
McGovern's legacy lives on for besieged Eagles backs
Tom Barrass's move to Hawthorn at the end of last year and McGovern's concussion-forced retirement last month means Edwards is now 'the man' in West Coast's besieged defence.
The 24-year-old has notched just 52 AFL games since being taken as a rookie in 2017 and there were doubts whether he could become the team's go-to key defender when a poor start to the year resulted in him being dropped.
But Edwards returned with a bang in round nine, playing every game since then and excelling in the role of key backman.
Edwards will be back in action on Sunday when West Coast face Port Adelaide at Adelaide Oval, with key forwards Mitch Georgiades and Ollie Lord lying in wait.
"I had a bit of a shaky start to the year and went back to WAFL to work on a few things," Edwards said.
"I needed to improve some of my positioning and contest stuff, which is my one wood.
"It's always a tough role playing the deepest back on big forwards in a developing side.
"But I feel like I've taken some good steps this year and I can be that guy for the Eagles for years to come."
Another player to have excelled in defence this year has been Ginbey, who often mans key forwards who are bigger and taller than him.
"Bloody hell, I love Reuben. He's a superstar," Edwards said.
"I love playing with him. He can play on talls. He can play on smalls. I couldn't speak higher of him."
Edwards said defence coach Luke Webster and former West Coast captain Shannon Hurn had played pivotal roles in his progress.
He also lavished praise on five-time All-Australian McGovern, who is regarded as one of the best AFL defenders of all time.
"He's a good mate of mine," Edwards said.
"He drops seeds of wisdom here and there for me.
"He's probably the best defender in the modern era, so to be able to take things from his game and have him teach me stuff over the course of my journey has been invaluable."
Port Adelaide (7-9) lost Esava Ratugolea, Sam Powell-Pepper and Dante Visentini to season-ending injuries in last week's 28-point loss to Brisbane.
West Coast, who are aiming to celebrate Jamie Cripps' 250th game for the Eagles with a win, axed Tim Kelly, Sandy Brock, Bo Allan and Jack Williams.
Tom Cole, Matt Owies, Tyrell Dewar and fit-again defender Rhett Bazzo, who has played just one AFL match since the start of 2024, come into the side.
Powered by Jeremy McGovern's "seeds of wisdom", Harry Edwards is confident he can hold down West Coast's key defensive post for years to come alongside partner in crime Reuben Ginbey.
Tom Barrass's move to Hawthorn at the end of last year and McGovern's concussion-forced retirement last month means Edwards is now 'the man' in West Coast's besieged defence.
The 24-year-old has notched just 52 AFL games since being taken as a rookie in 2017 and there were doubts whether he could become the team's go-to key defender when a poor start to the year resulted in him being dropped.
But Edwards returned with a bang in round nine, playing every game since then and excelling in the role of key backman.
Edwards will be back in action on Sunday when West Coast face Port Adelaide at Adelaide Oval, with key forwards Mitch Georgiades and Ollie Lord lying in wait.
"I had a bit of a shaky start to the year and went back to WAFL to work on a few things," Edwards said.
"I needed to improve some of my positioning and contest stuff, which is my one wood.
"It's always a tough role playing the deepest back on big forwards in a developing side.
"But I feel like I've taken some good steps this year and I can be that guy for the Eagles for years to come."
Another player to have excelled in defence this year has been Ginbey, who often mans key forwards who are bigger and taller than him.
"Bloody hell, I love Reuben. He's a superstar," Edwards said.
"I love playing with him. He can play on talls. He can play on smalls. I couldn't speak higher of him."
Edwards said defence coach Luke Webster and former West Coast captain Shannon Hurn had played pivotal roles in his progress.
He also lavished praise on five-time All-Australian McGovern, who is regarded as one of the best AFL defenders of all time.
"He's a good mate of mine," Edwards said.
"He drops seeds of wisdom here and there for me.
"He's probably the best defender in the modern era, so to be able to take things from his game and have him teach me stuff over the course of my journey has been invaluable."
Port Adelaide (7-9) lost Esava Ratugolea, Sam Powell-Pepper and Dante Visentini to season-ending injuries in last week's 28-point loss to Brisbane.
West Coast, who are aiming to celebrate Jamie Cripps' 250th game for the Eagles with a win, axed Tim Kelly, Sandy Brock, Bo Allan and Jack Williams.
Tom Cole, Matt Owies, Tyrell Dewar and fit-again defender Rhett Bazzo, who has played just one AFL match since the start of 2024, come into the side.
Powered by Jeremy McGovern's "seeds of wisdom", Harry Edwards is confident he can hold down West Coast's key defensive post for years to come alongside partner in crime Reuben Ginbey.
Tom Barrass's move to Hawthorn at the end of last year and McGovern's concussion-forced retirement last month means Edwards is now 'the man' in West Coast's besieged defence.
The 24-year-old has notched just 52 AFL games since being taken as a rookie in 2017 and there were doubts whether he could become the team's go-to key defender when a poor start to the year resulted in him being dropped.
But Edwards returned with a bang in round nine, playing every game since then and excelling in the role of key backman.
Edwards will be back in action on Sunday when West Coast face Port Adelaide at Adelaide Oval, with key forwards Mitch Georgiades and Ollie Lord lying in wait.
"I had a bit of a shaky start to the year and went back to WAFL to work on a few things," Edwards said.
"I needed to improve some of my positioning and contest stuff, which is my one wood.
"It's always a tough role playing the deepest back on big forwards in a developing side.
"But I feel like I've taken some good steps this year and I can be that guy for the Eagles for years to come."
Another player to have excelled in defence this year has been Ginbey, who often mans key forwards who are bigger and taller than him.
"Bloody hell, I love Reuben. He's a superstar," Edwards said.
"I love playing with him. He can play on talls. He can play on smalls. I couldn't speak higher of him."
Edwards said defence coach Luke Webster and former West Coast captain Shannon Hurn had played pivotal roles in his progress.
He also lavished praise on five-time All-Australian McGovern, who is regarded as one of the best AFL defenders of all time.
"He's a good mate of mine," Edwards said.
"He drops seeds of wisdom here and there for me.
"He's probably the best defender in the modern era, so to be able to take things from his game and have him teach me stuff over the course of my journey has been invaluable."
Port Adelaide (7-9) lost Esava Ratugolea, Sam Powell-Pepper and Dante Visentini to season-ending injuries in last week's 28-point loss to Brisbane.
West Coast, who are aiming to celebrate Jamie Cripps' 250th game for the Eagles with a win, axed Tim Kelly, Sandy Brock, Bo Allan and Jack Williams.
Tom Cole, Matt Owies, Tyrell Dewar and fit-again defender Rhett Bazzo, who has played just one AFL match since the start of 2024, come into the side.

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Perth Now
8 minutes ago
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'When Amy was Amy': 20 years on from cycling tragedy
What Warren McDonald saw that day is unimaginable, so over time he has learned to shift his mind's eye back a bit. Then he was the Australian Institute of Sport women's road cycling head coach. McDonald prefers to recall heady days in Italy, overseeing former Olympic rower Amy Gillett as she showcased her formidable "engine". It was July 2005, the year after compatriot Sara Carrigan had won the Athens Olympics road race, and the world was their oyster. Gillett had won bronze at the national time trial championships that year and was a key member of the AIS squad. They were Generation Next for Australian women's road cycling. This is where McDonald will try to settle his mind on Friday - 20 years to the day since a teenage German driver lost control of her car on a country road and everything changed forever. "I look back on the couple of days before the accident, when I was motor-pacing Amy. She was flying," McDonald tells AAP. "She was obviously targeting this race, and just seeing her smile and grimace at the same time. It just hits home that she didn't come home - that really affects her family and friends. "But for me, I try to look at those couple of days before, when Amy was Amy, and training really, really well." Gillett and her AIS teammates - Katie Brown, Lorian Graham, Kate Nichols, Alexis Rhodes and Louise Yaxley - were on a training ride the day before the Thuringen Rundfahrt, a major women's road race. The car drove head-first into their bunch. Gillett died at the scene, Yaxley and Rhodes spent days in induced comas. All of Gillett's teammates suffered serious injuries. McDonald, driving a team support car, was not far behind them. He was the first to be confronted with the trauma of what had happened. This is Australian cycling's 9/11, or the death of Princess Di. Everyone involved in the sport on July 18, 2005 - and a fair few non-cycling people - can tell you exactly where they were and what they were doing when they heard the news. Two decades later, while time has healed some wounds, the grief and the sadness and the "what-if" remain profound. As always, it is complicated and people have dealt with it differently. Gillett's teammates had long recoveries that fundamentally affected their cycling careers, to varying degrees. For example, Rhodes won bronze at the 2008 time trial nationals. Graham narrowly missed selection for the 2008 Olympics. But all their lives pivoted on that day. Compatriot Kate Bates, then 23, was in the midst of a cycling career that featured the Olympics and a world track title. She now is managing director of the Amy Gillett Foundation, formed in the wake of the accident, which advocates for road safety and aims to improve the often-vexed relationship between cyclists and motorists. Bates speaks of the "butterfly effect" of what happened 20 years ago. "It wasn't about us, but there's no denying the life-changing impact it had on all of us," she said of Australian women's road cycling. "On reflection, as you get older, it means more." Bates wants the foundation to reflect what Gillett wanted in her sporting career. "She was very ambitious, very courageous, very bold - that's what the foundation should be ... never give up," Bates said. "It's more important than it ever has been. As of May 31, it was Australia's deadliest 12 months on the road since 2010. "There are some things that have changed, but certainly not enough has changed." Asked about the foundation's purpose, Bates is blunt: zero cyclist deaths on Australian roads. A new online campaign will be launched next week to mark the anniversary and aiming to improve attitudes and behaviours, titled simply "It Starts With Me". A couple of years after the accident, a top rider privately admitted she was quitting the sport before time. She no longer felt safe enough on her bike. It is an age-old maxim in the sport that there are two sorts of cyclists - those who have crashed, and those who are about to. But this was fundamentally different. Two decades later, Australian cycling has celebrated Grace Brown's Olympic gold medal and Sarah Gigante's two stage wins in the Giro d'Italia. But safety remains a massive issue in the sport. McDonald and his wife Sian are the parents of two teenage boys, Fionn and Dash. In the midst of a phone interview that is often fraught, there is a ray of light when McDonald is asked about how the accident changed him. "The life of a uni student - he just got out of bed (in the afternoon). How's that? He goes back to uni next week," McDonald said of Fionn and bursts out laughing. Once Dash has finished school, McDonald and Sian will go to the accident site. It will be his first time there since that terrible day. To know the McDonalds, witness the dignity of Gillett's parents Denis and Mary and her husband Simon, be awed by Rhodes' toughness on a bike and come to know Graham's impish sense of humour, the last 20 years bring an awful reminder. Terrible things sometimes happen to great people. Mary has written a heart-rending letter to her daughter to mark the anniversary, published on the foundation website. "Please keep riding those rainbows - there are many of us looking out for you," Mary says.


Perth Now
8 minutes ago
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Protect the father-son rule, Carlton's Voss says
Carlton coach Michael Voss has urged the AFL to protect the father-son rule after talented teenager Cody Walker nominated the Blues a year before he is eligible to be drafted. As they prepare to miss finals for the first time since 2022, Carlton were given a huge boost when Walker informed them he intended to join the club via the 2026 draft. His father, Andrew, played 202 games for Carlton between 2004 and 2016. But Cody was also eligible to join Richmond as part of their Next Generation Academy due to his Indigenous heritage. The 184cm midfielder has starred for Vic Country in this year's national championships, pushing his case to be a potential No.1 pick next year. Walker will join Ben and Lucas Camporeale, the sons of premiership player Scott, on Carlton's list for 2027. "The father-son rule should stay with how it currently sits," Voss said on Friday. "There's some things that we need to continue around the history of the game and the traditions of the game, and this is one of them. "I'd understand if there's probably a further conversation around what academies look like in general. "But when it comes to the father and sons, that's been a tradition that's stood the test of time, and should continue to do so. "Whether that evolves over time and what you ultimately end up paying for that, probably is a continued conversation, but where teams can get and clubs get access to their father-son, father-daughters, should always be made available." Father-son access has caused significant debate between the 18 clubs, with some teams more fortunate than others. Geelong have had an excellent track record with the rule, helping set up their three premiership between 2007 and 2011. Collingwood superstar Nick Daicos is arguably the best player in the AFL, while his brother Josh is a premiership gun in his own right. Reigning premiers Brisbane have three father-sons - Will Ashcroft, Levi Ashcroft and Jaspa Fletcher - in their best team. But less established clubs like Gold Coast, GWS and Fremantle are naturally less likely to produce sons of guns. Even foundation club St Kilda are yet to benefit from the rule, with president Andrew Bassat leading the charge on overhauling Northern Academies. Voss will be hoping the news of Walker's arrival at the end of 2026 can inspire Carlton to snap a four-game losing streak when they face Melbourne at the MCG on Saturday night. The 6-11 Blues are out of finals contention, but an encouraging end to the season could help Voss save his job. Voss downplayed concerns of Tom De Koning's form, as the mobile ruckman is weighing up a monster offer to join St Kilda. De Koning is yet to make a decision, publicly, but it is expected he will accept the mammoth contract with the Saints. The 26-year-old has played more forward in recent weeks in the absence of Harry McKay, with Marc Pittonet being the No.1 ruck. "I think you're reading a little bit too much into it," Voss said of De Koning's form dipping amid the contract decision. "Even with the discussion around him and the combination (with Pittonet), it's black and white for us. There's a role to play. "We need it played, and he's really determined to be able to get that done. "The discussion around it is for other people to talk about."


The Advertiser
8 minutes ago
- The Advertiser
'When Amy was Amy': 20 years on from cycling tragedy
What Warren McDonald saw that day is unimaginable, so over time he has learned to shift his mind's eye back a bit. Then he was the Australian Institute of Sport women's road cycling head coach. McDonald prefers to recall heady days in Italy, overseeing former Olympic rower Amy Gillett as she showcased her formidable "engine". It was July 2005, the year after compatriot Sara Carrigan had won the Athens Olympics road race, and the world was their oyster. Gillett had won bronze at the national time trial championships that year and was a key member of the AIS squad. They were Generation Next for Australian women's road cycling. This is where McDonald will try to settle his mind on Friday - 20 years to the day since a teenage German driver lost control of her car on a country road and everything changed forever. "I look back on the couple of days before the accident, when I was motor-pacing Amy. She was flying," McDonald tells AAP. "She was obviously targeting this race, and just seeing her smile and grimace at the same time. It just hits home that she didn't come home - that really affects her family and friends. "But for me, I try to look at those couple of days before, when Amy was Amy, and training really, really well." Gillett and her AIS teammates - Katie Brown, Lorian Graham, Kate Nichols, Alexis Rhodes and Louise Yaxley - were on a training ride the day before the Thuringen Rundfahrt, a major women's road race. The car drove head-first into their bunch. Gillett died at the scene, Yaxley and Rhodes spent days in induced comas. All of Gillett's teammates suffered serious injuries. McDonald, driving a team support car, was not far behind them. He was the first to be confronted with the trauma of what had happened. This is Australian cycling's 9/11, or the death of Princess Di. Everyone involved in the sport on July 18, 2005 - and a fair few non-cycling people - can tell you exactly where they were and what they were doing when they heard the news. Two decades later, while time has healed some wounds, the grief and the sadness and the "what-if" remain profound. As always, it is complicated and people have dealt with it differently. Gillett's teammates had long recoveries that fundamentally affected their cycling careers, to varying degrees. For example, Rhodes won bronze at the 2008 time trial nationals. Graham narrowly missed selection for the 2008 Olympics. But all their lives pivoted on that day. Compatriot Kate Bates, then 23, was in the midst of a cycling career that featured the Olympics and a world track title. She now is managing director of the Amy Gillett Foundation, formed in the wake of the accident, which advocates for road safety and aims to improve the often-vexed relationship between cyclists and motorists. Bates speaks of the "butterfly effect" of what happened 20 years ago. "It wasn't about us, but there's no denying the life-changing impact it had on all of us," she said of Australian women's road cycling. "On reflection, as you get older, it means more." Bates wants the foundation to reflect what Gillett wanted in her sporting career. "She was very ambitious, very courageous, very bold - that's what the foundation should be ... never give up," Bates said. "It's more important than it ever has been. As of May 31, it was Australia's deadliest 12 months on the road since 2010. "There are some things that have changed, but certainly not enough has changed." Asked about the foundation's purpose, Bates is blunt: zero cyclist deaths on Australian roads. A new online campaign will be launched next week to mark the anniversary and aiming to improve attitudes and behaviours, titled simply "It Starts With Me". A couple of years after the accident, a top rider privately admitted she was quitting the sport before time. She no longer felt safe enough on her bike. It is an age-old maxim in the sport that there are two sorts of cyclists - those who have crashed, and those who are about to. But this was fundamentally different. Two decades later, Australian cycling has celebrated Grace Brown's Olympic gold medal and Sarah Gigante's two stage wins in the Giro d'Italia. But safety remains a massive issue in the sport. McDonald and his wife Sian are the parents of two teenage boys, Fionn and Dash. In the midst of a phone interview that is often fraught, there is a ray of light when McDonald is asked about how the accident changed him. "The life of a uni student - he just got out of bed (in the afternoon). How's that? He goes back to uni next week," McDonald said of Fionn and bursts out laughing. Once Dash has finished school, McDonald and Sian will go to the accident site. It will be his first time there since that terrible day. To know the McDonalds, witness the dignity of Gillett's parents Denis and Mary and her husband Simon, be awed by Rhodes' toughness on a bike and come to know Graham's impish sense of humour, the last 20 years bring an awful reminder. Terrible things sometimes happen to great people. Mary has written a heart-rending letter to her daughter to mark the anniversary, published on the foundation website. "Please keep riding those rainbows - there are many of us looking out for you," Mary says. What Warren McDonald saw that day is unimaginable, so over time he has learned to shift his mind's eye back a bit. Then he was the Australian Institute of Sport women's road cycling head coach. McDonald prefers to recall heady days in Italy, overseeing former Olympic rower Amy Gillett as she showcased her formidable "engine". It was July 2005, the year after compatriot Sara Carrigan had won the Athens Olympics road race, and the world was their oyster. Gillett had won bronze at the national time trial championships that year and was a key member of the AIS squad. They were Generation Next for Australian women's road cycling. This is where McDonald will try to settle his mind on Friday - 20 years to the day since a teenage German driver lost control of her car on a country road and everything changed forever. "I look back on the couple of days before the accident, when I was motor-pacing Amy. She was flying," McDonald tells AAP. "She was obviously targeting this race, and just seeing her smile and grimace at the same time. It just hits home that she didn't come home - that really affects her family and friends. "But for me, I try to look at those couple of days before, when Amy was Amy, and training really, really well." Gillett and her AIS teammates - Katie Brown, Lorian Graham, Kate Nichols, Alexis Rhodes and Louise Yaxley - were on a training ride the day before the Thuringen Rundfahrt, a major women's road race. The car drove head-first into their bunch. Gillett died at the scene, Yaxley and Rhodes spent days in induced comas. All of Gillett's teammates suffered serious injuries. McDonald, driving a team support car, was not far behind them. He was the first to be confronted with the trauma of what had happened. This is Australian cycling's 9/11, or the death of Princess Di. Everyone involved in the sport on July 18, 2005 - and a fair few non-cycling people - can tell you exactly where they were and what they were doing when they heard the news. Two decades later, while time has healed some wounds, the grief and the sadness and the "what-if" remain profound. As always, it is complicated and people have dealt with it differently. Gillett's teammates had long recoveries that fundamentally affected their cycling careers, to varying degrees. For example, Rhodes won bronze at the 2008 time trial nationals. Graham narrowly missed selection for the 2008 Olympics. But all their lives pivoted on that day. Compatriot Kate Bates, then 23, was in the midst of a cycling career that featured the Olympics and a world track title. She now is managing director of the Amy Gillett Foundation, formed in the wake of the accident, which advocates for road safety and aims to improve the often-vexed relationship between cyclists and motorists. Bates speaks of the "butterfly effect" of what happened 20 years ago. "It wasn't about us, but there's no denying the life-changing impact it had on all of us," she said of Australian women's road cycling. "On reflection, as you get older, it means more." Bates wants the foundation to reflect what Gillett wanted in her sporting career. "She was very ambitious, very courageous, very bold - that's what the foundation should be ... never give up," Bates said. "It's more important than it ever has been. As of May 31, it was Australia's deadliest 12 months on the road since 2010. "There are some things that have changed, but certainly not enough has changed." Asked about the foundation's purpose, Bates is blunt: zero cyclist deaths on Australian roads. A new online campaign will be launched next week to mark the anniversary and aiming to improve attitudes and behaviours, titled simply "It Starts With Me". A couple of years after the accident, a top rider privately admitted she was quitting the sport before time. She no longer felt safe enough on her bike. It is an age-old maxim in the sport that there are two sorts of cyclists - those who have crashed, and those who are about to. But this was fundamentally different. Two decades later, Australian cycling has celebrated Grace Brown's Olympic gold medal and Sarah Gigante's two stage wins in the Giro d'Italia. But safety remains a massive issue in the sport. McDonald and his wife Sian are the parents of two teenage boys, Fionn and Dash. In the midst of a phone interview that is often fraught, there is a ray of light when McDonald is asked about how the accident changed him. "The life of a uni student - he just got out of bed (in the afternoon). How's that? He goes back to uni next week," McDonald said of Fionn and bursts out laughing. Once Dash has finished school, McDonald and Sian will go to the accident site. It will be his first time there since that terrible day. To know the McDonalds, witness the dignity of Gillett's parents Denis and Mary and her husband Simon, be awed by Rhodes' toughness on a bike and come to know Graham's impish sense of humour, the last 20 years bring an awful reminder. Terrible things sometimes happen to great people. Mary has written a heart-rending letter to her daughter to mark the anniversary, published on the foundation website. "Please keep riding those rainbows - there are many of us looking out for you," Mary says. What Warren McDonald saw that day is unimaginable, so over time he has learned to shift his mind's eye back a bit. Then he was the Australian Institute of Sport women's road cycling head coach. McDonald prefers to recall heady days in Italy, overseeing former Olympic rower Amy Gillett as she showcased her formidable "engine". It was July 2005, the year after compatriot Sara Carrigan had won the Athens Olympics road race, and the world was their oyster. Gillett had won bronze at the national time trial championships that year and was a key member of the AIS squad. They were Generation Next for Australian women's road cycling. This is where McDonald will try to settle his mind on Friday - 20 years to the day since a teenage German driver lost control of her car on a country road and everything changed forever. "I look back on the couple of days before the accident, when I was motor-pacing Amy. She was flying," McDonald tells AAP. "She was obviously targeting this race, and just seeing her smile and grimace at the same time. It just hits home that she didn't come home - that really affects her family and friends. "But for me, I try to look at those couple of days before, when Amy was Amy, and training really, really well." Gillett and her AIS teammates - Katie Brown, Lorian Graham, Kate Nichols, Alexis Rhodes and Louise Yaxley - were on a training ride the day before the Thuringen Rundfahrt, a major women's road race. The car drove head-first into their bunch. Gillett died at the scene, Yaxley and Rhodes spent days in induced comas. All of Gillett's teammates suffered serious injuries. McDonald, driving a team support car, was not far behind them. He was the first to be confronted with the trauma of what had happened. This is Australian cycling's 9/11, or the death of Princess Di. Everyone involved in the sport on July 18, 2005 - and a fair few non-cycling people - can tell you exactly where they were and what they were doing when they heard the news. Two decades later, while time has healed some wounds, the grief and the sadness and the "what-if" remain profound. As always, it is complicated and people have dealt with it differently. Gillett's teammates had long recoveries that fundamentally affected their cycling careers, to varying degrees. For example, Rhodes won bronze at the 2008 time trial nationals. Graham narrowly missed selection for the 2008 Olympics. But all their lives pivoted on that day. Compatriot Kate Bates, then 23, was in the midst of a cycling career that featured the Olympics and a world track title. She now is managing director of the Amy Gillett Foundation, formed in the wake of the accident, which advocates for road safety and aims to improve the often-vexed relationship between cyclists and motorists. Bates speaks of the "butterfly effect" of what happened 20 years ago. "It wasn't about us, but there's no denying the life-changing impact it had on all of us," she said of Australian women's road cycling. "On reflection, as you get older, it means more." Bates wants the foundation to reflect what Gillett wanted in her sporting career. "She was very ambitious, very courageous, very bold - that's what the foundation should be ... never give up," Bates said. "It's more important than it ever has been. As of May 31, it was Australia's deadliest 12 months on the road since 2010. "There are some things that have changed, but certainly not enough has changed." Asked about the foundation's purpose, Bates is blunt: zero cyclist deaths on Australian roads. A new online campaign will be launched next week to mark the anniversary and aiming to improve attitudes and behaviours, titled simply "It Starts With Me". A couple of years after the accident, a top rider privately admitted she was quitting the sport before time. She no longer felt safe enough on her bike. It is an age-old maxim in the sport that there are two sorts of cyclists - those who have crashed, and those who are about to. But this was fundamentally different. Two decades later, Australian cycling has celebrated Grace Brown's Olympic gold medal and Sarah Gigante's two stage wins in the Giro d'Italia. But safety remains a massive issue in the sport. McDonald and his wife Sian are the parents of two teenage boys, Fionn and Dash. In the midst of a phone interview that is often fraught, there is a ray of light when McDonald is asked about how the accident changed him. "The life of a uni student - he just got out of bed (in the afternoon). How's that? He goes back to uni next week," McDonald said of Fionn and bursts out laughing. Once Dash has finished school, McDonald and Sian will go to the accident site. It will be his first time there since that terrible day. To know the McDonalds, witness the dignity of Gillett's parents Denis and Mary and her husband Simon, be awed by Rhodes' toughness on a bike and come to know Graham's impish sense of humour, the last 20 years bring an awful reminder. Terrible things sometimes happen to great people. Mary has written a heart-rending letter to her daughter to mark the anniversary, published on the foundation website. "Please keep riding those rainbows - there are many of us looking out for you," Mary says.