logo
St Kilda vs Carlton live AFL updates: Charlie Curnow under injury cloud heading into must-win clash for Blues

St Kilda vs Carlton live AFL updates: Charlie Curnow under injury cloud heading into must-win clash for Blues

Carlton is adamant star forward Charlie Curnow's knee issue isn't serious after he suffered a knock at training ahead of a blockbuster clash against St Kilda.
Follow the live blog below, keep up to date with all the latest stats in our ScoreCentre, and tune in to our live radio coverage.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

West Coast boss Don Pyke breaks down remembering ‘emotional' victory after Adam Selwood's death
West Coast boss Don Pyke breaks down remembering ‘emotional' victory after Adam Selwood's death

7NEWS

time14 minutes ago

  • 7NEWS

West Coast boss Don Pyke breaks down remembering ‘emotional' victory after Adam Selwood's death

West Coast CEO Don Pyke fought back tears speaking about the Eagles' emotion-charged victory in the wake of the tragic death of premiership player Adam Selwood. The Eagles upset St Kilda last month at Optus Stadium for their only victory of the season. It came just 24 hours after the AFL world were shattered by the death of Selwood. Adam Selwood's death came just a few months after twin brother Troy also died. In an exclusive interview with 7NEWS Perth's Ryan Daniels, Pyke broke down when asked about his feeling when the siren went after the Saints match. 'I'm getting emotional ... I was just proud of the footy club,' he said through tears. 'It wasn't easy. It wasn't easy for the staff in particular, they were close to Adam and the players were probably more upset because the staff were upset. 'A lot of them didn't know Adam, they didn't know his reputation and his involvement across the club but they sensed that it was a sad day for the club. 'When the siren went it was quite interesting, I sort of sat back and thought 'how are we going to deal with this?' and I thought the players showed real maturity. 'They won their first game for the year, you'd expect they'd be jumping around, they'd be all over but they were sort of this subdued nature to this. 'It was a great win but it was a sad win. But it showed to me how great footy clubs are because everyone came together, all the planets align and we win a game of footy off the back of what was an incredibly sad weekend for the club. 'It was sort of this muted celebration of a win. 'I felt great for Andrew (McQualter), first win as an AFL coach at our club was fantastic, but off the back of the circumstances was interesting. 'Very mixed emotions for the whole day. Meanwhile, Pyke has provided an update on contract negotiations with boom superstar Harley Reid. Reid remains contracted to the club until the end of 2026 on his initial three-year deal with the club. But there is constant speculation surrounding his future with every Victorian club reportedly in the hunt for the 20-year-old. 7NEWS Perth's Ryan Daniels has previously reported there are three, five and seven-year deals on the table for Ried that would be the most lucrative deal in Eagles history. The offer is expected to be worth close to $2 million a season. Pyke said they are still waiting for Reid to make a decision. 'We've been in communication with him and his management,' Pyke told 7NEWS Perth. 'I keep saying to him, Harley is a 20-year-old second-year player, I appreciate that it's unique and we recognise that as a No.1 pick, I don't think any of us have seen a player hit the scene as strong as he did and he performed through the roof last year. 'As much as we'd love to get him re-signed and we're certainly in those conversations with him but you don't tie him down and say 'sign here, sign here'. 'He'll make his decision when he wants to. He's enjoying his time here and as much as everyone would be desperate for us to sign him, it'll take the time it takes.' Pyke insists he isn't nervous about the situation. 'That's assuming he actually knows what he wants,' Pyke said when asked if Reid really wanted to say he'd just sign. 'He might go 'well I want a 10-year deal' ... we've had the conversation, what is it you want right now and how does this contract offer look for you, and bits and pieces. 'I don't know and hopefully it gets to the point where he wants to make a decision soon and then we'll deal with that.'

‘Politics in front of people': Great in awe of ‘powerful words' as boss explains roadblock to Devils' stadium alternative
‘Politics in front of people': Great in awe of ‘powerful words' as boss explains roadblock to Devils' stadium alternative

News.com.au

time29 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

‘Politics in front of people': Great in awe of ‘powerful words' as boss explains roadblock to Devils' stadium alternative

Devils chief executive Brendon Gale says the 'no stadium, no team' condition for Tasmania's AFL entry remains crucial, stressing Hobart and Launceston's major venues are still 'not fit' to 'underpin a team in the big league on a sustainable basis'. Gale on Fox Footy's AFL 360 on Tuesday night remained defiant his club was still 'on track' to enter the AFL in 2028, despite a state government bombshell this week casting doubt over the Devils' future. Tasmanian Premier Jeremy Rockliff on Wednesday morning was hit with a no-confidence motion, which will continue to be debated in state parliament on Thursday. FOX FOOTY, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every match of every round in the 2025 Toyota AFL Premiership Season LIVE in 4K, with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited-time offer. Opposition leader Dean Winter, who filed the no-confidence motion, wrote to AFL chief executive Andrew Dillon amid the parliamentary chaos on Wednesday and reaffirmed the Labor Party's support for the new Macquarie Point stadium build and the Devils' entry into the AFL. But Winter's move was based off claims the Rockliff Government had mismanaged the state's budget and bungled key infrastructure projects, including the proposed stadium. Should Rockliff fail to stave off the no-confidence motion, it's possible Tasmania will be pushed to a snap election, which could derail the new stadium plans and put the 19th AFL licence in jeopardy. The AFL on Wednesday reiterated it remained steadfast that a 'clear requirement' for Tasmania's inclusion is 'a new 23,000 seat roofed stadium at Macquarie Point'. That agreement is between the AFL and the state government, with the stadium needing to clear passage of both Houses of Parliament. Premiership Brisbane Lions coach – and Tasmanian football hall of fame legend – Chris Fagan said the AFL 'should let the team come in and then sort the stadium out' in the long-term, saying the Devils should just 'use facilities that are available' in Launceston and Hobart. 'It would be such a tragedy if the team itself doesn't go ahead because there wasn't a new stadium when there are other football fields down there that AFL footballers currently play on,' Fagan told the Herald Sun. 'The surfaces are fantastic. 'But I think it is only a noisy minority who don't want it (new stadium) anyway. The vast majority of Tasmanians I think do want it. 'Once you have the team in there, then these things become easier.' When asked on Fox Footy's AFL 360 if the 'no team, no stadium' policy to introduce Tassie was 'too ambitious' and that 'too many stumbling blocks' had been placed in front of the key stakeholders, Gale said: 'No, I just think it's been a difficult concept to explain. 'Firstly, there's no good time to build a stadium around the world. They're always big and they're expensive, and there's always a whole range of other priorities … Whether it's Adelaide or Perth Stadium, they're difficult to get through and get popular support. 'I guess that's compounded by the fact that people in Tasmania think: 'Well, we've got two perfectly good stadiums in Hobart and Launceston, why can't we just have those?' And they're reasonable stadiums and they've been fit for purpose. But they're not fit for the purpose of providing sustainable commercial business model to underpin a team in the big league on a sustainable basis. 'It's hard to explain in seven or 10 seconds, but once you do have the time and space to explain, you know, why it is important – and then also the whole range of other benefits that will be created and will be unlocked – people tend to come around. But it's not easy.' The anguish of the impact of the political turmoil on the Devils was personified on Wednesday by club general manager of marketing, corporate affairs and social impact Kath McCann – the Devils' longest-serving official – who broke down in tears at a press conference. 'This club is powered by our future generations, by our kids and by our grandkids,' a teary McCann said. 'It's an opportunity to bring this state together, it's an opportunity to create pathways. 'I've got 50 students out here in my sight line, they power us every single day — and they will keep doing that and we're going to play on. We want to see this team become a reality because our young people deserve it.' Premiership Eagle Will Schofield was blown away by McCann's passion and 'powerful words'. 'This is more than just a footy club. This is something for an entire state, an entire generation of Tasmanians coming up behind it,' Schofield told Fox Sports News' AFL Tonight. 'It's a real instance of politics getting in front of people. This is a move that's going to change the state – and the football followers specifically in Tasmania, the people. So whether it be adults now or kids in future generations, being able to put this stadium together and this team together, it's more than just a game of footy. 'The cheques and balances will get done, but what's really sad is it seems like politics is getting in front of the people – of which I think a lot want this stadium and this team to come through. 'Knowing how big a football state Tasmania is, it'll be really sad for that to be lost.'

After making history together, Nathan Cleary and Jarome Luai will face off in the NRL for the first time
After making history together, Nathan Cleary and Jarome Luai will face off in the NRL for the first time

ABC News

time35 minutes ago

  • ABC News

After making history together, Nathan Cleary and Jarome Luai will face off in the NRL for the first time

As far as Jarome Luai is concerned, there are only two kinds of people on a rugby league pitch, even if he's facing Nathan Cleary. He said as much before the last time he played against Cleary, ahead of the 2022 World Cup final, a showdown the two will wage in the NRL for the first time when the Panthers face the Tigers on Sunday. "We're competitors through and through and it's going to be a great battle against one of my boys. But out there on the field, there's no friends — only brothers and enemies," Luai said. "I'm always going to look at it that way." Luai is the kind of player who talks and lives in absolutes, but if anyone could be both brother and enemy to him it might be Cleary. They first competed against each other a long time ago and Luai was the better prospect when they were boys — Cleary himself has acknowledged as much many times before, as will anyone who's been at Penrith long enough to remember the two of them running around for St Mary's and Penrith Brothers, and then for the club's junior rep sides. Luai won plenty of those early contests as well. When they first wore the black jerseys together as Under 16s players in 2013, it was Luai who started at halfback with Cleary first stuck on the bench before getting a start at hooker. Eventually, they combined for the first time in the halves later that season, and once they did it was clear their games were made for each other because even back then they were a mix of the iron will and the loudest voice, the light and the heat. The following seasons are when Cleary surged ahead — three years after he couldn't beat out Luai in a junior team, he was starting for Penrith in the big league at 18 and looking good doing it. By the time they partnered in the halves in the NRL for the first time in 2019, Cleary had already three finals series and a winning Origin campaign under his belt, as well as all the prestige and pressure that comes with being anointed as one of rugby league's young Messiahs. For Luai, it was just his ninth NRL game. That first match was against Parramatta, six years and two weeks ago at the same ground where they'll face off this Sunday. Back then, the Panthers were dead last on the ladder and talk was that Cleary could be in danger of losing his spot for New South Wales. It was a tough watch. Calling it one for the purists would offend the purists and it's strange, after what they've become, to go back and see a time when Luai and Cleary were the incomplete versions of themselves. Cleary is determined and dogged, but the game always seems a bit beyond his reach. He is grasping out desperately but cannot seize and control it the way he does so easily now. Compared to the bulletproof confidence and electricity he exudes so easily now, Luai is positively demure — he mainly shifts the ball from side to side, doesn't run it once and kicks it only twice. But one of those kicks came late, and it took a rebound off a Parramatta defender right into Cleary's path for him to score what would be the winning try. It doesn't look like much, but once you know what happened next it's a harbinger of doom. This rebounded kick in a sloppy, forgettable game is the first time Luai and Cleary clicked together in first grade and that's a clicking that didn't stop until they parted ways after last year's grand final as the most successful club halves combination of the NRL era. In the first few premiership years, Cleary fed off Luai's confidence while Luai excelled with the space Cleary learned to provide. Watching them together is to see two players in perfect harmony with one another. As the run of titles continued and their games became more complex, each began to show more of the other. Cleary learned to add more and more flourishes and subtleties to his rock-solid fundamentals as Luai learned to take the team around the park more effectively without blunting his own prodigious attacking gifts. That transformation helped drive Penrith to immortality because it meant each learned to live without the other and in a world where most teams are a strained halfback's hamstring away from collapsing, having two playmakers who can shine independently as well as together is close to priceless. Their combination took them to greatness but to stay there they had to be as effective apart as they could be together and in the last two years they have proven they can. Cleary has played many great games in his life and has many more to come but the final stages of the 2023 grand final will likely always be his finest hour, due in no small part to Luai succumbing to a shoulder injury and the weight of destiny falling almost solely on the halfback. Likewise, with hamstring and shoulder problems slowing Cleary down, last year it was Luai who came to the fore as the side's top dog, running them around the park in a style all his own. By the time the finals started, Luai (eight) had played nearly as many games at halfback as Cleary had (ten) and the Panthers were ensconced in the top four and ready for yet another premiership tilt, which they duly converted into a title that felt like it ran on muscle memory. Things are different now for Penrith. They miss Luai and James Fisher-Harris as they have not missed any of the other stars who have departed through the premiership years. They miss Luai's energy, his focus, his ability to channel his competitiveness towards victory and to inspire such efforts in others as much as they miss his skill, his cunning and his ability to work both with and without Cleary. The Panthers only moved off the bottom of the ladder last week and with a heavy Origin representation they cannot afford to drop many more games if they want to make the finals, especially against a side like the Tigers who are also fixing to be part of the logjam at the end of the top eight. Cleary is still great — his fingerprints were all over last week's win against Parramatta, as they have been for most of Penrith's best moments this year. But with so many of their players so unfamiliar with such hard times what the Panthers wouldn't give for Luai to supercharge them, to remind them of who they are, to send a bolt of lightning up their arm and get the angry blood pumping again. That is exactly what Luai is fighting hard to give his new club. At the Tigers he is starting again with a club stuck way down in the hole, trying to teach players young and old how to be great which is a lesson as hard to teach as it is to learn. This is a club still in transition, still building itself up after years in the doldrums. They have made progress this year and Luai has been a big part of it but after three straight losses and the Lachlan Galvin saga the Tigers need a win and they need it bad. Which means Luai and Cleary back where they were when they first locked horns on suburban fields across Sydney's west all those years ago. Their only previous meeting as stars was at Old Trafford in front of 60,000 with a World Cup on the line and Cleary's Australian side got the better of Luai and Samoa. But this one is more familiar to them both because it's a battle of the weekly desperation that they know so well, the knife fight in the mud that makes all the bigger days possible. Cleary and Luai both know that finals are the end of the story but wins like this are how you get there. Their mighty wills, which were united so many times through the history they made together, are now fixed on the other and for the first time in their club colours they want the same thing and only one of them can have it. Brothers fight all the time but so do enemies and after the history Cleary and Luai lived together they really can be both, even if it's just for 80 minutes at a time.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store