
AFLW stars urge officials to take short term pain for long term gain in the face of massive losses
The AFL has reportedly told clubs the women's competition is losing $50 million a year as it approaches its 10th season, which starts next month.
League officials have made improving on-field performances the top priority for the AFLW, which is also facing declining crowds and television audiences.
AFLW players are pushing for an expanded season, in which every team plays each of its opponents once, by 2031.
But a review by league officials has reportedly showed that would come at a $200 million loss.
Hore, a seven-year AFLW veteran, urged league officials and sponsors to have faith in the competition, which she believes is growing its on-field product each year.
'I'm super confident that the AFLW is an amazing competition already and we're only 10 seasons in, so I think we just need to keep investing, both as players and then more broadly as well, into the game,' Hore said.
'I compare myself as a player in my first season in 2018 and if I was that same player now I certainly wouldn't be getting a game.
'The standard and the investment from players is only growing, and the competition's only going to keep growing as the investment comes.'
Hore, a three-time All-Australian and a premiership player in 2022, said the continuing influx of young players who have developed through talent pathways will lift the AFLW's standard.
'The skill levels are going to continue to grow and I've really seen that in our new girls and our draftees this year,' she said.
'They've been playing the game since they were five years old.
'I compare it to myself, I played from five until 10 (years of age) and then didn't play for 10 years.
'It's a pretty long time where I didn't get to develop my skills.
'These girls are coming through the pathways now ... it makes me really, really excited for the future.'
Hore on Wednesday helped Melbourne launch a new sponsorship with Swedish automotive manufacturer Polestar, who will partner with the Demons' women's team this season.
'This partnership just shows that there's so many businesses and organisations that really want to help grow the game and support us girls,' Hore said.
'It's an investment really and the competition's growing. We're celebrating our 10th season but only nine years in, so the competition is going to continue to grow.
'Sponsorships like this show that there's real investment from organisations and businesses out there, which we really love.'

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7NEWS
18 minutes ago
- 7NEWS
AFL players brutally mocked over 93-day holiday break: ‘It is a joke'
AFL players — and the Sydney Swans in particular — are being ridiculed for the amount time off they are afforded over the off-season. Expert Channel 7 commentator Kane Cornes is perplexed by the amount time professional players have away from the club, and could not believe his ear when he heard Swans coach Dean Cox reveal his return-to-train dates for his players. After an underwhelming season cruelled by injury, Cox said the first-to-fourth-year players would be back on November 10 and senior players would fire up their pre-season on November 24. 'So, you know, for the younger players they'll get five weeks pre-Christmas,' Cox said. 'Throughout that, they'll be expected to come back extremely fit and in really good condition and ready to attack a full pre-season.' On Channel 7's The Agenda Setters on Monday night, AFL great Nick Riewoldt said 'AFL footy will remain a part-time job in 2026' with players being afforded such a generous vacation time. Cornes said it was a 'joke'. 'Their (Sydney's) last game is on August 23,' Cornes said on Channel 7's The Agenda Setters. 'Their senior players are back on November 24. 'That is a 93-day break for our AFL players and you are telling me these are full-time players. 'It is a joke and no wonder the skill level (is questionable and) injuries are high. It's for that reason. '(AFL players) get far too much time off (and) that's not including Christmas.' Cornes has been hot on the topic (of the amount time off players have) for many years, and believes AFL coaches do not get enough time to spend with their players ahead of the season proper. He also believes the extended time-off contributed to a spate of injuries that happened to senior players at the start of this year. 'It's been one of my biggest frustrations for a long time,' Cornes said on SEN earlier this year. 'I actually have been writing about this for seven years. 'Players get far too much time off and the lack of preparation is leading to this significant spate of injuries.' Cornes said back then the AFL Players' Association had 'far too much power in the game' and things needed to change. 'Who is going to stand up to them?,' he asked. 'If you're wondering why everyone is getting injured and why it's never been worse, this is why.' Annual leave for most Australians is a four-week period, while those who are required to work on public holidays typically receive a six-week break.


The Advertiser
18 minutes ago
- The Advertiser
Aussie beef a hot commodity as US imports hit a high
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Australian beef exports to the US would likely "skyrocket" as a result, according to the commodity report. "That is now three of (America's) top five import markets affected due to tariffs, a reduced herd or disease," it said. "This presents even greater opportunities for Aussie producers as the US looks to satisfy their own domestic demand with expected falling beef production." Australian cattle producers had anticipated that opening the gates to US-processed beef would have a limited effect on the domestic market. "The US is already importing bucket loads of beef from from Australia, so for it to come back the other way is unlikely," Craig Huf, a grazier and chair of the NSW Farmers Association far north coast branch, told AAP after the decision in July. "So, in the short term, we probably don't expect it to impact us." Cattle industry groups have called for an independent review into the government's decision to lift the US beef restrictions. "Australia has got some of the best biosecurity protocols in the world and the produce here is often bought because of its clean, green image," Mr Huf said. "So to jeopardise that is pretty risky, but here's hoping the science is right." The total export market has been "extraordinary" in 2025, with July the highest monthly export volume on record at just under 150,500 tonnes. For growers, widespread rainfall in July marked a turning point for winter crops across many states, the commodity report said. "After a late break and critically low soil moisture levels through June, the late July rainfall has given growers a renewed shot at achieving average yields or better," it said. "While it's come late, it arrived in time to stabilise crop potential, provided spring conditions remain favourable." US demand for Australian beef looks set to skyrocket as drought, disease and hefty tariffs hit other top cattle-producing countries. Australia exported more than 43,000 tonnes of beef to the United States in July, the highest volume since October 2024, according to a Bendigo Bank Agribusiness commodity report released on Tuesday. The extra demand came at the same time as the federal government announced it would allow imports of US beef that had been raised in Canada or Mexico but processed in America. Australia had faced pressure from President Donald Trump to ease the restrictions on beef as it sought exemptions from wide-ranging tariffs. As US herd numbers continued to dwindle due to drought in 2025, Americans have also been eating beef imported from Canada and Brazil. But with Brazil facing a 50 per cent tariff, Canada slipping further into drought and a US ban on Mexican beef due to a parasite infestation, America would have to source meat from elsewhere. Australian beef exports to the US would likely "skyrocket" as a result, according to the commodity report. "That is now three of (America's) top five import markets affected due to tariffs, a reduced herd or disease," it said. "This presents even greater opportunities for Aussie producers as the US looks to satisfy their own domestic demand with expected falling beef production." Australian cattle producers had anticipated that opening the gates to US-processed beef would have a limited effect on the domestic market. "The US is already importing bucket loads of beef from from Australia, so for it to come back the other way is unlikely," Craig Huf, a grazier and chair of the NSW Farmers Association far north coast branch, told AAP after the decision in July. "So, in the short term, we probably don't expect it to impact us." Cattle industry groups have called for an independent review into the government's decision to lift the US beef restrictions. "Australia has got some of the best biosecurity protocols in the world and the produce here is often bought because of its clean, green image," Mr Huf said. "So to jeopardise that is pretty risky, but here's hoping the science is right." The total export market has been "extraordinary" in 2025, with July the highest monthly export volume on record at just under 150,500 tonnes. For growers, widespread rainfall in July marked a turning point for winter crops across many states, the commodity report said. "After a late break and critically low soil moisture levels through June, the late July rainfall has given growers a renewed shot at achieving average yields or better," it said. "While it's come late, it arrived in time to stabilise crop potential, provided spring conditions remain favourable." US demand for Australian beef looks set to skyrocket as drought, disease and hefty tariffs hit other top cattle-producing countries. Australia exported more than 43,000 tonnes of beef to the United States in July, the highest volume since October 2024, according to a Bendigo Bank Agribusiness commodity report released on Tuesday. The extra demand came at the same time as the federal government announced it would allow imports of US beef that had been raised in Canada or Mexico but processed in America. Australia had faced pressure from President Donald Trump to ease the restrictions on beef as it sought exemptions from wide-ranging tariffs. As US herd numbers continued to dwindle due to drought in 2025, Americans have also been eating beef imported from Canada and Brazil. But with Brazil facing a 50 per cent tariff, Canada slipping further into drought and a US ban on Mexican beef due to a parasite infestation, America would have to source meat from elsewhere. Australian beef exports to the US would likely "skyrocket" as a result, according to the commodity report. "That is now three of (America's) top five import markets affected due to tariffs, a reduced herd or disease," it said. "This presents even greater opportunities for Aussie producers as the US looks to satisfy their own domestic demand with expected falling beef production." Australian cattle producers had anticipated that opening the gates to US-processed beef would have a limited effect on the domestic market. "The US is already importing bucket loads of beef from from Australia, so for it to come back the other way is unlikely," Craig Huf, a grazier and chair of the NSW Farmers Association far north coast branch, told AAP after the decision in July. "So, in the short term, we probably don't expect it to impact us." Cattle industry groups have called for an independent review into the government's decision to lift the US beef restrictions. "Australia has got some of the best biosecurity protocols in the world and the produce here is often bought because of its clean, green image," Mr Huf said. "So to jeopardise that is pretty risky, but here's hoping the science is right." The total export market has been "extraordinary" in 2025, with July the highest monthly export volume on record at just under 150,500 tonnes. For growers, widespread rainfall in July marked a turning point for winter crops across many states, the commodity report said. "After a late break and critically low soil moisture levels through June, the late July rainfall has given growers a renewed shot at achieving average yields or better," it said. "While it's come late, it arrived in time to stabilise crop potential, provided spring conditions remain favourable." US demand for Australian beef looks set to skyrocket as drought, disease and hefty tariffs hit other top cattle-producing countries. Australia exported more than 43,000 tonnes of beef to the United States in July, the highest volume since October 2024, according to a Bendigo Bank Agribusiness commodity report released on Tuesday. The extra demand came at the same time as the federal government announced it would allow imports of US beef that had been raised in Canada or Mexico but processed in America. Australia had faced pressure from President Donald Trump to ease the restrictions on beef as it sought exemptions from wide-ranging tariffs. As US herd numbers continued to dwindle due to drought in 2025, Americans have also been eating beef imported from Canada and Brazil. But with Brazil facing a 50 per cent tariff, Canada slipping further into drought and a US ban on Mexican beef due to a parasite infestation, America would have to source meat from elsewhere. Australian beef exports to the US would likely "skyrocket" as a result, according to the commodity report. "That is now three of (America's) top five import markets affected due to tariffs, a reduced herd or disease," it said. "This presents even greater opportunities for Aussie producers as the US looks to satisfy their own domestic demand with expected falling beef production." Australian cattle producers had anticipated that opening the gates to US-processed beef would have a limited effect on the domestic market. "The US is already importing bucket loads of beef from from Australia, so for it to come back the other way is unlikely," Craig Huf, a grazier and chair of the NSW Farmers Association far north coast branch, told AAP after the decision in July. "So, in the short term, we probably don't expect it to impact us." Cattle industry groups have called for an independent review into the government's decision to lift the US beef restrictions. "Australia has got some of the best biosecurity protocols in the world and the produce here is often bought because of its clean, green image," Mr Huf said. "So to jeopardise that is pretty risky, but here's hoping the science is right." The total export market has been "extraordinary" in 2025, with July the highest monthly export volume on record at just under 150,500 tonnes. For growers, widespread rainfall in July marked a turning point for winter crops across many states, the commodity report said. "After a late break and critically low soil moisture levels through June, the late July rainfall has given growers a renewed shot at achieving average yields or better," it said. "While it's come late, it arrived in time to stabilise crop potential, provided spring conditions remain favourable."

News.com.au
18 minutes ago
- News.com.au
Top 10 at 11: ASX opens at fresh highs; small caps push deeper into e-commerce spaces
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