logo
Adam Treloar hanging by a thread as scans reveal crushing blow

Adam Treloar hanging by a thread as scans reveal crushing blow

Perth Now23-06-2025
Western Bulldogs midfielder Adam Treloar faces an uphill battle to play much more footy this year after scans revealed another serious calf injury.
Treloar was substituted out of Sunday's big win over Richmond after suffering yet another calf issue.
7NEWS chief AFL reporter Mitch Cleary said he will be sidelined for at least six weeks.
'Adam Treloar's scans have revealed a calf strain,' Cleary said on Monday.
'Set to be sidelined for at least the next six weeks.
'Going to be touch-and-go for a H&A return… finals another conversation (if Dogs make it).
'The All-Australian also out of contract for 2026.'
The 32-year-old, who became an All-Australian for the first time last year, was playing just his fourth senior match of the season.
He missed the first seven games of the year after a pre-season injury, but managed just one match (against Port Adelaide in Round 8) before he was sidelined again.
Treloar returned to face the Hawks in Round 13, and played against the Saints the following week before going down once more on Sunday.
With nine rounds left in the season, it leaves Treloar's season hanging by a thread.
The Bulldogs look likely to make the finals, which will give the veteran more chance to recover but also will leave coach Luke Beveridge with a massive decision on whether to select the injury-prone midfielder.
Earlier this month, Beveridge maintained they would continue to pick him when he's fit.
'We're hoping he's got a future beyond this year and that will take care of itself. We'll work through that,' he said.
'He's just such an influential player and an esteemed player over a long period of time, that by and large, week to week, he's probably going to be in our best 22 or 23 so we'll pick him when he's when he's feeling fit and healthy and strong.'
The Western Bulldogs currently sit in eighth position on the ladder ahead of Friday night's huge clash against Sydney.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Mourinho's Fenerbahce hit five to end Bos' Euro dream
Mourinho's Fenerbahce hit five to end Bos' Euro dream

Perth Now

time3 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Mourinho's Fenerbahce hit five to end Bos' Euro dream

Jose Mourinho's Fenerbahce have surged into the Champions League qualifying play-offs by overturning a two-goal deficit against Robin van Persie-coached Feyenoord. The result was a blow for Socceroo defender Jordan Bos who had joined his boyhood club during the off-season and hoped to play with them in the Champions League. Bos had made the winning goal when Fenerbahce lost 2-1 in the Netherlands last week. The Turkish club fell further behind in the second leg of Tuesday's third qualifying round clash when Feyenoord defender Tsuyoshi Watanabe scored the opener in the 41st minute. Mourinho's team rallied quickly with two goals before half-time — the second by Colombia forward Jhon Duran, on a season-long loan from Saudi club Al Nassr — on the way to a 5-2 win. That meant Fenerbahce advanced 6-4 on aggregate. Fenerbahce will host Benfica or Nice in the first leg of the play-off round next week with a place in the lucrative 36-team league phase at stake. Benfica started the second leg against Nice with a 2-0 lead at home later on Tuesday. Daniel Arzani, another of Tony Popovic's European-based Australian players, didn't feature in Ferencvaros' 3-0 defeat of Bulgarian club Ludogorets. That took the Hungarian side through 3-0 on aggregate. Rangers advanced to the play-offs 4-2 on aggregate against Viktoria Plzen despite a 2-1 loss in the Czech Republic. The Scottish club will host the first leg of their play-off next week against Club Brugge who got three second-half goals in a 3-2 comeback win over Salzburg to advance 4-2 on aggregate. Russian-owned Pafos, the champions of Cyprus, beat Dynamo Kyiv of Ukraine 2-0 to advance 3-0 on aggregate. Copenhagen beat its near neighbour Malmo 5-0, one week after a scoreless draw on the other side of the Oresund Bridge that connects Denmark and Sweden. Copenhagen's reward is a two-legged play-off against Swiss champions Basel.

Weary Popyrin suffers agonising defeat in Cincinnati
Weary Popyrin suffers agonising defeat in Cincinnati

Perth Now

time3 hours ago

  • Perth Now

Weary Popyrin suffers agonising defeat in Cincinnati

After three-and-a-half hours in sweltering Ohio heat Alexei Popyrin just ran out of gas in an epic Cincinnati Open third round tie with ninth seed Andrey Rublev. Popyrin lost 7-6 (7-5) 6-7 (5-7) 5-7 after a see-saw encounter that could easily have gone the other way. The Australian, himself ranked 19, will have the consolation of a very good workout ahead of the US Open, and may appreciate some rest after such a draining encounter. However, his chances of a top 16 ranking and better seeding slot in New York appear to be gone. When Rublev's passing shot beat him to seal victory with the Russian's first match point Popyrin looked very weary, then smiled ruefully as he dragged himself to the net to give his opponent a hug. The pair had slugged it out for three tight sets, interrupted in the last by a lengthy rain break. First up on Court 3, in front of a decent crowd mainly supporting Rublev, Popyrin's opening serve was broken from 40-0 up, but he broke back immediately, helped by a brace of double-faults by the Russian. The first set thereafter went with serve to the tiebreak. After four mini-breaks in that Popyrin served an ace at 5-5 then Rublev, facing set point, double-faulted. The second set went with serve to the tiebreak, albeit Popyrin had to save three break points while forcing none. After double-faulting at 4-5 in the breaker he broke for 5-5, only for Rublev to sweep the next two points and the tiebreak. The pair had been playing for more than two hours at this stage, in 32C heat. There followed an epic 28-point service game in which Popyrin forced but failed to take four break points. The match had begun shortly after 11am local time, in fierce sunshine, but for some time humidity had been rising and clouds building. Suddenly, with the third set poised at 2-1 to Rublev, and 30-30 on Popyrin's serve, a cloudburst flooded the court and sent players and spectators rushing for cover. Popyrin immediately went a break point down when they resumed just under an hour later, but saved it before serving out with two aces. The match then went with serve until, at 30-30 and 5-6 down, the Australian had to step away from his serve due to a ringing mobile phone. It may have made no difference but his subsequent serves weren't quite there and Rublev pounced. The Russian now meets Argentina's Francisco Comensana who beat Reilly Opelka 6-7 (4-7) 6-4 7-5. Adam Walton is also in third round action, against Jiri Lehecka, the 22nd-seeded Czech. The winner will meet No.5 seed Ben Shelton or Roberto Bautista Agut in the last 16. Elsewhere on Tuesday three-time grand slam semifinalist Grigor Dimitrov has withdrawn from the US Open, a little more than a month after he tore a chest muscle and had to quit playing against Jannik Sinner at Wimbledon. Alejandro Tabilo gets his spot in the men's singles, which starts on August 24.

Football Australia dumps ‘national playing style' amid executive clean-out
Football Australia dumps ‘national playing style' amid executive clean-out

Sydney Morning Herald

time4 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Football Australia dumps ‘national playing style' amid executive clean-out

Plans for a 'distinctly Australian' style of play for the Socceroos and Matildas that would direct player and coach development appear to have been abandoned by Football Australia amid a dramatic restructure of its executive team. Two-time A-League championship coach Ernie Merrick was the author of a 57-page document seen by this masthead, titled Forward Press 2032: A blueprint for sustainable success on the world stage, which outlines a high-intensity, proactive brand of football designed to be embedded at every level of the game, from grassroots to the national teams, aimed at achieving success at the 2032 Olympic Games in Brisbane. But the document was blocked from release during Merrick's time as FA's chief football officer – and won't be made public, at least in its current form, after his position was made redundant last month. It comes amid a dramatic turnover of executive staff at FA – headed by the departure of former chief executive James Johnson – which has been described as akin to regime change by several sources within the sport's administrative ranks. Of the 14 members of FA's executive leadership team as listed in the federation's 2023 annual report, only two remain: commercial boss Tom Rischbieth and ex-Matilda Sarah Walsh, who is heading up the 2026 Women's Asian Cup organising committee. Last week, Peter Filopoulos, FA's former media and marketing chief who was closely aligned with Johnson, was also shown the door without public acknowledgement. Best known for twice winning the A-League Men with Melbourne Victory in the competition's early years, Merrick was a surprise appointment when he was unveiled in mid-2022 as FA's first chief football officer, and part of his wide-ranging remit was to define what would become Australia's 'national style' of play. Johnson created the position in response to concern about Australia's technical direction after the Socceroos' failure to qualify directly for the World Cup in Qatar and the Matildas' disappointing quarter-final exit at the last Asian Cup. At the time, FA had gone more than two years without a full-time technical lead after the resignation of Rob Sherman, the former national technical director who criticised the 'dominant political, bureaucratic and administrative mindset' of the sport and FFA on his way out. The role of the chief football officer, Johnson said, would suit a 'disruptor' who was prepared to take on stakeholders to advance player development, coaching education, and bigger-picture philosophical matters, including a rewriting of the national football curriculum. Merrick, however, soon faced pushback internally and externally on some of the reforms he pursued, according to sources who spoke on the condition of anonymity due to the sensitivity of the matter, and some of the things he had worked on never saw the light of day.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store