Nash cops four matches for crude hit; Moore out of Anzac Day clash; Yze prickly on Balta issue
Tehan said Nash was trying to slap the ball out of Miers' hands, but when the Geelong forward lowered the ball it exposed his face.
'At all times … Nash's eyes are only at the ball,' said Tehan.
'The level of the arm and the level of the ball are the same … the ball gets lowered out of that range and the consequence is ... the inside of the bicep [of Nash] makes contact with Mr Miers.
'This was not a dirty act, it was an obvious football act.'
But Gleeson said it should have been obvious such a careless act would have a significant impact to Miers.
Until Wednesday night, Nash had an unblemished tribunal record in more than 100 AFL games. He said it was accidental and the result of a legitimate football play.
'I simply tried to grab the ball and tap it free with my hand,' said Nash. 'I was looking at the footy the whole time.'
After the game Nash, who expressed his remorse during the hearing, said he tried to find Miers and apologise. The following day he sent Miers a text, which he recited to the tribunal.
'I wanted to check in on how you've pulled up today,' Nash texted Miers.
'I'm also reaching out to let you know that there really was no malice to that hit. I tried to play the ball I just got it badly wrong ... very sorry for what happened.'
Nash will miss Hawthorn's games against West Coast, Richmond, Melbourne and Gold Coast.
Moore to miss Anzac Day clash
Danny Russell
Collingwood have pulled Darcy Moore out of Friday's Anzac Day match after the Magpies captain started experiencing vertigo from an ear injury.
It means that vice captain Nick Daicos, at just 22, will become the youngest player to skipper the Pies in 57 years. The star onballer has played just 76 games and is in his fourth top-flight season.
At 22 years and 112 days Daicos will become Collingwood's fourth-youngest skipper, after Len Thompson in 1968 (20 years and 244 days), Dick Lee in 1910 (21 years and 91 days) and Murray Weideman in 1958 (22 years and 62 days).
Moore copped an accidental knee to the left ear from teammate Jeremy Howe during a marking contest in Collingwood's 52-point win over the Brisbane Lions last Thursday.
The skipper was taken from the ground at the time with blood trickling from a split at the bottom of the ear.
The cut needed stitches, but Moore was cleared of concussion during the match and again during the week.
Magpies coach Craig McRae announced during his press conference on Wednesday that Moore would not be playing against Essendon.
'Darcy's got a bit of an inner-ear issue,' McRae said. 'We are not sure exactly what it is. He has got a bit of vertigo symptoms at the moment.
'We've had scans, he is probably off to see a specialist now to see what is going on there.'
McRae said Moore had not been able to train because of the lingering issues.
'I just chatted to him prior to training, and he goes, 'It just sort of comes on and goes away',' the Collingwood coach said.
'I haven't experienced vertigo, but he is using that language. We don't know the answers yet. He is going to go and have some tests, and we might be able to report something this afternoon.'
The Collingwood match committee sit on Wednesday afternoon to name a replacement for the key defender.
'Lucky enough we have got a few players we think we can bring in,' McRae said.
'Whether we go tall or we go smaller in our backline, we will work through that, but it leaves a hole.'
'Any questions about the game?': Yze fed up with Balta questions
Danny Russell
Richmond coach Adem Yze has shut down a barrage of questions about Noah Balta's assault case as he revealed that the Tigers had ruled out appealing his punishment because it would stretch the matter out for another six weeks.
Yze fronted a press conference at the Tigers' Punt Road headquarters on Wednesday morning, speaking for the first time since Balta was sentenced to an 18-month correctional service order in Albury Local Court on Tuesday for assault.
Balta's penalty included a three-month nighttime curfew that will rule him out of at least four AFL games, including the Anzac Eve clash on Thursday night against Melbourne as well as the traditional Dreamtime at the G nighttime blockbuster against Essendon at the MCG in round 11.
The Tigers coach spoke for four minutes about how the club would help a 'flat' and 'remorseful' Balta deal with his unusual penalty, which requires him to give up alcohol and be in his house between 10pm and 6am for the next three months, before declaring he had said 'enough'.
'To be fair, that's about six questions I've answered about Noah,' Yze said.
'Our job right now, he's been sanctioned, we're going to support him from now moving forward, and we've got a massive game against Melbourne. No more questions. Any questions about the game?'
Loading
The Richmond communications department then told the media pack that they were 'moving on'.
Earlier, Yze had said the club and Balta accepted the court's punishment and would now set a plan for him, 'understanding which games he won't be allowed to play'.
'To go through an appeal process would be almost giving him the license to get back in and [say that] footy was more relevant than the sanction,' Yze said.
'He knew that he did wrong, and he was going to be punished. So to go through that for another six weeks, we just thought it was too hard, not only on him, but on our footy club and our playing group, so we accept the decision, and we move on.'
Loading
Yze said the club had not expected a curfew, but they knew the defender was going to be sanctioned.
'Dealing with that is just part of it,' he said. 'Like I said, he's really remorseful. We knew that he was going to be punished, and we went through that process yesterday, and now that's one little element that we'll have to play around with and deal with as a club.
'But at the same time we have got to wrap our arms around him and help him through this.'
Richmond banned Balta, 25, for four AFL games and two pre-season matches after it was revealed he had assaulted a man outside Mulwala Water Ski Club in the early hours of December 30 last year.
But Yze defended Balta's decision to not speak publicly about the court case.
'He will speak in time,' the Tigers coach said. 'It's pretty tough to go through. There's a fair few players that don't like speaking in front of the media, and they're not trained for that.
'And going through what he went through yesterday, you're obviously a little bit worried about what he could say.
'He was he's obviously disappointed, he's flat, he's emotional, so we've just got to protect him with that. He'll speak when he when it's his right time to speak and you will sense how remorseful he is.'
Balta played his first game of the season against the Gold Coast last Saturday, and will be expected to line up for the Tigers again against Hawthorn in a day match at the MCG in round eight.
Yze said Richmond would bring in 195-centimetre youngster Campbell Gray, 21, to make his debut on Thursday night. Gray was taken at pick 16 in the 2024 mid-season rookie draft.
Roos lash out at 'coach bashing' of Clarkson
AAP
North Melbourne have come out swinging in defence of Alastair Clarkson with football boss Todd Viney lashing 'disrespectful' criticism and 'coach bashing' of the Kangaroos mentor.
North have lost their past four games by an average of almost 59 points and reached a season-low with an embarrassing 82-point defeat to Carlton on Good Friday.
Clarkson has come under fire, but Viney, who also worked with him at Hawthorn, scoffed at any suggestion the four-time premiership mentor had lost his edge.
'I find it amusing, really. I find it probably disrespectful,' Viney said on SEN on Wednesday.
'This is not only to Clarko but this is something that's pointed at senior coaches all the time. It's almost like a sport ... There is a sport around putting undue pressure on senior coaches in my view.'
Viney pointed out 2025 was the first season where Clarkson hadn't also been dealing with the fallout from the Hawthorn racism saga.
'Not many clubs can really perform at their best when they've got such distractions going on,' Viney continued. 'He's had enormous distractions, unwarranted criticisms, judged unfairly – it's taken an enormous toll on him over those two years.
'Eventually we're into this third year, two years and six games in. He's a rejuvenated person, back to his old self, a lot of energy, seeing the game as well as he's ever seen it.'
Viney was adamant Clarkson was well supported and seeing the game 'as well as he ever has' but the Kangaroos were in the early stages of building their game.
'The criticism is really unwarranted,' he said. 'I think it's a bit of a sport, the coach-bashing thing.
'It's a tall poppy syndrome which is the Australian culture – we pick on the guys who have been successful and in time ultimately bring them down.'
Loading
Ahead of Saturday's away clash with Port Adelaide, Viney was adamant the Kangaroos were strong and aligned across the board and wouldn't deviate from their plans.
'A lot of things are going well so we won't be fractured, we won't fall into jumping at shadows with all the noise,' he said. 'We understand the game gives us nothing and we need to deserve to win games.
'No one's going to give us anything and we don't expect it, we expect to cop our right whack with performances like the weekend.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
9 hours ago
- Perth Now
Coach reveals on Smith meeting with AFL boss
Geelong coach Chris Scott is confident star recruit Bailey Smith's 'low-key' meeting with AFL chief executive Andrew Dillon about his on and off-field behaviour won't curtail the brilliant start to his Cats career, adamant the Brownlow Medal fancy 'did most of the talking'. Smith, who will return for the Cats against Essendon on Saturday after a brief injury lay-off, was part of a meeting with Dillon, Scott, Geelong football boss Andrew Mackie and chief executive Steve Hocking at his Surf Coast property last Thursday. It came after Smith put himself in the spotlight when he alluded to recreational drug use on social media, having already twice been fined for an inappropriate gesture towards opposition fans. Bailey Smith flips the bird at the crowd. Credit: Supplied Smith, who crossed to Geelong from the Western Bulldogs, also became embroiled in a verbal stoush with his former club after playing in front of a packed MCG and declaring 'you don't get that at Ballarat' after a crowd below 10,000 attended a Dogs game in the regional centre. But Scott was loathe to 'overplay the importance of it' and Smith was even 'keen' to have the face-to-face meeting after Dillon had addressed the issues publicly on occasion. 'It was a very casual and low-key catch-up, as much as can be between peers when you've got a 23 or 24-year-old with the CEO of the Cats and the CEO of the AFL,' Scott said on Friday. 'I'm loathe to say too much because I don't want to speak on behalf of Andrew Dillon, but as a club we certainly appreciated the fact that he reached out. 'The takeaways would have been Bailey has a really good feel that he's got a lot of people supporting him. 'I think he recognised better post that meeting how much the AFL value what he can bring to the game and by extension to the AFL themselves. Cats fans love Bailey Smith. Michael Klein Credit: News Corp Australia 'I don't think he's ever had any trouble with this, but it has been reinforced, the responsibility that he has to the game as well. Those things kind of go hand-in-glove. 'The more I talk about it, the more I get concerned that I give the impression that it was three or four people speaking at Bailey. It wasn't like that at all.' Scott said Smith, who has the support of the club and his teammates to continue to show his character, was in no way taken aback by the meeting and would continue to show his character. 'He actually did most of the talking – which is not unusual,' Scott said. 'It's been good fun to have him around the place. Players love him. Staff love him. 'We're on our toes, aren't we? ' 'It's exciting, but we've said for a long time we don't have any intention of trying to fill our list with the same sort of person. He is unique but in the most positive sense of the word.' Scott will notch a significant milestone on Saturday, coaching against his brother Brad, with the twins notching up a combined 1000 games as players and coaches.

News.com.au
9 hours ago
- News.com.au
Australian Olympian suspended as world left horrified by footage of horse whipped 42 times
WARNING: The following story contains images readers may find disturbing. Australian Olympian Heath Ryan has been provisionally suspended over horrific footage that has been circulated around the world. The equestrian horse trainer has taken to social media to defend his actions after video of an apparent whipping incident was shared by an outspoken dressage content publisher on social media platforms. The viral video shows Ryan, 66, appearing to strike six-year-old gelding Nico during an indoor training session. Watch the biggest Aussie sports & the best from overseas LIVE on Kayo Sports | New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited time offer. The clip that has been swirling online shows Ryan raise his left hand and strike the eventing horse on the rump 42 times. Equestrian Australia has said the organisation is aware of the footage and has begun an investigation. 'Equestrian Australia is extremely alarmed and concerned by the treatment of the horse shown in this footage,' the governing body said in a statement. 'The person depicted in the video is a member of Equestrian Australia. EA is currently investigating this matter ... [and] has this afternoon imposed a provisional suspension of this person's membership of Equestrian Australia and their rights, privileges and benefits associated with their membership. 'Equestrian Australia takes matters of animal welfare very seriously. Contrary to commentary on YouTube, we have no information to suggest Equestrian Australia management asked for the footage of this incident to be removed.' The situation has now turned into a very public war of words with Ryan telling Facebook followers he had been attempting to rescue the horse from being sent to the 'knackery'. According to Ryan, the chestnut gelding had been labelled 'dangerous' by a previous owner and had been marked to be euthanised before the horse was transported to the Novocastrian's training facility. He said the horse had attacked its previous owner and left the person needing treatment in an intensive care ward. 'That video was a life or death moment for Nico,' he wrote. 'I am so sad this was caught on video. If I had been thinking of myself, I would have immediately just gotten off and sent Nico to the Knackery,' Ryan said. He said the video was filmed two years' ago and was released by an 'unhappy' former employee. He insisted in the comments published on Facebook that he was attempting to save the horse's life. Citing Nico's incident with a previous owner, Ryan said: 'The horse grabbed her [by the mouth] and ripped her out of the saddle and savaged her. 'I'd never run into anything like that before. It would just stop, but it would also turn around and try and grab you like a stallion and rip you out of the saddle. It had done this with its previous owner, who had never hit it. '[The whipping] turned everything around. This horse went on to have its best interest looked after. Clearly, in hindsight, it wasn't horse abuse. It was actually saving its life. That's irrefutable. It's just that when you look at it, I understand it. It's bloody horrendous. 'And if you think I enjoyed that, I did not. I hated it, but I just felt I was desperate. This horse was maybe as good as dead as I thought it could be. Could I talk to it? Could I open up channels of communication? 'People say that's disgusting, and you know, that's not opening channels of communication. I was going, 'Well, it actually saved its life. In 48 hours, it would have been dead.' The horse is still alive and lives with a new owner. The scandal was first brought into the public domain when shared by the 'Dressage Hub' page on Facebook. The video, shared by Dressage Hub's Susan Wachowich, has since been deleted from Facebook. One version has since been shared under the 'Dressage Hub' profile on YouTube. The American-based site has 58,000 followers and the video of Ryan's incident has been viewed more than 26,000 times. Wachowich said in commentary of the video Ryan had 'savagely abused' the horse. 'This video infuriates me to the core,' she said. Wachowich also made a startling claim Equestrian Australia had asked the original publisher of the video to remove it from Facebook. Ryan is well-respected of the Australian equestrian community and represented Australia at the 2008 Beijing Olympics where the Australian team finished seventh in the mixed dressage team event.

The Age
18 hours ago
- The Age
‘Not to be messed with': Criminals recruited for country's biggest wind farm
When Keys arrived at the wind farm, west of Melbourne, as the AWU's chief delegate, he was determined not to let history repeat. According to project insiders, he began cultivating people who could keep the CFMEU at bay. Among them was ex-AFL player Billy Nicholls, who in 2015 was sentenced to 11 years' jail for shooting two men in their legs over drug disputes. Both victims survived, and Nicholls was convicted of intentionally causing serious his arrest, the former Hawthorn and Richmond player's life had become consumed by ice and a descent into the underworld. Keys told supporters Nicholls had not only left jail a reformed man, but with a tough-guy reputation that ensured the CFMEU had earmarked him to join its growing list of criminals-turned-union reps. Keys got in first, appointing Nicholls his new AWU wind farm deputy delegate. Nicholls would in turn bring his own hard men to the wind farm, proposing as a delegate an ex-Geelong bikie and boxer called Brad Azzopardi, who had been released from prison after being jailed for a dangerous driving incident that left a man dead. Wiser heads in the AWU intervened and Azzopardi, who has a 1 per cent bikie tattoo on his head, was instead given a support job on the wind farm. Nicholls also arranged for ex-bikie Jonny Walker, who served eight years in jail for manslaughter over the fatal bashing of a man in a bikie clubhouse, to get work at the wind farm after the CFMEU turfed Walker amid a bikie cleanout in the wake of the Building Bad scandal in July 2024. Along with hard men, Keys and his deputy were also assembling a group of staunch AWU companies capable of withstanding the CFMEU's pressure and heavy connections. Project sources said 24-7 would come to stand out. Workers from rival labour hire firms were pushed onto its books and 24-7 began promoting, through its website, its achievement in supplying 'approximately 50 skilled people … to one of the largest renewable wind farm projects in the world', as well as its 'close working relationships with industry stakeholders, including unions'. When project and union insiders queried why Keys appeared so enamoured with the labour hire company, despite its lack of obvious civil construction experience or AWU history, they became concerned it was because of the whispers that 24-7 had both gangland and CFMEU protection. When first approached by this masthead a fortnight ago, Keys said he had no knowledge of the firm's criminal links, or of any person called Bassem. He said 24-7 involved only 'two girl directors and the operations manager' and that he had 'never met a guy' called Bassem. Keys subsequently refused to answer further questions on the record, despite repeated attempts by this masthead to quiz him. But photos uncovered by this masthead show Keys, Nicholls and a third AWU delegate being hosted by 24-7 at the Collingwood AFL President's Lunch at the MCG on the day the Building Bad scandal broke last July. In the photos, there is no sign of the firm's female directors. Rather, the AWU trio are snapped at the 24-7 table posing with two brothers, Bassem and Osama Elsayed, along with a third man, Jarrod Hennig. Bassem is a convicted criminal who was accused in a September 2017 bail hearing by a Victoria Police special taskforce of hiring a violent criminal to bribe a grandmother preparing to testify that his brother Osama had shoved a gun in her son's mouth over a drug debt. A detective told the bail hearing of her concerns about Bassem's 'associations with organised crime' and how phone taps had captured him and his younger brother talking about how the violent criminal would be 'taking care of it'. Loading 'They have a conversation, laughing in regards to how loose … [the standover man] is and they know that he has … [previously] murdered someone,' the court heard. The court also heard allegations Bassem had separately extorted an associate over a $100,000 business loan, texting the victim: 'I hope Allah burns you in hell you thief' and allegedly hiring a standover man who threatened to 'rape' the debtor's family. After the victim retracted the most serious allegations from his statement, Bassem was sentenced in 2019 to six months' jail and a 12-month community corrections order. The conviction added to a criminal rap sheet that already included 'offences of violence, dishonesty, firearm, driving and drug offences' and which Victorian Supreme Court judge Rita Zammit described as 'significant'. Osama was, in August 2019, separately jailed for three years and four months for his role in a drug trafficking syndicate and for separate charges of robbery and recklessly causing injury. This drug syndicate was led by the third man photographed at the MCG lunch, Jarrod Hennig, who was jailed for eight years on multiple counts of drug trafficking. Industry, underworld and police sources, along with corporate and court records, reveal Hennig's middle name to be Morgan. He is the 'Jarrod Morgan' whose signature appears on AWU enterprise bargaining agreements secured by 24-7 in 2023 and 2024. Hennig is also married to Rebecca Reed, who signed off on the same documents as 24-7's director. Her co-director, Kristina Kuzmanovska, is Bassem Elsayed's wife. Osama Elsayed also appears to have been involved in the 24-7 group, creating a business called 24-7 Waterproofing in 2024 with fellow convicted drug trafficker Mohsen Mehrijafarloo. In January 2025, 24-7 Labour moved its registered office to a new Northcote business address. On the same day, Osama moved another of his businesses to the same registered office. The address is the office of accountant Charles Pellegrino, who for years has handled the finances of the CFMEU-backed gangland figures Mick Gatto and John Khoury. Pellegrino's Northcote office was raided in March by a federal police team investigating payments to Pellegrino's companies that were allegedly intended for Gatto, Khoury and other construction industry or union players. No charges have been laid. There is no suggestion the Elsayed brothers are the targets of that federal police operation. But they have their own strong links to the CFMEU. A character referee for Bassem at his 2017 bail hearing was ex-kickboxer and bouncer Chris Chrisopoulidis, who told the judge he was 'good friends' with Bassem. Chrisopoulidis would go on to become one of the CFMEU organisers who confronted Keys on the West Gate project. Bassem's wife, Kristina, is also a 50 per cent shareholder of a construction firm which gained a CFMEU enterprise bargaining agreement in 2021. Her co-owner of that business is builder Thomas Chillico, who is facing criminal charges for allegedly bribing a public official to gain construction permits. In a statement, Rebecca Reed said 24-7 'has no knowledge of or involvement with organised crime at all and is in all respects a well-run small family business. Loading 'If anyone has made allegations that 24-7 … is in any way involved with organised crime, those allegations are false,' she wrote. She said that while the company took a 'progressive approach to ex-offenders', Bassem had no 'formal involvement' with her firm. Reed did not answer several specific questions, or respond to further requests. Asked about whether he knew of 24-7 ties to any criminals such as Bassem, AWU secretary Ronnie Hayden said he had 'no idea who any of these people are'. 'When 24-7 came to us … Jared [sic] came with two women, Rebecca and Kristina,' he said. Hayden stressed he had never authorised the AWU to give preferential treatment to any labour hire firm. He conceded it was possible Keys had 'favoured' 24-7 because of concerns other labour hire firms were not giving the AWU the chance to recruit their workers as union members. 'I understand Johnny was pissed off with the labour hire companies that had done that,' he said. Before 24-7 was engaged at Golden Plains, there was the Host Group. It not only supplied multiple workers to the wind farm project but allied itself closely with the AWU in Queensland, contributing dozens of workers and security personnel to the government-funded Centenary Bridge upgrade in Brisbane. Host's director Gary Samuel has recently fallen out dramatically with the AWU over hotly disputed claims of underpayment of workers. But until last year, Host promoted itself boldly as the AWU's preferred labour hire company across the nation, helping it win an important contract with Centenary Bridge's key contractor, BMD Group. That deal partly involved providing security against intimidation tactics carried out by the CFMEU on the project. BMD declined to comment, but this masthead's investigation has confirmed that a security subcontractor used by Host to help do this engaged several high-ranking Comancheros, including the feared bikie group's national president, Bemir Saracevic, to intimidate CFMEU figures in Brisbane last year. While there is no suggestion that Samuel himself was involved in the Comanchero standover, he has a history of underworld relationships. Sources close to Samuel have confirmed he met Saracevic on multiple occasions, having employed one of the bikie boss's close friends as a Host adviser and worker. Royal commission records reveal that in 2011, Samuel advised a building firm owned by Mick Gatto and his fellow underworld identity Mat Tomas (both Tomas and Gatto achieved notoriety by beating separate murder charges). Samuel later went into a failed business venture with Tomas and also ran the Victorian operations of the now-deceased labour hire king Kevin McHugh, whom federal police charged in 2020 with money laundering offences and tax fraud. Loading Samuel is also close to convicted drug trafficker turned businessman Michael La Verde, who married into a prominent Calabrian mafia family and has a host of organised crime connections. La Verde claims on LinkedIn to be involved in Samuel's Host Group, although it is understood this is limited to Samuel providing his friend an email address. Samuel declined to answer specific questions but in a statement said it was 'important to acknowledge the ongoing rivalry between the CFMEU and the AWU' and that 'certain factions of the CFMEU have been linked to organised crime'. 'Our company is law-abiding and has no link to organised crime,' he said. The AWU is now rethinking its backing of the firm at the wind farm and the Centenary Bridge. Quizzed about Host, Hayden conceded the union failed to undertake thorough due diligence of labour hire firms it has supported with EBAs and other union backing. He said the union would lift its game but also urged federal and state governments to do more to weed out sinister players in the industry. Hayden said one vital reform the Albanese government could back was banning labour hire on government-funded projects. 'I think any project that the government are putting taxpayers' money into should be direct employment,' he said. A Victorian government spokesperson said it was 'eradicating the rotten culture' in the construction industry, including through the introduction of new powers for the Labour Hire Authority. Federal Workplace Relations minister Amanda Rishworth said the government was finalising a blueprint to improve the industry and was working on the implementation of a new labour hire system.