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'Couldn't hit the side of a barn': Dockers miss chances

'Couldn't hit the side of a barn': Dockers miss chances

Yahoo5 days ago
Fremantle coach Justin Longmuir has urged his team to become more ruthless after being left to rue yet another missed opportunity to build all-important percentage.
The Dockers posted their ninth win from their past 10 matches on Saturday when they defeated struggling West Coast by 49 points at Optus Stadium.
The 18.18 (126) to 12.5 (77) triumph kept Fremantle (13-6) within percentage of the top four.
Although a 49-point win on paper sounds strong, Fremantle created enough opportunities to win in the vicinity of 75 points.
It continued a trend for Fremantle, who have only won in excess of 50 points once this season.
Out of the top nine teams, Fremantle (111.7 per cent) possess by far the worst percentage.
If could be a big issue that comes back to haunt them in the next month as they attempt to lock down a finals or even a top-four berth.
Longmuir didn't mince his words when talking about the missed opportunity of building percentage after the win over West Coast.
"We just couldn't hit the side of a barn, especially in that second quarter - 1.6 and two out on the full," Longmuir said.
"When you're 18.18 and there are four out of the fulls (it is a missed chance).
"I said to the players after the game, it's been a bit of a trend for us.
"I think we held Adelaide to 38 points or something until three-quarter time, and then coughed up three or four goals out of our back half just by going to sleep in that game. "It was a bit the same with the GWS game. And you do that across the course of the year - take one per cent here or there - it adds up.
"So we need to be a bit more ruthless in that sense. And maybe that's the next step."
Fremantle will have another chance to boost their percentage next Sunday when they host struggling Carlton at Optus Stadium, before rounding out their home-and-away campaign with games against Port (away), Brisbane (home) and Western Bulldogs (away).
Given the Dockers' poor percentage, they will probably need to win all four in order to nab a prized top-four berth.
There were plenty of big contributors in the win over West Coast, but the most pleasing aspect of the triumph was the hot form of Hayden Young.
The 24-year-old made his return from hamstring surgery as the sub last week in the one-point win over Collingwood.
He was handed a start against West Coast, and went on to tally 23 disposals, seven clearances, 555m gained and three goals before being subbed out early in the last.
His efforts earned him a maiden Glendinning-Allan medal as best afield, and he looms as a key player in Fremantle's push for premiership glory.
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A.J. Preller's busiest deadline day was a sight to behold: ‘Something out of a video game'
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New York Times

time24 minutes ago

  • New York Times

A.J. Preller's busiest deadline day was a sight to behold: ‘Something out of a video game'

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'Grave doubt': Payne Haas cops fresh setback as Broncos face brutal double blow
'Grave doubt': Payne Haas cops fresh setback as Broncos face brutal double blow

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

'Grave doubt': Payne Haas cops fresh setback as Broncos face brutal double blow

The Brisbane Broncos have suffered a double setback ahead of Friday night's must-win clash against South Sydney, with Payne Haas battling illness and Brendan Piakura ruled out of the game. s Peter Badel reports that Haas has been struck down with an infection and is in 'grave doubt' for the round 22 clash against the Rabbitohs at Suncorp Stadium. Brisbane will have until an hour before the game kicks off at 8pm on Friday night to make a final call on the 25-year-old wrecking ball. But if Haas is a late scratching for the showdown against the Bunnies, it would be a massive blow to the sixth-placed Broncos' hopes of finishing the regular season inside the top-four. Even if the NSW Origin star is deemed well enough to play, he's set to go into the clash against Wayne Bennett's Rabbitohs underdone. The powerhouse prop reportedly started feeling unwell during the Broncos captain's run at Red Hill on Thursday morning. But coach Michael Maguire will understandably give him until the 11th hour to prove his fitness for Friday night's game. Payne Haas in significant doubt for the Broncos in Round 22 due to illness (via @badel_cmail).Has been kept in the squad post 24 hour cuts but reportedly a high chance of being ruled out for final team lists - Broncos going to give him up til then to prove his fitness. — NRL PHYSIO (@nrlphysio) July 31, 2025 He has an infection. They have until an hour before kick off to make a final call — Pete Badel (@badel_cmail) July 31, 2025 Haas had already been battling a number of injury niggles, but Brisbane's medical team revealed this week that his workload was being managed and insisted he would keep playing. The NSW prop has been dealing with an ongoing lower back issue that troubled him during the Blues' Origin series defeat. And he was also seen limping at the end of Brisbane's shock loss to Parramatta last week after a knock to the ankle, which fortunately wasn't serious enough to require scans. But the Broncos' head of football Troy Thomson - who was also the high performance manager for the Kangaroos and the premiership-winning Rabbitohs side in 2014 - explained that it is more beneficial for Haas to continue training and playing with Brisbane. And the club rejected suggestions that it would be more beneficial to rest him. "If Payne can't play a game of footy of course we are going to give him a rest, but this whole notion that giving him a rest is going to fix him is not how the human body works," Thomson told AAP. "Movement helps recovery. If you don't move, you get sorer. "We are managing Payne's loads, like we do all of the players on an individual basis to ensure they are fresh enough but also have sufficient fitness, strength, flexibility and range of motion to play week-in and week-out NRL. It is about ensuring they have the right stimulus ... and volume and intensity of load as well." Brendan Piakura ruled out for Broncos after head knock The Broncos can ill afford to lose another player from their forward pack - particularly one as influential as Haas - after Piakura was a late scratching for the Rabbitohs game. It's understood the Brisbane edge forward suffered a head knock at training, meaning he will undergo a mandatory 11-day stand down which is also set to rule Piakura out of next Thursday night's blockbuster against premiership favourites, Melbourne. Veteran back-rower Jack Gosiewski has come into Brisbane's starting side to replace Piakura for the Souths game, with front-row recruit Ben Talty added to the bench. If Haas is ruled out, then either Kobe Hetherington or fellow interchange forward Xavier Willison could be promoted to a starting prop role, with utility forward Tyson Smoothy likely to come into the 17 after being named in Brisbane's extended squad. Broncos team newsIt's understood Brendan Piakura suffered a head knock at @brisbanebroncos training which is why he was a late scratching for @SSFCRABBITOHS 11-day stand down would also see him miss @storm next week. — Joel Gould (@JoelGould6) July 31, 2025 with AAP

Pocklington old boy identified as Lions rugby pioneer in Australia
Pocklington old boy identified as Lions rugby pioneer in Australia

Yahoo

timean hour ago

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Pocklington old boy identified as Lions rugby pioneer in Australia

Revisited research prompted by the current British and Irish Lions rugby tour to Australia has confirmed that a Pocklington School old boy, Walter Judkins, played a key part in the first Lions team that went 'down under' in 1899. Judkins had gone under the radar as one of the school's sporting greats, until research in the 1970s uncovered an item in the Pocklington Weekly News newspaper's edition of August 26, 1899, stating: "W Judkins, late of Pocklington School, is one of the team of English Rugby Footballers at present touring Australia." Based on this, Judkins was included in an article in Pocklington School's 1979-80 magazine that celebrated its rugby centenary; but doubts subsequently arose when British Lions' history publications, and later the official Lions' website, named the 1899 tourist as 'William Judkins,' not the ex-Pocklington schoolboy, Walter. So Pocklington's W Judkins went back under the radar until the 2025 Lions tour sparked another look. Thanks to online reference sources, it has been possible to plot Walter Judkins' life history and prove he was indeed the W Judkins named in the 1899 Pocklington Weekly News. Walter Judkins was born in 1876 in Long Buckby, Northamptonshire, the son of a prosperous Nuneaton quarry owner. Judkins moved to Pocklington School in 1889, and was there a capable sportsman, winning events on sports days and playing first team cricket and football. After leaving school, Judkins had a stint at his local Nuneaton rugby club. His father died in March 1898; Walter turned up for a trial at Coventry Rugby Club, straightaway becoming a first team pack regular; and in April 1899, he was selected for the British Isle's team of 21 players to tour Australia the following month. The boat journey 'down under' took five weeks. Judkins played in 13 of the 21 games in the ten-week tour, contributing to the Lions' 3-1 series victory. After returning to England, he volunteered for army service, and saw action in the Ashanti campaign and Boer War. He later became director of the Judkins Quarry and Brickworks. He married in 1909 but had no children and died suddenly in 1921 on a trip to South Africa.

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