logo
Sydney Swans coach Dean Cox criticised for behaviour on sidelines

Sydney Swans coach Dean Cox criticised for behaviour on sidelines

News.com.au23-04-2025

A picture paints a thousand words.
Dean Cox's first year in the hot seat is beginning to resemble a nightmare. On Sunday, Sydney were handed another home-ground defeat and the struggling coach couldn't hide his despair.
Cox is under scrutiny for the visible strain etched across his face while sitting on the sidelines this weekend as the Swans lost by eight points to Port Adelaide. Images captured of his gestures — hands on head and arms flailing — have projected the wrong image according to club stalwarts and footy commentators.
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.
Former Swans premiership coach Paul Roos said the performance against Port Adelaide was 'un-Sydney'. The team once feared for its clinical efficiency has now been reduced to what Roos called 'Globetrotter football.'
Footy journalist Caroline Wilson also took aim at Cox's body language, saying his behaviour in the box when things aren't going his way goes back to the beginning of the season when it all went wrong at the SCG in round one.
'What concerned me a lot when he came to the bench during that Port Adelaide game was there were just too much drama (going on),' Wilson said on Channel 7's The Agenda Setters.
Vision showed Cox and football boss Leon Cameron waving their arms with theatrical exasperation. Cox later sat with his head in his hands as Port Adelaide opened the second half with a goal.
'I think if you're seeing that as a player … I don't think you want to see that,' Wilson said.
Kane Cornes agreed.
'If you're going to be on the bench, there needs to be positivity. You've got to be engaging with your players, talking instructions, otherwise get up to the box where your players can't see it,' he said.
Luke Hodge said if a coach is losing the plot in view of the players, it can often make the situation worse.
'So if you've got a coach down there losing his marbles and carrying on, that's taking the attention of the players from what's going on out there.'
Dale Thomas said the optics were 'horrible'.
'I'm happy with that being in the box but you can't be doing that if you are down on the ground, because that sends a horrible message to your players who are doing their absolute best,' he said.
'Just look at the lack of cohesion once this ball is won back from Port Adelaide … Are they a pressing defence? Are they a collapsing defence? There are players going in all sorts of direction.
'They have no idea what they're doing coming forward. There's a loose handover in there … That's an end-to-end transition through the middle of the ground that they play better than any other side.
'That is, again, confusion, and no doubt that is why time and again we're seeing Dean Cox with that frustration.'
'They would have gone through a defensive mode, and at the minute, they are on completely different pages.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

St Kilda coach Ross Lyon suggests local media frenzy over Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera in Adelaide could impact his contract decision
St Kilda coach Ross Lyon suggests local media frenzy over Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera in Adelaide could impact his contract decision

News.com.au

time12 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

St Kilda coach Ross Lyon suggests local media frenzy over Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera in Adelaide could impact his contract decision

St Kilda coach Ross Lyon is adamant he's 'not losing any sleep' over the looming decision from off-contract star Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera after a personal trip to Adelaide in which he was 'terrorised twice' by local media. The South Australian-born 22-year-old, who is bound for All-Australian selection in 2025, is believed to be at the centre of a bidding war between Adelaide and Port Adelaide, with the Saints also hopeful of hanging on to him. His manager, Ben Williams, denied a report suggesting Wanganeen-Milera wouldn't join the Crows due to a racism incident involving former Adelaide captain Taylor Walker in 2021. Wanganeen-Milera has close links with Port players, including Jason Horne-Francis, and the pair were spotted together at a frozen yoghurt shop in Adelaide where Wanganeen-Milera spent the bye week catching up with 'fam' according to Lyon. While there have been reports that Wanganeen-Milera, who has played 75 games with the Saints since his debut in 2022, has issues living in Melbourne, Lyon said the 'melting pot' in Adelaide, which included TV cameras following the young gun at the airport, showed what life could be like if he moved. 'What's interesting is the environment over there,' Lyon said on Tuesday. 'He's been doorstopped twice and terrorised twice (by media). It talks to the intensity over there, getting doorstopped at the airport during the bye. It's interesting how a non-story becomes a story. Clearly it's good to have competitive tension.' Lyon said the Saints were confident the development and support Wanganeen-Milera had been offered at St Kilda and their plans to be a 'great club' were the best way to ensure he remained on a deal that could reach seven figures annually. 'Build it and they will come. Develop our players, support them, make it a safe environment and then at the end of the day you are either good enough to keep them or you're not,' he said. 'I'm not losing too much sleep over it. 'We want to make St Kilda great. We've got a lot of hard work to do over a long period of time.' Lyon was also unmoved by the catch-up with Horne-Francis, a fellow Indigenous star, adamant St Kilda did a lot of work for its own First Nations players. 'The brother boys, they love getting together,' he said. 'We've got Pauly Vandenbergh (AFL diversity pathways manager) coming into the club today who works closely with our First Nations players. 'That's just one aspect of the game.' The Saints will tackle the Western Bulldogs on Thursday night just 52 days after copping a 71-point smashing in round 6. Midfielder Jack Macrae is set to push for selection against his old team after recovering from a punctured lung.

Giants' developing star says too much pressure can be put on young players
Giants' developing star says too much pressure can be put on young players

ABC News

time3 hours ago

  • ABC News

Giants' developing star says too much pressure can be put on young players

The one thing Aaron Cadman didn't realise he would need in abundance when he arrived at GWS was patience. At 17, he was a winger drafted in the prized number one spot to become a key forward, and by his own admission, "weighed nothing" and "was just skin and bone running on the wing". "There's always a couple of man-childs getting around who dominate early … Obviously, I've got a bit of a thinner frame. I had to spend years in an elite environment for my body to develop the way that it needs to," Cadman told ABC Sport. "Then there's also the craft stuff that's different to say a midfielder or small forward … It's much harder to shift someone who's 110 kilos than 70 kilos." All that made one of the toughest components for him coming into the system his own impatience. "I didn't want to wait for anything," Cadman said. "And then also the pressure with being number one. You want to play straight away and showcase what you got and show people why you've been drafted at number one. So, it was really tough." Now 21 and in his third year, Cadman feels that a good game for him might not be kicking multiple goals but rather bringing the ball to ground enough to get others involved. This year, he has already had more goal assists than last season and he is on track to beat his goal tally. "I've slowly reined in my emotions and really developed in that area, developed a lot of patience," he said. But there are still days he thinks, "I should be dominating now". In these moments — and wanting to be a premier goal scorer of the competition — he thinks of the likes of Carlton's Charlie Curnow. Curnow debuted in 2016 after being taken by Carlton at pick 12. Six years later he became a two-time Coleman medallist and All-Australian (2022, 2023) after an injury-riddled start to his career. Similarly, former Geelong star Tom Hawkins debuted in 2007 yet didn't start his five-time All Australian run until 2012. He is now ranked 13th highest in the history of the league for goalkicking. Among some Cats fans, there was an impatience for him to develop quicker in his early years. "Sometimes it takes you six years. So, it takes time — but I hate waiting," Cadman said. "I guess it is a good mindset to have, in a way, but sometimes it does kill me" Cadman has also been afforded time to develop in Sydney away from the limelight and in a side that is not dwelling down the bottom of the ladder. While number one draft picks often find themselves in struggling or rebuilding sides — such as Harley Reid at West Coast, Jason Horne-Francis while at North Melbourne and Sam Lalor at Richmond — the Giants made a preliminary final in 2023, the year Cadman debuted. "People think that just because they come in, they can swing everything around, but it's not a one-man show," Cadman said. "I feel for those guys and the pressure that's put on them. They seem to be dealing with it. Everyone deals with it in different ways but they seem to be striving and playing some really good footy. "But you can't expect someone in their first — you could almost say first three years — to be the best player on the team. It takes a lot of time. "There's always going to be outliers with [Nick] Daicos and [Harry] Sheezel. They're unbelievable players. But people need to develop an elite environment and just have time in the system and to educate and hone in their skills." Cadman is also in a forward line with the reigning Coleman medalist Jesse Hogan and 2023 All Australian captain Toby Greene, which helps things. "Even if I compare me and [Nate Caddy] a little bit … but you can't even really compare us because he's basically been handed the reins to the whole forward line himself," Cadman said of the 19-year-old Bomber who coach Brad Scott hailed as a "point of difference" for the club after just three games. "He's getting basically the number one defender every week, and sometimes he's got limited help. So he's flying for balls with three other people on him. He's doing it tough, but hats off to him, and he's going to be a superstar." Cadman added that for key forwards, it's not always about what happens on the stat sheet, where a good game for him in his first two years was just bringing the ball to the front. "That's all it was. [And] it's all these things, all these patterns that key forwards will run that set others up. It's the same with every other position," he said. "And first-year players, I think there's way too much pressure being put on them … I'm just super grateful that I'm here in Sydney, where a bit of the limelight is off and just allows me to focus on what I need to focus on."

Furious Matildas star Katrina Gorry blasts Sam Kerr baby critics
Furious Matildas star Katrina Gorry blasts Sam Kerr baby critics

News.com.au

time3 hours ago

  • News.com.au

Furious Matildas star Katrina Gorry blasts Sam Kerr baby critics

Matildas great Katrina Gorry has blasted some of the commentary that accompanied Sam Kerr's announcement of the birth of her baby boy. Midfielder Gorry, 32, is a mainstay of the Australian side, making 114 appearances to date in well over a decade in national colours. Watch every game of The 2025 FIFA Club World Cup LIVE on Kayo Sports | New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited time offer. Captain of West Ham United in the Women's Super League, Gorry has two children with her fiancee Clara Markstedt, son Koby born last year and three-year-old daughter Harper. Gorry and fellow footballer Markstedt are getting married on June 15. Last month, Kerr and her fiancee Kristie Mewis came under fire from conservative politicians after welcoming baby boy Jagger into the world. The Matildas star and Mewis announced the birth of their first child on Instagram, writing: 'Our little man is here.' The post was flooded with messages of support, but Lyle Shelton – national director of political party Family First – used the opportunity to slam the pair's decision. Shelton claimed by raising Jagger, the football glamour couple are 'depriving' the child of his 'human rights'. 'A baby is born – but where's dad?' Shelton wrote on social media alongside a picture of the loved-up couple with their newborn. 'Family First congratulates Sam Kerr and Kristie Mewis on the birth of their son – but we must speak a truth too many are afraid to say. 'No child should be deliberately deprived of their father. Children aren't lifestyle accessories – they're human beings with rights.' Gorry has just published her autobiography, titled Katrina Gorry: A Matildas hero's story of football, motherhood and breaking down barriers, and spoke exclusively to She was asked for her reaction to Shelton's comments and said she was stunned that sort of attitude is still prevalent today. 'It's tough,' Gorry told From The Newsroom podcast, which you can watch in the video at the top of the page. 'When I look at my kids, they're full of love, they're full of happiness, you know? 'Yeah they don't have a dad, but they've got two mums. 'Harper thinks it's pretty cool that she's got two mums and I see the life that they live. 'I've seen kids being brought up with a mum and a dad and not treated the same way. 'And I think if you're two healthy parents and you can give them love and happiness, then what's left to give? 'It shouldn't matter if you're a male or female. It should just matter if you can love the child and give them everything that they need. 'And that makes me really upset that people are still, you know, living in that age and in that era and can't see how loved these kids are. 'We spend so much money just to have them. So, you know, we've made that decision together to be able to have the kids. 'We've spent a lot of money to do it and I think that says more than anything.' In Shelton's post on Kerr, he went on to ask: 'When the cultural elites cheer on choices that sideline dads, who's left standing for the child? 'Love is not enough. Every child deserves – and needs – a mum and a dad, wherever possible. 'It's time to put children's rights before adult desires.' Unsurprisingly, Shelton was one of the leading voices of the 'No' campaign against same-sex marriage in Australia in 2017. He wasn't the only one angry at Kerr and Mewis for raising a child together, with United Australia Party Senator Ralph Babet, also commenting: 'Children need both a mother and a father.' Those takes came after the couple's baby announcement was inundated with backlash and homophobic abuse. In December, Kerr announced on Instagram the couple would soon become a family of three and the news was widely shared by various accounts such as the Matildas and her club team Chelsea. However, such was the magnitude of hatred and homophobia in the comments, Chelsea had to turn off and hide various comments. The abuse was swiftly condemned by Chelsea Pride, an LGBTQ+ supporter group. 'Homophobia has no place in football, at Chelsea, or in our society,' the group said in a statement. 'It's heartbreaking and infuriating to see social media flooded with hateful comments when we should be celebrating love, pride, and unity. 'Over the weekend and today, our club was forced to shut down comments and even delete posts, posts that should have been shining moments of joy, from the powerful symbolism of Rainbow Laces to the incredible news that Sam Kerr and Kristie Mewis will welcome a child in 2025. ''No to Hate' isn't just a slogan; it's a battle cry. It's a reminder that we must keep fighting for what is right, for true acceptance, and for a game that embraces everyone without exception.'

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