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St Kilda champion and star Seven commentator Nick Riewoldt sets staggering first in Australian Football Hall of Fame honour

St Kilda champion and star Seven commentator Nick Riewoldt sets staggering first in Australian Football Hall of Fame honour

7NEWSa day ago

Star Channel 7 commentators and football champions Nick Riewoldt, Luke Hodge and Erin Phillips have been inducted into the Australian Football Hall of Fame.
Phillips, one of the greatest AFLW players of all time, is the second woman to enter the Hall of Fame, while Riewoldt, quite remarkably, became the first No.1 draft pick to be inducted.
WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Nick Riewoldt inducted into Australian Football Hall of Fame.
Riewoldt was eligible for the award two years ago but was unable to take part in the ceremony because he was living in the US.
On Tuesday night in Melbourne, he was the first player at the event to be honoured with his overdue award.
Riewoldt holds St Kilda's record for the most games as captain, with 221 of his 336 matches.
The key forward was a five-time All-Australian who went agonisingly close to a premiership, playing in St Kilda's draw and two losses across 2009-10.
Riewoldt said he had made his peace with not being able to help the Saints win their elusive second flag
'Rather than feeling like I walked away with the game still owing me something, I walk away feeling like the game gave me absolutely everything,' he said.
After he was taken with the No.1 draft pick in 2000, the Queenslander booted 718 goals for St Kilda.
He was captain of the club in 2005 and from 2007-16, and was a six-time best-and-fairest winner.
Veteran AFL journalist Caroline Wilson congratulated Riewoldt on his amazing career.
'There he is ... our Monday night (Agenda Setters) colleague, the 300-plus gamer,' Wilson said.
'He has just been inducted into the Australian Football Hall of Fame. There he is with his family. He's got two tables there. There he is with (AFL chair) Richard Goyder. Of course, inducted two years ago, but back in Australia and able to accept the award, the first No.1 draft pick to actually become elevated into the Hall of Fame.'
Kane Cornes was staggered by that fact.
'That's amazing, isn't it?' Cornes said. 'What a career.
Phillips is not only the second woman inducted, but becomes the first father-daughter combination.
The Adelaide and Port Adelaide star was a marquee name when the AFLW started in 2017 and she joins women's pioneer Debbie Lee, who was inducted four years ago.
Phillips paid an emotional tribute to her dad Greg, and Lee, who were at Tuesday's annual induction dinner in Melbourne, in her acceptance speech.
'To Dad, I can't imagine how hard it would have been to tell your 13-year-old daughter that she couldn't play the game she loves any more,' she said.
'And 27 years later, she's standing next to you in the Hall of Fame.'
Phillips thanked the 'incredible women' who made the AFLW possible and singled out Lee.
'You kicked down this door so others could walk through,' she said. 'I'm so proud to be by your side and I can't wait to kick down more doors with you Deb.'
Phillips ended her stellar playing career at the end of 2022. The five-year player eligibility rule for the Hall of Fame was changed for women last year. AFLW players can now be inducted within a year of retirement and she was an obvious candidate.
Her father, Port Adelaide great Greg, was inducted in 2020. Fos and Mark Williams, Hayden Bunton Sr and Jr and umpires Jack McMurray Sr and Jr are the father-son inductees.
Phillips was Adelaide's inaugural captain and the first women's best and fairest winner, playing in three Crows flags despite needing a knee reconstruction.
She then switched to Port Adelaide when they joined the league in 2022.
When the women's league started in 2017, marquee players such as Phillips were crucial for its profile and credibility.
Phillips, a former WNBA and Australian basketballer, immediately established herself as one of the AFLW's elite players.
Also on Tuesday night, South Australian goalkicking machine Ken Farmer was elevated to legend status.
Farmer, who died in 1982, is the SANFL's most prolific goalkicker, with 1417 for North Adelaide from 1929-41 in 224 games at an extraordinary average of 6.33 per game.
He was never goalless in a game and coached the Roosters to two premierships.
Seven-time East Perth premiership player George Owens was this year's first historical inductee.
Apart from his swathe of premierships at East Perth and the 1925 Sandover Medal, Owens also umpired five WAFL grand finals.

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Best activewear for winter: Shop leggings, tops and hoodies up to 40 per cent off top brands
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Best activewear for winter: Shop leggings, tops and hoodies up to 40 per cent off top brands

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AFLW introduces future pick trading, pre-season draft, as part of 2025 rule changes

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Roo little beauty: meet the cuddly Aussie movie stars set to charm the world
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  • The Advertiser

Roo little beauty: meet the cuddly Aussie movie stars set to charm the world

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By the time movie-goers see them bouncing across cinema screens in September, the cute quartet will be all grown up and already released back into the wild. Director Kate Woods, of Looking for Alibrandi acclaim, said there was "no CGI or digital trickery with the joeys". "What you see is exactly how they behave," she said. "I think most of the world associates Australia with kangaroos, but not many films have shown kangaroos in a realistic and natural way, so I hope audiences learn something about the country and see it in a slightly different way." The Kangaroo Dundee series was seen in more than 90 countries, giving StudioCanal a ready worldwide audience for Kangaroo. The French screen giant turned quaint British children's book character Paddington Bear into an $800 million box office heavyweight with three hit movies since 2014. StudioCanal Australia and New Zealand CEO Elizabeth Trotman said the first feature film from the company's Australian production arm, Cultivator Films Australia, was "sure to leave an indelible mark on the cinematic landscape". Australian film companies Brindle Films and Bunya Productions were key collaborators during filming, lending their experience and expertise in bringing First Nations stories and Red Centre vistas to the screen. Producer David Jowsey, whose credits for Bunya Productions include Warwick Thornton's Sweet Country and Iven Sen's outback crime thriller Mystery Road, expects Aussie movie-goers to feel proud when they see Kangaroo's depiction of "the deep red beauty of our vast outback". "Kangaroo embraces the best of Australia, our community, our land, our spirit and our baby roos," he said. Older generations who grew up with Skippy The Bush Kangaroo would find it fun, "full of heart and belonging, reminding us of a simpler Australia". Meet joeys Margot, Emily, Connor and Biscuit, the cuddlesome stars of Kangaroo, the first Australian movie from the studio behind the blockbuster Paddington franchise. StudioCanal has given the ACM network, publisher of this masthead, an exclusive first look at images from its upcoming family comedy as it releases a heartwarming new trailer and the film's new poster. Opening in cinemas on September 18, Kangaroo is loosely based on the life of Chris "Brolga" Barns, founder of the Alice Springs Kangaroo Sanctuary, whose escapades raising orphaned joeys were featured in the 2013 BBC-National Geographic documentary series Kangaroo Dundee. The film stars Ryan Corr as a TV weather presenter stranded in a tiny Northern Territory town who teams up with a 12-year-old Indigenous girl to rescue an orphan joey. Newcomer Lily Whiteley, chosen from more than 300 hopefuls, makes her acting debut alongside Corr and co-stars Deborah Mailman, Ernie Dingo and Brooke Satchwell. Whiteley shares much of her screen time with Margot, Emily, Connor and their on-set stand-in and snugglemate Biscuit - all real orphaned joeys in the care of the Kangaroo Sanctuary who had their own trailer on the set of the movie in Alice Springs, where Barns and his wife Tahnee would give them their bottle every three hours. By the time movie-goers see them bouncing across cinema screens in September, the cute quartet will be all grown up and already released back into the wild. Director Kate Woods, of Looking for Alibrandi acclaim, said there was "no CGI or digital trickery with the joeys". "What you see is exactly how they behave," she said. "I think most of the world associates Australia with kangaroos, but not many films have shown kangaroos in a realistic and natural way, so I hope audiences learn something about the country and see it in a slightly different way." The Kangaroo Dundee series was seen in more than 90 countries, giving StudioCanal a ready worldwide audience for Kangaroo. The French screen giant turned quaint British children's book character Paddington Bear into an $800 million box office heavyweight with three hit movies since 2014. StudioCanal Australia and New Zealand CEO Elizabeth Trotman said the first feature film from the company's Australian production arm, Cultivator Films Australia, was "sure to leave an indelible mark on the cinematic landscape". Australian film companies Brindle Films and Bunya Productions were key collaborators during filming, lending their experience and expertise in bringing First Nations stories and Red Centre vistas to the screen. Producer David Jowsey, whose credits for Bunya Productions include Warwick Thornton's Sweet Country and Iven Sen's outback crime thriller Mystery Road, expects Aussie movie-goers to feel proud when they see Kangaroo's depiction of "the deep red beauty of our vast outback". "Kangaroo embraces the best of Australia, our community, our land, our spirit and our baby roos," he said. Older generations who grew up with Skippy The Bush Kangaroo would find it fun, "full of heart and belonging, reminding us of a simpler Australia". Meet joeys Margot, Emily, Connor and Biscuit, the cuddlesome stars of Kangaroo, the first Australian movie from the studio behind the blockbuster Paddington franchise. StudioCanal has given the ACM network, publisher of this masthead, an exclusive first look at images from its upcoming family comedy as it releases a heartwarming new trailer and the film's new poster. Opening in cinemas on September 18, Kangaroo is loosely based on the life of Chris "Brolga" Barns, founder of the Alice Springs Kangaroo Sanctuary, whose escapades raising orphaned joeys were featured in the 2013 BBC-National Geographic documentary series Kangaroo Dundee. The film stars Ryan Corr as a TV weather presenter stranded in a tiny Northern Territory town who teams up with a 12-year-old Indigenous girl to rescue an orphan joey. Newcomer Lily Whiteley, chosen from more than 300 hopefuls, makes her acting debut alongside Corr and co-stars Deborah Mailman, Ernie Dingo and Brooke Satchwell. Whiteley shares much of her screen time with Margot, Emily, Connor and their on-set stand-in and snugglemate Biscuit - all real orphaned joeys in the care of the Kangaroo Sanctuary who had their own trailer on the set of the movie in Alice Springs, where Barns and his wife Tahnee would give them their bottle every three hours. By the time movie-goers see them bouncing across cinema screens in September, the cute quartet will be all grown up and already released back into the wild. Director Kate Woods, of Looking for Alibrandi acclaim, said there was "no CGI or digital trickery with the joeys". "What you see is exactly how they behave," she said. "I think most of the world associates Australia with kangaroos, but not many films have shown kangaroos in a realistic and natural way, so I hope audiences learn something about the country and see it in a slightly different way." The Kangaroo Dundee series was seen in more than 90 countries, giving StudioCanal a ready worldwide audience for Kangaroo. The French screen giant turned quaint British children's book character Paddington Bear into an $800 million box office heavyweight with three hit movies since 2014. StudioCanal Australia and New Zealand CEO Elizabeth Trotman said the first feature film from the company's Australian production arm, Cultivator Films Australia, was "sure to leave an indelible mark on the cinematic landscape". Australian film companies Brindle Films and Bunya Productions were key collaborators during filming, lending their experience and expertise in bringing First Nations stories and Red Centre vistas to the screen. Producer David Jowsey, whose credits for Bunya Productions include Warwick Thornton's Sweet Country and Iven Sen's outback crime thriller Mystery Road, expects Aussie movie-goers to feel proud when they see Kangaroo's depiction of "the deep red beauty of our vast outback". "Kangaroo embraces the best of Australia, our community, our land, our spirit and our baby roos," he said. Older generations who grew up with Skippy The Bush Kangaroo would find it fun, "full of heart and belonging, reminding us of a simpler Australia".

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