logo
Sydney Swans v Hawthorn Hawks: AFL 2025 season opener

Sydney Swans v Hawthorn Hawks: AFL 2025 season opener

The Guardian07-03-2025
Show key events only Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature
Late to the party and wondering who's a contender and who's a pretender? Who's legit and who's gonna quit? Then don't worry, because Jonathan Horn has you covered with his in-depth predicted ladder for the 2025 season.
First, the ten sides that Horn expects to find themselves on the outside looking in when September rolls around. Although, as a Bulldogs man, can't say I'm too enamoured with his predictions here. Share
Wet and wild conditions had been expected for tonight's game but, for now, they've failed to materialise. The SCG is bathed in a glorious setting sun as the first bounce approaches, with conditions looking perfect for footy. Share
Tonight wasn't supposed to serve as the opening game of the season, of course. That honour was supposed to go to reigning premiers Brisbane and Geelong up at the Gabba yesterday evening, only for that game to be postponed as Tropical Cyclone Alfred closed in on the Queensland and northern NSW coast. If you are caught up in the storm, please stay safe.
Saturday's meeting between the Gold Coast and Essendon has also been postponed due to Alfred, with the Lions and Cats now set to meet in round three and the Suns and Bombers making up their fixture alongside their previously scheduled fixtures in round 24.
In the NRL, the Dolphins fixture with South Sydney has been relocated from Lang Park to Western Sydney stadium, with the Dolphins' Kodi Nikorima, Mark Nicholls, and Kenny Bromwich opting to remain in Brisbane to prepare for the cyclone.
In the A-Leagues, Brisbane Roar's A-League Women meeting with Melbourne City – where City were seeking to set a new record for the longest unbeaten run in league history – has been postponed, while the Roar's A-League Men outfit were forced to fly out early for their meeting with Adelaide United. Share
Howdy all and welcome to the Guardian's live coverage of the 2025 AFLM's season opener between Sydney and Hawthorn at the SCG. It's not the curtain raiser we were expecting at this time last week but it still shapes as a blockbuster contest between last year's vanquished grand finalists and a side that finished 2024 on the rise. My name's Joey Lynch and I'm looking forward to taking you through all the action.
Tonight marks the beginning of a new era for the Swans, Dean Cox given the daunting task of succeeding John Longmire after he stunned the AFL world by stepping down last November, reaching the end of his tether after 14 highly successful years at the helm of the club. The last time the Swans were in this position they handled things rather well, transitioning from one premiership coach to another as Longmire succeeded Paul Roos and went on to reach five grand finals, winning one. We now await to see if they'll be able to pull off a similar handover with Cox.
On top of this, there's also the matter of Sydney seeking to put behind them the last, disastrous grand final of Longmire's tenure – a dominant home and away season counting for little as they suffered a 10-goal drubbing at the hands of Brisbane in last year's decider. It's been 160 days since that thrashing and now, the redemption tour begins.
Looking to spoil this, however, are the Hollywood Hawks. Starting last season with five straight losses, Hawthorn caught fire and won 11 of their last 13 matches to book a spot in the finals, a berth which subsequently saw them record a first finals win since 2015 when they beat the Western Bulldogs. They won plenty of fans with their entertaining brand of footy during this run and while they might have copped a reality brick to the face when they faced off with Port Adelaide in a semi-final last season, they've been widely tipped to kick on in 2025. Of course, with expectation comes pressure, and Sam Mitchell's unit will face an early acid test against the Swans tonight.
The first bounce will be at 7.40pm AEDT and we'll look to bring you up to speed on everything you need to know before then. Share
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

He plays the toughest position in the NRL - but this hard-man Broncos star is preparing for life after footy in the LAST business you'd expect
He plays the toughest position in the NRL - but this hard-man Broncos star is preparing for life after footy in the LAST business you'd expect

Daily Mail​

time4 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

He plays the toughest position in the NRL - but this hard-man Broncos star is preparing for life after footy in the LAST business you'd expect

Tough-as-teak Brisbane prop Ben Talty is the fragrance king of the NRL and fast asserting himself as a late bloomer rookie with a long career ahead of him. The 26-year-old former North Sydney Bears captain has been a barnstormer off the bench for the Broncos in their late season surge and off the field he is kicking goals galore. Talty has a Bachelor of Business and Bachelor of Innovation and Entrepreneurship. In cahoots with best mate and fellow Broncos prop Fletcher Baker, he is co-founder of Nefertum, a luxury fragrance brand that blends pure Egyptian oils with Australian craftsmanship. The name pays homage to Nefertiti, the famous queen of ancient Egypt. 'Fletcher and I decided we wanted to go to Egypt one year but we didn't have the idea of going and setting up a fragrance business,' Talty grinned. 'My mother told me to go and try out an oil shop, and we did that at a couple of shops over there. 'We kept in touch with a good friend of ours over there, an awesome fella, and he's our supplier. He sends it over here and we just check it and sell it.' What former Broncos hardmen like Peter Ryan, Tonie Carroll and Shane Webcke would make of it is anyone's guess, but you can bet your bottom dollar they would be in admiration of Talty's displays after getting his late shot at the NRL and vindicating coach Michael Maguire's faith in him. Talty, a Muswellbrook Rams junior, has scored three tries in his five NRL games this year after signing with Brisbane mid-season and brings punch and thrust every time he comes on. 'It's something I thought that would never come true,' Talty said. 'I was working away at North Sydney. You play footy for so long and you get to a certain age and you start to question whether it's all going to work out. 'I'm just fortunate enough that Madge (Maguire) and the rest of the staff and recruitment put a little bit of faith in me. 'I grew up on a horse stud just out of Muswellbrook in the Hunter (Valley), so my parents had to always take me to training Monday, Wednesday and Friday. It was a four-hour round trip, so being able to repay them for this and be in this position and make them proud, it's just such an honour to do that.' Talty is on a train-and-trial deal until the end of 2026. The Broncos could upgrade that at any stage. Perth Bears fans are already clamouring for Talty to be a foundation player in 2027 when they enter the NRL. 'All I ever wanted to do was play first grade, and the Broncos made that come true so I'm quite content with where I am at currently,' he said. 'The Bears will always have a deep place in my heart because they helped build the foundation of where I am now. 'I'm still a long way from where I want to be as well. It's a great start, but I'm looking further ahead.' Talty was a Newcastle junior from the age of 15 so can't wait to take on the Knights away on Sunday. 'They helped pave the way. It should be an unreal experience,' he said.

Footy star Adam Reynolds gets caught up in road rage incident with his daughter over an issue Aussie parents will sympathise with
Footy star Adam Reynolds gets caught up in road rage incident with his daughter over an issue Aussie parents will sympathise with

Daily Mail​

time9 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Footy star Adam Reynolds gets caught up in road rage incident with his daughter over an issue Aussie parents will sympathise with

Veteran halfback Adam Reynolds found himself in the middle of a rather heated verbal confrontation in Brisbane over the weekend while giving his eldest daughter a driving lesson. The incident kicked off after Reynolds' daughter got beeped and abused by a couple of frustrated motorists for driving too slowly. Then one rude driver pushed the footy star too far. 'So we're driving home, and L plates are slow, we all know that. They're not driving fast, they're inexperienced,' Reynolds told Triple M's Rush Hour. '...and she gets beeped from behind and a bloke pulls up besides her, puts his hands out wondering what's going on. 'So I told my daughter to politely to pull up right next to him and he proceeded to put the window down. 'So I told her to put the window down, and there was some verbal exchanges.' The Broncos star said the other driver didn't recognise him as the two men argued. 'I said, "listen mate, she's on her L's you can see that, we've got them all over the car. What's your problem?"' Reynolds said. 'And he said "hurry up", and I said "she's a learner mate, what do you expect? Have some respect". 'That was the polite version. And his window went up very quickly and he sped off after that.' When pressed if things could have escalated to violence, the footy star said there was a chance. 'If he got out of the car, I was getting out of the car... I've got my daughter there.' Despite some unfriendly drivers, Reynolds has spoken about how much he loves the lifestyle in Brisbane following his move from the Rabbitohs after losing the 2021 Grand Final. 'The club and city have welcomed me and my family with open arms, family means everything to me and this is home,' he said. 'We are really building something special here and I want to be a part of that moving forward. 'To be able to finish my career at the club which has given me so much over the past few seasons means a lot to me.'

Star boxer Nikita Tszyu reveals the troubling reason he quit his old life as a white-collar worker
Star boxer Nikita Tszyu reveals the troubling reason he quit his old life as a white-collar worker

Daily Mail​

time20 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Star boxer Nikita Tszyu reveals the troubling reason he quit his old life as a white-collar worker

Nikita Tszyu has revealed that a 'spiritual experience', where he realised that he enjoyed 'inflicting pain and being a little devil', was the reason behind why he opted to quit his job in architecture and instead pursue a full-time career in boxing. The 27-year-old Australian is set to make his return to the ring on Wednesday night following a year-long hiatus. The 10-0 southpaw is set to square off against Macedonian fighter Lulzim Ismaili, aged 28, at the ICC Sydney Theatre. Tszyu, who is the younger brother of Aussie star Tim Tszyu and the son of former world champion Kostya, had previously pursued a career with international architectural firm Woods Bagot. As a youngster, it looked as though Nikita would follow his dad and brother into the sport, impressing as a junior fighter before opting to quit at the age of 16 to pursue a career in architecture. He'd later gain a Bachelor's degree in Architectural Design at the University of Technology Sydney. But he would feel unfulfilled by the line of work. 'I've never spoken about this before, but I had a spiritual experience that showed me my true desires in life,' the fighter told The Courier Mail. 'It was a vision of pain and suffering, darkness and evil thoughts. 'At that stage of my life, it was showing me the things I desired most in life, and that was inflicting pain and being a little devil. 'It was essentially the feelings I get from boxing. 'So I knew I'd regret it for the rest of my life if I didn't pursue boxing while I still could.' Nikita explained that boxing has provided him with a way to deal with those dark thoughts, adding that he didn't know where they came from. 'Boxing is the legal way to unleash it,' the fighter added. But he is OK if he doesn't win world titles. In fact, Nikita explained that he wants to use boxing, and his dark thoughts, to help provide for his family. 'Once boxing is done, my plan is to have that side of me released through being on a farm with animals and out in the wilderness. 'I want to use that darkness to feed my family.' Nikita, who revealed last week that he had been eating his wife's placenta and drinking her breast milk in a bid to ingest more vitamins, last fought in August 2024, where he bested Koen Mazoudier at the ICC Exhibition Centre in Sydney. Interestingly, should he win on Wednesday night in Sydney, there is talk that he could headline a fight card in Las Vegas on the same weekend as the NRL's opening round extravaganza in Sin City in 2026. It is an opportunity that excites the 27-year-old fighter, but what's even more enticing is that he could come up against heavyweight great Evander Holyfield's son, Evan, among several other big names. That's according to Fox Sports, who claim the idea had initially been to have his older brother Tim headline the event. Nikita branded the news 'perfect'. 'Already having so many Australians there in Las Vegas, the atmosphere would be electric,' Nikita said. 'Right now, I'm taking each fight as it comes. 'And I do have to take care of business here before heading overseas. 'But what I like is new experiences. 'And being able to experience something that the greatest boxers in the world do – fighting in Las Vegas, the pinnacle – it's something I would absolutely love.

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