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Cornes, Dillon apologise to umpires over Schultz saga

Cornes, Dillon apologise to umpires over Schultz saga

Yahoo2 days ago

The four umpires caught in the Lachie Schultz concussion saga have had apologies from AFL chief executive Andrew Dillon and commentator Kane Cornes.
It's emerged that Dillon had a phone hook up on Wednesday with the four field umpires.
On Thursday afternoon, Cornes read a statement on SEN and apologised "unreservedly" for his comments at the time.
The AFL last month admitted a process "failed", compounding the debacle around the on-field mishandling of Schultz's concussion.
The Collingwood forward was hurt in the round-10 win over Fremantle on May 8 in Perth.
An awful collision sees Lachie Schultz in real trouble, but play continues and the Pies extend their lead. 📺 Watch #AFLFreoPies LIVE on ch. 504 or stream on Kayo: https://t.co/tEbIJrg77g✍️ BLOG https://t.co/yYfbU2mekN🔢 MATCH CENTRE https://t.co/lvaile6LjW pic.twitter.com/yzMv0VjJBf
— Fox Footy (@FOXFOOTY) May 8, 2025
The AFL was slammed for bungling an investigation into why Schultz wasn't removed from the field, despite clearly being in trouble following a collision with Fremantle defender Jordan Clark.
AFL football boss Laura Kane eventually took responsibility after becoming aware umpires had actually noticed Schultz was injured.
The AFL initially released a statement saying umpires didn't see Schultz on the ground, but would have stopped play had they realised.
Then, the league sent out another statement, saying there had been an initial miscommunication.
In the midst of the saga, Cornes had made on-air comments accusing the umpires of misleading the AFL.
"I accused field umpires who were officiating that round nine match between Fremantle and Collingwood of misleading the AFL, and that they had not seen the incident in which Collingwood's Lachie Schultz suffered a concussion," Cornes said.
"Now in light of the additional (AFL) statement, which made it clear that the umpires had not misled the AFL, I acknowledge that the allegations made by me on this show were false, and I withdraw them," Cornes said.
"I understand the umpires truthfully told the AFL that they saw the incident and did not mislead the AFL. So I unreservedly apologise."
There had been speculation that the umpires involved were considering their legal options over the saga.

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Cornes, Dillon apologise to umpires over Schultz saga
Cornes, Dillon apologise to umpires over Schultz saga

Yahoo

time2 days ago

  • Yahoo

Cornes, Dillon apologise to umpires over Schultz saga

The four umpires caught in the Lachie Schultz concussion saga have had apologies from AFL chief executive Andrew Dillon and commentator Kane Cornes. It's emerged that Dillon had a phone hook up on Wednesday with the four field umpires. On Thursday afternoon, Cornes read a statement on SEN and apologised "unreservedly" for his comments at the time. The AFL last month admitted a process "failed", compounding the debacle around the on-field mishandling of Schultz's concussion. The Collingwood forward was hurt in the round-10 win over Fremantle on May 8 in Perth. An awful collision sees Lachie Schultz in real trouble, but play continues and the Pies extend their lead. 📺 Watch #AFLFreoPies LIVE on ch. 504 or stream on Kayo: BLOG MATCH CENTRE — Fox Footy (@FOXFOOTY) May 8, 2025 The AFL was slammed for bungling an investigation into why Schultz wasn't removed from the field, despite clearly being in trouble following a collision with Fremantle defender Jordan Clark. AFL football boss Laura Kane eventually took responsibility after becoming aware umpires had actually noticed Schultz was injured. The AFL initially released a statement saying umpires didn't see Schultz on the ground, but would have stopped play had they realised. Then, the league sent out another statement, saying there had been an initial miscommunication. In the midst of the saga, Cornes had made on-air comments accusing the umpires of misleading the AFL. "I accused field umpires who were officiating that round nine match between Fremantle and Collingwood of misleading the AFL, and that they had not seen the incident in which Collingwood's Lachie Schultz suffered a concussion," Cornes said. "Now in light of the additional (AFL) statement, which made it clear that the umpires had not misled the AFL, I acknowledge that the allegations made by me on this show were false, and I withdraw them," Cornes said. "I understand the umpires truthfully told the AFL that they saw the incident and did not mislead the AFL. So I unreservedly apologise." There had been speculation that the umpires involved were considering their legal options over the saga.

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