logo
Essendon must stop pining for the past after finding a semblance of stability

Essendon must stop pining for the past after finding a semblance of stability

Yahoo21-05-2025

Essendon face all-too familiar problems behind the scenes as a heavy defeat to Western Bulldogs follows a promising start to the 2025 AFL season.
Essendon face all-too familiar problems behind the scenes as a heavy defeat to Western Bulldogs follows a promising start to the 2025 AFL season. Photograph: James Ross/AAP
It was all trundling along nicely for Essendon. The club spent the past month gently tempering expectations, reminding everyone that this is a long-term project, that there will be bad losses and barren patches, but to stay the course. On field, they weren't beating much, but they were winning, they were defending, and they were having a crack. Coach Brad Scott was getting the most out of a limited but willing team.
That all came unglued on Saturday night, when they were trounced by a red-hot Western Bulldogs. Essendon reverted to type and sank back into the pack. Almost immediately, the club was batting away suggestions that Scott's coaching tenure was under threat, and that Bombers great James Hird was the man to replace him.
Advertisement
In response to Caroline Wilson's suggestion that the wolves were circling, the former Essendon chair Paul Little reportedly told the veteran reporter: 'You never say never to anything. It hasn't been an easy time for the club these past few years. There may come a time where there is a need for a restructure. If I felt I could add value to the club, and if they felt I could help, I would consider it.'
That was quickly quashed on Nine's Footy Classified, a program whose entire purpose suddenly seems to be to repudiate what has been reported on Channel Seven an hour earlier. One show says it's on, another says it's off. The dogs bark, the caravan moves on, and the rest of us are left scratching our heads.
Hird came within a whisker of reclaiming the Essendon coaching job in September 2022. Kevin Sheedy, his chief backer, was on Lindsay Fox's luxury yacht, sailing around the world with hundreds of movers and shakers to celebrate the trucking magnate's 85th birthday. He was confident that Hird would be appointed, and that the old Essendon was back. Back on dry land a fortnight later, he was informed his man had missed out.
Essendon is an unusual football club. For years now it has been very political, riven by factions, dictated to by coterie groups and deferential to its past. It has presented as a club that can't let go, and still pines for the glory years. It manifests in many ways. You see it in the axe-grinding columns Allan Hird phones into the Herald Sun. You see it in the former players who run for board positions. You see it in lifers like former list boss Adrian Dodoro, who strutted around like he owned the place, became the king of October, drafted the wrong players, and then took the club to the Fair Work Commission.
Advertisement
To his credit, president David Barham has sought to cut ties with the past. 'Harking back to the 80s, 90s or the 2000s and wishing we could return to that just causes drama and disunity,' he said at the AGM last year. 'The competition is so far removed from those times, it is almost a completely different game.'
Barham has made mistakes and rubbed plenty of people up the wrong way. He sacked a coach, rolled a president, and appointed the shortest tenured CEO in corporate history. But he's honest about what has gone wrong, and what needs to change. He called it 20 years of 'quick fixes and shortcuts'; 20 years of scandals, sugar hits, false dawns, bad trades, draft busts, and schadenfreude; 20 years of Stephen Dank, Andrew Thorburn, Hird and Dodoro.
On Footy Classified on Tuesday night, striking the right balance between bewilderment and defiance, Scott sat next to the man who was said to be in line to replace him. Scott spins a good game. But he and the people who employ him are right. For the first time in a long time at Essendon, there is clarity and a semblance of stability and sanity. To defer to the past, to pine for once what was, and to jump at shadows would rank among the biggest mistakes in recent times at a club that has made more than most.
Crunching the numbers
The Cats midfielder has the highest winning percentage of all current players to have lined up in at least 100 matches ahead of his 300th game on Thursday night.
From the archives
Richmond were winless after eight games and coach Terry Wallace was at his wits' end. It was 2007 and the Tigers seemed to have the Dreamtime at the 'G game in the bag. But as was their way back then, they found a way to completely stuff it up.
Advertisement
With scores level in the dying stages, Matthew Richardson marked, played on, kicked the goal and celebrated like a crazy man. But the umpire, wearing a PlayStation 2 sponsored shirt, adhered to the newly stiffened up 'hands on the back' rule.
Richardson was apoplectic, the Tigers blew the game, and Matthew Lloyd rubbed salt in the wound by kicking a goal after the siren that bent like a Wasim Akram outswinger.
They said what?
Geelong's boom recruit has helped turn his first clash with Western Bulldogs into a grudge match after an exchange of barbs with former teammates.
View from the stands (or the couch)
'We will stick to our plan and we think the decision has been sound. But it would be useful to get a few players back and not have as many injuries.
Advertisement
'You hold the line and you hope for the injury count to drop.'
Port Adelaide boss David Koch shuts down suggestions that the Power will deviate from their succession plan while speaking on 5AA, as he backs coach Ken Hinkley to see out the season before handing the reins to Josh Carr.
Footy quiz
Which club has won the most Dreamtime at the 'G clashes between Essendon and Richmond? Bonus point if you know how many.
Answers in next week's newsletter, but if you think you know it, hit reply and let me know!
Last week's answer: Which club is enjoying the longest current wooden spoon drought? Geelong. It has been 67 years since the Cats finished bottom in 1958.
Advertisement
Congratulations to Mick C, who was first to reply with the right answer.
Want more?
The death of Adam Selwood aged 41 has been a reminder to reflect on the magnificent triviality of sport.
Carlton, Fitzroy and Brisbane great Robert Walls died aged 74 and has been remembered as a teacher, a competitor and a hard but fair man.
West Coast star Jeremy McGovern's AFL playing future is in doubt as the five-time All-Australian suffers ongoing concussion symptoms after a head knock in round eight.
Got a story tip?
Reply to this email and drop me a line, or email fromthepocket@theguardian.com.
Enjoying this newsletter?
Have a friend who might? Forward this to them, or tell them how to get it.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

AFL world reacts amid brutal news about Hawthorn legend Dermott Brereton
AFL world reacts amid brutal news about Hawthorn legend Dermott Brereton

Yahoo

time20 hours ago

  • Yahoo

AFL world reacts amid brutal news about Hawthorn legend Dermott Brereton

Hawthorn legend Dermott Brereton has lifted the lid on some of the debilitating effects of his AFL career, revealing he struggles to walk down stairs and needs his partner to put his shoes and socks on for him. Brereton played 211 games (189 for the Hawks) across a legendary career, winning five AFL/VFL premierships. He's an AFL and Hawthorn Hall of Fame member, and has become a popular commentator and analyst since retiring. But speaking at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on Friday, the 60-year-old opened up about what life is like due to his career. As reported by , Brereton said he struggles to sleep some nights due to chronic shoulder pain, and has been forced to take anti-inflammatories for the better part of 40 years. 'Some mornings my beautiful partner Julie has to put on my shoes and socks for me," he said in his 'Toast to Football' speech at the annual Norm Smith Oration. "With the pain in my spine, where they put in a cage inserted there, I can't reach. I just can't put on socks and shoes. 'Some days I have to walk down the stairs sideways because I haven't any cartilage – bone on bone, that is – for 40 years. Some days I can't shake hands with other men, and if they do so, I fear they'll re-open some of the broken bones in my hands from defenders' spoils and from when [an opponent] jumped on my hand deliberately. Some days I have to crab my way down the stairs because my often half-a-dozen times reconstructed ankle will not flex any more.' Brereton recounted many of the battles he had with opposition defenders during a brutal era of hard-nosed footy. 'Some nights I sleep very little because of the arthritis in my shoulder joints. That's from decades of lifting as heavy weights as I could, purely because the position I played required it," he said. Brutally, he revealed he sometimes questions whether his career was worth the price he's now paying. But he always lands on the same answer. 'I often ask myself, in that moment of true misery, when I can't move, that moment of weakness, I'll ask myself – was it worth it?" he admitted. 'And the answer's always the same. I'd do it all over again, exactly the same again. Maybe next time, though in the next lifetime, I might go a little harder. '[It gave me] a lifetime of employment, it's given me a small dose of fame, occasionally given me romance. It has given me great friendships. It's given me my life's greatest mentor – Allan (Jeans, his Hawthorn coach). And it has given me a purpose. But it's also taken away something very dear to me.' AFL fans were stunned to learn of Brereton's plight, taking to social media with messages of support. Journalist Jake Niall said the revelations "should concern the AFL and past and current players." One fan wrote: "Good for him to speak out so others understand. Some things like that can be far too embarrassing to share. Particularly someone with Dermie's hardened image." RELATED: Hawthorn teammate's brutal public response to Jack Ginnivan act Sam Mitchell goes public with sad news about former teammate It comes after the son of Brereton's partner Julie was recently picked up by Essendon in the AFL's mid-season draft. Archie May, a 198cm-tall forward from WAFL club Subiaco, went to the Bombers despite Collingwood fans hoping to snare him. May had previously revealed how Brereton has helped with his development. "Obviously it's a lot of hard work and sacrifices that go into the journey. I think it's about proving the people close to me right," he said of his mother's partner. "Dermott has been massive in my development. Especially in the last few years as I took football more seriously." Good for him to speak out so others understand. Some things like that can be far too embarrassing to share. Particularly someone with Dermies hardened image. — 'Chickenhead' 👌👨‍🌾🧑‍🍳🥷🕵️‍♂️🐣🐤🐔🐓🌏🌕🔥🐎 (@Jimali1111) June 6, 2025 That's what afl players (professional players of any sport) give up to live the good life, their body. It's the cost of living the good life, getting paid really good money and opening up a lot of doors in life. Of course your body is going to be minced playing 10+ years of footy — Harry grant (@happyharrygrant) June 6, 2025

Chargers returning to San Diego for pair of training camp practices
Chargers returning to San Diego for pair of training camp practices

Miami Herald

timea day ago

  • Miami Herald

Chargers returning to San Diego for pair of training camp practices

The Los Angeles Chargers will be back in San Diego for two training camp practices this summer, the team announced Thursday. The Chargers will hold the pair of practices at Torero Stadium on the University of San Diego's campus on July 22-23. Before moving to Los Angeles in 2017, the Chargers spent 56 years in San Diego, beginning in the AFL in 1961. This tenure included an AFL championship in 1963, a Super Bowl appearance in the 1994-95 season and 11 playoff wins. The team played in Los Angeles for its inaugural season in 1960. Owner Dean Spanos and the city of San Diego failed to reach an agreement on a new stadium in the city, causing Spanos to uproot the franchise and move north. --Field Level Media Field Level Media 2025 - All Rights Reserved

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.

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