logo
Simmo on Sheed: ‘He's stayed as humble as you can be'

Simmo on Sheed: ‘He's stayed as humble as you can be'

Perth Now2 days ago
Dom Sheed's first AFL win was also Adam Simpson's first as Eagles coach.
Just over a decade later, what turned out to be Sheed's last AFL win was also Simpson's last as Eagles coach.
In between, Sheed iced the 2018 kick that made him a premiership hero and earned Simpson premiership coach status, with the latter lauding the 'special connection' the two share after this week's retirement announcement.
Simpson was full of praise for the outgoing midfielder, saying his personality had never changed despite the life-changing goal.
'He's just such a quality person,' Simpson said on AFL 360 of Sheed, who played all bar one of his 165 games under the coach's tutelage.
'He's stayed as humble as you can be after achieving something like that.'
Reflecting on Sheed's pinpoint kick from deep in the MCG pocket to give West Coast a late lead they would never surrender against Collingwood, Simpson said he 'wasn't surprised' that it had sailed through – despite not watching the moment as he focused on how his team needed to set up in the seconds that followed.
'The race at Subiaco was exactly there,' Simpson said of the south-east pocket location tying in with the raceway at their former training venue.
'We can't get them off the track (without taking shots from there), and when they come on the track, we can't get them on to do proper skills – they're just having shots from that pocket.
'So if there was ever going to be a pocket, it would be that one.' Simpson and Sheed in 2023. Credit: Kelsey Reid / The West Australian
Simpson said Sheed's ascension to grand final hero almost didn't happen, with the left-footer's role in the side in late 2018 only formalised after Andrew Gaff's lengthy suspension for his hit on Andrew Brayshaw.
'It wasn't a smooth first three or four years. He actually, in the '18 season, was playing reserves football through form,' Simpson said.
'After what happened to Gaffy, when he got rubbed out for eight weeks, there became a spot available for a particular role. He came in and never looked back.
'It would have been a really interesting discussion if Gaffy was available coming into that game.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Elliott soars to new heights as Pies' march continues
Elliott soars to new heights as Pies' march continues

The Advertiser

time37 minutes ago

  • The Advertiser

Elliott soars to new heights as Pies' march continues

Red-hot veteran Jamie Elliott has lifted Collingwood to a new level in their AFL premiership pursuit this season, coach Craig McRae says. The 32-year-old has put together a career-best campaign, setting a new personal benchmark for a single year with 41 goals. And with seven home-and-away rounds plus finals left to play, Elliott is on track to become the first Magpie since Travis Cloke in 2013 to kick more than 60 goals in a season. The small forward sits second in the Coleman Medal race, behind only Geelong's Jeremy Cameron, and is firmly in All-Australian calculations. "He's been fantastic, Jamie, and never been happier," McRae said after Friday night's 17.13 (115) to 8.11 (59) thrashing of Carlton at the MCG. "He's part of the leadership group and I'm repeating myself here, but with the way we're connecting inside-50, Jamie is giving us a great presence. "He's playing as part of a system where we've always found a way to score, but we've never really had anyone that kicks four or five goals regularly. "Jamie's done that this year, which has probably taken us to a new level." Elliott shone with four goals in the first three quarters against Carlton as the Magpies surged 60 points clear by the final change and cruised to victory. An eighth consecutive win gave Collingwood a 14-2 record, ticking off a key milestone for McRae with almost two months to spare. "We set a goal at the start of the year to qualify for the finals and we can officially say that we've got 14 wins and we've done that," McRae said. "Not in our wildest dreams did we ever think we'd have that at this time of year in such a tight competition. "So we wanted to celebrate that ... but I was just rapt tonight with our system against a team with their backs against the wall." Collingwood face a tricky assignment next Friday night when they take on finals hopefuls Gold Coast at People First Stadium. Red-hot veteran Jamie Elliott has lifted Collingwood to a new level in their AFL premiership pursuit this season, coach Craig McRae says. The 32-year-old has put together a career-best campaign, setting a new personal benchmark for a single year with 41 goals. And with seven home-and-away rounds plus finals left to play, Elliott is on track to become the first Magpie since Travis Cloke in 2013 to kick more than 60 goals in a season. The small forward sits second in the Coleman Medal race, behind only Geelong's Jeremy Cameron, and is firmly in All-Australian calculations. "He's been fantastic, Jamie, and never been happier," McRae said after Friday night's 17.13 (115) to 8.11 (59) thrashing of Carlton at the MCG. "He's part of the leadership group and I'm repeating myself here, but with the way we're connecting inside-50, Jamie is giving us a great presence. "He's playing as part of a system where we've always found a way to score, but we've never really had anyone that kicks four or five goals regularly. "Jamie's done that this year, which has probably taken us to a new level." Elliott shone with four goals in the first three quarters against Carlton as the Magpies surged 60 points clear by the final change and cruised to victory. An eighth consecutive win gave Collingwood a 14-2 record, ticking off a key milestone for McRae with almost two months to spare. "We set a goal at the start of the year to qualify for the finals and we can officially say that we've got 14 wins and we've done that," McRae said. "Not in our wildest dreams did we ever think we'd have that at this time of year in such a tight competition. "So we wanted to celebrate that ... but I was just rapt tonight with our system against a team with their backs against the wall." Collingwood face a tricky assignment next Friday night when they take on finals hopefuls Gold Coast at People First Stadium. Red-hot veteran Jamie Elliott has lifted Collingwood to a new level in their AFL premiership pursuit this season, coach Craig McRae says. The 32-year-old has put together a career-best campaign, setting a new personal benchmark for a single year with 41 goals. And with seven home-and-away rounds plus finals left to play, Elliott is on track to become the first Magpie since Travis Cloke in 2013 to kick more than 60 goals in a season. The small forward sits second in the Coleman Medal race, behind only Geelong's Jeremy Cameron, and is firmly in All-Australian calculations. "He's been fantastic, Jamie, and never been happier," McRae said after Friday night's 17.13 (115) to 8.11 (59) thrashing of Carlton at the MCG. "He's part of the leadership group and I'm repeating myself here, but with the way we're connecting inside-50, Jamie is giving us a great presence. "He's playing as part of a system where we've always found a way to score, but we've never really had anyone that kicks four or five goals regularly. "Jamie's done that this year, which has probably taken us to a new level." Elliott shone with four goals in the first three quarters against Carlton as the Magpies surged 60 points clear by the final change and cruised to victory. An eighth consecutive win gave Collingwood a 14-2 record, ticking off a key milestone for McRae with almost two months to spare. "We set a goal at the start of the year to qualify for the finals and we can officially say that we've got 14 wins and we've done that," McRae said. "Not in our wildest dreams did we ever think we'd have that at this time of year in such a tight competition. "So we wanted to celebrate that ... but I was just rapt tonight with our system against a team with their backs against the wall." Collingwood face a tricky assignment next Friday night when they take on finals hopefuls Gold Coast at People First Stadium.

Football, family and forgiveness: the driving forces of Michael Long's life
Football, family and forgiveness: the driving forces of Michael Long's life

ABC News

time2 hours ago

  • ABC News

Football, family and forgiveness: the driving forces of Michael Long's life

Star footballer, activist, reformist, leader: Michael Long has worn many labels in his 55 years. Now there is a new label to describe the Anmatjere and Marranunggu man from the Tiwi Islands: NAIDOC lifetime achievement honoree. When I sat down to speak with Michael about his significant contributions, he was adamant that nothing he did was achieved alone, making sure those who helped him along the way were recognised as well. It's a long list, including his parents Agnes and Jack, the St Mary's Football Club where he got his start, Essendon Football Club for drafting him in 1989 and coach Kevin Sheedy for his support on the field and off, and perhaps most surprisingly, Damian Monkhorst, the Collingwood player whose racist abuse of Long sparked major change in the AFLM. "Damian Monkhorst, he has had just as much impact on racial vilification and what happens in our game, and I have enormous respect [for him]," Long said. "He's now become just as important to the rule as I have and I take my hat off to him. You know what he's done is impact on the other side of the fence." It was just over 30 years ago — during the 1995 ANZAC day clash between Essendon and Collingwood — Monkhorst called Long a racial slur on the field. After the game, Long decided to proceed with an official complaint, pushing the AFL to do more to protect non-white players from what he called "tactics" used to put Indigenous and other diverse players off their game. "Obviously, I spoke to the club that we needed to put something into place to protect not just Indigenous players, but all players with different backgrounds," he said. Taking a stand against racist abuse garnered huge public interest and put a lot of pressure on the then-26-year-old. "I had so many different letters and death threats and they came every day. You are trying to focus on your football, and you had that in the back of your mind as well, and we were having our first child and had the media at our front doorstep," he said. The incident led to the AFL's then-groundbreaking racial vilification policy, which bans the harassment of players on the basis of race or ethnicity, and lays out processes for complaints, investigations, and conciliation processes. While he thinks the league still has much to overcome, Michael Long is proud of the changes he made. "So much good that has come out of the racial vilification [code], even though it was the hardest, hardest time and probably my lifetime playing in," he said. Twenty years after the incident, Long met with Monkhurst at the end of the 11th Long Walk to Dreamtime at the 'G. The two men shook hands in a show of forgiveness, Monkhorst calling the incident a "terrible mistake". "I think the greatest way to show that is to forgive someone and make a bigger impact amongst not just Indigenous, but the Australian community and the football community," Long said. Long credits the influence of his parents, Stolen Generation survivors who grew up on Catholic missions, for his decision to forgive Monkhorst. "My mother was very Catholic and a very humble person and very forgiving and [had] all those morals as a churchgoer, and my father, they both grew up on a Catholic mission. I suppose part of that's embedded in you, and that's who you are," he said. "I speak to Damien now and then and yeah, we have a good relationship." After his instrumental efforts in two Essendon premierships, including becoming Norm Smith medalist in the 1993 Grand Final, Long's playing career ended in the early 2000s. It was then he turned his public profile and platform towards activism for Indigenous rights. In 2004, the Howard government announced it would abolish the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC), leaving many Indigenous people shocked and outraged. In response, Michael Long vowed to walk from Melbourne to Canberra to try and meet with the Prime Minister and ensure Indigenous rights would remain on the agenda. "In 2004, ATSIC had been abolished, and I think I had come back from a funeral, and thought 'what is happening?' You know, we've lost any type of voice or working at the government at the highest level. Where is the love for our people and the challenge we face?" he said. "That is why I felt really strongly about, when ATSIC was abolished, to keep Indigenous issues on the highest agenda with the government, because I just felt we had no vision, we had no voice. It has just been abolished." Setting off on the 650-kilometre trek from Melbourne with his cousin was an almost "spontaneous" decision, according to Long. But there is an innate connection between First Nations people and walking. For mob, walking can have much deeper meaning than just a mode of transportation. It is a form of connection to country and it is integral for survival. As Wakka Wakka and Gooreng Gooreng woman, Professor Sandra Phillips, wrote in 2022, it is walking that connects generations of First Nations people. "Walking is inherent to the experience of being Aboriginal and for a millennia along songlines and trade routes, walking went without massive disruption," she wrote in Walking While Aboriginal. It is no surprise that over the years since colonisation, walking has been the way that many blackfellas have called for change. The Long Walk, as it was dubbed, was just the latest in a long history of Indigenous people taking literal steps to advocate for their rights. These include protest walks by William Cooper against Nazi Germany and colonisation, the walk-offs of Wave Hill station and the Cummeragunja Mission over treatment of Aboriginal people, the 1988 bicentenary protests and the 2000 walk for reconciliation across the Sydney Harbour Bridge. "Walking is a good, strong message of bringing people along with you," Long said, reflecting on his decision at the time. "It wasn't just about me; it was about the community and people who [had] come along from different communities. They believed in what we wanted to achieve by walking and taking that and putting Indigenous issues back on the national agenda." The journey didn't come without risks. He again received death threats and while on the road he shared fears with a reporter that he would be "shot" while on his way. "There was someone that did put a threat, and I think it was one of the towns. That was the last thing I wanted, [for] people to join me and have that hanging over their heads as they are walking along." Long spoke to his fellow walkers, assuring them he wouldn't think any less of them if they didn't want to continue the journey. "But they all stayed," he said. "They stayed and you talk about strength, and you talk stay the course, no-one left, so I think that was probably just as powerful as what we were trying to achieve." In the end, Long and his supporters only made it to Albury before John Howard called to offer him a meeting. "By the time we got there, the integral moment was meeting the prime minister, but most importantly, we got the message out there to Australia before we got to Canberra," he said. In 2023, the Long Walk headed from Melbourne to Canberra in support of an Indigenous Voice to Parliament. "What we wanted to see happen as part of the referendum and the Constitution, you know, we had a great moment in time in Australia to do that and it was so sad," he said. "After the walk and the outcome and I don't think I left the house for a few days, but you've got to get back on your horse. We've got to keep pursuing what we've been doing. "It just shows that there is a lot more, a lot more work to be done in our own backyard, in our own community. As much as it failed. It doesn't stop us from continuing.". At 55, Long still has plenty he wants to do and big plans for his future advocacy, education, and development work, though he laughs that the NAIDOC committee might be "telling him something" in giving him a lifetime achievement award. "People are recognising what you have done and your community and I've used football as leverage to give kids an opportunity," he said. "Football has been good to me, and I hope I've been good to football. Hopefully, a lot of good things have come out of it." His eponymous foundations, the Michael Long Foundation and the Michael Long Learning and Leadership Centre, have been running for around a decade now. They fund Indigenous education and football programs, while working to nurture up-and-coming talent in the Northern Territory. "It's basically around education and football and using that to keep our kids in school. Obviously, there is a pathway with football for our young men and women," he said. Now there are expansion plans on the horizon at Long's old football club, setting up a Michael Long Centre at Essendon's Windy Hill training ground. "That's the next challenge … We see that as a national satellite to the one we have in Darwin," he said. "Then hopefully we can start to implement that with other states as well. "Football is one of the biggest opportunities and pathways. So I'm pretty excited about that."

Skill errors, poor crowds and a $200m loss: Why the league is worried about AFLW
Skill errors, poor crowds and a $200m loss: Why the league is worried about AFLW

Sydney Morning Herald

time2 hours ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Skill errors, poor crowds and a $200m loss: Why the league is worried about AFLW

Two years ago, Dillon used the cautionary example of cricket's Big Bash League, saying that competition had expanded too quickly and had been forced to reduce games as a result. Speaking to clubs during the AFLW pay negotiations with players demanding more games, Dillon reported TV ratings were down 70 per cent on season one and crowd numbers down by 60 per cent. While several CEOs on the Gold Coast pointed to the additional government funding, sponsorship, cultural benefits and new audiences driven by AFLW, Dillon and his team remained adamant the competition could not afford to support significant further expansion as it heads towards the next player wage negotiations. Currently, the AFLW costs about $100 million per year to run, earning back about $50 million. In 2024, the AFL posted a profit of more than $40 million, according to its annual report. The AFLW season this year opens with Carlton-Collingwood on August 14 at Ikon Park. The Thursday night clash will be televised on Channel Seven and the season will run for 12 home-and-away rounds – one additional round from 2024 as dictated by the current collective bargaining agreement. The women's salary cap sits at $1.175 million and will increase to $1.375 million by 2027 in the final year of the current deal. Having completed an extensive review into AFLW, the game has also bolstered its women's competition committee, chaired by commissioner Simone Wilkie. It has eight new members including Essendon president David Barham, incoming AFL COO Tom Harley, Tasmania Football Club executive Kath McCann and West Australian women's pioneer Jan Cooper. Key priorities going forward following the review include prioritising the role of second-tier competitions and identifying and celebrating the key differences between the women's and the men's game. Among a number of minor rule tweaks to improve the spectacle and open up the on-field game, the AFLW considered but ultimately rejected allowing players to run 25 metres before bouncing the ball, a skill a number of players, particularly the growing Irish contingent, have struggled with. Tasmania's push to launch its inaugural AFLW team in 2027 before the AFL side scheduled for 2028 now looks unlikely, largely due to cost considerations. The presentation on the Gold Coast, led by the competition's strategy boss Walter Lee, Dillon and football and AFLW executive Laura Kane, included extensive research into women's sporting competitions and compared the merits of private ownership against subsidised models such as AFLW. They included the Women's Super League in the UK, a soccer competition that has had an evolving structure since its inception in 2010 and a complicated relationship with private investment. In 2023 the clubs broke away from the FA to form their own competition. Also included was the WNBA in the US, in which the teams and the competition were collectively owned by the NBA until 2002 when the men's national body sold all the teams either to their men's counterparts or to third parties. Loading The AFL also presented the highly successful example of Angel City FC, a professional women's soccer team based in Los Angeles formed in 2020 and including a long list of high-profile female celebrity owners before Disney CEO Bob Iger and his wife Willow Bay became the team's majority shareholders in 2024. Although private ownership for AFLW teams looks unlikely, AFL bosses concluded to the clubs on the Gold Coast that historically the most successful women's sporting clubs began as independent products not affiliated to traditional men's sports. The annual timing of the women's fixture remains a topic of ongoing debate for the competition along with the choice of grand final venue and representative games.

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