Four more years: Free agent Brayden Maynard re-signs with Collingwood
Free agent Brayden Maynard has re-signed with Collingwood for four more years on a deal worth about $3.3 million.
The vice captain, considered the modern embodiment of the classic Collingwood player, a heart-and-soul figure extremely popular with the Collingwood fans, will be likely now to remain a Magpie for life.
Given the popularity of the tough defender, it always seemed unlikely Maynard would leave. But the arrival of two more half-back flankers in Dan Houston and Harry Perryman last off-season created the idea that Maynard could become surplus to requirements in a team searching for options to bring in a draft pick.
Maynard's form had been excellent this year regardless of the duo's arrival and the fact he has carried a foot injury. His ruptured his plantar fascia a fortnight ago and will miss at least one more game after this week's bye before returning.
Loading
North Melbourne, Adelaide, Port Adelaide and Sydney were all interested in the free agent and while they were sceptical that he was a player Collingwood would be prepared to lose and not try to re-sign, the longer he remained unsigned the more hopeful they became.
It didn't get to the point of clubs making formal contract offers, but he was made aware he could earn close to $1 million a year for four or five years if he were open to leaving. That sort of contract would have earned Collingwood a first-round draft pick in free agency compensation.
Having traded this year's first-round national draft pick as part of the deal to get Houston, Collingwood are in the market for draft picks with two next generation academy players and potential father-son players available to them this year.
As the rules stand – and they may be subject to change with the advent of trading future picks two years in advance this year – Collingwood can't trade their future first-round pick to get back into this year's draft because they have traded two future first-round picks in the last four-year cycle. AFL rules cap how many future picks clubs can trade in a four-year period.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Age
34 minutes ago
- The Age
‘I was winning races': The link between eating disorders and elite athletes
Loading Associate professor in clinical psychology at The University of Melbourne, Isabel Krug, whose research focuses on eating disorders, says while anyone in any sport can develop an eating disorder, certain 'aesthetic-based' sports like figure skating and gymnastics, which privilege thinness, pose a greater risk factor for athletes. 'These can reinforce disordered eating behaviours, especially, restricting food and orthorexic tendencies [obsession with healthy food], and body dissatisfaction.' The environment of high-performance sports – in which athletes' bodies are their tools – can also contribute. 'The way we measure athletes' bodies, the way we talk about their bodies, the language we use, are all really important factors,' she says. 'Sport can add fuel to the fire.' Still, Jeacocke says work is being done to better understand the complex relationship between high-performance sport and eating disorders. In 2020, the AIS and National Eating Disorders Collaboration published a statement on the topic, outlining guidelines for athletes, coaches, support staff, clinicians and sporting organisations. Jeacocke, who co-authored the statement, says preventing and identifying eating disorders in athletes requires a multipronged approach. 'It's taking a really holistic view of athletes, looking at their mental and physical health. So, how do we optimise health and well-being to maximise performance?' 'We want to win gold medals, we want to break world records, yes, but how we do that is super important,' she says. Three athletes – current and former – share their thoughts on why elite sport can be such a breeding ground for disordered eating, and what finally set them on the path to recovery. 'I just needed someone to sit and listen' While football is not a weight-based sport, Gorry says the culture of regular weigh-ins, body fat checks and density scans contributed to a creeping obsession over food and the way she looked. 'There's just so much pressure every day to perform, to be a certain body shape and to be at our peak,' she says. Gorry, who became a Butterfly Foundation ambassador in 2024, would like to see less focus on weight and a more nuanced understanding of women's health. 'As footballers, it doesn't make sense to be weighing in. Everyone's going to weigh differently, being female athletes, you could put on 3 kilograms while you've got your period, and we don't talk about the reasons why,' she says. 'It's just a number at the end of the day, it should be how you feel in your body and how you're performing.' So, what was the turning point that set her on the path to recovery? Alongside clinical treatment and pregnancy, which gave her a newfound appreciation for her body, support from teammates helped. 'A big part of it was actually my roommate in the Matildas at the time, Michelle [Heyman]. She noticed and asked, 'I can see that you're struggling. Are you okay? I'm here for you'.' 'That's all I needed. I didn't need someone to try and help me. I just needed someone to sit there and listen and point me in the right direction without pushing me.' Now a mother to Harper and Koby, she says her experience with an eating disorder has shaped how she parents, too. 'It's a conversation Clara [ Markstedt, Gorry's wife ] and I both have all the time around food, or even when Harper's looking at herself in the mirror, just making sure we're validating her in the right way.' 'My self-worth was attached to football' In 2010, Brock McLean, now 39, had just moved from Melbourne Football Club to Carlton. Having recently suffered injuries, he had lost speed on the field. His coaches recommended he lose weight. 'Against the advice of nutritionists and doctors, I agreed to do it because I was so desperate to get back to playing footy. My mental health issues at the time was that my self-worth was attached to football,' he says. 'I was at the very apex of professional football. You couldn't go any higher than that. So I developed a really unhealthy way of viewing myself.' McLean embarked on a restrictive meal plan. He would suppress cravings for certain foods for weeks on end before giving in and bingeing, then overtraining and eventually using laxatives. Loading These behaviours dovetailed with anxiety, depression and addiction, and he developed bulimia nervosa. Young men and boys are often underrepresented in conversations about body image and eating disorders, despite the fact around one-third of those who suffer from an eating disorder are male. McLean says the stigma around eating disorders and mental illness in men's sport meant he was afraid to seek help. 'I was really uncomfortable opening up to people. I just couldn't do it because I felt like it was emasculating, particularly for an eating disorder.' After retiring in 2014 and moving into the corporate world, the self-worth he had derived from football transferred to climbing the corporate ladder. But through seeing a psychologist, the tide has slowly started to turn. 'It doesn't matter what you look like, what your job title is, how much money you make. You're a good person, you treat people well, you're a great dad and husband,' he says. 'I only can imagine what I could have achieved' Dr Jennifer Hamer was diagnosed with anorexia at age 12. A promising endurance runner in her home country of England who represented Great Britain at the European Championships, her eating disordered progressed with her sporting career. 'I was always carrying my eating disorder with me, which I believe held me back a lot,' she says, explaining she was frequently getting injured and spending time at the physio in rehab. 'My pure love for the sport became really, really scarred by the fact that it was now being controlled by an eating disorder.' While Hamer says it's difficult to say whether she would have developed an eating disorder had she not been involved in sports, she feels her coaches were ill-equipped to support her and her family. Loading 'There's a point in your eating disorder in the early stages where it doesn't affect you negatively … I was winning races, so they were like, 'Oh, she's winning. But let's keep pushing her harder.'' 'And I wasn't going to say anything because I was loving it because I was abiding by the eating disorder rules, and I was getting away with all the things that I wanted to do.' At 22, Hamer's eating disorder meant she was so weak she could no longer run, and she was admitted to an inpatient clinic. There, she was given a career-ending diagnosis: she had osteoporosis from years of disordered eating. But for Hamer, now 33, it's only in the past four to five years she's really entered a space of recovery. She's also discovered a love for ocean swimming which allows her to indulge her love for endurance sports.

Sydney Morning Herald
36 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
WTC? Waste of Time Championship
Those who have blamed the Lord's pitch for the helter-skelter World Test Championship final might have picked the wrong target. The Australia-South Africa Test match has been played by 22 cricketers re-acquainting themselves with red balls and the concept of a game going for five days. It's not their fault that they're not ready: a lack of readiness has been built into its design, as if the powers of international cricket want to look like they're saving the Test format while doing everything they can to undermine it. Imagine if a football World Cup final were played as a one-off, out-of-season friendly for the benefit of Jeff Bezos. Not even FIFA could screw up that badly. None of South Africa's players had taken part in a first-class game of cricket in the past five months. One, Lungi Ngidi, last bowled a red ball in a match in August 2024. (He looked a tad rusty.) Three of the Australians had played some county cricket in England last month, but for the rest, their last first-class cricket was three to six months ago. Rusty? Just a bit. Australian viewers might be a bit rusty too. Those who wanted to watch the game had to pinch their noses, hold their breath and submerge themselves in the swamp that is Amazon. For the Test match not to be protected by anti-siphoning laws gives a pretty good idea of how Australian regulatory and broadcasting interests rate it. For the rights to be sold to a company with a rap sheet including (but far from limited to) tax avoidance, industrial-scale fraud, forced labour and abuses of workers on five continents, monopolistic market manipulation, invasion of privacy – okay, we got the point when Jeff Bezos lined up to kiss Donald Trump's ring – well, for a cricket fan it's like being blackmailed into buying a Tesla. Test cricket is just another Amazon product, along with rape and paedophilia guides, 'I Love Hitler' T-shirts and web services for war criminals. Millions, presumably, are trying to swing a free trial so as not to further enrich Bezos. Good luck trying to cancel it. All of this asks the question: What is the WTC final anyway? Is it really a thing, or just a nice boondoggle to give Test cricket some 'context'? If its purpose is to convince the world that Test cricket matters, it's done as good a job as most of the batsmen on the opening two days. The WTC was devised to give meaning to matches throughout a two-year cycle, although the nature of that meaning, expressed in a points table as hard to read as a Shane Warne zooter, remains all the more unclear for South Africa's presence. Nobody believes the Proteas are one of the top two, three or even four Test teams (although at the time of writing, cricket being cricket and two-horse races being what they are, South Africa still have a chance of being world champions, at some form of cricket, at last. Maybe, maybe not. In this kind of 'Test', the whole thing could flip over in an hour.)


Perth Now
38 minutes ago
- Perth Now
Dawn Fraser embraces goddaughter after record-breaking swim
Swimming superstar Lani Pallister has set a new national record in the women's 800m freestyle at the Australian swim trials for the upcoming world championships. Pallister clocked a brilliant 8.10.84, which bettered Ariarne Titmus' previous benchmark of 8.12.29 set when winning Olympic silver last year. Australian icon Dawn Fraser was in the stands in Adelaide and was among the first to congratulate her goddaughter on the record. Photos emerged of the pair embracing in a heartwarming moment. Fraser looked in good spirits, six months on from the devastating fall that saw her spend time in ICU. Dawn Fraser and Lani Pallister embrace after the record-breaking swim. Credit: Getty The 87-year-old has recovered after breaking ribs and a major hip bone when she tripped on an unfinished driveway at her home in Noosa. Palister's record came just two months after joining coach Dean Boxall who also guides Titmus, who remains on a post-Olympic break. 'That's an Australian record I have wanted for a long time, since making my first team in 2022,' said Pallister. The 23-year-old also sent a classy message to Titmus. 'It's kind of bitter-sweet not having her in the pool at this moment,' she said. 'She's done so much for women's swimming internationally, but also just everything she's done for Australian swimming. 'So I think I have a lot to thank her for with what she's done in inspiring me as an athlete. I've been able to travel with her and watch how she conducts herself.' Meanwhile, Kyle Chalmers posted the third-quickest men's 100m freestyle time in the world this year at the trials on Thursday night. He also owns the second-fastest time in what is supposed to be a post-Olympic let-down of a year. 'I'm not here with pressure and expectation; anything I achieve from this point is just icing on the cake of my career,' Chalmers said. 'I'm stoked my body is feeling this good. 'And that's why I want to capitalise on it while I can because I know it's not going to feel this good forever.' Kyle Chalmers, waving to the crowd after his latest win, has never been happier or healthier. Credit: AAP Chalmers won gold in the event at the 2016 Olympics and silver at the following two Games - at last year's Paris edition he touched in 47.48. 'I'm physically, mentally and emotionally in a great place,' the 26-year-old said. 'When all of those buckets are topped up, I can swim well.' Chalmers' latest triumph came after Kaylee McKeown posted the fastest women's 200m backstroke time of the year at the Adelaide trials. Unlike Chalmers, she dismissed the feat as irrelevant ahead of the world titles in Singapore starting July 27. 'It doesn't matter what you do here, it depends what you do on the day in an international meet,' McKeown said after finishing in two minutes 04.47 seconds, some 1.33 seconds outside her world record. 'I could be doing world records here, get to an international meet and come in last, so it really doesn't matter. 'I have just got to get my mind right and see what I can do in a few weeks' time.' The five-time Olympic gold medallist won all three backstroke events in Adelaide, over 50m, 100m and 200m. She now has a shot at repeating her unprecedented achievement from the 2023 worlds in Japan when she became the first female to win three golds in any stroke over 50m, 100m and 200m at an international meet. But in a shock result in the women's 200m butterfly, Paris Olympian Lizzy Dekkers missed out. Dekkers, who finished fourth in the Olympic final, was third behind Brittany Castelluzzo (2:06.91) and Abbey Connor (2:07.14) who both qualified for the worlds. In the men's 200m individual medley, 25-year-old David Schlict (1:58.10) shaded William Petric by 0.15 seconds - both also made the world championship team. - With AAP