
West Coast confirm Elliot Yeo will not feature again this season as Eagles focus on next year
Yeo went down with a knee/ankle injury in a pre-season intraclub clash and was initially listed out for three to four months.
However, frustrating setbacks and a second surgery in May kept pushing back the timeline, with the club now confirming he will miss the entirety of the season.
'At this stage of the season, unfortunately, we've run out of time to get Elliot back to playing,' high-performance manager Mat Inness said.
'Our focus now is on giving him the best possible lead-in to next pre-season and ensuring he's set up for a strong and uninterrupted campaign in 2026.'
Having secured a three-year extension after managing 20 games last season, Yeo's loss in the midfield has proven hard to replace with Tim Kelly out of form, leaving Harley Reid exposed for oppositions to target.
It also continues a miserable run for the two-time All-Australian, who has now only managed 57 games since 2019, with last year the only time he's played more than 12 games in a season in that period.
He joins veterans Oscar Allen and Jake Waterman with season-ending injuries, while Dom Sheed and Jeremy McGovern were both forced into retirement due to injury/concussion.
Defender/ruck Callum Jamieson is also out for at least the next week, with the 24-year-old likely fighting for his AFL career as he remains without a contract for next year.
'Cal is progressing well in his rehab from a low-level hamstring strain,' Inness said.
'He won't be available this week, but we expect him to be back in 1-2 weeks if he continues to track well.'

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


7NEWS
3 minutes ago
- 7NEWS
Crisafulli Government encourages Queenslanders to submit locals for the 2026 Australian of the Year
The Crisafulli Government is encouraging Queenslanders to celebrate local individuals who have made a difference to their community. Nominations for the four categories will close on Thursday. The awards include: Australian of the Year, Senior Australian of the Year, Young Australian of the Year and Australia's Local Hero. 'This is about recognising those heroes who quietly go about making Queensland a better place to live, today and into the future,' Premier David Crisafulli said. The panel said they are looking for someone who has made a significant contribution to Australia or community, excels in their field, and inspires others. Last year's winner was Neale Daniher, former AFL legend, recognised for his contribution to charity and advocacy for motor neurone disease research. Anyone over the age of 16 can be nominated, except sitting politicians. Nominations can be submitted via the Australian of the Year website.

Sydney Morning Herald
7 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
I couldn't imagine living in such an eerie area. But my suburb is difficult to leave
Imagine, if you will, a hand of God, in addition to assisting Maradona to win the World Cup for Argentina in 1986, coming down from heaven and scooping up a swathe of humanity from the Asian subcontinent in a north-westerly direction over Iran, Iraq, Turkey, and then a final quick dip in far-Western Europe. Picture that hand scattering these people in one of the fastest-growing residential growth corridors in Australia and you will perhaps grasp something of what Craigieburn is about: this enigmatic suburb you either take a quick rubberneck glance at on your way to Canberra or Sydney, or whose existence you maybe consider as you board a train upon the Craigieburn line and wonder what poor souls have to ride this route all the way to the end. Previously a land of sweeping plains, farms, and sheep runs, Craigieburn has evolved over the decades to become the suburban love child of Metricon and Lendlease. It embodies aspiration. The median house price is $650,000, and is where anyone and everyone can get their first taste of the great Australian dream. There is a distinct old and new Craigieburn: the former features classic brick-veneer homely residences, while the latter includes an impressive array of rendered and modernist mansions that wouldn't look out of place in Toorak. In 2010, I was living in Moonee Ponds and serving as an honorary chaplain to the Coburg Tigers VFL Club. Highgate Reserve in the less-developed northern region of Craigieburn, with its 'MCG-sized oval' was a second home ground to the Tigers. The team travelled up here to play Gold Coast during that quasi-internship season they spent in the VFL. The ground was packed, primarily as NRL code-hopper Karmichael Hunt was pulling on the boots for the first time. Gold Coast were thrashed, and Coburg took in the gate earnings that day, so everyone was happy. I mention this anecdote, as a central arterial road, Grand Boulevard, literally came to a gravelly stop next to the oval; there were no shops, few homes, no roundabouts, and I simply couldn't imagine living in such an eerie place. Fast forward to 2014, however, when I moved up here to take up a post at the local Anglican school for almost a decade: a young, low-fee, rapidly expanding educational centre that now boasts three connected campuses. The Melbourne Anglican Diocese purchased a historic sea-captain's homestead and acreage that featured in the 1983 film Phar Lap with Tom Burlinson. Incidentally, my office was also originally located in the archaic coach house where the Toecutter gang tried to abduct Mel Gibson's son in the first Mad Max film, but that is another story ... We moved to a newer housing area called Highlands, which features a very agreeable man-made lake and a Saturday morning Parkrun around it. I decided that I probably lived in one of Australia's most multicultural streets. In order, my neighbours were: Pakistani Muslims, Iraqi Christians, Turkish Alevis, Turkish Sunnis, Afghani Hazaras, Chaldean Catholics, Indian Sikhs, Punjabis and Hmongs, with a smattering of Anglos, Filipinos and Pacific Islanders in the multiethnic mix. Craigieburn is part of the gargantuan 3064 postcode. Its population of over 65,000 in 2021 made it Australia's second-largest suburb, after Point Cook. We are so big, in fact, that in 2020, we were declared special enough to have our own tailored lockdown. These were indeed dark days for many of the multi-generational abodes in the area, and the cutely named exercise of 'remote learning' was somewhat strained in an area where two-thirds of residents speak a language other than English at home.

Sydney Morning Herald
7 minutes ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Bowls marks 180 years, ramps up Brisbane 2032 pitch
It started out the back of a hotel in 1845 and has since grown into a sport played by 2 million people at 1800 clubs across Australia. Hobart's Sandy Bay Bowls Club held a celebration on Monday to mark 180 years since the first recorded game in Australia. That match took place a few kilometres up the road at the then-named Beach Tavern between English immigrant and father-of-19 Frederick Lipscombe and T Burgess. 'We know it was 25 ends, which started the tradition of 25 ends in Australia,' Bowls Australia president Iain Evans said. 'Mr Burgess won on the very last end. It was a very close game.' The sport, which has become intertwined with Australian culture and more recently, allowed players to forgo footwear, spread its wings to Sydney and Melbourne in the following decades. The Hobart event featured a barbecue, tea and coffee and sandwiches, while young and old got to have a crack on the green. Bowls Australia used the anniversary to ramp up its push for the sport's inclusion in the 2032 Brisbane Olympics.