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WATCH AFL Round 23 Predictions: Pies Must Win vs Crows & Suns Top 2?

WATCH AFL Round 23 Predictions: Pies Must Win vs Crows & Suns Top 2?

News.com.au3 days ago
The AFL Today Show is here for all your Round 23 preview needs, covering every single game with team, stats, debates and tips for a huge early finals matchup of Adelaide vs Collingwood, Ross Lyon responding to the media, why North Melbourne must win and if Sydney can play spoiler over Geelong!Are the Pies still a threat for finals?
Are the Crows the real deal?
Can the Swans continue to play finals spoiler?
Is Ross Lyon telling the truth about St Kilda?
Is Nat Fyfe the greatest Docker of all time?
Can the Dogs smash records against the Eagles?
Will Aaron Naughton or Riley Thilthorpe make the All-Australian team?
Will the Hawks lock in a finals spot?
The panel full of banter chat about their locks of the week, big calls & key match-ups, including a big debate on the Brownlow + All Australian spots and if anyone from Carlton can stop Mitch Georgiades kicking a bag?
Get around the AFL Today Show brought to you by panelists Liam 'Stats Guy' McAllion, Leo Mullaly and Marcus Bazzano as they talk out all things footy for the 2025 of AFL season!
FOLLOW AFL TODAY SHOW CONTENT
The AFL Today Show is your ultimate footy companion, covering every single team equally and in depth! We break down each game and round of the 2025 season with three shows a week, expert tips, social posts galore, in-depth analysis, debates, interviews with players and top journalists, as well as plenty of banter—chatting about all the things that make AFL great!
Two shows every week, including a round preview show and a round wrap on every game!
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Ash Centra's tricky bounce prompts imitators across the AFL world
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Ash Centra's tricky bounce prompts imitators across the AFL world

Number one draft pick Ash Centra took a stunning mark that led to her first goal with her first kick in AFLW on Thursday night. And a second of pre-game footage has already made her a star across the sport. The rookie was just farting around with the footy in Collingwood's warm-up before their season-opening loss to Carlton at Princes Park when she introduced us all to a brand new move. The 19-year-old scooped up the ball while jogging, threaded it behind her back, and bounced it through her legs while managing to have it hit her perfectly in stride. It was the sort of move that looks impressive when Stephen Curry does it with a basketball on a hardcourt, but seeing someone pull it off so casually with the Sherrin on grass makes you double-take, questioning if your eyes are playing tricks on you. Perhaps it was shameless aura-farming from the Gippsland junior, but the nonchalant manner in which she executed it suggested she's done it a million times before. It was clearly a brand new move to the men's league too, with the blokes battling to emulate it. AFLM superstar Nick Daicos was among her male Magpie counterparts who battled to control it in the sheds: Hawks coach and legendary midfielder Sam Mitchell had a decent crack while standing still, although there were a few fumbles on the cutting room floor by the Hawthorn social crew: The North Melbourne boys gave it a college try before getting camera shy: A few Saints had a go, with mixed results: But perhaps the best cover version goes to Carlton's Ashton Moir. Not only did he do it at jogging pace on grass, including the pick-up off the ground, he added in a lovely checkside goal and did it all in Sambas. You would be risking an all-time bake from your coach if you ever tried it in a game, but at footy ovals all around the country, you'll see adults, kids and anyone with a ball literally falling over themselves to try and execute what will forever be known as The Centra Bounce.

Norm Smith medallist Bobby Hill's finals hopes under threat as AFL absence set to continue
Norm Smith medallist Bobby Hill's finals hopes under threat as AFL absence set to continue

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Norm Smith medallist Bobby Hill's finals hopes under threat as AFL absence set to continue

Norm Smith medallist Bobby Hill's hopes of a recall remain in doubt ahead of the AFL finals, with Collingwood coach Craig McRae flagging the small forward is still working his way back into calculations. Personal issues have restricted Hill to just one half of senior football and one game of VFL over the past two months. Despite missing selection for the Pies' loss to the Crows on Saturday night he travelled with the team to Adelaide instead of facing Port Melbourne in the VFL. Whether that decision helps or harms Hill's hopes of returning to the AFL side this season remains to be seen. 'Bobby's getting better every day,' McRae said after Collingwood lost to the Crows by just three points. 'Not sure if he's available next week but it's pleasing to have him back this week training hard for us.' Hill near his best would undoubtedly boost the Pies but it appears form is not the deciding factor, according to 7NEWS Melbourne's Mitch Cleary. 'Feels like Collingwood's senior players are just waiting to win a bit of trust back with Bobby Hill,' he said on Sunday Footy Feast. 'Everything you hear around the club — he's been missing some sessions here and there, clearly dealing with some personal concerns away from the club. 'I think, hearing Craig McRae there, it's unlikely he'll play next week.' If he misses out on a recall to face Melbourne next week, Hill's case could yet be helped by returning to play for Collingwood's VFL team. The reserves are set for a wildcard final next weekend and a win there would set up an elimination final during the AFL's pre-finals bye. Hill has kicked a goal in all but one of his AFL appearances this season and notched multiple majors in wins over fellow finals hopefuls Fremantle, Brisbane and the Bulldogs. Meanwhile, McRae expects Jeremy Howe to be straight back in next week after missing the Adelaide game with concussion.

'Words can't describe': Wallaby star's emotional return
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After fearing he'd played his last Test, James O'Connor is being lauded for delivering maybe his best performance yet in a Wallabies gold jumper. A record-breaking 17 years after debuting as a teenage utility in Padova, O'Connor pulled all the right strings as chief playmaker in Australia's extraordinary 38-22 comeback win over the world champion Springboks in Johannesburg. Only drafted into the squad following injuries to preferred flyhalves Noah Lolesio, Tom Lynagh and Ben Donaldson, O'Connor played a starring role in the Wallabies' first win at Ellis Park since 1963. Despite turning 36 next year and having only been used as a cameo finisher off the bench during the Crusaders' triumphant 2025 Super Rugby Pacific campaign, O'Connor controlled proceedings for the entire 80 minutes on Sunday morning (AEST). "Look, genuinely, words can't describe right now," he said. "That's personally definitely my favourite win. It meant so much. "It's been a lot of emotion this week, a lot of reflection. I thought my time in the gold jersey was done three years ago. "I fought bloody hard to get back here and the opportunity came with some of the guys getting injured, but I'm here now and I'm loving it." As well as slotting four conversions, O'Connor helped set up Australia's opening try for Dylan Pietsch that sparked the remarkable comeback from 22-0 down, then threw a magical two-man cut-out pass for the 65th-minute five-pointer from Max Jorgensen that virtually sealed the Wallabies' famous win. "He just grew into the game," said Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt. "I thought he got a little bit rattled in the first 20 minutes, just with the heat that the Boks brought. "But the longer the game went on, I felt he started to manage it really well." O'Connor readily admitted returning to the Test ranks after a three-year absence had been daunting at times. "I'm not going to lie," he told Stan Sport. "There's been plenty of times I've thought in my mind, 'Jeez, have I bit off more than I could chew here' because training's quick, everything's hard, everything's quicker. "And I thought, 'Man, I might have talked it up too much now'. "But the boys who got around me, they've looked after me and we've slowly just built into this game plan and, yeah, I'm really loving that detail that Joe's bringing. "He's allowing us to play and really execute in killer moments of the game." The 65-Test veteran agreed with Schmidt that it took a while to find his feet as the Springboks made a ferocious start to the Rugby Championship with three tries in the opening 17 minutes. "A scratchy first 20, but I could feel the gaps were there," O'Connor said. "The space was there. I just couldn't get the ball to that space in the first 20. "Then I felt we eased into the game in that second 20 minutes of that first half. "I felt like we built momentum well and we started to get some outcomes. "So halftime we spoke about it. 'Look, we're in this game, we know we can score points. It's just about trusting what we've built.' "That belief is strong in us now. We've been building. You could see in that Lions series that we're building belief. "So doubling down and there you go, that's a result, so super proud and stoked."

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