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AFL legend Jason Dunstall and netball great Laura Geitz headline Hall of Fame inductees
AFL legend Jason Dunstall and netball great Laura Geitz headline Hall of Fame inductees

7NEWS

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • 7NEWS

AFL legend Jason Dunstall and netball great Laura Geitz headline Hall of Fame inductees

At 13, Laura Geitz was about as tall as she is now. She was a first-year high school student in country Queensland, just trying to fit in and wishing her 190cm frame did not make her stand out so much. At 20, Jason Dunstall was enjoying an outstanding debut senior season at local Brisbane club Coorparoo. Dunstall had tried rugby union and soccer at school, but settled on Australian Rules as he tried to work out what his degree focus should be at university. Then Geitz discovered netball and Hawthorn coach Allan Jeans discovered Dunstall. And the rest is glorious history. On Friday, Geitz and Dunstall joined veteran sports physician Dr Peter Harcourt at the MCG to be confirmed among this year's Sport Australia Hall Of Fame inductees. Winter Olympics gold medallist Torah Bright, former tennis world No.1 Lleyton Hewitt and Australia's most-capped soccer international Mark Schwarzer are overseas. Rugby league great Cameron Smith could not attend because of illness. As Hall Of Fame chair John Bertrand presented her medal, Geitz marvelled at the sliding doors moment when she discovered the sport where she became an all-time great. 'I was particularly shy and uncertain of myself. I was about the same height as I am now ... so that made life really easy in the first year of high school,' Geitz said ruefully. 'I suppose that very first experience of that game was what netball gave me for my entire career, and that was somewhere ... that made me feel very comfortable. 'My height was to my advantage and I just fell in love with the game.' Geitz immediately saw the future - but her Mum needed some convincing. 'I came home and told my Mum that I was going to play for Quensland and Australia,' she said. 'She was pretty humble and said 'maybe we should set some other goals' - so I always remind her of her lack of support in those early days.' Dunstall's honour comes a year after he was elevated to legend status in the Australian football Hall Of Fame. He is one of only six VFL/AFL players to kick more than 1000 goals and a towering figure in Hawthorn history - not just for his playing exploits, but also as a key official when they appointed Alastair Clarkson as coach. Now a prominent AFL commentator, he chuckled when asked about the 'festival of Dunstall' with the two hall of fame honours. 'It's been a big couple of years - I'm as surprised as anyone,' he told AAP. Of this latest honour, Dunstall said: 'it's very humbling - my first thought is we just play a domestic sport, footy, and we have fun doing it. 'To be recognised amongst a group of incredible sporting people ... who have competed on the international stage and achieved great things for Australia, kind-of puts it into a little bit of perspective.' This is the 40th anniversary of the Sport Australia Hall Of Fame. The induction dinner will be held on November 17, with two legends also to be honoured. 2025 SPORT AUSTRALIA HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES Torah Bright - snowboarder, most successful Australian women's winter Olympian with one gold and one silver across three Games. Jason Dunstall - 1254 goals, four-time premiership player, Australian Football Hall Of Fame legend. Laura Geitz - Australian netball captain. Two-time World Cup champion, Commonwealth Games gold medallist. Dr Peter Harcourt - more than four decades in medicine across a wide range of sports and organisations. Lleyton Hewitt - world No.1 tennis player, two-time grand slam champion. Mark Schwarzer - goalkeeper, most-capped Socceroo with 109, including two World Cups. Only non-Briton to make more than 500 English Premier League appearances. Cameron Smith- three-time Melbourne Storm premiership player. Only NRL player to reach 400 games. All-time record points scorer with 2786.

Sliding doors moments set up stars for sports greatness
Sliding doors moments set up stars for sports greatness

Perth Now

time4 days ago

  • Sport
  • Perth Now

Sliding doors moments set up stars for sports greatness

At 13, Laura Geitz was about as tall as she is now. She was a first-year high school student in country Queensland, just trying to fit in and wishing her 190cm frame did not make her stand out so much. At 20, Jason Dunstall was enjoying an outstanding debut senior season at local Brisbane club Coorparoo. Dunstall had tried rugby union and soccer at school, but settled on Australian Rules as he tried to work out what his degree focus should be at university. Then Geitz discovered netball and Hawthorn coach Allan Jeans discovered Dunstall. And the rest is glorious history. On Friday, Geitz and Dunstall joined veteran sports physician Dr Peter Harcourt at the MCG to be confirmed among this year's Sport Australia Hall Of Fame inductees. Winter Olympics gold medallist Torah Bright, former tennis world No.1 Lleyton Hewitt and Australia's most-capped soccer international Mark Schwarzer are overseas. Rugby league great Cameron Smith could not attend because of illness. As Hall Of Fame chair John Bertrand presented her medal, Geitz marvelled at the sliding doors moment when she discovered the sport where she became an all-time great. 'I was particularly shy and uncertain of myself. I was about the same height as I am now ... so that made life really easy in the first year of high school,' Geitz said ruefully. 'I suppose that very first experience of that game was what netball gave me for my entire career, and that was somewhere ... that made me feel very comfortable. 'My height was to my advantage and I just fell in love with the game.' Geitz immediately saw the future - but her Mum needed some convincing. 'I came home and told my Mum that I was going to play for Quensland and Australia,' she said. 'She was pretty humble and said 'maybe we should set some other goals' - so I always remind her of her lack of support in those early days.' Dunstall's honour comes a year after he was elevated to legend status in the Australian football Hall Of Fame. He is one of only six VFL/AFL players to kick more than 1000 goals and a towering figure in Hawthorn history - not just for his playing exploits, but also as a key official when they appointed Alastair Clarkson as coach. Now a prominent AFL commentator, he chuckled when asked about the 'festival of Dunstall' with the two hall of fame honours. 'It's been a big couple of years - I'm as surprised as anyone,' he told AAP. Of this latest honour, Dunstall said: 'it's very humbling - my first thought is we just play a domestic sport, footy, and we have fun doing it. 'To be recognised amongst a group of incredible sporting people ... who have competed on the international stage and achieved great things for Australia, kind-of puts it into a little bit of perspective.' This is the 40th anniversary of the Sport Australia Hall Of Fame. The induction dinner will be held on November 17, with two legends also to be honoured. 2025 SPORT AUSTRALIA HALL OF FAME INDUCTEES Torah Bright - snowboarder, most successful Australian women's winter Olympian with one gold and one silver across three Games. Jason Dunstall - 1254 goals, four-time premiership player, Australian Football Hall Of Fame legend. Laura Geitz - Australian netball captain. Two-time World Cup champion, Commonwealth Games gold medallist. Dr Peter Harcourt - more than four decades in medicine across a wide range of sports and organisations. Lleyton Hewitt - world No.1 tennis player, two-time grand slam champion. Mark Schwarzer - goalkeeper, most-capped Socceroo with 109, including two World Cups. Only non-Briton to make more than 500 English Premier League appearances. Cameron Smith- three-time Melbourne Storm premiership player. Only NRL player to reach 400 games. All-time record points scorer with 2786.

Real Housewives of Brisbane star lists stunning six-bedroom mansion
Real Housewives of Brisbane star lists stunning six-bedroom mansion

Daily Mail​

time4 days ago

  • Business
  • Daily Mail​

Real Housewives of Brisbane star lists stunning six-bedroom mansion

High-profile businesswoman Fleur Madden is set to put her Queensland mansion under the hammer. Madden, who was cast in the axed Real Housewives of Brisbane spin-off, has not listed a price guide for the two-storey, six-bedroom property she shares with her husband, mining executive Jimmy Gwisai. According to sales records, the median sale price for large upscale properties in Coorparoo, where the home is situated, is an impressive $2.5million The couple's property, dubbed The Palms, is inspired by the architecture found in Florida around Palm Springs. Highlights include a dazzling façade, stone archways, a pink blush front door and a private dining room that features a built-in 'wine wall' and spectacular chandelier. There's also a curved staircase, terrazzo tiling, oak timber floors, a beautifully appointed 'media room' and a home office that can double as a bedroom. The ground floor offers an open-plan layout combining an oversized kitchen and living space, which opens out to a covered patio and al fresco dining and pool area. Other highlights include soaring three-metre ceilings and a master suite occupying an entire corner of the top floor, which also features a grand ensuite and dressing room. Impressive 'classic' details are featured prominently in the appointments, including French doors and windows. It comes after Madden, who runs the Ginsburg Advisory business brand, was all set to star in reality spin-off, The Real Housewives of Brisbane. Announced in 2023, Foxtel dropped the Brisbane edition in favour of a second Sydney season. Madden was to feature in a cast including couture designer Sonia Stradiotto and jewellery designer Jimena Alejandra. Speaking to Adelaide Now at the time, Alejandra revealed that she was first approached in 2022. Also interviewed for the story was Madden, who said that the network had plans to make the series different and less frivolous than its predecessors. 'They were specifically looking for businesswomen and women that had their own success, they were trying to make it different,' she told the publication in 2023. It was earlier reported that The Real Housewives reality franchise would be moving to Brisbane and the Gold Coast. According to The Courier Mail, suitable candidates living in Queensland's wealthiest postcodes were being sought out. Producers had approached a number of high-profile women, and some reportedly declined the opportunity, opting to keep their lives private.

How quieter seasons can help your house stand out when it's for sale
How quieter seasons can help your house stand out when it's for sale

News.com.au

time04-07-2025

  • Business
  • News.com.au

How quieter seasons can help your house stand out when it's for sale

While springtime is typically the most popular time to sell, Jo Millington and Stuart Myerscough decided selling in winter would help their home stand out among the crowd. 'We wanted to hit the market before the spring market rush,' Ms Millington said, and added winter doesn't always mean poor weather in Queensland. 'We certainly weren't hoping to avoid winter … the sun is shining, the birds are singing; there's no drastic change in people's behaviours.' The couple had lived in their Coorparoo house for seven years, having raised their three children there. Now, the two have been looking to downsize, getting ready for their older children to move out of their family home. 'The kids are growing up,' Ms Millington said. 'Our son's left home, our middle child's in year 12, and the house is built for large families. 'So we felt it was probably time to try something else, so we could get used to it and it wouldn't be such a big change when the kids left home.' The campaign for the home at 420 Upper Cornwall St has taken the family through June and July, where homes are most often at their cheapest across Queensland suburbs. New Ray White data has found the winter season to have the most suburbs selling houses at their lowest prices, with 718 suburbs across the state showing winter months were the cheapest times to buy. This beat out summer, with 524 recorded suburbs showing their cheapest deals, spring with 486 suburbs, and autumn with 357 suburbs. This was taken by assessing the state's 2085 best-selling suburbs over a ten-year period. But Place Camp Hill agent Shane Hicks said while market habits may still be present since the Covid pandemic, seasonality has become a lot less important for buyers. 'In my opinion, since Covid seasonality for buyers has gone out the window,' he said. 'They are here all the time; that's both local and interstate.' Ms Millington said she could see seasonal weather affecting some of the southern states more, but in Queensland it was 'much of a muchness'. 'I feel like any challenges we've had haven't had anything to do with the season,' she said. 'I truly believe in Queensland, seasonality is irrelevant.' 'Buyers are still out there looking, but there are fewer homes on the market,' Mr Hicks said. 'So if the buyer really needs to buy, it's a great opportunity for a seller to achieve a sale.' Mr Hicks said he was still receiving a lot of activity from registered bidders and buyers agents: particularly representing interstate buyers, preparing for a move to Queensland before the next school year. 'If they're moving, they're really shopping now,' he said.

Teens who attacked Toutai Kefu and family in their Brisbane home have sentences upheld following appeal
Teens who attacked Toutai Kefu and family in their Brisbane home have sentences upheld following appeal

ABC News

time03-06-2025

  • General
  • ABC News

Teens who attacked Toutai Kefu and family in their Brisbane home have sentences upheld following appeal

Queensland's attorney-general has failed to appeal the sentences handed to two teenagers who attacked former rugby great Toutai Kefu and his family during a home invasion. Last year the two boys, who were aged 15 at the time of the incident, were sentenced over the 2021 break-in at Coorparoo, after pleading guilty to several offences including multiple counts of malicious acts with intent. They were both given less than 10 years in detention, and had no convictions recorded. The then attorney-general Yvette D'Ath launched an appeal on the grounds the sentences were manifestly inadequate. During a hearing held in the Court of Appeal earlier this year, prosecutors argued the sentencing judge did not have regard to the maximum penalty for some of the offences, which were deemed "particularly heinous". Under Queensland youth justice laws at the time, it meant the teenagers could face a punishment of up to and including life in prison. In a published judgement, three Court of Appeal judges found "no error had been established" by the attorney-general in relation to the sentencing judge's consideration of an appropriate term of detention.

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