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Country Footy: Echuca starts season unbeaten despite injury ‘curse' in Goulburn Valley league

Country Footy: Echuca starts season unbeaten despite injury ‘curse' in Goulburn Valley league

Herald Sun02-05-2025

Don't miss out on the headlines from Local Footy. Followed categories will be added to My News.
Echuca is confident a 'cursed' injury toll won't impact its chances of winning a fourth straight premiership in the Goulburn Valley league.
Instead, it has ramped up the chance to invest more games into juniors.
The Murray Bombers take on the Shepparton Bears in a Goulburn Valley Football League grand final replay on Saturday at Deakin Reserve with both sides winning their opening four matches of the year.
However, the unbeaten run has not come without challenges.
At one stage the Bombers had 14 players on the injury list including ex-AFL player Ben Reid and Carlton VFL-lister player Aiden Mills who both have season-ending injuries.
'We're a bit cursed,' Echuca coach Simon Maddox said.
'In terms of players' health it hasn't been a good start.
'We knew we were going to be younger and there was going to be chances for kids.
'We've got a few more kids in than expected.
'It has created some great opportunities for some young kids who will now test themselves against the best in the competition on Saturday.'
Last weekend against Benalla Echuca fielded a dozen players either under the age of 20 or with under 10 games of senior experience.
Despite some nervous moments at the start they still won by 55 points.
Maddox said the worst of the crisis was over with a host of players to return this weekend for the trip to Shepparton.
Ex-AFL player Sam Reid comes in after missing the Benalla game with Kane Morris also returning.
Last year's leading club goalkicker, Liam Tenace, also returns for his first game of the season.
'We're not complaining about Saturday's side, it's a pretty good side,' Maddox said.
'We get three big ins and Lachie Watson is back, he didn't play last week.
'But there'll be different faces to what played on grand final day.'
Maddox said he expected a fired up Bears outfit after the 96-point smashing by Echuca in the grand final last year.
'It should be a ripping game of football,' he said.
'Your first point of redemption is when you play them again.
'I expect Shepparton to be red hot at the start of the game.
'It will be a territory battle.
'They are trying to right last year's wrong and we're still trying to make a statement we are one of the best teams in the competition.'
The game starts at 2pm.

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Patrick Dangerfield's daughter steals the show with cracking one-liner at 350th game media conference
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Patrick Dangerfield's daughter Flic has stolen the show ahead of her dad's 350th AFL game. Geelong captain Dangerfield will become the 25th AFL/VFL player to reach the rare milestone when he takes the field against Brisbane at GMHBA Stadium on Friday night. The 35-year-old notched 154 games for Adelaide between 2008 and 2015 before heading home to Geelong. The eight-time All-Australian has added another 195 games, the 2016 Brownlow Medal, three best and fairests and a long-elusive premiership in 2022 — the Cats' first in 11 years. He has also become a father of three to George (seven), Felicity (five) and Winnifred (two). Dangerfield had his two daughters with him at Wednesday's media conference and they joined him at the desk, while they waited for coach Chris Scott. The sisters appeared to enjoy their time in front of the microphones, with plenty of laughs and giggles. When Scott finally arrived, Flic graciously vacated the seat before she was encouraged back to the mic by her dad. 'What do you have to say to Chris ... don't get shy now,' Dangerfield said. Flic then took her moment and nailed it. 'You're late,' she said to Scott before everyone erupted in laughter. Scott hailed the recruitment of Dangerfield, which immediately helped the Cats return to the finals after a rare miss in Scott's rein. 'It coincided with a period where I wouldn't go so far as to say we were at the crossroads, but history is a pretty good guide in terms of list management and the length of time that teams can stay up in contention,' coach Chris Scott said. 'And we were certainly testing the boundaries of that through that period. 'He didn't do it all himself, but he did a lot of it in terms of getting us back into contention. 'Pat himself talks about it a lot - there's so many people that go into making a club successful over a long period of time. But none of them more important than him. '... We were hopeful that he could help a lot, but no one could be so optimistic to think that one player is going to come in and completely transform the fortunes of our football team. 'But I'm happy enough to say, in the fullness of time, that he did that.' For Scott, former AFLPA president Dangerfield is a player as influential off the field as on it, noting his ability to juggle being a friendly ear to teenage draftees with having 'high-powered negotiations' with the AFL hierarchy. 'The impact he's had on the club, off field, it's been instructive for all of us, and certainly on a personal level he's been great for me,' he said. If Dangerfield was the driving force behind Geelong's latest success, then the club has been just as important for the Moggs Creek local. He joins former teammates Gary Ablett Jr, Joel Selwood and Tom Hawkins in reaching 350 games. 'It speaks to the organisation and the environment that's been created that players want to hang around,' he said. 'They want to enjoy the environment. They want to squeeze everything out of their career. 'And it's not necessarily the game that catches up with you mentally. It's your body physically failing you, which I think is a great spot to be.' Scott stands by past comments that Dangerfield, an explosive midfielder with relentless attack on the ball, was a 'unicorn' of a player. 'He was the best player of that type in the competition,' he said. 'I've always had a bias, personally, towards the powerful inside midfielders. There have been some pretty good ones over the years, (Nat) Fyfe and (Dustin) Martin at that time. Patrick was singular in the way he played. '... Habitually, he does some things that no other player can do.' Now in his 18th season, Dangerfield has been transformed from a midfielder to a more permanent forward, which he considers a 'game changer'. It appears a move that could extend his career, though he refuses to look any further forward than his contract for next year. 'I'm happy to say I'm loving the game as much as I've ever loved it, to be honest,' he said. 'And perhaps that's because you do get closer to the end than the start. 'And you realise how fortunate you are to play the game, to be involved in it, to try and feel young with the young players that come in and the stories they have and the way they go about things. 'That keeps things fun. It keeps you willing to be around.'

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