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AFL Geelong Cats star Jeremy Cameron drops Bailey Smith truth bomb after big win, Brownlow betting plunge

AFL Geelong Cats star Jeremy Cameron drops Bailey Smith truth bomb after big win, Brownlow betting plunge

Mercury5 days ago

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Bailey Smith has earned widespread praise from his teammates after another starring role in Geelong's 95-point thrashing of Essendon on Saturday night.
Smith has been in the spotlight ever since his high profile move from the Western Bulldogs, fined for some on-field gestures and drawing concern over a 'nose beers' social media post.
It all led to the extraordinary move of a face-to-face meeting with AFL chief executive Andrew Dillon during the week.
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After that chat, and a week off for a hamstring issue, the blond midfielder returned with 41 disposals, six clearances and 760 metres gained in the Cats' 23.13 (151) to 8.8 (56) annihilation of the Bombers at the MCG.
After the game, Cats spearhead Jeremy Cameron – who booted six goals for the night – was asked on Fox Footy how Smith handled 'being most talked about player in the game'.
'I think he handles it pretty well, doesn't he?' Cameron replied.
'He's got a good spot there at home when he gets away and when he's at the football club, what he's done for us as players has been absolutely amazing.
Bailey Smith of the Cats takes a selfie with fans after Geelong's demoltion of Essendon. (Photo by)
'We've got his back right through whatever it is during the week. We'll always have his back and back him in to do what he does.
'He's brilliant out here on the field, but inside the locker room he's even better, which is hard to believe but it's true.
'We look forward to seeing what he can do in the back half of the year.'
Smith and his new midfield teammate Max Holmes are forming a devastating partnership around the ground, with the latter contributing 36 possessions, eight clearances and 871 metres gained of his own.
Fox Footy were keen to push the 'Dash brothers' tag on the emerging duo and Holmes had a cheeky dig at Smith when asked about him post-match.
Smith had 41 disposals against the Bombers. (Photo by)
One half of Geelong's 'Dash Brothers', Max Holmes had 36 touches himself.. (Photo by)
'I shook my head because he came off with 39 (disposals) and he wasn't supposed to go back on,' Holmes said.
'Clearly he was thinking about my 40 last week, so he wanted to out do me. Little so and so there.
'He cops it in the media and pretty unfairly a lot of the time.
'It's great to see him just shut out the noise on game day and play good footy.
'With Bailey in the side hopefully we're a better team than last year.'
During the week, Dillon reiterated to Smith his importance as a role model after some of his recent acts had overstepped the mark.
But his coach Chris Scott felt like it should be viewed in a positive light and nothing to generate negative talk.
'I don't think (Smith) felt like there was focus on him,' Scott said.
'I understand that there were questions around it, but I thought it was more the interest in something that's a bit unusual, like a conversation around the fire that didn't really light very well.
'It's rare for an AFL CEO to do that with a young player.
'We appreciated it, it was a step in the right direction, but maybe I misread it and I don't follow much of that stuff, but I didn't feel like it was a negative that would've put pressure on him.
AFL CEO Andrew Dillon (right) met with Bailey Smith at his home last week. (Photo by)
'If there's a bit of a sense that there's some controversy in a negative sense towards him, I don't think we're feeling it, or I'm not seeing it anyway, but sometimes coaches are the last to know.'
As is always the case with the 24-year-old Smith, he drew a wide range of comments online after his latest impressive display on the field.
One tweet declared: 'Bailey Smith is gonna win the Brownlow isn't he.'
Another said: 'Bailey Smith is easily the best player in the league right now, bar none!'
A third agreed, saying: 'Bailey Smith might actually be a lock for the Brownlow.'
Smith is now a $3 favourite for the Brownlow Medal with Sportsbet, ahead of Adelaide's Jordan Dawson ($3.75) and Collingwood's Nick Daicos ($5.50).
Smith had odds as long as $51 with some bookies pre-season.
Jeremy Cameron kicked another bag of goals to lead the Coleman Medal. (Photo by Michael Willson/AFL Photos via Getty Images)
Yet others weren't quite so convinced about his stats and overall impact.
'Bailey Smith the master of the stat pad. Handballs to someone under pressure to get the handball receive every single time,' came one observation.
'Even though he's so impactful, it feels like Bailey Smith wanders around and gets lost within the game,' suggested another.
'Bailey Smith would average 150 if he could kick,' offered a SuperCoach fan.
Sitting second on the ladder, the Cats next face a huge Friday night clash with reigning premiers Brisbane in Geelong on June 20.
- with NewsWire
Originally published as Geelong teammates support Bailey Smith amid mammoth betting plunge

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'He's a meteorite': how Baraka blitzed an $8 billion Australian industry to find fans worldwide
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Do the people of Perth care about rugby league? Here's what we learnt in Origin week
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Do the people of Perth care about rugby league? Here's what we learnt in Origin week

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Do the people of Perth care about rugby league? Here's what we learnt in Origin week
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At a guess, 75 per cent of people were in some sort of Origin merchandise. Surely, they were interstate travellers, right? But of the 57,000-strong crowd in attendance, only 13,000 travelled from other states to watch the game. On top of the 44,000 locals in the crowd, another 190,000 watched from their Perth lounge rooms – more than recent round's free-to-air audience for the Fremantle Dockers and West Coast Eagles games. Of course, those figures don't include the number of people watching AFL matches on Kayo, but they do at least make you wonder if West Australian editor Chris Dore was right when he said 'if we had a league readership here, we would be covering it' when asked why his newspaper had buried its Origin coverage next to the escort-services page on the day of the game. This is the same newspaper that six years earlier, before the first Origin game was played in Perth, was championing the cause that the city should have its own NRL team. The Bears will have enough challenges without worrying about that. Rugby league by the numbers in Perth In 2018, the NRL kicked off the NRL season with a double header at Optus Stadium. The fixture attracted a crowd of 38,824 attendees, with 20 per cent out-of-state visitors In 2019 and 2022, the NRL's marquee State of Origin delivered more than $25m direct economic expenditure impact into WA, with over 116,000 visitor nights and nearly 20,000 out-of-state visitors. In 2023, the Dolphins first visit to Perth drew a crowd of over 45,000. In 2024, the Dolphins-Roosters NRL game at HBF Park sold out quickly with the match setting a new attendance record at the venue. In 2025 the recent Sharks-Manly and Rabbitohs-Cowboys double header attracted a crowd of 31,347. The 2025 Perth Origin sold out with more than 57,000 fans, of which 13,000 came from other states. Record ratings for Perth (190k) for game two of this year's Origin series, up from 169,000 in game one. It was the second-biggest consumption of food and beverage at Optus Stadium, surpassed only by the AFL grand final in 2021. Let's face it, the NRL has made things hard for them by insisting they operate from the start on a level playing field and not offering them any salary cap dispensation, as the AFL has done when setting up new franchises. Even in the NRL, expansion team Papua New Guinea will come into the competition in 2028 with the added bonus of being able to offer players a tax-free income. Not since the Melbourne Storm almost three decades ago has a team been asked to convince 30 players to move interstate, away from family and friends. The Dolphins had the luxury of having their own junior nursery and signing a bunch of players who already lived in south-east Queensland. The state of rugby league in Perth There are currently around 5000 registered participants in Western Australia. When the Western Reds were in the competition, participation numbers were in between 15,000-20,000. The NRL aims to double participation in WA in 5 years and reach 30,000 participants in 10 years. In 2025, registrations are currently trending for WA's best year since the days of the Western Reds. 240 schools are currently engaged in rugby league programs in WA with elite rugby league programs in six schools. With the Perth Bears and government support, it is hoped to drive this number to more than 500 schools and establish and elite schoolboy/girl competitions in WA. That means the Bears will have to pay overs for more players, creating an unbalanced roster in a town where they can't just go down to the local ground and find the next best kid. If you are player 19-30 on the roster, or one of the club's development players, you could be making a 10-hour return trip each week to represent the North Sydney Bears in NSW Cup, if the club decides to adopt that development-pathway model. As one rival NRL club representative said during the week: 'I'm glad our players have just done this trip, now they won't sign with the Bears.' Their coach Mal Meninga proved incredibly popular with the locals during his recent trip to the west for Origin II, which is a huge positive. But it must also be remembered that, despite an impeccable record of coaching at representative level for Queensland and Australia, he hasn't coached a club team since 2001. With that will come uncertainty. Loading Similarly, the Bears' chief executive Anthony de Ceglie is a well-connected figure in Perth, which again is a huge positive. But, by his own admission, he has very little rugby league IQ. None of that means the Bears won't – or can't – be a success, but the challenges are real. Time is of the essence and much of this team's success will hinge on its ability to arrive with a bang and not a succession of wooden spoons as it figures itself out.

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