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News.com.au
a day ago
- Sport
- News.com.au
Essendon could get up to six first-choice players back following bye to stem run of four losses
Essendon could get as many as six players back immediately after the bye but 'balance' will drive coach Brad Scott's decision despite the battling Bombers coping a 41-point hiding from Fremantle on Thursday night. Scott unleashed another debutant, his team's 11th amid an injury crisis, with teenage ruckman Vigo Visentini added to an outfit that has now lost four games in a row, including a 95-point mauling by Geelong. But as Scott declared young Archie Perkins was 'doubting himself' after a few questionable moments coming on as the sub for the second week in a row despite being one of the more senior players available to him, the coach stopped short of declaring he throw everyone available back in for the round 17 clash with Gold Coast. 'We might get some players back after the break,' Scott said. 'We'll definitely get (Sam) Durham back, for example, from suspension, and there's probably five or six others that will be close. 'But now we've got to balance, is it a risk to bring five or six back all at once? We'll have to assess where they're at. 'Those players will have a really strong training session this weekend. 'They won't have the same bye week that all the other players will have, so we've got two weeks really now to get them ready and then make an assessment as to whether we bring some back.' Perkins, who now has 93 games under his belt, having been taken at pick 9 in the 2020 draft, had a couple of moments that he would rather have back against the Dockers, including missing an uncontested mark in attack because he took his eyes off the ball. He managed just 10 possessions in the loss to the Dockers, following seven against Geelong and 11 against Carlton. Scott said he thought it would come for the 23-year-old. 'I think that it's always about reminding players what they're really good at. And Perkins is a strong, powerful footballer who, at his best, is breaking through tackles and competing really strong,' he said. 'Right at the moment, he's doubting himself a little bit. And so my job is to remind him of what he's really good at. 'Coach those things in terms of the technical aspect but then getting to the point where he's in the frame of mind to get out and compete because he is a competitor. 'But he's just making mistakes through hesitation at the moment. 'It'll come for him. We've just got to persist.' The Bombers had seven first-year players on the ground on Thursday night. One that impressed Scott was Visentini. 'We think there are some players that have come into our team that won't go out regardless of who comes back,' he said. 'So that, by definition, should make us stronger. 'From what I saw tonight, it won't be his (Visentini's) last game of AFL footy, that's for sure. 'I thought he rucked really well. I thought he competed really well. 'He's a 19-year-old playing his first game against a premiership player who was picked two or three in the draft. So, you know, there's some big challenges in footy but probably not too many bigger than that. 'I like his competitiveness. He's a great size, he's a terrific athlete, and he's got a huge opportunity to learn under one of the all-time great ruckman in Todd Goldstein. 'Knowing Goldie, like I do, Goldie's dual objective will be to get himself ready to perform when he needs to play, but he'll take a really-strong interest in getting Vigo up to speed as quickly as possible.'

Sydney Morning Herald
7 days ago
- Sport
- Sydney Morning Herald
Essendon v Geelong LIVE: Bombers, Cats face off at the MCG as Saturday AFL action continues
Loading Posts area Latest posts Latest posts 3.50pm Subs named for Cats vs Dons Neither side has made a late change with Archie Perkins (Dons) and Mitch Duncan (Cats) the subs. 3.45pm Matthews says Tasmanian dew adds to roof argument By Jon Pierik AFL great Leigh Matthews says Friday night's clash in Launceston was a poor spectacle because of heavy dew and reinforced why a new stadium in Hobart needs to have a roof. Hawthorn defeated Adelaide by three points in a cliffhanger in the first Friday night game at UTAS Stadium, but there were only 11 combined goals between the sides in conditions where it was, at times, difficult to handle the ball. A vote on a new $975 million, 23,000-seat stadium at Macquarie Point in Hobart has been delayed because of a snap state election on July 19, but Matthews says – should it go ahead – it must have a roof. Launceston games are usually played on a Saturday or Sunday afternoon, but the Hawks' game against the Crows was played under lights on Friday night, which brought the dew into play. 3.44pm Where does your club rank on wins against top eight sides?

ABC News
11-05-2025
- Sport
- ABC News
Reid's arrival can supercharge Bomber rebuild … what we learned from round nine
Zach Reid continues to announce himself as one of the best young defenders in the AFL, a fascinating ruck battle leaves questions for St Kilda, and Collingwood proves why its system is the best in the competition. Here's what we learned from round nine of the AFL season. Any discussions around drafts are usually a touchy subject for Essendon fans due to the staggering number of misses over the past two decades. One class in particular, that of 2020, is a polarising topic. The Bombers had three top 10 picks in that draft and walked away with three players — Nik Cox, Archie Perkins and Zach Reid. While other players from that class, namely Riley Thilthorpe (pick 2), Max Holmes (pick 20) and Errol Gulden (pick 32) have kicked on and become stars of the competition, the Bombers have been waiting for their trio to hit their straps. Cox started the brightest and Perkins has played the most games of the trio, but many around the club have long believed Reid, who has played the least, will end up being the best player. It has been a hard graft for Reid, whose career has been halted by multiple injuries, but he is finally putting together some football and quickly showing why Essendon has been willing to play the long game with him. Reid has played eight straight games to start this season, incredibly the longest stretch of games in his four-year career to date. Saturday's 27-disposal, 14-mark effort against the Swans was by far the best of the lot. The Bombers stopped in their tracks for the second straight week after a bright first half, and as the Swans pushed in the final quarter, Reid stood up tall. Reid took five intercept marks throughout the contest, all with varying degrees of difficulty. There were the easy ones where he gobbled up haphazard kicks inside 50 from Sydney, tougher ones where he withstood heavy contact to take a big pack mark. But one stood out in which he ran back with the flight of the ball to take it over his shoulder. It was so special that the master of running back with the flight of the ball — Brisbane great Jonathan Brown — stopped commentating the live action as it happened on Fox Footy so he could talk about the mark itself. Reid looked like someone who hadn't played AFL football in a long time in his first two matches this season, but in the weeks that have followed, not only is he getting acclimatised to the pace of the game, but he is growing more confidence in his body with every crunching hit he withstands in a marking contest. Reid isn't just an intercept threat either. He racked up 451 metres against the Swans, mostly using incisive kicks out of Essendon's back 50. In a side that is largely devoid of elite ball users by foot, he sticks out like a sore thumb. There has been great debate over what exactly constitutes a pass mark for the Bombers this season, Brad Scott's third in charge. Getting 20 or more games into Reid will go a long way to making it a positive season. Essendon is still ages away, but players like Reid can shorten the timeline in a hurry, particularly when paired with an equally exciting tall at the other end of the ground in Nate Caddy. All the great sides have strong spines, and the Bombers are building theirs with Caddy and Reid as the bookends. Friday night's clash between St Kilda and Carlton was dubbed by some as the TDK Cup due to the two clubs' bidding war over Blues ruckman Tom De Koning. De Koning is out of contract with the Blues at the end of the year, and the Saints have reportedly handed him the football equivalent of a blank cheque to pledge his future to Moorabbin. Carlton wants him to stay, but is well aware he could walk, given the Blues have their own cap constraints. There is only one problem, the Saints already have a really good ruckman in Rowan Marshall, who is signed through the end of the 2027 season. De Koning is four years younger than Marshall and is an upgrade, he is arguably the best ruckman in the competition in the non-Max Gawn division, but the duel between the two men begged the question as to whether the Saints really needed an upgrade in the ruck stocks. The Saints are quite clearly big game hunting, and have been for the best part of 12 months. They attempted to turn Essendon skipper Zach Merrett's head with an offer so big that Merrett, the most loyal of players, needed to sit down with his partner to talk about it. They chased Finn Callaghan, who said no and signed a monster deal to stay with the Giants himself. De Koning is seemingly the next cab off the rank. If De Koning says yes to the Saints, he'll walk in as the club's highest-paid player. A look at the ruckmen in recent premiership sides, sans Gawn with Melbourne in 2021, suggests blowing large portions of your salary cap on rucks isn't really all that wise. Collingwood realised this barely 12 months after giving Brodie Grundy, an excellent two-time All-Australian big man, a monster seven-year, $7 million deal. They flipped Grundy to use the cap space elsewhere, filled the ruck spot with Darcy Cameron, a less sexy ruck option, and won a premiership 12 months later. It was interesting to watch Marshall play with an extra layer of meanness than usual against De Koning. Every contest between the two had an air of "good luck taking my job" about it from the Saints ruckman. De Koning had the better game, but Marshall wasn't too far behind at all, and the game was a microcosm of where the two ruckmen's careers currently stand. The Saints have a big contract call pending with Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera as well, who is also out of contract and wants to be remunerated in a way that reflects his status as one of the best players on the team. Is it worth pricing yourself out of the Wanganeen-Milera business because you finally got a big fish to say yes? That's the question Saints bosses must ask themselves. A sensational first couple of months has Collingwood deservedly sitting among the league's premiership favourites, but Thursday's win over Fremantle in Perth might have been the biggest statement yet. How many other clubs would boldly decide to go to Perth, still the most daunting road trip in the AFL, while choosing to rest four first-choice players? Yes, Craig McRae suggested Brayden Maynard and Brody Mihocek were dealing with a few ailments, but had this match been a final, they would have played. So too would Jordan De Goey and Scott Pendlebury. Not only were the Pies undermanned, they came up against a Fremantle side in dire need of a response at home. What ensued was another reminder that Collingwood will be incredibly hard to beat at the pointy end of the year. Australian rules football isn't like basketball or the world game, it is harder to plug and play due to the sheer number of players there are on the field. With a larger amount of players comes a larger chance for things to go wrong if guys aren't on the same page. What Collingwood did against Fremantle was the finest example of plug-and-play that you're ever likely to see. Pendlebury and De Goey are two of the Magpies' top six centre bounce players so far this season. With the pair out, Craig McRae put ironman Jack Crisp into the coalface and it yielded instant positive results. Crisp attended 61 per cent of the Pies' centre bounces against Fremantle, by far his highest of the season (his previous high was 13 per cent against the Swans in round five), and responded with 29 disposals and seven clearances, the most by any Collingwood player. The Magpies are now in year four of the McRae era and clearly have supreme confidence in what he preaches. They are able to adjust on the fly, pardon the pun, better than any other team in the competition. Each player not only knows their own role, but their teammate's role as well, allowing the Pies to shapeshift throughout a contest as much as the game deems necessary. It is why they regularly prevail in close games.
Yahoo
12-04-2025
- Sport
- Yahoo
Essendon salute as winless Melbourne sink into the mire
Essendon captain Zach Merrett has dominated in a 33-point thrashing of Melbourne that plunges the winless Demons further into the mire. Skipper Merrett was best-afield with 38 disposals in the Bombers' 15.6 (96) to 8.9 (57) win in Saturday night's Gather Round game at Adelaide Oval. Merrett, Dylan Shiel (30 touches) and Jye Menzie, who kicked four goals, were instrumental in Essendon squaring their win-loss ledger at 2-2. But Simon Goodwin's Demons sink to 0-5 and 17th spot, above only West Coast. Melbourne produced a third-term rally before a crowd of 45,039. The oval's earlier game - Carlton's 71-point hammering of the Eagles - attracted 41,252 spectators. But the damage had been done: the Demons were within six points early in the second term before Essendon kicked the next five goals for a 35-point lead in the third quarter. Just when the Demons appeared down and out, they suddenly - and unexpectedly - turned the tide with four consecutive goals in a 15-minute burst. Bailey Fritsch score twice and Kozzy Pickett added his second as Melbourne drew within 11 points. Archie Perkins takes to the skies ✈️#AFLDeesDons — AFL (@AFL) April 12, 2025 The Demons were 10 down when busy Bomber Nic Martin goaled in the 32nd minute, giving his side a 16-point cushion at three quarter-time. Essendon goalsneak Jade Gresham snapped a major early in the last term to further settle the Demons' fate. Melbourne will lament their lacklustre start - they trailed by 12 points at quarter-time and then allowed Essendon to produce a telling quarter-hour. The Bombers scored four consecutive goals in a batch bookended by the influential Menzie, whose third goal created a 30-point break. At that stage Melbourne, renowned in recent years for a misfiring forward line, led the inside 50 count 25-22 but had scored just 2.4. Essendon's 7.4 to 2.5 halftime lead was soon increased by an Archie Perkins strike and Brad Scott's team appeared safe at 35 points up. The Demons slotted four goals in their unheralded 15 minutes, but their best period was too brief to overpower the Bombers. Melbourne's vaunted on-ball brigade had its collective colours lowered, with Merrett, Shiel, Ben Hobbs (20, two goals), Andrew McGrath (26 possessions) and Nic Martin (28, one goal) all shining. Demons winger Ed Langdon was a standout with 25 touches and a goal while big guns Pickett (23, two goals), Christian Petracca (27,possessions) and Clayton Oliver (24 possessions) all had impact.