SEN SA Breakfast.
âHe gets injured all the time, Jake Stringer. I donât think heâs worthy of a four-year contract.
âHeâll be looking for that clearly because itâs his last big one (contract).
âEssendon have shown that if you lose some players, itâs not the end of the world. You can get a great draft pick, go to the draft and get some youth in, which is what theyâve done.
âI wouldnât be offering him ridiculous money.â
Stringer is expected to be available for selection in the next few weeks. The ex-Bulldog injured his hamstring in the Round 8 loss to GWS.
A bizarre pre-match bum-squeezing incident in the Collingwood dressing room continues to divide the AFL and spark debate across the nation.
The decision by the AFL to launch an investigation and review has been met with widespread ridicule across Australia - with KIIS breakfast host Kyle Sandilands saying it shows the whingers have taken over Australia.
The investigation into the television footage of a team huddle in the Magpies dressing room which captured star Jordan De Goey patting and squeezing the rear of teammate Isaac Quaynor several times while standing behind him.
De Goey was also captured using his left middle finger to pinch Quaynor s bottom as Magpies coach Nathan Buckley gave the team final instructions before running onto the SCG for their clash against the Sydney Swans on Saturday.
Western Bulldogs ball-magnet on track to join exclusive club
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Western Bulldogs midfielder Tom Liberatore is having a superb season.
Liberatore leads the AFL for clearances in 2021 and extracted another 12 in the Bulldogsâ 19-point win over Port Adelaide on Saturday night.
The Dogs ball-magnet averages over nine a game this year and is on track to become just the second player to crack 200 clearances in a season. Only Carlton great Brett Ratten (265) has recorded 200-plus clearances in a single campaign.
Kane Cornes believes Liberatoreâs numbers warrant selection in this year s All-Australian team.
AFL.com.auâs The Round So Far.
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2021-05-14T10:55+10:00
North Melbourne coach David Noble has made the case for his struggling side to be awarded a priority pick, after a run of sixteen straight losses.
The Roos have won just one of their last 23 games, and sit eight points adrift at the bottom of the ladder with a percentage of 52.7.
“I’d love one, absolutely I’d love one. Why wouldn’t we?” Noble asked reporters on Thursday.
“If we were in a situation where that mechanism can be activated, I’m all for it.”
Noble was the general manager of football at Brisbane when the Lions applied for a priority pick five years ago.