‘It's a no-go': Giants captain busted in apparent dirty act
Greene has already been hit with a one-match suspension for striking Swans star Isaac Heeney during the spiteful Sydney derby and the 31-year-old could now face further attention from the AFL.
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New vision of an apparent second striking act was first shared on Channel 9's Footy Classified on Monday night with the mercurial small forward appearing to kick Swans defender Dane Rampe in the groin region.
The new vision shows Greene lashed out kicking directly behind him between Rampe's legs during a heated confrontation before the start of the game.
Vision from behind the goals showed Rampe giving Greene some special attention with multiple attempts to push and shove his opponent behind play.
As the ball was bounced to start the game, Greene then kicked out behind him.
According to Channel 9, the AFL was not aware of the incident before Monday night.
Greene's elbow to the side of Isaac Heeney's head was the only charge handed down following the AFL Match Review Officer's review of the game with the league stating 'there were no incidents requiring a detailed explanation'.
You can watch the incident in the video player above.
Essendon legend Matthew Lloyd on Monday night told the AFL and new general manager of football performance Greg Swann the league needs to come out and make a public statement about Greene's uncovered act.
'I feel that the AFL will look at this,' Lloyd said.
'I'm not sure what they do after the event or if this is the first time they've heard about or known about the vision.
'The groin region and an intentional kick going to that region, it certainly must be re-looked at by the AFL. I'd expect a statement from them in the next 24 hours.'
Former GWS board member Jimmy Bartel said 'kicking is a no-go' in football and pointed to Greene's poor discipline in important matches, with seven incidents cited from finals or so called 'big' games.
'It's still pretty average,' the Brownlow medallist said.
'Kicking is a no-go and then kicking to the groin region and throwing your legs back like that.
'This is the issue with Toby Greene, especially in big games he sees the red mist worse than most. That's the problem.'
Greene's suspension for striking Heeney comes ahead of a crucial finals-shaping Thursday night fixture for the Giants against the Western Bulldogs.
With the Giants and Bulldogs both winning on Friday night, eight premiership points still separates the clubs, with the Dogs in a must-win position ahead of the clash at Marvel Stadium in Round 21.
Brisbane Lions legend Jonathan Brown put Greene's 'undisciplined' act down to being 'too amped up' to start the match.
'Yeah, it is late. So, you can understand some sort of fine,' he said on Fox Footy on Friday night.
'He was just a bit fired up, he was a bit hot under the collar — maybe a bit amped up too much in the first half, and that just showed out in some of the undisciplined nature of the acts in the first half.'
Fellow Lions great Alastair Lynch added: 'I think that's where Adam Kingsley's coming from — he didn't make the right impact in that first half and (needed) a bit of a reset. I don't think the Isaac Heeney one's a good look.'
Fox Footy's Ben Dixon said he had close eyes on Greene during the first quarter watching from the sideline.
'No shots fired during the week, very quiet leading into Derby 31 and Toby Greene might've been saving his rounds because the first quarter he was firing shots left, right and centre,' he said from the boundary line.
'Isaac Heeney's 'don't argue' on Toby Greene, he said 'I'm not having that', comes in with a forearm to the head, reverse free kick. That was holding the ball.
'And then off the ball with Aaron Francis, just one to the chest, throwing his weight around.
'He's not going to miss many tonight the way the captain's going about it.'
Greene also showed his contempt towards fellow agitator Tom Papley heading to the halftime break, telling Fox Footy 'he's looking overweight, see how he goes second half'.

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ABC News
20 minutes ago
- ABC News
Australian rugby looks for pride and soul in the mud and the rain of a Lions dead rubber
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A few Lions fans made a show of wearing shorts in defiance of the conditions, walking around with chests out and fine spirits and given the series was wrapped up, it's hard to begrudge them a little peacocking. "Is this what you Aussies call cold? Is this what you call winter?" one asked with a beer in each hand and two more half-finished ones in his jacket pockets, as another man strode past one of the precinct's few pubs blasting a tune on the bagpipes. The stakes on the field still felt high to the last, even accounting for the Lions' earlier victories in Brisbane and Perth, and there were heroes to be found all through the mud and the grime. In his final Test match Nic White marshalled and fought and chipped like Snidely Whiplash if he knew how to box kick and the retiring halfback deserved the standing ovation he received on exit. 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News.com.au
20 minutes ago
- News.com.au
New campaign for probe into 2012 death of gold prospector Bruce Schuler
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ABC News
an hour ago
- ABC News
Five quick hits: Wallabies vs British and Irish Lions, third Test from Stadium Australia
The Wallabies have achieved just their seventh Test win over the British and Irish Lions, in a match that finished well beyond its listed time. Lightning stopped a gripping Test match that was physically demanding, and had the biggest and smallest players unafraid to muscle up. Here are the five quick hits from Stadium Australia. Any fears the Wallabies were going to come out of the sheds flat for the third Test, scarred by the heartbreak of last week, were extinguished in the opening minutes. Desperate for a fast start, Australia chanced its arm, showing little regard for the wet and miserable conditions. The up-tempo style of play was working for the Wallabies, who earned a five-metre scrum after driving Lions winger Tommy Freeman into his own in-goal. The Wallabies scrum, put under pressure in Melbourne, held firm at the first time of asking in Sydney. The Wallabies were patient on the Lions' goal line, hammering the defence with runs from the big forwards. When the moment was right, Nic White spun the ball out to the left. Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii held the ball as long as he dared, drawing in two defenders, before passing to an unmarked Dylan Pietsch on the wing. With cover defence scampering across, Pietsch held his nerve and scored well, diving for the line and showing terrific ball control despite the conditions. Wallabies scrum half Nic White was allowed to have a farewell Test against rugby's most special team. But the number nine had no interest in exiting Test rugby quietly. White was in the thick of the action from the early moments, being the focal point of two melees. The first came in the 22nd minute when White chose to pick a fight with Lions hooker Dan Sheehan. That skirmish set off a chain reaction, with three spot fires emerging. White was the focus of Lion-fury in the 43rd minute, when Tadhg Beirne took exception to a shove from White. That led to more melees on the pitch, as medics came to the aid of Lions lock James Ryan, left motionless on the ground after copping an accidental knee from Will Skelton. James Ryan's injury early in the second half paused the match for several minutes. But while there was concern for the Irishman on the ground, another problem was forming in the skies. The players and officials walked off with the medical cart, as lightning around Homebush forced play to be suspended. Fans in the first 19 rows of the lower tier were encouraged to seek shelter in the concourse, while the players and coaching staff were thrown into the unknown. Fans around Stadium Australia remained upbeat during the near-45-minute delay, while some took it too far and ran onto the field. Four times, security was forced to enter a paying surface deemed unsafe because of lightning, just to escort patrons who wanted 15 seconds of notoriety from anyone who was watching. How the teams handled the break was different once the match had a restart time. The Wallabies were on the pitch 10 minutes before the resumption, going through warm-ups. The Lions, however, did not emerge from the sheds until five minutes before play resumed. That five-minute difference likely had little impact on the outcome, but served as an interesting point about how each side handled the same problem. The opening minutes of the second half saw Test rugby at its best. Coming off a 45-minute delay for lightning, the Wallabies and Lions waged a battle in the middle of the field. With the Wallabies lead just eight points, whoever could score first in the second half was going to have a tremendous chance of winning. Fortunately for Australia, the Lions blinked first. Trying to pass quickly down the left flank, the Lions were unable to handle the wet ball that went to ground. The ball popped into the arms of Max Jorgensen, who latched onto the footy like it was his most cherished possession. Once he had the ball in his arms, Jorgensen made the Lions pay. He broke one tackle and then was sprinting down the sideline, never to be caught. His try gave the Wallabies a 15-point lead and had Australian fans believing in a win. It was the second time in this series that Jorgensen's brilliance caught the Lions off guard. The winger scored Australia's opening try in the first Test, snatching a ball out of the air and sprinting away for the score. That try gave Australians hope in the first Test, and his try in Sydney put the Wallabies on the cusp of victory. Queensland Reds player Tate McDermott came off the bench in all three Tests, but was one of the Wallabies' best in the series. His introduction into the first Test sparked the Wallabies' fightback. He held his own for 60 minutes in Melbourne as a makeshift winger, after Harry Potter succumbed to a hamstring injury. With the match on the line in Sydney, it was McDermott again who made his presence felt. Jac Morgan's try in the 62nd minute reduced the Wallabies' lead back to eight points, hoping to spark another comeback like they did seven days earlier. But the Wallabies were not going to let another potential win slip through their grasp. Camped on the Lions' goal line for five minutes, the Wallabies battled and toiled against a dogged defence. Repeated infringements led to the Lions being reduced to 14- men when reserve hooker Ronan Kelleher was sent to the sin bin in the 69th minute. Two attempted driving mauls had been stopped. More than 10 drives from around the breakdown had been repelled. But amid the big forwards hammering away, it was one of the smallest men on the pitch to break through. McDertmott saw tired defenders next to the breakdown, so darted from the back and ducked under their arms. The scrum half then reached out and slammed the ball on the ground, sending the large contingent of Wallabies fans into hysteria. The Wallabies had a 15-point lead again and they were not going to give it up. History had been achieved for a side so often written off.