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Michael Walters: Fremantle Dockers great announces retirement, effective immediately

Michael Walters: Fremantle Dockers great announces retirement, effective immediately

West Australian3 days ago
Fremantle will farewell a club legend with five-team leading goalkicker Michael Walters announcing his immediate retirement on Thursday morning.
The man affectionately known as 'Sonny' will cut short his 17th season at the club with injuries keeping him from adding to his games tally this season.
Ironically, it means his final game was against the club he had been a talisman for when he captained the Indigenous All Stars to a win over the Dockers in February
Walters retires as a legend of the club, having been drafted with pick 53 in 2008, going on to kick 365 goals from his 239 games, earning an All-Australian blazer and life membership in 2019.
Only Hall of Famer Matthew Pavlich has more goals than Walters, while he sits seventh for games played, one behind Nat Fyfe and is the club's all-time Indigenous games record holder.
He was also part of the 2013 grand final side, kicking two goals in a losing effort, and while he won't be there as the Dockers look to climb the premiership mountain this season, the 34-year-old says he's at peace with the decision.
'I have been working my backside off to try and get back to play some form of footy, and while mentally I am still committed, unfortunately my body wouldn't allow me to continue playing,' Walters said.
'I never left a stone unturned, I tried to return and play again at the top level, and it just didn't work out.'
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Paris Olympics gold medallist Letsile Tebogo from Botswana, who kicked off his 2025 campaign at the Maurie Plant Meet in Melbourne in March, won the men's 200m in impressive style in 19.76. Australian Jessica Hull has hung tough at her favourite hunting ground to finish a gutsy third in the women's 1500m at the Diamond League meet in Eugene as peerless Kenyan Faith Kipyegon smashed her own world record. Once the pacemaker dropped out shortly after the halfway point, Paris Olympics silver medallist Hull was the only runner to go with Kigyegon, who has won the last three Olympic 1500m golds. The Kenyan powered home in the final 200 metres to stop the clock at three minutes 48.68 seconds, bettering her previous world mark of 3:49.04. Hull, 28, was third in 3:52.67 at the Hayward Field track where she first made her name as a collegiate star for the University of Oregon. "To get the position right off the line was super nice, and then I just tried to stay relaxed," said Hull. "Then I felt Faith, she put her foot down and made it really hard for that last 500 metres. "This was the fastest 1500m I've been in all year, so it was definitely tough in that last 400, but I'm okay with that being tough at this point of the season. "It was really important to get a really fast one under my belt and build from here." Olympic champion Beatrice Chebet from Kenya also broke a world mark on Saturday (Sunday AEST), becoming the first woman to break the 14-minute barrier in the 5000m with a sizzling run of 13:58.06. Chebet looked in shock when she saw the time, adding to her world 10,000m record set in Eugene last year. Flying Dutchman Niels Laros caused a major boilover in the storied Bowerman Mile, passing American Yared Nuguse in the shadow of the line. Nuguse went out hard as he chased the world record but eventually had to settle for second in 3:45.95, one hundredth of a second behind Laros. Australian teen sensation Cam Myers was a commendable sixth in a stacked field in 3:47.50 - just two hundredths of a second outside the national record he shares with Olli Hoare. Olympic silver medallist Kishane Thompson from Jamaica saluted in a high-quality men's 100m in 9.85. "I'm the only one that can stop me," Thompson said. "I don't say that to brag, but to be honest, once I better my execution, amazing things are going to happen." Lachlan Kennedy was eighth in 10.07. It was the first competitive outing for the 21-year-old Kennedy since he became just the second Australian to legally break the 10-second barrier with a flying time of 9.98 last month in Kenya. American Melissa Jefferson-Wooden stormed home to win the women's 100m in 10.75, relegating Olympic champ Julien Alfred from St Lucia to second spot in 10.77. Paris Olympics gold medallist Letsile Tebogo from Botswana, who kicked off his 2025 campaign at the Maurie Plant Meet in Melbourne in March, won the men's 200m in impressive style in 19.76.

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