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AFL round 15 tips: Geelong v Brisbane, Carlton v North Melbourne

AFL round 15 tips: Geelong v Brisbane, Carlton v North Melbourne

Herald Sun18-06-2025
Don't miss out on the headlines from AFL. Followed categories will be added to My News.
There's seven games for footy fans to enjoy in round 15 and the pick of the bunch comes on Friday night.
The second and third-placed teams on the ladder will do battle when Geelong clash with Brisbane at the Cattery in Patrick Dangerfield's 350th game.
Only one of our tipsters can see the Lions causing an upset, but there is far more love for the Kangaroos to cause a boilover against the Blues.
Don't know who to back? Check out who our experts like in round 15 below. Confidential
Brodie Ryan has revealed the pain of her break-up with footy great Nathan Buckley but says her life is now 'a little more stress-free with a little less pressure and less responsibility'. AFL
Carlton is war gaming Tom De Koning's call — whatever it may be. Could they nab their biggest rival's No. 1 ruckman? Plus, factors in the Lions' quest for Oscar Allen and more trade news.
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Without Parallel stays unbeaten at Rosehill to emerge as a contender for The Kosciuszko
Without Parallel stays unbeaten at Rosehill to emerge as a contender for The Kosciuszko

Herald Sun

time42 minutes ago

  • Herald Sun

Without Parallel stays unbeaten at Rosehill to emerge as a contender for The Kosciuszko

Unbeaten mare Without Parallel stormed into The Kosciuszko contention after demolishing her rivals in a Highway at Rosehill. Don't miss out on the headlines from Horse Racing. Followed categories will be added to My News. Country NSW's leading trainer Matt Dunn has his sights on The Kosciuszko after his emerging talent Without Parallel remained unbeaten at Rosehill Gardens on Saturday. The four-year-old mare made it four from four when revelling in the heavy conditions to trounce her rivals in the Highway Class 3 Handicap (1200m). Immediately after the win, installed Without Parallel into The Kosciuszko pre-field market as a $26 chance for the $2m 1200m country feature at Randwick on October 18. • PUNT LIKE A PRO: Become a Racenet iQ member and get expert tips – with fully transparent return on investment statistics – from Racenet's team of professional punters at our Pro Tips section. SUBSCRIBE NOW! 'We have to start thinking seriously about the race now,' Dunn said. 'Horses can go from Highway races to The Kosciuszko but they need to win like she did. 'I did something similar with a horse called Derry Grove. He won two Highways before running in The Kosciuszko. 'I've got a bit more time up my sleeve with this horse, so I'll go home and plot a path. 'She's a good candidate.' Without Parallel was sent out the $2.45 favourite and gave her backers a painless watch, dominating from the front before surging clear in the straight to win by an ever widening 4¾ lengths from Via Vegas ($18) with Cougars ($8) a half-head back in third. The victory was the perfect start to the new season for apprentice Anna Roper, who was having her first ride for Dunn and provided the prolific trainer with his 41st Highway winner. 'It's a really impressive effort,' Roper said. 'She added another string to her bow today with the wet track and in Sydney grade. 'I was sort of hoping to lead and when that horse crossed me, I didn't really want to follow it so I just popped outside it. â€' SKY Racing (@SkyRacingAU) August 2, 2025 • Waller and J-Mac ignite Godolphin's new era 'It meant I was able to get to the best part of the track so it was good to do that with her. 'She handled that track really well and to do that over 1200 (metres), Matt has got a really nice horse on his hands. 'Super turn of foot. Turning for home I gave her one slap down the shoulder and she took off like a rocket, so she is a really nice horse for the future. 'She's the nicest horse I've sat on in a Highway, that's for sure and certain.' Without Parallel started her career with two starts in the Northern Rivers district of NSW before resuming in June when she recorded her third win at Eagle Farm. Dunn said the daughter of former Kiwi-based shuttle stallion Time Test still has plenty of scope to continue her progression through the grades. 'The way she did that was no surprise to me,' he said. 'The only question I had was if she was going to get through the heavy ground and she's ticked that box now. 'I was hopefully she's handle it because she's that right shape. She's a speed horse that's nimble and athletic. 'If today was a dry track I'd have expected her to do that to them. I hold her in good regard. • Crossbow aims higher after maiden win at Flemington 'Today was another positive. 'She handles firm, good, soft and heavy, she can make the pace or come off speed. 'A real little runner. She's an intelligent little racehorse that just does it.' Roper heads into 2025/26 after the best return of her short career, riding 77 winners during last season with 23.5 metropolitan winners to finish third in the Sydney apprentices' premiership. 'That was my first ride for Matt so it was good to get the job done like that for him,' Roper said. 'I'd really like to get to 100 winners this season shore up my place riding in town so it was good to get off to a fast start like that. 'Last season I missed the first few months through injury so this year to plan is to try to get to 100. 'I really want to work on my consistency too this season in town on a week-to-week basis. 'I've been very lucky with the support I've received from some big stables like Ciaron's. He's been so supportive to my career.' Originally published as Without Parallel stays unbeaten with Highway win at Rosehill to emerge as a strong contender for The Kosciuszko Horse Racing Trainer Denim Wynen celebrated her first city win as former Yulong-owned mare Sunshine Law relished the heavy conditions to score a first-up win at Rosehill. Horse Racing Premiership winners Chris Waller and James McDonald kicked off Godolphin's new era on a winning note with Amusing saluting for the 'Blue Army' at Rosehill.

AFL 2025: Jack Ginnivan pulls finger at Adelaide fans, video, fine, after Hawthorn's loss to Adelaide, latest news
AFL 2025: Jack Ginnivan pulls finger at Adelaide fans, video, fine, after Hawthorn's loss to Adelaide, latest news

Herald Sun

time43 minutes ago

  • Herald Sun

AFL 2025: Jack Ginnivan pulls finger at Adelaide fans, video, fine, after Hawthorn's loss to Adelaide, latest news

Don't miss out on the headlines from AFL. Followed categories will be added to My News. Hawthorn young gun Jack Ginnivan is the latest AFL player set to be sanctioned for giving the bird to Adelaide supporters. Ginnivan was caught on camera pulling his finger to Crows fans while walking off Adelaide Oval after the Hawks' 14-point loss on Friday night. The 22-year old, who's set to cop a $1000 fine for the incident, took to Instagram to respond to a video of the act with the comment: 'Best coin spent.' FOX FOOTY, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every match of every round in the 2025 Toyota AFL Premiership Season LIVE in 4K, with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited-time offer. Ginnivan would join the likes of Geelong's Bailey Smith and West Coast's Harley Reid in getting fined for the middle-finger salute in 2025. 'There was definitely a one-fingered salute from Jack Ginnivan,' Herald Sun reporter Jon Ralph said on Fox Footy. 'I think we call that the Bailey Smith ... the going rate is $1000, we saw Bailey Smith double-finger salute and also Harley Reid earlier in the year. 'That's what (Ginnivan) does, that's Hok-ball for you.' Ginnivan was among Hawthorn's best players on Friday night, finishing with 20 disposals and two goals. The youngster's post-game bird weren't his only cheeky antics on the night, with Ginnivan turning to the crowd after kicking an epic goal on his left foot late in the third quarter and pointing to his ear.

‘Overrated': Uncomfortable Wayne Bennett coaching truth laid bare as failures mount
‘Overrated': Uncomfortable Wayne Bennett coaching truth laid bare as failures mount

News.com.au

timean hour ago

  • News.com.au

‘Overrated': Uncomfortable Wayne Bennett coaching truth laid bare as failures mount

Wayne Bennett is a protected species. The man who is widely referred to as 'super coach' and 'the greatest NRL coach of all time', largely escapes criticism. But it's been 15 years since he has led an NRL side to premiership glory, and the last decade has shed light on a more stark truth, that the man considered by many to be the greatest coach Australia has ever seen may just be a little overrated. FOX LEAGUE, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every game of every round in the 2025 NRL Telstra Premiership, LIVE with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Join now and get your first month for just $1. Having coached numerous clubs to NRL premierships, Bennett has registered seven titles to go along with seven State of Origin series victories. Players often speak of Bennett in the highest regard, and the 75-year-old already finds himself in the NRL Hall of Fame. But his last two decades of coaching have been far from excellent, and even still, many rate him as the best coach in the game. Wayne Bennett tasted immediate NRL success Bennett was appointed to be the first coach of the Brisbane Broncos when the club was formed in 1988. From 1988 to 2008, he won six premierships, with what was undoubtedly one of the all-time greatest NRL sides. He also infamously axed Wally Lewis as captain and ended up letting him go entirely. It was a decision that was controversial, but given the success at Brisbane, it went without widespread scrutiny. He then took over a St George side which was already a force in the NRL and took it to a title in 2010. The Dragons went backwards in 2011, finishing 5th before being knocked out by the Broncos. Bennett then left the club, which failed to make finals the following year. Wayne Bennett's Knights disaster Bennett then joined the Knights in 2012 and was given the task of turning the mid-table side into a premiership force. It was the first time he took the reins of a side that wasn't either completely new or already a premiership force. And not only did he fail to bring an elusive premiership to the Hunter, he put the team into a hole that would take them several years to get out of. The 'super coach' signed several ageing stars of the game, with one goal: to win a premiership. But in his three years at the club, he failed to make finals in two of those years, put the roster back half a decade and then jumped off the sinking ship he built. Bennett brought his favourites, such as Darius Boyd, whom he previously coached, and signed veterans in their final years, such as Beau Scott and Jeremy Smith, on absurd contracts. And once he knew success would not come, he left to rejoin the Broncos – a team that had just made an elimination final. While the Knights were left to pick up the pieces, and with the club in disarray partly thanks to Bennett, they would go on to claim three consecutive wooden spoons and have to overhaul the squad Bennett built. Wayne Bennett's Broncos tenure, part two After leaving the Knights in licorice allsorts, Bennett returned to Brisbane in 2015 and took them to a grand final, which they would ultimately lose to the Cowboys, in one of the all-time grand final classics. The next two years rolled on, and the Broncos never got as close as they did in 2015. In that time, he allowed Ben Hunt to go to the Dragons, Ash Taylor to the Titans and Jai Arrow upped and left. Meanwhile Bennett spent handsomely to get Jack Bird, and once again, the side he took over went backwards as his decisions turned out to be far from spectacular. And after two prompt exits from finals footy in 2016 and 2017, Bennett found himself under pressure with a sense that the Broncos were on the decline. After another exit in the first round of finals in 2018, Brisbane sacked Bennett, and the club was forced to rebuild from the ground up, with some dire years post-Bennett. Meanwhile, Bennett continued to coach Great Britain, as he had done since 2016, after his Broncos stint. But that would soon also end. In 2019, Bennett was selected as head coach for the Great Britain Lions tour of the Southern Hemisphere, and it was a disaster. His side would lose all four matches, including a humiliating 28–10 loss against Papua New Guinea in Port Moresby. His contract expired after this tour, and he was unsurprisingly not offered a new one. Wayne Bennett's Rabbitohs tenure Bennett would make his NRL coaching return in 2019, taking the reins of a surging Rabbitohs side. After finishing third in 2018, the Rabbitohs were already premiership contenders, and Bennett was seen as the last missing piece of the puzzle. With the likes of Greg Inglis, Sam and Tom Burgess, Damien Cook, Alex Johnson, Cam Murray and several other stars, many thought it was a matter of when, not if, they would win another premiership. But after winning his first 11 games at the helm, they also went backwards. While they still managed to finish third after their strong start to the season, Bennett's side was beaten by Canberra in the preliminary final. Under Bennett, Souths managed to play finals footy the following two years and made the grand final under the veteran coach in 2021, which they ultimately lost to Penrith. While that tenure was considered fruitful, there was never a premiership to show, despite the stacked roster. Bennett takes over new franchise, the Dolphins After coming close in 2021 to an eighth premiership, Bennett had the chance to build the team he wanted at the Dolphins in 2022. With an empty roster and plenty of pull, many thought the Dolphins would be a force in no time, with Bennett taking charge of their first season in 2023. In 2023, they finished 13th and then 10th in 2024. He was then replaced by Kristian Woolf who in 2025 has turned the side from toilers into premiership contenders. Despite an injury list arguably only second to that of the Bunnies, Woolf's Dolphins currently sit in the top eight and have reinvented themselves post-Bennett. Bennett's second Souths tenure legacy defining Bennett made a return to Redfern in 2025, and it has been a disaster so far. The 75-year-old has had to navigate a massive injury crisis throughout the year, and while that is an excuse, he is still looking down the barrel of his first-ever wooden spoon. While there are plenty of excuses, he is using them. As the Bunnies were battered by the Broncos on Saturday, 60-14, Bennett pointed to the injury list and schedule as why they are struggling. And while I don't blame him, the reality is that they have been poor all year and even when many of their stars have been on the field they haven't looked like a finals footy side. So, with no premiership success in well over a decade, it must be asked, is Bennett still the super coach that he is made out to be? Bennett continues to cling to his success of the 90s and 00s as teams continue to go backwards under his leadership. It must also be mentioned that the clubs Bennett leaves are almost always in worse shape than when he took over. Coaches at Brisbane, St George Illawarra, Souths and Newcastle have also been dumped in the years after replacing Bennett at the helm. When asked about that phenomenon last year, Bennett said: 'Well, that's not my fault.' But the truth is, while it isn't entirely fair to pin it on the 75-year-old, he is far from an innocent party, as his roster management does play a major role. Bennett is undoubtedly a great of this game and deserves to be in the coaching Hall of Fame, as ultimately he has won a whopping seven NRL premierships and withstood the test of time. But he has shown time and time again he can't rebuild a team and take them to success, like contemporary Craig Bellamy has done repeatedly, and the teams Bennett leaves are almost always in a worse shape than when he takes over. Players run through walls for him, I've heard his speeches and they get the hairs standing up on my arms, granted, but he isn't the tactical genius people make him out to be. So perhaps it is time to humanise the Souths coach a bit. He is an NRL coaching legend, a great mentor and a truly inspiring leader, but the best coach to ever do it? Please.

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