logo
‘No doubt' on big North improvement

‘No doubt' on big North improvement

Yahoo25-02-2025
North Melbourne skipper Jy Simpkin has 'no doubt' the Roos will improve on their successive three-win seasons in 2025.
The Roos have narrowly dodged the wooden spoon in back-to-back seasons, edging out West Coast in 2023 and then Richmond.
But with the addition of premiership trio Jack Darling, Luke Parker and Caleb Daniel, as well as No.2 pick Finn O'Sullivan and internal growth, the Roos are hopeful.
Simpkin, fresh off winning the best-on-ground medal for the Indigenous All Stars, is certain the Roos will climb the ladder this year.
'I think at the moment we're focused on the process, we obviously have a lot of talent coming through, so I have no doubt we will improve,' he said.
'We won three games last year. I have no doubt we will improve on that – but to have an expectation on where we'll finish on the ladder, it's not something we look at.
'We're focused on the process over the outcome because we know if we get the process right, then the outcome will take care of itself.'
Simpkin has noticed a lift in leadership at Arden St that has allowed four-time premiership coach Alastair Clarkson to take a step back.
The player-led Roo revival is focusing on three facets of the game but particularly their scores against.
'He's (Clarkson) put a lot more time into us and the assistant coaches to step up, taking a bit of a back step for us to take control of our future and destiny,' Simpkin said.
'The pre-season has been really good, we had a good hitout against Melbourne and we're looking forward to getting over to Bunbury to play the Eagles.
'We've just got to continue to work on our offence, defence and contest – those are the three facets of the game.
'Our defence, we were I think 18th in the competition for that last year, so it's something we need to step up.
'We've been training and finding different ways we can improve that sort of stuff.'
Simpkin's 'no doubt' attitude about North Melbourne's improvement extends to the contract status of star midfielder Luke Davies-Uniacke.
Davies-Uniacke would become one of the hottest free agents of the year if he didn't extend with the Roos before the end of the season, but Simpkin expected him to sign on.
'I'm confident with LDU, but it's up to him. The club has put an offer in front of him, so he'll make his decision in due course, but I've got no doubts he'll sign on,' he said.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A.J. Preller's busiest deadline day was a sight to behold: ‘Something out of a video game'
A.J. Preller's busiest deadline day was a sight to behold: ‘Something out of a video game'

New York Times

timea day ago

  • New York Times

A.J. Preller's busiest deadline day was a sight to behold: ‘Something out of a video game'

The reactions ranged from curiosity to awe to personal lament. As A.J. Preller put the finishing touches on the busiest transacting day of his 11-year tenure, the San Diego Padres general manager evoked strong opinions from various corners of the industry. This was normal, even if the circumstances were not. It was Thursday afternoon on the West Coast, and over the seven hours that led up to another trade deadline, Preller and the title-chasing Padres had pulled off five trades involving 22 players, including a blockbuster that saw them land baseball's hardest thrower while moving one of the sport's best prospects. Advertisement One rival evaluator panned the acquisition of Mason Miller as an overpay, noting that the star reliever's performance, while impressive, could be recreated at the kind of cost that did not include teenage shortstop Leo De Vries. Another wondered if San Diego had suddenly rebranded itself as the most dangerous team in the National League. 'The volume of deals made by them,' the scout said, 'is something out of a video game.' Still another person worried that a planned trip to watch a Padres minor-league affiliate could prove fruitless. 'Might be me and an empty stadium because of forfeit,' the third evaluator said. It was a joke. It also felt appropriate. No GM pursues splashes or eschews half-measures as relentlessly as Preller. Thursday might have brought his most aggressive and most creative trade deadline yet. The Padres added Miller to what was already a league-best bullpen. They hung onto incumbent closer Robert Suarez and starter Dylan Cease, reasoning that the pending free agents could still provide more value than what they might have brought back. The Padres splurged for a new primary catcher in Freddy Fermin. They altered the complexion of a previously top-heavy offense by importing Ryan O'Hearn and Ramón Laureano. They replaced some newly departed rotation depth by adding JP Sears and Nestor Cortes, who joined O'Hearn as the lone rentals among the newcomers. In lesser moves, they acquired a Triple-A infielder and a low-level shortstop prospect. They made all these additions while shipping out 14 young players. It was a dizzying collection of capital, from De Vries, whom some scouts already view as a top-five prospect in the entire sport, to promising big-league starters Stephen Kolek and Ryan Bergert, to talented minor-league pitchers Braden Nett and Boston Bateman. Advertisement Arguably just as notable, the Padres accomplished all of this while increasing their payroll and luxury-tax numbers by only a few million dollars. According to FanGraphs, the former figure ticked up to $215 million, the latter to $267 million. 'From that standpoint, I think it's going to end up probably being a pretty neutral process,' Preller said. Preller's lack of financial flexibility — or at least the kind he once enjoyed — was no secret. His biggest backer, late owner Peter Seidler, died in November 2023. Since then, the Padres have traded away star outfielder Juan Soto. They have significantly reduced what was a bloated payroll. They have continued operating amid a legal dispute between Seidler's widow and two of his brothers, a conflict that remains ongoing. The trades were bold. The vision feels fragile AJ's still upholding the you for your excellence. 💛🤎#ForTheFaithful — Sheel Seidler (@sheel_padres) July 31, 2025 So far, they have weathered these storms. The newly upgraded Padres project, on paper, seems to be as formidable as the 2024 Padres, who gave the eventual champion Los Angeles Dodgers a scare last October. Less than a year later, the 2025 Padres survived an often-rocky four months to awake on deadline day just three games behind L.A. Now, that distance could be further bridged by a bullpen that will integrate Miller into the majors' deepest array of setup men. According to team officials, the initial plan is for Suarez, the major-league saves leader, to remain as the primary closer. That would allow Padres manager Mike Shildt to deploy Miller and his powerful arm in a variety of high-leverage situations. 'Like we've seen so far through the first 100 games, if we have an opportunity to shorten the game, you want to take that,' Preller said. 'I think also it gives Mike an opportunity to mix and match with the 'pen, an opportunity certain nights to be able to go to one set of relievers and give guys an opportunity to get a little bit of a rest and a blow and be fresh for, hopefully, what's a long run here for the rest of the regular season and into the postseason.' Advertisement Miller, who turns 27 next month, represents one of the sport's bigger gambles. He ranks first in average fastball velocity and second in strikeout rate, and the former Athletics closer comes with four additional years of affordable club control. The Padres could extract even more value by stretching him out as a starter as soon as next season. However, the last time he started in the majors, he sprained his ulnar collateral ligament as a rookie in 2023. The Padres theoretically could have doubled down on their bullpen by acquiring a less famous reliever with a more modest price tag and similar results. (Despite strong underlying numbers, Miller has pitched to a 3.76 ERA this season.) Recent weeks did little to change the perception that Preller gravitates toward the biggest available names, sometimes to the detriment of his roster construction. Still, he was busy in more than one area. Fermin gives San Diego a controllable, quality catcher at what was a position of dire need. O'Hearn and Laureano should help revitalize a lineup that often felt like it ran only seven or eight deep. The front office was willing to bet that, with free agency dangling in front of him, Cease could turn around his season over the next two months. The Padres know they might come to regret all that they gave up Thursday. Still, Preller, who has plenty of reason to rue past deals, keeps finding ways to replenish a farm system that is often criticized for vanishing depth. The price of his latest blockbuster featured De Vries, who received a $4.2 million signing bonus in 2024. The rest of the A's return consisted of an undrafted signee (Nett), a $125,000 international signee (Henry Baez) and a minor-league signee (Eduarniel Núñez). 'I think it's pretty incredible he could spin Núñez as part of the deal for Miller and Spears,' said one National League scout. Anyone can acquire and flip minor-league signees, of course. Almost no general manager seems as unafraid to trade the likes of De Vries and outfielder James Wood and left-hander MacKenzie Gore. (The Padres had discussions about potentially reacquiring Gore from the Washington Nationals. They found the cost prohibitive, as they did in their pursuits of the Cleveland Guardians' Steven Kwan and the Boston Red Sox's Jarren Duran.) 'For us, we've talked more about making fair deals and deals that work for both sides,' Preller said, citing his December 2023 trade of Soto that brought back starting pitcher Michael King as the headliner. 'That's the way the deal should be. You know, deals that helps both teams win. That's the perspective we take. You obviously are always trying to make good trades, but I think we understand we've got to give up good players to get good players. Advertisement 'At the end, if it puts your team in a good position for now and for the future, that's a positive outcome. And if we're doing our job, you're going to have players in the big leagues (that are) doing well. And I think teams understand that, yeah, we'll deal some players that will do that.' Only a few months from now, Preller's latest mortgaging of the future could prove ill-advised. Perhaps it will amount to a seemingly short-sighted attempt by a GM approaching the final year of his contract. The impact of the Padres' latest batch of club-controlled additions might pale in comparison to the potential losses of Cease, Suarez, King and first baseman Luis Arraez — all key contributors, and all potential free agents. For now, Preller's most frenetic day of activity remains a sight to behold. Not least because, after everything that happened over the past 21 months, the Padres suddenly appear to have as good a chance as ever at running down that elusive title.

No Harley spells big problems for struggling Eagles
No Harley spells big problems for struggling Eagles

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

No Harley spells big problems for struggling Eagles

West Coast will get a month-long look at what life would be like without Harley Reid, and it's not going to be pretty. Reid's future remains a huge talking point, with the 20-year-old's manager in deep talks with West Coast about a possible contract extension. There are reports Reid could command in the vicinity of $24m over 11 years - numbers that have never been seen before in the AFL. West Coast are being urged against committing such a large sum to a single player. But such is the on-and-off field worth of Reid, the Eagles may end up doing a deal worth in the vicinity of $20m. Harley Reid is an absolute star 🤩#AFLFreoEagles — AFL (@AFL) July 26, 2025 Reid has been one of West Coast's best players this season, but he'll miss the final four matches of the campaign with a syndesmosis injury. Given West Coast are also without Elliot Yeo (ankle) and Jack Graham (suspension), the Eagles will roll out their weakest midfield of the season against Melbourne's star-studded on-ball brigade at Marvel Stadium on Saturday. Tim Kelly and Liam Baker are the remaining old heads that could be employed in West Coast's engine room this week, with youngsters such as Elijah Hewett, Clay Hall, Brady Hough and Tom Gross set to be handed a big responsibility over the back-end of the season. Reid is contracted for 2026, but there's no guarantee he will stay long term. Even when Reid was playing, West Coast were by far the worst clearance team in the league this season. It means there could be plenty of pain in store when the Eagles round out their season with games against Melbourne, Adelaide, Western Bulldogs and Sydney. "It's not easy, but it's been like that for most of the year," Eagles coach Andrew McQualter said. "So we've seen great growth. We've seen Elijah Hewett, We've seen Brady Hough grow. "We've seen Clay Hall come and play through the midfield. "So sometimes when you're put in a position where we have been, it's not been short-term benefit, but it will be long-term benefit." West Coast (1-18) are headed for their third wooden spoon in the space of three years. But all of the heat on Saturday will be on the 6-13 Demons, who coughed up a 46-point three-quarter time lead in last week's six-point loss to St Kilda. Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin is under all sorts of pressure, and former Demons assistant McQualter is expecting his old club to come out firing. West Coast welcome back key defender Harry Edwards (hamstring), while the Demons will unveil former Eagle Jai Culley.

Padres acquire All-Star closer Mason Miller from Athletics in blockbuster deal before trade deadline: reports
Padres acquire All-Star closer Mason Miller from Athletics in blockbuster deal before trade deadline: reports

Fox News

time2 days ago

  • Fox News

Padres acquire All-Star closer Mason Miller from Athletics in blockbuster deal before trade deadline: reports

The biggest splash of the MLB trade deadline thus far has come between two west coast teams. The Athletics traded All-Star closer Mason Miller and starting pitcher J.P. Sears to the San Diego Padres for the third-ranked prospect in all of baseball and three other minor league pitchers, according to multiple reports. Rumors swirled earlier in the week that Miller's name had been mentioned in preliminary discussions. Late Wednesday, it was revealed the Padres had put their name in the hat. It was a hefty price for the Padres, but it's hard to blame them right now. They own a three-game lead for the final wild card spot, but they're also just three games back of the Los Angeles Dodgers for the NL West crown. Miller is, hands down one, of the best in the game. He made his MLB debut in 2023 but burst onto the scene last year with a 2.49 ERA and 14.4 K/9. He was named an All-Star last season, which was his first full campaign in the majors. He's been clocked at 104.1 mph and averages 101.1 on the gun this season, the fastest in the sport. His strikeout percentage of 39.1% is also the best mark in the major leagues, but he does rank in the bottom-10 percentile in walk-rate. His ERA is also up from last year, being at 3.76. Nonetheless, the Padres have locked up their closer, who won't even reach arbitration until after next season. That explains the haul the Athletics got, with the prized possession being shortstop Leo De Vries, an 18-year-old from the Domincan Republic. He signed with the Padres as a top international prospect for $4.2 million last year and was almost immediately a top prosect. De Vries represented San Diego in the MLB All-Star Futures Game earlier this month in Atlanta. This year appears to be the trade deadline of relievers, and Miller tops the class.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store