
Quade Cooper was Aussie rugby's biggest star - now his shock social media post shows how far he's fallen from the peak of the game
The 37-year-old playmaker finished up with Japanese club Kintetsu Liners this year and has recently taken up a the challenge of playing American flag football.
Flag football, the non-contact cousin of American football, will make its Olympic debut in LA – and Cooper is hoping to win gold.
On Thursday, the footy star took to X to offer his services to touch footy teams on the Gold Coast after returning to Australia recently.
'If there's any local touch rugby comps on the Gold Coast at the moment that need players? HMU [Hit me up],' he posted on X.
Footy fans were stoked that the Wallabies legend could potentially play on their team for free.
If there's any local touch rugby comps on the Gold Coast at the moment that need players? HMU
— Quade Cooper (@QuadeCooper) June 25, 2025
'I don't think anyone wants to play against you man but that would be a dream,' replied one fan.
Last week, Cooper played flag football for Australia in a match held in Los Angeles.
'20yrs ago I played my first professional game against Japan and today I play my first game against Japan in LA. Crazy full circle moment. Forever connected to Japan,' he posted to X.
Turning out to play touch against amateurs is a million miles away from the fly-half's career peak after he made his Wallabies debut in 2008 and went on to play 80 Tests for Australia, scoring 208 points.
Cooper first rose to prominence as a talented schoolboy when on scholarship at the Anglican Church Grammar School in Brisbane.
Cooper played in the 'Churchie' first XV in 2005 and 2006 and was quickly snapped up by the Queensland Reds after finishing high school.
Along with fellow young guns Kurtley Beale and James O'Connor, Cooper was viewed as an excitement machine at the time as the Wallabies looked to once again become a force in world rugby.
The New Zealand-born playmaker has also dabbled in professional boxing and dated the likes of model Laura Dundovic, champion Australian swimmer Stephanie Rice and socialite Nicole Shiraz.
He also had his controversies over the years, the most notable of which was copping a $40,000 fine and three-match suspension for describing the Wallabies as a 'toxic environment ... destroying me as a player and a person' in 2012.
Cooper was controversially overlooked by former Wallabies coach Eddie Jones in 2023, bringing to an end his stint with the national team.
Right now - in addition to getting a few games of touch footy - he is determined add the title 'Olympian' to his list of achievements.
'To be part of something that could potentially change the landscape for a lot of people in our country, all around the world, give them an avenue to play in a sport at the Olympics, is pretty special,' Cooper said.
His passing wizardry and knack for flair have already earned him highlight reels on social media – skills that suit the quarterback role perfectly.
And he's not looking to go it alone. Cooper has a wishlist of elite Aussie athletes he hopes will join him, including NRL stars Reece Walsh, Hamiso Tabuai-Fidow, and cross-code talent Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii.
'You look at guys like Reece Walsh, like the Hammer… the way they move, the way they're able to accelerate, how dynamic they are,' he said.
'These are guys who play on both sides of the ball. It's not a contact game, but just the awareness to be able to know how someone moves, be able to defend them.'
The non-contact game involves five players per side, using flag belts instead of tackles – making it faster, safer, and more accessible.
'For a lot of people who love and want to participate in rugby or league or AFL, that's very similar – a lot of skills and attributes of the game that I love so much,' Cooper said.
'But to be able to do that and not have the head knocks, the broken bones and the collisions – I look at it from all aspects like that, and this is pretty exciting to be part of.'
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Telegraph
26 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Maro Itoje silences doubters and proves why he is Lions captain with towering performance
The question was to the point, and Maro Itoje was ready for it, knowing that his performance in the victory over the Queensland Reds had already provided a compelling answer. The British and Irish Lions captain had watched from the stands as Joe McCarthy, the Lions rookie, produced the kind of barnstorming display that had lit up Itoje's first tour in 2017 against Western Force last Saturday. At the time we wondered if it had ramped up the pressure on Itoje. He might be tour captain but there is a feeling that Lions head coach Andy Farrell offers guarantees to no player, not even Itoje. Every place is up for grabs, right until the 11 th hour. It is the way it should be on a Lions tour. For Farrell, the uncertainty is designed to engender a competitiveness that drives standards and wrings every drop out of his squad of 38 that may feature a new face by the end of the week if the unfortunate Elliot Daly is ruled out of the tour after suffering a suspected broken forearm. Daly's experience demonstrated just how precious the Lions experience is. The Saracens man had just returned to his irresistible pomp, relishing the competition and opportunity to step up for his second start this week after Hugo Keenan was ruled out with an illness. Now it is feared that he may not be able to add to his five Test caps for the Lions from the 2017 and 2021 tours. It seems Itoje is taking nothing for granted either. Quite simply and magnificently, he led from the front, with his ferocious physicality, hard-hitting tackling and breakdown menace masking some disjointed moments in the first half from the tourists. Itoje may have played more minutes in this extended season than most, but what stood out was his unrelenting energy. It rekindled memories of his second Test display against New Zealand in Wellington as a rookie on the 2017 tour. He won nine line-outs, including stealing two of the Reds' throws, scored one of the Lions' eight tries, but most impressive of all was his rampaging contribution, disrupting the Reds at source and also stepping up in his carrying. His leadership manner may be reserved and considered in contrast to some of the chest-thumping Lions captains before him, but no one could have been in any doubt about who was leading the charge at the Suncorp Stadium in front of the Reds' biggest crowd since the tourists were last here 12 years ago. The question that hung in the air was whether his performance had come from his own determination, or as a reaction to McCarthy's display. His answer will have been music to Farrell's ears. 'It's a bit of both, to be honest,' said Itoje. 'I think the whole point of these tours is you're with great players, and you see great players performing well, and it gives you extra motivation to perform well. 'I guess, despite my role as captain, I know that if I'm not playing well, then it doesn't matter if I'm captain or not, I won't be in the team, so I need to make sure that my performance is where it needs to be. I want everyone to play well, all of my team-mates, I want them to play well, and I guess our job as players is, one, to work together, and that's really important, and two, to make all the coaches' jobs as hard as possible when it comes to picking the team. It's definitely a bit of both of that.' Sitting beside him was Farrell, who despite a rather disjointed first half that included line-out losses, scrum penalties conceded, tackles missed and nine handling errors, relished seeing a number of players stand up and be counted when the pressure was on. As Les Kiss, the Red head coach said afterwards, the Lions power came through eventually and inevitably. Jamison Gibson-Park, Bundee Aki, Jack Conan and the official man-of-the-match Jac Morgan all stood out, while Tommy Freeman continued his scoring spree, with two more tries to underscore his finishing prowess. Tommy Freeman at the double 2️⃣🔥 — Sky Sports Rugby Union (@SkySportsRugby) July 2, 2025 'He played all right, didn't he?' said Farrell, nodding towards Itoje. 'Do you know what I thought was pretty pleasing? When you play your first game and you're dying for another one to come around, especially when the second game is against the Force, people put their hands up and played pretty well. 'I was pretty impressed with most of those players who had a second chance in the second game today. That's exactly what we want to see, a reaction. Maro was obviously one of them, I thought Jac Morgan was everywhere. Bundee was a lot better, Jack Conan looked strong. We can go on in that manner, but I suppose what I'm trying to say is exactly that's what we want. The competition's started and there's reactions all over the place. Long may that continue.' The Test side is starting to take shape, and under Farrell's tenure, that is likely to form the bulk of next Wednesday's side to face the ACT Brumbies in Canberra, with the door still firmly open for late bolters to force their way in against invitational Australian and New Zealand side in Adelaide on the final Saturday before the opening game against the Wallabies in Brisbane 17 days' time. With Hugo Keenan yet to start after pulling out of the Reds game with illness, and Blair Kinghorn having just arrived in Australia after his Top 14 commitments, the Lions still have a big question to answer at full-back, but Farrell is undeterred. 'This is proper touring now,' he added. Match details Scoring sequence: 5-0 Toomaga-Allen try, 7-0 McLaughlin-Phillips con, 7-5 Freeman try, 7-7 Russell con, 12-7 Flook try, 12-12 Porter try, 12-14 Russell con, 12-19 Van der Merwe try, 12-21 Russell con, 12-26 Itoje try, 12-28 Russell con, 12-33 Morgan try, 12-35 Smith con, 12-40 Freeman try, 12-42 Smith con, 12-47 Jones try, 12-52 Ringrose try. Queensland Reds: J Campbell; L Anderson, J Flook (I Henry 53), H Paisami, T Ryan; H McLaughlin-Phillips, K Thomas (L Werchon 58); A Ross (G Blake 57), M Faessler (J Nasser 53), J Toomaga-Allen, S Fa'agase 57), J Canham (R Smith 58), L Salakaia-Loto (A Blyth 53), S Uru, J Bryant, J Brial (C Vest 63). British and Irish Lions: E Daly (G Ringrose 66); T Freeman, H Jones, B Aki (B Earl 66), D van der Merwe; F Russell (F Smith 51), J Gibson-Park (A Mitchell 51); A Porter (E Genge 50), R Kelleher (L Cowan-Dickie 50), W Stuart (F Bealham 50), M Itoje, O Chessum (J Ryan 58), T Curry, J Morgan, J Conan.


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Talking points as Lions Test team begins to take shape
Fans gathered from mid-afternoon in the pubs of Caxton Street close to the Suncorp Stadium, familiar accents at every turn, reminders of after the Lions had put away the Queensland Reds 52-12 - notching up eight tries and a half-century of points for the second game in succession - these same fans were back where they started, with an eyeful of rugby and a skinful of pints. Lions jerseys everywhere. The first real stirrings of a proper red army in the land of the green and the two games played in Australia and three played in total, we're beginning to see a picture forming, not complete but with more detail than before, some players coming up in rich colour and others beginning to fade to grey as the Lions build towards the first Test at this same stadium on 19 July. The curious situation at full-back A statistic did the rounds during the week, inspired by rugby statistician @topofthemoonGW,, external that fairly knocked everyone to the ground. Elliot Daly had featured in 10 Lions matchday squads in a row before his run 'ended' in Brisbane against the it didn't end. Hugo Keenan dropped out through illness and Daly stepped back in to make it 11 in a row. It's a number that would have had the old boys saluting him, the Lions of the late 1800s and early 1900s who ran themselves into the ground in so many games that half of them lost about two inches off their trouser Daly didn't last the course, and we're now back to where we were this time last week, sweating on an injured Lion. Tomos Williams had to go home, cut down in peak form, and the hope is that Daly, playing fantastically, doesn't suffer the same fate after going off in the second half. As sporting heartbreak goes, it would be beyond a strange situation there is at full-back now. Not a crisis by any means, but curious. Daly is nursing an injury to his arm, Keenan hasn't played since the end of May, and Blair Kinghorn only just landed in the country the other coach Andy Farrell was asked if he was worried. "No, we've lots of full-backs," he he's right. Kinghorn and Keenan will get up to speed soon enough and, in reserve, he has Marcus Smith (admittedly not everyone's cup of tea at 15, but an option) and the versatility of Huw Jones who revived his international career when playing well at full-back for half a season with Harlequins before returning to wants good news on Daly, but if it's bad there is a cavalry coming over the hill in the shape of Kinghorn and Keenan and a cast of others. Meanwhile, it might be an idea to alert Tom Jordan, in New Zealand with Scotland, just in case. Itoje's timely reminder of his excellence Lions captain Maro Itoje was asked on Monday about the high number of minutes he has played this season for club and country and whether he felt tired at the contrary, he said. He felt revived and energised by the Lions around him - and in Brisbane he proved it. One try, 10 carries, 18 tackles - he was an absolute pest just as soon as the Lions settled down after their initial ropey wasn't so hot against the Pumas, but this was Itoje beginning to crank through the gears."I think the whole point of these tours is you're with great players, and you see great players performing well, and it gives you extra motivation to perform well," he said, later."I guess despite my role as captain, I know that if I'm not playing well, it doesn't matter if I'm captain or not, I won't be in the team. So I need to make sure that my performance is where it needs to be." Can Freeman break up the Irish wing duopoly? When Farrell singled out Mack Hansen for praise after the Western Force game last weekend, Tommy Freeman might have gulped hard. The coach of Ireland bigging up an Ireland wing?It can't have been easy listening for Freeman or for Duhan van der Merwe as they attempt to break up the Irish pair for the Test der Merwe, a sensational broken field runner, has lost too much ground on the other three at this point. He was good and bad on Wednesday, but he's clearly fourth of the four wings. His game just didn't fit with what Farrell wants from his delivered a fine performance, scored two tries and kept himself in the hunt. He's a wonderful player who is competing against the odds given Farrell's familiarity with Hansen and James Lowe, but he did everything that could be expected of him. Farrell seeking clarity on some scrum calls In their two games in Australia the Lions have encountered some bumps on the road - desperation and a high penalty count in the first half in Perth, some restart issues, a few unconvincing scrums - but they're clever players and capable of coming up with solutions on the scrum was penalised too often for comfort in Brisbane. It didn't cost them, but the Lions don't want to get a reputation for being ill-disciplined."I think we'll look back on some of the decisions and get some clarity on a few," said Farrell. "I suppose that's how it always is, isn't it? It's hard to referee at the best of times. But I obviously know that we've got a world-class front row."When you hear a coach saying that he will seek "clarity" on scrum interpretation it normally means he didn't agree with the interpretation. There was a strange kind of spikiness around this one."I'm saying we need some clarity on bits, because that's what you'd always want to do, so you can fix things if you need to fix them," he were they harsh calls? "I'm not saying that," said Farrell. "I said we need some clarity." Lions Test squad begins to crystallise Jac Morgan needed a big game - and he delivered. His energy levels were tremendous, his aggression in the tackle, his subtle touches and, of course, his try were of the highest rose up the ranks while Tom Curry fell down. He has lost his mojo at the wrong time. Close to a Test certainty during the season, Curry will now be lucky if he makes the 23. It's all beginning to look very Stuart had a chance to propel himself into the box-seat at tighthead but he got done in defence and gave away three penalties. It wasn't the audition he all odds, Finlay Bealham, not even in the original squad, might just be favourite for a Test spot because the great Tadhg Furlong still hasn't stirred in the way Furlong up sweet thoughts for Daly's fitness, there's a Test 23 beginning to emerge through the fog of uncertainty. Skin and hair will fly in protest, but…Kinghorn (Daly), Hansen, Ringrose, Tuipulotu, Lowe, Russell (F Smith), Gibson-Park (Mitchell); Genge (Schoeman), Sheehan (Cowan-Dickie), Bealham (Furlong), Itoje, McCarthy, Chessum (Beirne), Van der Flier, Conan (Pollock).How's that for a Lions Test match squad?Such is the nature of this trek, what happened in Brisbane will be an after-thought later on Thursday when Farrell names the team to face the Waratahs. So much build-up and yet the Lions have to move on from it in a relative Sydney, then…


Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Piastri slows down off-track to go faster on it
LONDON, July 2 (Reuters) - Slowing down may be the way to go faster for Oscar Piastri as the McLaren driver seeks to become the first Australian since Alan Jones in 1980 to conquer the Formula One world championship. The 24-year-old leads British teammate Lando Norris by 15 points, and five wins to three, as the season reaches halfway at Silverstone this weekend. The Australian is the only driver to have scored in every grand prix and remains remarkably chilled despite the pressure of a two-horse title battle that looks set to become ever more intense. Speaking to Reuters at a McLaren fan event, full of noise and excitement, in London's Trafalgar Square on Wednesday, Piastri said it was important mentally to know when to switch off and slow down. "I kind of know my limits. And know when I need to get away from F1 and do something else," he said. "It's the little things in life. Our season's so busy that ultimately you just want to go and do normal things. "Spend time with the people around you. Sit on the couch for a few hours. Just regular things. Go for a walk. Just slow down in life, really. And that's, for me, what I find important away from racing. "I don't have that many hobbies outside of F1, let's say. I ultimately got into racing because it was my hobby at the start and now it's my job. So it's still a passion of mine. "So when I'm not racing, I just like to do very, very wholesome things in life." On track, both he and Norris know what is at stake. Piastri felt they were managing to keep a lid on things, despite wheel-to-wheel racing, a collision and some near misses in recent races. "We're going about it in the best way that we can ... Lando and I get on well," said Piastri. "We've worked together really well for the last three years. "But obviously when the helmet goes on and we're on track, we're both trying to beat each other." Piastri said he still had things to work on -- and not just how to accommodate the growing number of trophies in his small Monaco apartment -- but had "a good handle on things" and his consistency had gone up a level. He was learning how to pick the right moves, pick the right strategy and not give away points. "I've never been in an F1 championship battle, but I've been in numerous championship battles in my junior career. I know what has worked for me in those championships, what hasn't worked," he said. "Not all of those junior championships were won with the same strengths or same weaknesses." Norris has his own 'Landostand' with 10,000 full-on fans at Stowe Corner for the race at Silverstone -- and Piastri said he was looking forward to giving them a wave when he went past. Just how cheeky that may be depends on the outcome on Sunday but the Australian fully intends to be the one on the top step of the podium. "I'm sure I'll wave to everyone," he said, grinning. "As long as they're waving back and not giving me the finger, then that's OK. "I'm sure they want a British driver to win. I kind of know which one, probably, but I think I would get an OK reception if I won as well. So I'll try my best to make that happen."