TV wrap: What you missed on TV on Monday night
Premiership coach Chris Fagan says he has been sounded out to coach the Tasmania Devils but has no interest in a senior job once he finishes with the Brisbane Lions.
Fagan is contracted with the Lions until the end of 2027, which would make it 11 years in charge, spearheaded by the 2024 premiership.
A proud Tasmanian, Fagan has always been at the top of a wishlist to coach the Devils, should they enter the competition in 2028.
But he said he would likely move to Melbourne to be closer to his daughters and grandchildren once he finishes at the Lions and wouldn't be tempted to coach another AFL team.
'I've been sounded out a little bit about coaching the team but I don't really want to coach after I'm finished at Brisbane,' he told Channel 7's Agenda Setters.
'I'd rather help someone else out. I have always thought that was my best role in footy: helping somebody else out.
'If an opportunity came up there that fitted in with my lifestyle and I could do it properly, then I would consider it but that may or may not happen.' AFL
Jamarra Ugle-Hagan's difficult year has taken another bizarre turn, with the star Dog alleging on Instagram that his car had been stolen from Port Melbourne. AFL
AFL fans have been left divided after a TV broadcast giant's 'uncomfortable' move during Carlton's shock loss to North Melbourne.

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ABC News
4 minutes ago
- ABC News
Five quick hits: Wallabies replacements step up, Curry saves a try and the Lions ride their luck at the MCG
The Lions have won the series in an epic at the MCG, completing their largest comeback in a Test match to finally win a match in Melbourne. The final try may be under the microscope though, while the Wallabies benefited from some much-needed Will Skelton heat. Here are the five quick hits from the MCG. Something that was entirely absent from the Wallabies in Brisbane was a bit of fire. Mongrel. Whatever you want to call it. Enter Will Skelton. The returning Wallaby lock hammered Tadhg Furlong in the back, forcing him to drop the ball. Maro Itoje and Furlong both took offence and, for the first time, the Wallabies were showing that they can fight back a bit. Any time a coach opts to go for a 6-2 split on the bench (six forwards, two backs) they run the risk of a significant issue if a back goes down with an injury. And so, when wing Harry Potter was felled with what appeared to be a left leg issue 20 minutes in, it forced a significant change. Reds scrum-half Tate McDermott came onto the wing, a position he is far from comfortable or familiar with. As much as the Wallabies were improved, the Lions were playing into their hands with some woeful ill-discipline. The Lions conceded six penalties in the first half and were provoking the ire of referee Andrea Piardi. So much so, in fact, that as the Wallabies were celebrating their second try, Tommy Freeman was being guided to the sin bin. The Wallabies led 11-5 and were rolling. Jake Gordon darted through a gap to score, before a Joseph Aukuso-Suaalii burst sent Tom Wright through a gap while the Lions were down to 14. All of a sudden the score was 23-5 and the Wallabies were away. As the second half wore on, the game as a whole tightened up. So when Langi Gleeson burst through on the right wing, feeding Fraser McReight, it felt pivotal for the Wallabies to land a blow that could knock the Lions back off their perch. He mazed inside and passed to Suaalii in midfield, who looked to find the men outside him on the left, only to dally for a fraction of a second too long and get crunched from behind by Tom Curry. It was a fair way out but it felt like the Wallabies had the Lions on the run until the English flanker came to the rescue. The Wallabies had led the match from the fourth minute of the match but, as the clock ticked down, the hosts were hanging on to just a two-point lead with the Lions hammering at their line. The pressure looked certain to burst and, when Hugo Keenan dived over in the corner, it looked like the comeback was complete. But Harry Wilson was furiously pointing to Carlo Tizzano on the ground in back play and referee Andrea Piardi reviewed on field. The replay showed Jac Morgan crashing into a ruck and cleaning out Tizzano, who turned, looked for the referee and then fell to the ground holding his head. Both men were low at the point of contact, it appeared that the contact was mostly shoulder on shoulder and the referee ruled there was no foul play. Hearts in your mouths moment for the Lions, devastation for the Wallabies. "I'm probably not in the right emotion to speak about that," Wilson told Nine.


7NEWS
an hour ago
- 7NEWS
Wallabies denied victory by ‘terrible' call in heartbreaking loss to Lions
The Wallabies have suffered a heart-breaking series loss to the British and Irish Lions after letting slip an 18-point lead to crash to a 29-26 defeat in the final minute of their second Test at the MCG. The Australians looked set to level the series after a rousing opening 30 minutes but the Lions roared back with fullback Hugo Keenan scoring with 45 seconds left on the clock for his team to take the lead for the first time in the match. The game ended in controversial circumstances with the Wallabies flanker Carlo Tizzano appearing to have been illegally cleaned out in the build-up to the match-winning try. While the TMO and referee Andrea Piardi reviewed the clean-out by Jac Morgan, he didn't deem it a penalty and the try stood. Former Wallabies centre Morgan Turinui blasted 'weak' referees over the controversial decision. 'The referees were too weak to give it (the penalty),' he said in commentary. 'You cannot hit a guy in the back of the neck to save the ball who is legally jackling. 'The referees have got it wrong. It has cost the Wallabies survival in the series. 'The British and Irish Lions lead this series 2-0. It was brave to come back from them, but it is a terrible decision that decides this match.' Ex-England and Lions skipper Martin Johnson took a contrasting view, but former Wallabies captain Michael Hooper agreed with Turinui. 'I can see what the referee's saying but there's a penalty there, whether it's on head, on neck or whether he's going straight off his feet to ground,' Hooper said on Nine. 'I would say if that was minute one it's a penalty and it was deserved to be awarded and the try overturned. 'If you're refereeing or judging by the letter of the law, minute one to minute 79 it doesn't matter.' Johnson disagreed. 'I didn't think there was enough there for a penalty that would change the game,' he said on Nine. 'You have to be very, very sure to change the game on a ref's decision. 'I thought it wasn't a penalty.' Gutted Wallabies captain Harry Wilson was asked in a post-match interview about the decision but said he 'wasn't in the right emotion to talk about it'. Coming after the Wallabies loss in Brisbane, the Lions will lift the Tom Richards Cup with a third Test still to play in Sydney. The result means the Wallabies are the first team since the 1966 Lions tour to lose the series in two games, with that Australian outfit losing both matches in a two-Test tour. Wilson said he was proud of the way his team played. 'I'm so proud of this team - we were written off, we came out here and put our bodies on the line and was there until the very end,' the No.8 told Stan Sport. 'To lose like that, it hurts. 'I hope everyone at home and everyone here saw what kind of team we had - we are going to keep fighting and keep improving. We just want to do Australia proud. 'I'm gutted there's not going to be a decider but if you think there's not going to be a lot on the line next week you're kidding yourself.' In the Lions' last two visits down under, in 2001 and 2013, Melbourne had been a happy hunting ground with the Wallabies drawing level after first Test defeats. It appeared this series would also follow that script as the hosts came out firing in front of a crowd of 90,307, which was the largest ever to watch a Lions match in Australia. With Will Skelton and Rob Valetini, who sat out the first Test through injury, adding size to the pack, the Wallabies answered their critics and aimed up early in a physical display that had the tourists on the back foot. Two early penalty kicks by Tom Lynagh gave the Wallabies an early six-point lead and a boost of confidence but the Lions were first across the tryline in the 15th minute through hooker Dan Sheehan. Prop James Slipper, only the second Wallaby to have played in two series then scored for an 11-5 lead and everything seemed to be going the home side's way. Lions winger Tommy Freeman was yellow-carded after his team's multiple infringements and the Wallabies then raced out a 23-5 lead with halfback Jake Gordon and fullback Tom Wright both scoring. But the tide started to turn and the Lions closed the gap to 23-17 by halftime, with flanker Tom Curry and centre Huw Jones touching down. The second half was an arm wrestle and a 59th minute try by Tadgh Beirne set up a thrilling finale. The Wallabies showed desperation in defence and it looked like they would hold on for a famous victory but the Lions had the final say.


West Australian
an hour ago
- West Australian
Ex-Wallabies slam 'weak' refs over series-deciding call
Former Wallabies centre Morgan Turinui has blasted "weak" referees over the controversial decision that confirmed Australia's heart-breaking series defeat to the British and Irish Lions. Lions fullback Hugo Keenan scored the match-winning try in the final minute of the second Test at the MCG, after Wallabies flanker Carlo Tizzano appeared to have been illegally cleaned out in the build-up. Tizzano looked to have been hit high and recoiled holding his neck. TMO Eric Gauzins and referee Andrea Piardi reviewed Lions flanker Jac Morgan's clean-out but ruled there was no foul play, allowing the try to stand. Turinui, who played 20 Tests for the Wallabies, was adamant it should have been ruled out. "The end is a penalty to the Wallabies and the referees were too weak to give it," Turinui said on Nine. "The referees have got it wrong and it's cost the Wallabies survival in the series. "The British and Irish Lions lead this series 2-0. It was brave to come back from them, but it is a terrible decision that decides this match." Ex-England and Lions skipper Martin Johnson took a contrasting view, but former Wallabies captain Michael Hooper agreed with Turinui. "I can see what the referee's saying but there's a penalty there, whether it's on head, on neck or whether he's going straight off his feet to ground," Hooper said on Nine. "I would say if that was minute one it's a penalty and it was deserved to be awarded and the try overturned. "If you're refereeing or judging by the letter of the law, minute one to minute 79 it doesn't matter." Johnson disagreed. "I didn't think there was enough there for a penalty that would change the game," he said on Nine. "You have to be very, very sure to change the game on a ref's decision. "I thought it wasn't a penalty." Wallabies captain Harry Wilson was in no mood to discuss the incident when he was asked about it minutes after the match. "I'm probably not in the right emotional state to talk about that," Wilson said on Nine.