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The HBF Injury Report for SuperCoach AFL Round 12!

The HBF Injury Report for SuperCoach AFL Round 12!

News.com.au28-05-2025
Every SuperCoach knows that managing injuries is key to success. This is the Injury Report, proudly brought to you by HBF – your health dream team.
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‘Absolute disgrace': NRL icon owed an apology amid unthinkable success
‘Absolute disgrace': NRL icon owed an apology amid unthinkable success

News.com.au

time10 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

‘Absolute disgrace': NRL icon owed an apology amid unthinkable success

Ricky Stuart has bagged refs, snarled at journalists and angrily thrown plastic bottles in to the bleachers - and it's time we all returned him some gratitude and an apology. The Raiders coach often finds himself public enemy number one, but his achievements in 2025 are a reminder this prickly pear is also an ingenious mentor who can produce a mean footy team. And while it may not be obvious to us outsiders, it also highlights his massive contribution to the game, and we're not talking about all the new NRL offices he funds with breach fines. Despite beginning the season as friendless outsiders, Stuart has transformed a Raiders side that was wooden spoon favourites in to bona fide premiership frontrunners. And while Cameron Ciraldo has done a bang-up job at Canterbury and Kristian Woolf has worked wonders creating a Dolphins team that can score from the carpark, all signs point to one thing: If Stuart's titanic deed doesn't win him the Coach of the Year award, then it would be an absolute disgrace. As we know, everyone involved in rugby league has at some point been offended by the Canberra legend, Canberra fans included. Whether slagging off opposition players, sacking blokes by overhead projector or merely picking Jamie Buhrer for NSW, chances are Sticky's done something to get up your nose. But if you look past his tightly-wound exterior and repeated sideline loogies, you'll see a passionate man manager with a deep love for his players who has worked outrageous juju. For a modestly financed club that doesn't swing its manhood around on the player market, any winning Raiders season should be considered a fine accomplishment. But in orchestrating Canberra's unlikely title drive, Stuart has cracked one of rugby league's toughest riddles by somehow syncing every player in his squad to deliver personal best form all at the same time. And by inspiring this unheralded bunch in to pole position, he's in touching distance of an iconic moment in Canberra's modern history to rival the 2019 Grand Final and that photo of Terry Campese bathing in milk. The Raiders usually struggle to convince anyone of the benefits of Burley Griffin over Bondi, but Stuart has flipped the script by nurturing a team of self-made stars that have no reservations living in a city that requires a wardrobe of 75% Gore-Tex. In addition to the steady hand of Jamal Fogarty, the emergence of Ethan Strange and an electric back five lead by Kaeo Weekes, this Raiders side is anchored by a Stuart calling card: A motherload of girthy grumpy street-smart forwards. Lead by brute bookends in Joe Tapine and Josh Papali'i, this is a pack that has voraciously played like they'd crash through their own mother just to get a quick play-the-ball. And to be fair, we should've known in pre-season they were primed for a scrap when Morgan Smithies and Hudson Young were caught in a Vegas elevator brawling over an inflatable baseball bat. In basic terms, they're all competitive, cranky and a little bit crackers, ie an extension of their coach. And this is where Stuart's secret ingredient lies. For a bloke who'd hold a grudge against Gandhi, he has so much love for his players that the infamous 'weak gutted dog' sledge at Jaeman Salmon that shocked the footy fraternity in 2022 was actually conveyed by his players as a big warm cuddle, albeit one that cost $25,000. As such, many may consider Stuart's finest work to be in the nuts and bolts of coaching, but his proudest achievements arguably come in being a patch-protective father figure full of love and care, even if he shows it by kicking plastic chairs down the sideline.

Mollie O'Callaghan equals Ian Thorpe with 11 swimming world championship gold medals
Mollie O'Callaghan equals Ian Thorpe with 11 swimming world championship gold medals

ABC News

time40 minutes ago

  • ABC News

Mollie O'Callaghan equals Ian Thorpe with 11 swimming world championship gold medals

Mollie O'Callaghan has equalled swimming great Ian Thorpe's Australian record of 11 world championship gold medals with victory in the women's 4x200m freestyle relay in Singapore. O'Callaghan anchored the team of Lani Pallister, Jamie Perkins and Brittany Castelluzzo to victory in a thrilling race with the USA finishing second and China in third. The 21-year-old's teammates laid the perfect platform, handing her a lead going into the final leg of 0.39 of a second over US superstar Katie Ledecky — who was shooting for her 23rd world title to move within three of the record golden haul of compatriot Michael Phelps. The two had a virtual match-race over the final 200m, but O'Callaghan was never headed to eventually win by 0.66 of a second in an overall time of 7:39.35 The night after winning the 200m freestyle, then swimming second fastest in the semifinals of the 100m, O'Callaghan overcame exhaustion to equal Thorpe's Australian record for world titles in the pool with her third gold of the meet. "It is very special. It would be wrong if I said it wasn't special. It's a huge accomplishment in a way," said O'Callaghan, who has won four individual and seven relay golds. "Each moment I can remember, and it just shows the journey that I've had, and us girls have had, because I haven't been able to do all these gold medals without these girls. "I have a great coach [Dean Boxall] who keeps it really positive – the environment, very passionate, you know he's really outgoing." O'Callaghan — who on Friday night (AEST) will try to add 100m freestyle gold to her 200m, 4x200m and 4x100m titles at this meet — had to leave the interview early, to calls of "love you", "proud of you" from her teammates. Pallister, who swam a personal best in her opening leg, said she gave O'Callaghan a pep talk before the final leg. "Without the profanities, I was pretty much saying to Mollie on the block 'do you know who you are?'," she said. "When you've had the former world record and you've won the world championship the day before … in my mind as soon as Mollie dives in, I know we've won it." Pallister and Perkins said the team did not think they would win the final without world record holder Ariarne Titmus, who was in commentary and in the middle of a year off. "When you lose a 1:52 swimmer and a world record holder, it's really hard to get up and America always lifts for relays, so we knew we were coming in for a battle tonight," Perkins said. The woman who has essentially replaced Titmus is Castelluzzo, who gave up the lead in her third leg before making up a body length in the final lap to touch in front. "I was just trying to keep calm and then have fun trying to mow someone down in the last 50m," the 24-year-old said. "Australia's very good at relays and I did feel a lot of pressure coming in. We've lost Arnie and I'm sort of the one who's come through and replaced [her], so it's big shoes to fill." Canadian Summer McIntosh blew the field away to win the women's 200m butterfly final in a time of 2:01.99 – her personal best and the second-fastest time in history. She was just 0.18 of a second behind the world record set by China's Zige Liu in 2009 during the infamous supersuit world championships in Rome. Do you have a story idea about women in sport? Email us abcsport5050@ As 18-year-old McIntosh turned around to view her time, she let out an audible obscenity in frustration, and it took several minutes before the gold medallist cracked a smile in her post-race interview. "Winning was the goal going in, but my other goal tonight was to break the world record, which often I don't really say or focus on, but to see how close I was to breaking it and not getting it, I'm a little bit frustrated," McIntosh said. It was her third victory at these championships as she seeks to win five individual gold medals to equal Phelps's record from Melbourne 2007. Australian Lizzie Dekkers came third behind McIntosh and American Regan Smith just six weeks after placing third at the Australian trials, which ruled her out of the world championships. But she was called up when Abbey Connor pulled out for "personal reasons". "A roller-coaster is really the best way to describe it. It's been a crazy few weeks," she said. "I'm really stoked with that result. It's definitely not what I expected. I wasn't meant to be here, you know? "Five weeks ago, I'd hopped back in the water, but I wasn't expecting to race for six months." She said swimming with McIntosh was inspiring. "Racing her is amazing, getting the opportunity to internationally race the best every time, it makes me want to push harder, especially because she is so young," the 21-year-old said. Australia's Kyle Chalmers won bronze in the men's 100m freestyle final as Romanian David Popovici swam the second-fastest time in history. His time of 46.51 seconds was just 0.11 outside the record set at the Olympic Games by China's Zhanle Pan, who missed out on the final. "I was never going to swim 46.5 or around that mark, unfortunately. I would have loved to see 46 next to my name," said Chalmers, who stopped the clock at 47.17. "But I'm really, really proud of that performance and to come away with a medal in such a stacked final is something I'm really proud of." Chalmers said he came close to stepping away from swimming in January, but credited his physiologist and coach for coming up with a new training plan that revived his love for the sport. "From doing nine sessions a week, 50 kilometres sort of weeks, to now doing once a day topping at probably at 20 kilometres, which is kind of reinventing myself in the sport and finding a new way to swim fast," he said. "It's been really exciting." Chalmers was the defending world champion and won silver at last year's Olympics but was almost a second behind Pan, which he said rocked his confidence. "To be beaten by a whole second in an Olympic final and then try and reset and believe that you're good enough to continue to compete in that event," he said. "Those guys saw a 46.4 last year and everyone's training and believing they can swim a 46 and 46 has become the new normal." Chalmers has a new lease on life in and out of the pool. He's engaged to Norwegian swimmer Ingeborg Loyning and the couple are expecting their first child in September, living on a farm in the Adelaide Hills. "I'm loving doing something so different that's stimulating my brain," he said. "To be able to just get up in the morning now, have a coffee, do some farm work, kind of go down to training around 11. "I swim by myself with the public swimmers in the middle of the day. "Our goal is to make the LA Olympics together." Frenchman, Leon Marchand could not repeat his world record-breaking pace from Wednesday night, but he still won gold in the men's 200m individual medley in the second-fastest time in history behind only his semifinal swim. Australia leads the swimming medal table with five gold medals ahead of the US on four, with Canada on three – all thanks to McIntosh.

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