Latest news with #Crow


The Advertiser
3 hours ago
- Sport
- The Advertiser
It's just a tragedy: Walsh lauded a decade after death
A decade ago, Adelaide captain Taylor Walker reluctantly answered his phone at 4.45am. "Phil's been murdered," Walker was told by the Crows' chief executive Andrew Fagan. Patrick Dangerfield answered a knock on his Adelaide door at 5.30am. "Phil's dead," Dangerfield, then a star Crow, was told by the club's football manager David Noble. "For that day and for the next few days I didn't cry," Dangerfield has said. "It was just total and utter disbelief ... you couldn't comprehend it." Ten years later, the AFL cohort in Adelaide are treading a fine line around Phil Walsh, who was stabbed to death by his son Cy on July 3, 2015. How best to acknowledge Walsh without creating further pain for his family? No-one quite knows. Just as no-one quite knew 10 years ago how to handle the death of the 55-year-old who was in the midst of his first season as the Crows' head coach. "It was a big washing machine for the next week," Walker has said of the emotional fall-out. Walsh had joined the Crows from arch rivals Port Adelaide, where in 2014 he was an assistant coach under Ken Hinkley. "His knowledge and his love of the game was real," Hinkley said this week. "It's just a tragedy, obviously everyone knows that, with what happened. "But there's a time when you reflect on the knowledge and the brilliance of his mind, which was amazing from a football sense." Walsh's renowned intensity left an imprint on all. "His game-day stuff, like his intensity and his willingness to try and win everything and make sure his team was so prepared," Hinkley said. "The players who would have played under Phil would say there was no stone unturned when it came to being ready to play football. "His footy knowledge ... no-one better." As a player, Walsh featured in 122 VFL/AFL games for Richmond, Collingwood and Brisbane from 1983-1990. In 2014 under Hinkley, Walsh was in his second stint as a Power assistant - he also held the role from 1999-2008. Walsh filled the same job at West Coast from 2009-13 before returning to South Australia. When Adelaide sacked Brenton Sanderson as coach in September 2014, the Crows' powerbroker and playing great Mark Ricciuto sought out Walsh. "I feel like I have been robbed," Ricciuto wrote in an open letter published five days after Walsh's death. "In fact, we have all been robbed. (Walsh's wife) Meredith, (daughter) Quinn and the family and their friends, I'm sure, are all feeling the same. "Why robbed? Because I think the Phil Walsh story was going to end as a fairytale. I could see him one day being a premiership coach ... and I do not say it lightly." Lifeline 13 11 14 beyondblue 1300 22 4636 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491 A decade ago, Adelaide captain Taylor Walker reluctantly answered his phone at 4.45am. "Phil's been murdered," Walker was told by the Crows' chief executive Andrew Fagan. Patrick Dangerfield answered a knock on his Adelaide door at 5.30am. "Phil's dead," Dangerfield, then a star Crow, was told by the club's football manager David Noble. "For that day and for the next few days I didn't cry," Dangerfield has said. "It was just total and utter disbelief ... you couldn't comprehend it." Ten years later, the AFL cohort in Adelaide are treading a fine line around Phil Walsh, who was stabbed to death by his son Cy on July 3, 2015. How best to acknowledge Walsh without creating further pain for his family? No-one quite knows. Just as no-one quite knew 10 years ago how to handle the death of the 55-year-old who was in the midst of his first season as the Crows' head coach. "It was a big washing machine for the next week," Walker has said of the emotional fall-out. Walsh had joined the Crows from arch rivals Port Adelaide, where in 2014 he was an assistant coach under Ken Hinkley. "His knowledge and his love of the game was real," Hinkley said this week. "It's just a tragedy, obviously everyone knows that, with what happened. "But there's a time when you reflect on the knowledge and the brilliance of his mind, which was amazing from a football sense." Walsh's renowned intensity left an imprint on all. "His game-day stuff, like his intensity and his willingness to try and win everything and make sure his team was so prepared," Hinkley said. "The players who would have played under Phil would say there was no stone unturned when it came to being ready to play football. "His footy knowledge ... no-one better." As a player, Walsh featured in 122 VFL/AFL games for Richmond, Collingwood and Brisbane from 1983-1990. In 2014 under Hinkley, Walsh was in his second stint as a Power assistant - he also held the role from 1999-2008. Walsh filled the same job at West Coast from 2009-13 before returning to South Australia. When Adelaide sacked Brenton Sanderson as coach in September 2014, the Crows' powerbroker and playing great Mark Ricciuto sought out Walsh. "I feel like I have been robbed," Ricciuto wrote in an open letter published five days after Walsh's death. "In fact, we have all been robbed. (Walsh's wife) Meredith, (daughter) Quinn and the family and their friends, I'm sure, are all feeling the same. "Why robbed? Because I think the Phil Walsh story was going to end as a fairytale. I could see him one day being a premiership coach ... and I do not say it lightly." Lifeline 13 11 14 beyondblue 1300 22 4636 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491 A decade ago, Adelaide captain Taylor Walker reluctantly answered his phone at 4.45am. "Phil's been murdered," Walker was told by the Crows' chief executive Andrew Fagan. Patrick Dangerfield answered a knock on his Adelaide door at 5.30am. "Phil's dead," Dangerfield, then a star Crow, was told by the club's football manager David Noble. "For that day and for the next few days I didn't cry," Dangerfield has said. "It was just total and utter disbelief ... you couldn't comprehend it." Ten years later, the AFL cohort in Adelaide are treading a fine line around Phil Walsh, who was stabbed to death by his son Cy on July 3, 2015. How best to acknowledge Walsh without creating further pain for his family? No-one quite knows. Just as no-one quite knew 10 years ago how to handle the death of the 55-year-old who was in the midst of his first season as the Crows' head coach. "It was a big washing machine for the next week," Walker has said of the emotional fall-out. Walsh had joined the Crows from arch rivals Port Adelaide, where in 2014 he was an assistant coach under Ken Hinkley. "His knowledge and his love of the game was real," Hinkley said this week. "It's just a tragedy, obviously everyone knows that, with what happened. "But there's a time when you reflect on the knowledge and the brilliance of his mind, which was amazing from a football sense." Walsh's renowned intensity left an imprint on all. "His game-day stuff, like his intensity and his willingness to try and win everything and make sure his team was so prepared," Hinkley said. "The players who would have played under Phil would say there was no stone unturned when it came to being ready to play football. "His footy knowledge ... no-one better." As a player, Walsh featured in 122 VFL/AFL games for Richmond, Collingwood and Brisbane from 1983-1990. In 2014 under Hinkley, Walsh was in his second stint as a Power assistant - he also held the role from 1999-2008. Walsh filled the same job at West Coast from 2009-13 before returning to South Australia. When Adelaide sacked Brenton Sanderson as coach in September 2014, the Crows' powerbroker and playing great Mark Ricciuto sought out Walsh. "I feel like I have been robbed," Ricciuto wrote in an open letter published five days after Walsh's death. "In fact, we have all been robbed. (Walsh's wife) Meredith, (daughter) Quinn and the family and their friends, I'm sure, are all feeling the same. "Why robbed? Because I think the Phil Walsh story was going to end as a fairytale. I could see him one day being a premiership coach ... and I do not say it lightly." Lifeline 13 11 14 beyondblue 1300 22 4636 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491


Perth Now
6 hours ago
- Sport
- Perth Now
It's just a tragedy: Walsh lauded a decade after death
A decade ago, Adelaide captain Taylor Walker reluctantly answered his phone at 4.45am. "Phil's been murdered," Walker was told by the Crows' chief executive Andrew Fagan. Patrick Dangerfield answered a knock on his Adelaide door at 5.30am. "Phil's dead," Dangerfield, then a star Crow, was told by the club's football manager David Noble. "For that day and for the next few days I didn't cry," Dangerfield has said. "It was just total and utter disbelief ... you couldn't comprehend it." Ten years later, the AFL cohort in Adelaide are treading a fine line around Phil Walsh, who was stabbed to death by his son Cy on July 3, 2015. How best to acknowledge Walsh without creating further pain for his family? No-one quite knows. Just as no-one quite knew 10 years ago how to handle the death of the 55-year-old who was in the midst of his first season as the Crows' head coach. "It was a big washing machine for the next week," Walker has said of the emotional fall-out. Walsh had joined the Crows from arch rivals Port Adelaide, where in 2014 he was an assistant coach under Ken Hinkley. "His knowledge and his love of the game was real," Hinkley said this week. "It's just a tragedy, obviously everyone knows that, with what happened. "But there's a time when you reflect on the knowledge and the brilliance of his mind, which was amazing from a football sense." Walsh's renowned intensity left an imprint on all. "His game-day stuff, like his intensity and his willingness to try and win everything and make sure his team was so prepared," Hinkley said. "The players who would have played under Phil would say there was no stone unturned when it came to being ready to play football. "His footy knowledge ... no-one better." As a player, Walsh featured in 122 VFL/AFL games for Richmond, Collingwood and Brisbane from 1983-1990. In 2014 under Hinkley, Walsh was in his second stint as a Power assistant - he also held the role from 1999-2008. Walsh filled the same job at West Coast from 2009-13 before returning to South Australia. When Adelaide sacked Brenton Sanderson as coach in September 2014, the Crows' powerbroker and playing great Mark Ricciuto sought out Walsh. "I feel like I have been robbed," Ricciuto wrote in an open letter published five days after Walsh's death. "In fact, we have all been robbed. (Walsh's wife) Meredith, (daughter) Quinn and the family and their friends, I'm sure, are all feeling the same. "Why robbed? Because I think the Phil Walsh story was going to end as a fairytale. I could see him one day being a premiership coach ... and I do not say it lightly." Lifeline 13 11 14 beyondblue 1300 22 4636 1800 RESPECT (1800 737 732) Men's Referral Service 1300 766 491


CNN
24-06-2025
- Politics
- CNN
Trump Announces Ceasefire Between Iran and Israel - Anderson Cooper 360 - Podcast on CNN Audio
Trump Announces Ceasefire Between Iran and Israel Anderson Cooper 360 48 mins President Trump has announced on social media an Israel-Iran ceasefire. The White House says Israel agreed to it on the condition Iran stops its strikes. And Iran's foreign minister says Tehran has 'no intention to continue our response' if Israel stops attacks first. Anderson has all the new developments from Tel Aviv. Plus, he gets reaction from two lawmakers in Washington, Alaska Republican Senator Lisa Murkowski and Colorado Democratic Congressman Jason Crow.


NZ Herald
19-06-2025
- Business
- NZ Herald
Popular services keep adding AI. Some customers want them to stop.
For 581 days in a row, artist Karen Crow dutifully opened language-learning app Duolingo and practised her French. For the past decade, she used audiobook service Audible to listen to books while working and travelling. But at the end of May, Crow cancelled both subscriptions over the companies' decisions to
Yahoo
17-06-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
See what's in the Supreme Court justices' annual financial disclosures
Washington — Annual financial disclosures for members of the Supreme Court were released to the public Tuesday, detailing the gifts and incomes the justices received in 2024, as well as any positions held outside of the court. Reports for eight of the nine sitting members of the high court were due on May 15. Justice Samuel Alito requested a 90-day extension, according to the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, as he has done in the past. The financial disclosure report showed three of the justices — Sonia Sotomayor, Neil Gorsuch and Ketanji Brown Jackson — brought in money from books last year. Jackson raked in $2 million from Penguin Random House, the publisher of her memoir, "Lovely One," while Sotomayor earned more than $130,000 in royalties and an advance. Gorsuch brought in $250,000 in royalties from HarperCollins Publishers, and an additional $259 from Princeton University Press. Sotomayor said that she visited the Coterie Theatre in Kansas City, Missouri, to "review a workshop performance" of "Just Ask," her children's book that was adapted as a musical. The trip was valued at $1,437, according to her report. The justice also listed reimbursements for travel, lodging and meals from universities in the U.S., Panama, Switzerland and Austria, where she participated in conferences and other speaking events. Justice Clarence Thomas, whose disclosures have come under scrutiny because of travels with his longtime friend and real estate developer Harlan Crow, reported no gifts, reimbursements or outside income from last year. He remains an honorary member of the Horatio Alger Association, according to his filing. Several Supreme Court members disclosed teaching positions, including Chief Justice John Roberts, who taught a two-week course for New England Law's summer program in Galway, Ireland, in July 2024. Justices Brett Kavanaugh and Amy Coney Barrett each were adjunct professors at Notre Dame Law School, earning just over $31,800 apiece, according to their reports. Gorsuch taught at George Mason University last year and was paid $30,000. Kavanaugh continues to coach girls' basketball, his disclosure shows. Filed annually to the Administrative Office of the U.S. Courts, the disclosures have received heightened attention since ProPublica revealed in 2023 luxury trips Thomas accepted from Crow, a major GOP donor, across their more than two-decade-long friendship. The justice's vacations to Bali and a private club in California had not been included on his financial disclosure reports at the time, and flights on Crow's private plane had also been omitted. Thomas has long maintained that he did not believe he had to disclose the travel and vowed to comply with guidelines about personal hospitality issued in 2023 by the Judicial Conference, the policymaking body for the federal judiciary. His report for 2022 did include flights Thomas took aboard Crow's private jet, as well as lodging at the developer's property in the Adirondacks. Thomas' disclosure form covering 2023 included an amendment to his 2019 report that listed two trips he took with Crow that year to Bali and Monte Rio, California. Still, the details about his travels with Crow ignited calls for a code of conduct for the Supreme Court. The high court adopted formal ethics rules and principles in November 2023, which all nine justices pledged to adhere to. But the code came under scrutiny because it does not include a mechanism for enforcement. American stranded in Israel with her family speaks out amid airstrike exchanges with Iran May retail sales drop more than expected Everything we know about Israel, Iran and where Trump stands on the conflict