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Buckley: Pie injury sours gutsy effort

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 04 April 2015 | 23.51

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COLLINGWOOD coach Nathan Buckley has lauded his side's ability to handle a fast-finishing Brisbane amid the continuing shock of the drug scandal that has engulfed the club.

The Magpies led by 53 points at the 25-minute mark of the third term and survived the Lions booting the last seven goals of the game to claim four competition points.

Revelations that Collingwood duo Lachlan Keeffe and Josh Thomas tested positive for a performance enhancing substance rocked the club this week.

But Collingwood handle drama better than most and dominated Brisbane for three quarters.

"Obviously that issue has travelled through the week but to be honest, we travelled (and) our major focus was on starting our season as well as we possibly could,'' he said.

"We leave here with four points which is the result we are after.

"It takes time for that shock (about Keeffe and Thomas) to settle in. I wouldn't think it would be truly absorbed yet by the players.''

Buckley said he had spoken to both Keeffe and Thomas but had not asked them specifically about their version of events.

The only down side for the Pies was a suspected broken thumb for star midfielder Steele Sidebottom who will be sidelined for a few weeks.

Sidebottom will be assessed in the coming days as to whether or not the thumb requires a pin.

"We basically dominated the game for the best part of three quarters and gave the opposition a sniff because we didn't finish a couple of chances and gave ourselves a bit of a scare,'' Buckley said.

"I thought the leadership, the pluck in that last eight minutes to hold the game and do what we needed to do was pretty good.''

Buckley said former Magpie Dayne Beams — who collected 32 disposals — was not specifically targeted.

"He is obviously a very good player but we didn't want to focus on Beamsy at the expense of Tom Rockliff, Dayne Zorko or Daniel Rich. It wasn't an all-encompassing focus on one player,'' he said.


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NRL threaten to strip points off Bulldogs

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CANTERBURY Bulldogs face the harshest of punishments, including being stripped of competition points, if there is a repeat of Friday's disgraceful crowd behaviour at ANZ Stadium.

The Bulldogs have also vowed to warn their captain James Graham and the players about their lack of ­respect for referees that has been blamed for inciting fans to throw bottles at match ­officials after the game.

It is expected Graham and teammate Dave Klemmer will be charged by the NRL for referee abuse, facing fines and possible suspensions.

The loss of competition points will also be considered if there are more crowd disturbances involving Bulldogs fans this year.

Officials being pelted with bottles after the controversial Bulldogs v Rabbitohs NRL match on Friday. Picture: AAP/Mick Tsikas Source: AAP

A touch judge falls after being hit by a bottle at the end of the NRL game. Picture: AAP/Mick Tsikas Source: AAP

And the threat should serve as a warning to other teams if their fans behave in the same manner.

"Under the game's code of conduct, there are a range of sanctions available to consider, which we will do in a thorough and considered way," NRL CEO Dave Smith said.

"These matters were ­serious and extremely disappointing for the entire game and do not reflect the game's values both on and off-the-field. We will be working with the police, ANZ Stadium and the Bulldogs to carefully review all matters regarding fan behaviour."

Meanwhile, Canterbury chief executive Raelene Castle said she and coach Des Hasler would address Graham and the entire team about the importance of respecting refereeing decisions.

"James wants to be captain of the Bulldogs for a long period of time and he needs to build a respectful relationship with the officials," Castle said.

"It's part of the role that he has to be seen as someone they want to work with and have a sensible conversation with on the field.

"That means in the first minute of the game or in the heat of the battle in the 80th minute. Leadership is a learning process. He's just started. None of us get it right all the time. He's got to learn from it and use it in a positive way going forward.

"It's something Des and I will be talking to James and the team about."

Bulldogs fans at the game against the Rabbitohs before it was marred by violence. Picture: AAP Image/Mick Tsikas Source: Getty Images

The Bulldogs CEO was assisting police and working alongside NRL and ANZ Stadium staff yesterday in the bitter aftermath to one of the code's most ­controversial days.

Castle ­accepted the blame on the club's behalf.

"It's really frustrating when you have 40,500 people and 40,400 of them are cheering loud with great passion and enthusiasm but they don't cross that line," she said.

Castle said it would be wrong for the NRL to take action against the club.

Overseas soccer clubs have lost competition points for crowd misbehaviour.


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Oh baby! Why Scott has rivals feeling green

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ADAM Scott kissed the new girl in his life for the first time in six weeks, before flying to a Masters showdown he feels he can win after a meagre 10 rounds in the ring.

The image of Scott changing nappies, while Rory McIlroy, Jason Day, Dustin Johnson and Jordan Spieth have all grabbed tournaments on the way to Augusta this week, is not entirely true.

Australia's former world No. 1 has something just as powerful going on.

He is serenely happy, on top of having a proven winning formula for Augusta that those top rivals are still sweating on finding.

QUIZ: HOW WELL DO THE KNOW THE US MASTERS

SCOTT REVERTS BACK TO BROOMSTICK FOR MASTERS

STRUGGLING TIGER BACK FOR MASTERS

Adam Scott celebrates after draining a birdie to force a play-off in 2013. Source: Getty Images

Newborn Bo, with mum Marie, flew into her new Bahamas base last Thursday night and dad was off on a plane to Augusta, Georgia the next day.

"Just thinking about Bo makes me happy. I underrated the feeling of parenthood," Scott, 34, said.

"I'm just like every other dad with baby pictures on my phone showing them off.

"It really feels like marriage and being a dad has come along at a really good time in my life.

"I feel ready for it, excited for all those challenges personally and it's a good motivator professionally as well.

"Even though I've barely seen her, like it's 10 days and she's six weeks old, it is a very warm feeling for me.

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"We'll all spend good time together after the Masters."

Scott's hungry mindset for another big showing radiates from everything he knows about his game and a catalogue of shots, escape routes, familiar putts and mental steel from his 13 Masters appearances.

A meagre 10 rounds of tournament play in the first three months of this year would not make him a winning bet for a US Open on an unfamiliar course.

It does for the Masters. He now calls Augusta National "my home track" such has his epic 2013 triumph been embedded in his psyche.

Scott, pictured driving on the third, says Augusta is his "home track". Source: Getty Images

He does not feel at a disadvantage to momentum men like new American hot shot Spieth, who enters the Masters coming off a win, a second and his last nine rounds under par.

"Absolutely not. Over the past five years I've developed such a good feeling of playing Augusta that I feel extremely comfortable around there," Scott said.

"Topped off by winning obviously helps the confidence a lot.

"It somewhat feels like going back to my home track."

There is a reason why Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Bubba Watson, Bernhard Langer, Jose Maria Olazabal and Nick Faldo have all won multiple Masters titles over the past 30 years.

"Guys have won it a couple of times quite close together because I think you do develop a real knack for playing Augusta. Winning that first time really helps," Scott said.

"You know you can win around there and not everyone goes in with that."

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With everything swirling around Scott last year as defending champion and the guy serving mum Pam's pavlova at the Champions dinner, he still opened with a fine 69.

Lapping it all up rather than putting an emotion-deflecting shield around himself was deliberate.

"I tried to enjoy it all. You only go back to defend your first Masters win once," said Scott, who finished 14th.

Scott is not as underdone as many would think with his extended baby-break. He practised every day on the Gold Coast before his Florida return last month at Doral for a strong fourth at the Cadillac Championship on one of the toughest courses the pros play all year.

His nine top 10s in majors since the start of 2011 is seriously good. But world No. 1 McIlroy's six top 10s over the same period have been converted to four victories in majors.

You have got to love how Aussie Scott is. He wanted a Gold Coast birth for Bo.

A week ago, cricket fan Scott woke in the Bahamas at 2am to watch Australia's blitz of New Zealand in the World Cup final on TV.

He craves a conversion rate in majors like Steve Smith's insatiable hunger for great hundreds over just good 50s.

"Methodical, meticulous ... Australia's batting was impressive when it mattered in the tournament," Scott said.

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Before he became Australian golf's impressive statesman, a young Scott said that winning one major "didn't justify anything" when highlighting the work he put in would justify more.

"I mean, I've not had a clear goal on it my whole life but certainly I've had en expectation of winning multiple majors," Scott said.

"It took me a long time to get one. Realistically, over the next five years I've got to get the rest because beyond 40 it's a bit of a lottery.

"I feel it's my time to win big events. I feel I've put in all the work I need to over the past few years and I just have to go out and do it."

Two-time Masters champion Adam Scott ... he would love that handle.

The nappies can wait, right?

"I did my fair share of nappies in Australia," he said with a laugh.

"Obviously, I've been away a while so I've got some catching up to do ... after the Masters."


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Tallis: Time for NRL to step in

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THE NRL needs to consider whether the time has come to punish clubs for the behaviour of their fans.

The league also must take stronger action for the way players talk to referees.

Everybody who was involved in what happened at ANZ Stadium on Friday needs to take responsibility for how their actions contributed to what was a disgraceful image for our game.

The players, coaches, club, fans and even the security need to look at what they did to ensure such an incident never happen again.

We don't want the hooliganism that plagues soccer in Europe infiltrate our game. We don't want teenage girls racially abusing players, as happened in the AFL last year.

We don't want the NRL to force clubs to play in empty stadiums.

CONTROL: Graham denies disrespect or any malice

BUZZ: Bulldogs' ref outburst way off track

CONSEQUENCES: Graham awaits outcome after outburst

James Graham is facing sanctions after his outburst at referee Gerard Sutton. Source: Getty Images

PLAYERS

The guys on the field need to realise that arguing with referees incites the fans. Yes, I have been guilty of arguing with referees in the past. And I was wrong.

As much as I thought I was right at the time, and on some issues I was right, I let my team down. Nobody who has ever argued with a referee has ever won.

I apologised to Bill Harrigan immediately after the Origin game whenI got sent off. I apologised to him for the fans too.

I met him at his house days later to ensure there were no issues moving forward. To this day it is something I am embarrassed about and wish never happened.

When you're out on the field, the last thing in your mind is how it must look to the little kid watching in the stands or at home on TV with his parents. At that level it's all about winning.

And the harder you try for something, the more passionate you get. That is what we saw with James Graham.

I love the passion and commitment he plays with. But he needs to accept he was wrong.

I truly believe Graham was only going for the ball when trying to charge down the field goal attempt.

But if you do that and make contact with the leg of a kicker, you get penalised. Simple as that.

I think more frustration came by the fact no players knew the rule that if you make a foul on a kicker taking a shot at field goal, it's a penalty 10m in front of the posts.

Again, if players think it's OK to abuse a referee, then the fans will too. The NRL needs to stamp out that behaviour.

The referees need to use the sin bin. If a player does not come out to them with respect and use manners, put them in the bin. It is time for zero tolerance.

Graham and David Klemmer need to accept what they did was wrong and apologise immediately for how they spoke to the referees.

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COACHES AND CLUB

One of the best things the NRL has done this year is ban coaches from talking about referees. It's a great message to send.

The coach can't call referees Voldemorts and think the fans won't feed off that disrespect.

The clubs need to support respect for officials from top to bottom. I know it's not all Bulldogs fans, but some of them show no respect to the law.

Punishing the club may be the only way to teach fans that this sort of behaviour won't be tolerated.

Is it time to take away competition points? Issue hefty club fines?

Like it or not, the way your members behave reflects as much upon your club as the behaviour of your superstar players.

A touch judge is hit by a bottle thrown from the crowd. Source: AAP

FANS

I want fans to be passionate, I love when they scream for their team.

But I hope they find every culprit from Friday on CCTV footage and ban them from coming to a league game ever again. It's a cowardly act to throw missiles at referees.

I've walked out of soccer games overseas where riot squads, horses, police armour tanks and water guns were waiting to keep fans separate.

What is society getting to?

This is sport. Yeah, it is tribal and you're invested in your team. You've loved your club since you were a kid and you want them to win. But it is OK to lose. There is always another game.

We all have a part to play. Parents need to talk to kids about what happened and explain that sort of behaviour is not acceptable in any game, at any level.

SECURITY

What is wrong with waiting to leave the field if the crowd are revved up?

If there is a contentious decision, security should wait in the middle of the ground with the referees until the crowd have dispersed. Or use a different exit.

It might seem an extreme measure, but it's better than putting our referees in danger.


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The day Dom knew Boak was man to take over

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DOM Cassisi knew Travis Boak would succeed him as Port Adelaide captain the day he looked Boak in the eye and said he understood if he was about to quit the club and go home.

On the eve of Boak's 50th game as Power captain, Cassisi says he was blown away by Boak's decision two years ago to resist a Victorian homecoming and the lure of rival clubs to stand by his own which was on its knees.

"I remember saying to him (in 2012) 'I can't polish a turd, I've got nothing to sell you to stay other than to say you will captain this club and imagine the feeling of taking it from being pretty average to right up there? Nothing will beat that'," Cassisi said.

"We had no coach, the board was pretty much stuffed, we had (CEO) Keith Thomas but didn't have a president ... Then for him to go and sign and put his faith in the club was unbelievable.

"I don't know if there would have been too many guys who would have stayed in that situation."

While Cassisi admits he was surprised by Boak's decision to stay at Alberton, from what he'd learned of Boak's character, he should have seen it coming.

"The boys definitely play for him and the reason they play for him is he's built up so much respect amongst the group over the seven-year period he's been there," Cassisi said.

"Since the first day he walked in. You can't be a dickhead for three years then flick a switch and start getting respect.

"He just got respect from day one because he worked hard ... how humble and how honest he is."

Cassisi was Port Adelaide's captain from 2009 to 2012 then played under Boak for his final two seasons before retiring during in 2014.

Boak was just 24 when he took over as skipper but Cassisi, who was 30 at the time, said it was meant to be.

"It was just so clear that he was ready, there was no awkwardness, it was a no-brainer," said Cassisi, a 228-game premiership player with Port Adelaide.

"He committed to the club and everyone was so pumped, it was so clear that he was going to be the best leader going forward and the transition was really good.

"It comes back to the way he carries himself, he works hard and he's humble."

As Port prepares to play Fremantle in Sunday's season opener, Cassisi and the Power's 2004 premiership captain Warren Tredrea have provided rare insight into Boak's leadership at the club.

"The one thing I didn't know if he had was the ruthlessness," Tredrea said.

"As a teammate he was always about preparation, he was young, a big early draft pick and had to show the way.

"But speaking to people even as recently as a few weeks ago, he's got that (ruthlessness) too.

"He can hold people to ransom and he can question his good mates even though they're mates."

On game day Boak will speak to the players as a group, but Hinkley is the last to address them as they huddle together before running out.

"He puts a lot of thought and effort into the pre-game stuff and mixes it up and ties it in to what we're focusing on in that particular week," Cassisi told The Advertiser.

"He always brings it back to the team and the only thing he asks is that you put the team first for four quarters and we'll be all right.

"He leads by example, he speaks up when he has to but he doesn't over-do it, which is good because when he does speak up it's even more profound.

"But he can be vocal when he has to. Say if a training session is not going well, he'll call the group in straight away.

"Kenny will blow the whistle and (Boak) will say 'boys, this is not up to standard'.

"His voice is awesome, on game day the way he directs the gameplan and structure.

"But he's not the type that yells and screams and barks."

After his outstanding season last year, Robbie Gray is understandably the flavour of the month for those forecasting Port's continued improvement this season.

But it's hard to look past Boak as the Power's best player.

One thing Tredrea and Cassisi both point to is that in the past two years when Port Adelaide has needed a big goal or a clutch tackle to make a statement, more often than not, it's been Boak who has delivered.

"Every time Port's needed a lift," Tredrea said.

"He's kicked Showdown goals, in finals think about that one where he followed the ball, got the handball receive and finished the goal early in the first quarter against Richmond.

"He wills himself to get better.

"He's not the most talented player on Port's list and he hasn't got the best skills - he's very, very good - but he just wills himself to a level like a Robert Harvey who I used to watch from a distance."

Cassisi agrees.

"The best leaders are the guys that respond when the coach asks them to, when their backs are against the wall," he said.

"If you think about how many times since Boaky has been captain, has he gone out and kicked a goal in the third or fourth quarter? Kicked a goal or done something really good when things are getting tough?

"There were numerous times throughout that 2014 season when the game was in the balance where he would do that.

"And post-match Kenny is like 'that is just a captain's game'.

"That to me is a true indication of a really good leader. You can say all you want but if you're not playing well then it doesn't matter.

"His game has gone to a new level, there's no doubt about that. Whether that's him thriving on the extra ownership and responsibility or not."

Cassisi does however note that the overall strength of Port Adelaide's team has complimented Boak in his early tenure as skipper.

"I think your group is in a bit of strife if you need a captain on game day to get everyone fired up," Cassisi said.

"That's the strength of the group at the moment, the boys go into a game with their roles that clearly defined, it's ridiculous, there is no grey area.

"That's the difference between a good coach and a bad coach, and it makes it easier when everyone has a clearly defined role and he's just driving the standards and performing at his best."

Tredrea says the positive influences around Boak extend further than just in the changerooms.

"He's also got good people around him, a chairman who gets it, a coach who gets it, all that sort of stuff," Tredrea said.

"In the media he presents well, he doesn't duck away from anything and he gets it. It's a phrase that's simple but he gets it, he knows what you need to do as captain and to be a successful organisation."

That is what Port Adelaide has been about since the new broom went through the place two years ago - putting the right people in the right positions and trusting the result will take care of itself.

Boak remains the fourth youngest captain in the competition but he has never looked more at home on the field.

"He stands up in the heat of the moment when he needs to and he's only 50 games in. His best is still to come," Tredrea said.


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How Roos showed Wallabies the way forward

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HAVING spent the last two weeks embedded with the Socceroos in Germany and Macedonia, I can confidently say I have seen the future.

Not for the Socceroos. For the Wallabies.

If Australian rugby does not want to fall further off the pace both at home and internationally, how can the ARU continue to refuse to choose overseas based players?

GENIA TO JOIN FRENCH RUGBY AFTER WORLD CUP

I was there last year when new Wallaby coach Michael Cheika said that he only wanted players who showed their commitment to the cause and stayed in Australia.

A couple of days later, the Wallabies went out and got absolutely hammered by the England pack at Twickenham.

Ange Postecoglou celebrates after winning the Asian Cup. Source: News Corp Australia

Sad to say I can't see any evidence to suggest the same won't happen at the World Cup in seven months. If Wales turns the tables and wins their pool match against the Aussies as well — and the odds are in their favour — the Wallabies won't make the knockout stage.

Now I'm not saying a last-minute change of heart on overseas eligibility by the big blazers who run the game in Australia will make any difference to our World Cup chances — it's too late for that. But if the Wallabies do bomb out in the first round, something is going to have to be done, and fast.

Rugby is already on the nose after the Ewen McKenzie era ended in debacle; another washout in October will all but flush it down the spout.

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I never thought I'd say this, but it's time rugby took a page out of the round-ball game's book.

Two weeks ago. Socceroos coach Ange Postecoglou stood in the foyer of the Hilton Hotel in Mainz, Germany and shook the hands of his players as they arrived from all over the world.

A day later, after one training session, they went out and came within 10 minutes of beating the world champions.

Had those players shown disloyalty to the cause by leaving Australia to further their careers rather than playing in the A-League?

Hardly. Quite the opposite.

Aussie forward can improve their set piece skills by playing in Europe. Source: Getty Images

Most of them have improved their skills playing in bigger leagues in Europe, the Middle East or Asia, and used that experience to strengthen the national team.

The crowds at the Asian Cup didn't seem too worried where the Aussie boys played their football. All they cared about was that they were wearing a gold shirt.

I'm not bagging Cheika's policy, or that of the ARU. It's very commendable — and very naive.

Surely the main aim of the national program should be to put the best possible team on the field. Right now, the biggest problem facing the Wallaby selectors is that they haven't got a tight five that can hold a candle to the European packs.

Why? Because the Australian forwards play in Super Rugby, a television product designed to get the ball out of set pieces as quick as possible so that the viewers don't get bored.

Our forwards don't know how to scrimmage because they don't do it enough (like European backs not knowing how to score tries, but that's another column.)

The only way Wallaby forwards can learn how play to like Europeans, is to play in Europe — and if they can do it well enough, they should play for their country.

As for the up-and-coming players who choose to stay in Super Rugby becoming disillusioned if they are passed over for the overseas-based players ... so what?

It will make them try harder. Not just to play for Australia, but to be offered an overseas contract.

It will improve their skills, their bank balances and the Wallabies.

It's what you call a win-win-win situation.


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Young star ready to break the shackles

Emma McKeon on her way to winning the Women's 100m Butterfly final at the national titles. Source: Gregg Porteous / News Corp Australia

EMMA McKeon was Australia's golden girl from Glasgow and now the teen star is determined to showcase her enormous potential on the world stage.

Four gold and two bronze medals stamped McKeon as Australia's hottest young swim star of 2014 but behind her bright smile there is an intense determination to ensure her career trajectory only keeps rising on the path to 2016 Rio Olympics.

For McKeon that means maintaining her domestic dominance in individual races, particularly her pet event the 200m freestyle which starts at Sydney Olympic Park today.

"I've still got big goals I want to achieve," McKeon said.

"Obviously I want to make the Olympic team next year, I hope to be on the podium."

The 18-year-old is the Commonwealth champion in the 200m freestyle and it is clearly her best hope of individual glory over the next two years.

Don't let her smile fool you. McKeon is ready to make huge waves in the pool. Source: News Corp Australia

But if McKeon has her way she will maintain much of the multi-event program that she excelled with in Scotland now that she knows she can handle the high workload in training and competition.

"This year I've got the hang of it, I now know how to rest up a bit better and am feeling much fresher," McKeon said.

McKeon and her coach Vince Raleigh have worked closely with sports science staff to analyse and reassess her technique in both freestyle and butterfly, wary that her increasing strength from gym needs to be reflected in her stroke.

She has implemented subtle changes this year, nothing that would be noticeable to the untrained eye, but something which may improve her performance even further.

"I've done a bit of changing to my stroke freestyle and butterfly so hopefully I can swim faster with it," she said.

"It comes with the strength as well, as I've got stronger with the gym work it improves as well."

In other heats starting this morning 400m champ Mack Horton will be near unbeatable in the 800m freestyle as he sets up a likely 400-800-1500m race program for Russia's world titles while Grant Irvine will start favourite in the 200m butterfly.


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