by Ned

Job board for Aussie Rules players, coaches & football clubs

22:27 in Australian Rules Football General by Ned

I’d like to introduce you to a brand new service called Footy Recruits.

Footy Recruits is a job board for Aussie Rules players, coaches & football clubs.

It’s a simple way for clubs to find players & coaches.

Have a look at the website at: www.footyrecruits.com

Some of Footy Recruit’s features:

  • Post profiles in 3 categories: Players, Coaches and Teams.
  • Upload multiple images for each ad.
  • Easy to find ads: simple, category-specific, and advanced search.
  • Browse profiles by categories.
  • Search by categories.
  • Subscribe for categories.
  • Browsing the list of recent, or most popular ads.
  • Browsing ‘my ads’.
  • ‘Add to favourites’ feature.
  • Reply to an ad, or send it to a friend.
  • Subscribe for category-specific RSS feeds.
  • RSS support: users can add the feed of latest ads to their RSS reader.

As this is a new service, we are offering free access to the first 250 applicants.

Yours sincerely,
Peter Bond.

FootyRecruits.com
admin@footyrecruits.com

by Ned

Cap on interchanges proposed

11:19 in AFL, Australia, Leave the Game Alone!!! by Ned

The Laws of the Game Committee is considering methods to limit rotations

A CAP on rotations and the use of substitutes are among the options to reduce the number of interchanges for the 2011 season.

They are among seven proposals put forward by the Laws of the Game committee that include allowing a score to be registered as a goal or a point whether the ball touches a post or not.

AFL operations manager Adrian Anderson released the proposals on Wednesday, and the League is now calling for feedback from the football community.

The options to curb the number of rotations during games, which have risen rapidly in recent seasons, are:

- The bench to comprise three interchange players and one substitute player;

- The bench to comprise two interchange players and two substitute players;

- Cap of 80 interchanges per match (including changes at breaks).

Read the Full Article

by Ned

League encourages women umpires

17:06 in AFL, Australia, Umpiring by Ned

Chelsea Roffey is one of the AFL's top goal umpires, says Adrian Anderson

AFL FOOTBALL operations manager Adrian Anderson has stressed the League’s desire to see an increase in the number of women officiating in matches.

Anderson told afl.com.au that the ultimate goal is to see a female field or boundary umpire officiating at the highest level.

“One of our best goal umpires is Chelsea Roffey, so we’d love to see some others make the elite level,” he said.

“Obviously there are intense physical and mental demands on field umpires, but they’re demands that could be met by women.”

Vote in our Poll

Read the Full Article

by Ned

Neil Craig urges Mark Williams to stay in AFL

16:32 in AFL, Adelaide, Australia, Port Adelaide by Ned

ADELAIDE coach Neil Craig says it would be the AFL’s loss if departing Port Adelaide coach Mark Williams walks away from the game for good.

Williams will step down as head coach of the Power after Friday night’s clash with Collingwood at the MCG, with rumours the 51-year-old could become Kevin Sheedy’s assistant at Greater Western Sydney.

Either way, Craig hoped Williams, who guided Port to the 2004 premiership, would remain involved in the game in some capacity down the track.

“I hope Mark stays in football,” Craig said in Perth today.

Read the Full Article

by Ned

GC snares Geelong’s high performance manager

10:25 in AFL, Australia, Geelong, Gold Coast by Ned

Dean Robinson

GEELONG has lost some talent to Gold Coast although not of the on-field variety, with high performance manager Dean Robinson accepting a position with the League’s 17th team.

While Robinson will not begin his official duties at Gold Coast until October, his departure from the Cats is effective immediately.

Robinson’s tenure at Geelong has coincided with a golden era for the club. In his first full season after joining Geelong from NRL club Manly, the Cats won the flag in 2007.

Two more grand final appearances followed, with another premiership being snared in last year’s thrilling win over St Kilda.

Read the Full Article

by Ned

A grand stand-off over Williamstown ground

10:23 in Australia, VFL, Williamstown by Ned

Opposition to the new plan for the cricket ground could delay the project.

A $7.5 million redevelopment of the Williamstown Cricket Ground could be delayed because of one resident’s objection.

The project, funded by the AFL, Williamstown Football Club, Victorian Government, Hobsons Bay Council and other parties, is due to be finished by mid-2012.

The council’s works and assets director Phillip McDonald said the objection, from a local resident, had to be heard by planning tribunal VCAT.

“Mediation between the parties has been unsuccessful and the VCAT hearing will take place in early August,” Mr McDonald said.

Read the Full Article

by Ned

WAFL player tests positive for anabolic steroid

23:05 in East Perth, WAFL, Western Australia by Ned

A WAFL player faces a two-year ban after testing positive for an anabolic steroid.

East Perth midfielder Dean Cadwallader, 19, returned the positive result for nandrolone in an out-of-competition test carried out by the Australian Sports Anti-Doping Authority (ASADA) during this year’s WA state program.

Both Cadwallader’s A and B samples were positive.

The prescribed penalty for using anabolic steroids under the WAFL’s anti-doping code is a two-year ban from all levels of the game.

Read the Full Article

by Ned

Draft likely to prove tricky for picky clubs

14:07 in Australia, Junior Football by Ned

Vic Country's Shaun Atley. Photo: Ken Irwin

THE national under-18 championships have concluded with clubs still considering the approaching national draft a challenge.

Recruiters surveyed by The Sunday Age during the week expected many clubs to take a minimum number of picks in the compromised November draft, and for “needs” to influence first-round decisions more than they have in past years.

Having already removed 11 players from the draft pool – under the rule that allowed them to pre-sign a dozen 17-year-olds last year – the Gold Coast will make nine of the first 11 choices in the draft, pushing the existing clubs’ first-round choices well down the order.

Essendon list manager Adrian Dodoro said while the championships had confirmed to him that each club would still have access to a talented player in the first round, clubs that were taking their first pick in the 20s – rather than at 10 or 11 – would naturally be making a more speculative choice.

Read the Full Article

by Ned

Ben Cousins taken to hospital after reaction to sleeping pill

13:59 in AFL, Australia, Richmond by Ned

BEN Cousins is still being assessed by doctors in the emergency department of the Epworth hospital after suffering a recurrence of a stomach complaint.

The Age understands the 31-year-old recovering drug addict is not in intensive care, as has been reported.

The Richmond onballer was rushed to hospital in an ambulance around 11:45am today and was still having his condition assessed in an emergency department booth at 1:20pm.

Richmond released a statement saying Cousins had suffered from “an adverse reaction to a sleeping tablet” and that the club was awaiting further updates.

Read the full Article

by Ned

Musicians hit the right note for community

22:08 in Australia, VAFA, Victoria by Ned

Music, footy and beer A suggestion to enliven AFL grand final pre-match entertainment. Photo: Joe Armao

FEMALE players and umpires mixed it up with the blokes, dogs and kids ran around the ground during breaks, fans feasted on cold cans of beer and were entertained as much by streakers and live bands as the football.

It was about as far away as you get from the corporatised AFL as you can get, but the 10,000 people who turned up to Elsternwick Park yesterday to cheer on the musicians and radio broadcasters duking it out in the annual Community Cup proved that there is still plenty of love for the suburban game.

The match wasn’t much of a spectacle – professional sportsmen have not had much luck in crossing over into the arts, and it seems to apply the other way around.

Read the full Article