“The controlling field umpire has blown the whistle for a ball up, He thinks that he’s seen an Essendon player kick the ball away and has blown whistle again to pay a time delay free kick [then] the support umpire through the headsets, and I’ve listened to the audio, has said, ‘No, it wasn’t Essendon. It was North Melbourne,’” Kane said. “Where a free kick is rightly being cancelled the umpires are instructed to ball it up. We can review it now and see that North Melbourne in fact kicked the ball away, and it should have been a free kick to Essendon. “In the moment, the instruction to the umpires, unless the support umpire is very sure, which in that moment he wasn’t, the ball up is the outcome that we’re after. We’re just pleased that the free kick to North Melbourne was cancelled.” Dons sweat on gruesome Jones injury Harrison Jones’ foot was pointing in a direction it shouldn’t, Jordan Ridley tore a hamstring, Jade Gresham’s groin screamed at him to stop playing. And Essendon won a game of football.In a game that should not have been in doubt after their first quarter but was absolutely in doubt right up until the last minute, the win came at a painful cost. “It was carnage there in second half in particular,” Essendon coach Brad Scott said. First the injuries, the worst of which was Jones just on three-quarter time when he sat cradling his lower leg over the boundary and the trainers struggled to get a stretcher to him as play continued. Scott said Jones had a dislocated ankle and he was taken by ambulance to hospital for further X-rays in case of a break. “He’s in a fair bit of pain. His ankle’s pointing the wrong way. So that obviously doesn’t sound good,” Scott said. Harrison Jones gets immediate treatment on the ground. Credit: AFL Photos via Getty Images“Ridley has a hamstring, fresh injury, unrelated to anything he’s had prior … In his 100th game, we talked about his roller coaster career. He’s been a Crighton Medallist. Clearly, we rate him extremely highly, and he’s had to overcome some adversity, and he just looked like he was starting to get a free run and gets another injury. And Gresham couldn’t come back on late with a bit of adductor tightness.” Essendon led by 25 points at half-time, but the Roos adjusted, blocked space and dragged the game into a scrap. They then played with daring half-back to trail by a point at three-quarter time. North lost Jackson Archer to a bad hamstring in the first half and were coming off a five-day break, but surged in the third quarter and kept winning territory in the last. The Bombers, with strong presence from Nate Caddy and Peter Wright presenting for the ball, and Sam Durham and Mason Redman trying to support of superb skipper Zach Merrett, used the ball more thoughtfully coming from defence than the Roos. In the final minutes, first gamer Finnbar Maley, the son of former NBL player Paul, had the chance to put the Roos in front when he took a strong contested mark and had a set shot from 50 metres out. He had already kicked one goal early on – a lovely curled goal from long range – but this time he sweated over his kick so long the clock ran out. He was hurried into his kick which then fell short. The Roos get around Finnbar Maley. Credit: Getty Images“There were a lot of mistakes made in the game. It was not Finbar’s fault,” coach Alastair Clarkson said. “He will be disappointed. It’s just him his humility would suggest he feels like he let the team down but he has not let us down at all. “The football world want to judge us on wins and losses but six times this year we have been in the game at three-quarter time, this time last year it was zero,” Clarkson said. A dangerous tackle by Jaxon Prior on Cam Zurhaar will run the gauntlet with the MRO. The Bombers need to mine their list for replacements.“The thing that I was really pleased with tonight was the resilience and the character of the group. We obviously had some adversity in the last quarter, and coaches are always loath to individualise, but we had some individuals that just stood up in big moments, players that we just couldn’t take off the ground,” Scott said. “It’s always a challenge. When you tell your almost 37-year-old ruckman [Todd Goldstein], he just needs to stay out there, which he’s sick of hearing from me over the journey. And he wasn’t the only one.” Clarkson, Hawks ‘tracking the right way’ in relationship rebuild Hawthorn coach Sam Mitchell says Alastair Clarkson’s decision to attend the Hawks’ centenary match against Richmond is a sign the two parties are mending a strained relationship. Clarkson has had little to do with the club he won four premierships at as a senior coach since parting ways in 2021.However, he confirmed this week he will be at the MCG on Sunday, the Hawks having invited every player to have played at least one game for the club, along with past coaches and staff. Grand memories: Sam Mitchell and Alastair Clarkson were key cogs during a brilliant premiership era. Credit: Getty and The Age Mitchell said on Friday it was a positive sign Clarkson, now the North Melbourne coach, had opted to join the celebrations. “He is coming to the reunion this week, so that says to me things are tracking the right way,” Mitchell said. Clarkson’s relationship with the club was particularly strained during the racism saga which emerged in 2022. He, former club football manager and now Brisbane premiership coach Chris Fagan and former staffer Jason Burt all strenuously denied any wrongdoing.An AFL investigation found no adverse findings against the trio. Loading Clarkson did attend the 10-year reunion in 2023 of the Hawks’ 2013 flag. But he and Mitchell have also had a fractured relationship, the former premiership captain having returned to Waverley as an assistant coach before replacing Clarkson in the top role. “There are so many great people from all of the eras. With Clarko being a four-time premiership coach, to have him coming along [on Sunday], and spend some time with the guys he coached, and do that sort of thing, there are so many great people from every era coming along,” Mitchell said. “The players that you know, whether it’s Lethal [Leigh Matthews], and Hodgey [Luke Hodge], and Tucky [Michael Tuck], and [Gary] Ayres, [Peter] Knights, the list goes on and on … or whether it’s the coaches or administrators, whether it’s the Ian Dickers of the world or Jeff Kennett’s of the world, I think it’s fantastic we are able to bring all of our people together.”The Hawks do not know if four-time premiership star Cyril Rioli, who has also fallen out with the club, will attend. Rioli and his family are Darwin-based. Skipper James Sicily has been a public point of conversation, with Matthews, the AFL great, questioning whether Sicily’s role as a swingman was impacting his “psyche” this season. Kicking boots on: Sam Mitchell says skipper James Sicily has been in All-Australian form, despite his kicking issues. Credit: Getty Images “I think he has been, for the majority of the year, in All Australian form. He is a beautiful kick of the footy,” Mitchell said. “He hasn’t kicked the ball well, but he is still finding it, he is still defending well, he is not having scores kicked on him. He just hasn’t kicked the ball very well, but he is still a good kick. I am far from concerned.”
Click here to read article