Gets better and better with every game. Marvelous pick up by the club to keep him on our radar. How did we get that one so right?
Well we can't always be wrong. Even we are odds on to get one right every now and again.
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Gets better and better with every game. Marvelous pick up by the club to keep him on our radar. How did we get that one so right?
Bring him in. Every club should have a Colombian influence.Whatever happened to the eldest brother (Sam?) who got caught with drugs in his system when playing for Collingwood?
He was playing good footy before that but never got another chance after his ban
Bring him in. Every club should have a Colombian influence.
Let not get ahead of ourselves...He should be in the AA discussion.
Give a monkey a typewriter and enough paper and eventually he'll write War and Peace.Accidents happen.
Monkeys now use computers.Give a monkey a typewriter and enough paper and eventually he'll write War and Peace.
He was on Collingwood's list for 3 seasons so probably played the majority of games in that time.16 games of AFL. Can't find his VFL or SANFL stats but it can't be much more than that in the seconds. Must have played less than 40 games of Australian rules football in his life. Just an astonishing effort. Has to be in AA contention.
My mate is a pies fan. He says Collingwood were grooming him for the retirement of Roughead. Covid caused havoc with these plans and he somehow became available.We did very, VERY well identifying this one, especially as he didn’t really set the world on fire for the Pies
Some astute Collingwood fans were pissed he left
Evidently
There’s probably enough Irishmen by now for an AFL Irish team of the century.He should be in the AA discussion.
We did very, VERY well identifying this one, especially as he didn’t really set the world on fire for the Pies
To what extent did we identify him?
I don't think we were proactive in seeking him out. The story goes he fell in our lap.
I guess we identified his talent enough not to turn him away.
How former Collingwood defender Mark Keane joined Adelaide after quitting the AFL, returning to Ireland due to homesickness
serious case of FOMO dragged Mark Keane away from the AFL.
“My mates were going out partying at home and I was here training, basically being a 30-year-old in their minds,” Keane tells this masthead.
“And they were being 18, 19, going out partying and I was thinking ‘gee, why aren’t I doing that?’”
Back in Ireland, Keane quickly reimmersed himself in local life.
“I had no intentions of coming back out,” he says.
The biggest change in 18 months was the itch Keane had to scratch was gone.
“A lot of my friends have moved on, not in college anymore, not getting that fear of missing out of being in college,” he says.
“They’ve all moved on to their own jobs and are getting on with their lives.
Chatting with an ex-Collingwood countryman, close mate Marty Clarke, got the ball rolling for his second AFL stint.
Keane thought he might have left his run too late.
It was January, club lists were presumably finalised.
But Clarke alerted him to Fischer McAsey’s retirement leaving a vacancy on Adelaide’s list.PLAYERCARDSTART3Fischer Mcasey
- Age
- 23
- Ht
- 196cm
- Wt
- 96kg
- Pos.
- Def
CareerSeasonLast 5
- D
- 6.8
- 2star
- K
- 3.3
- 1star
- HB
- 3.5
- 3star
- M
- 1.8
- 2star
- T
- 1.3
- 3star
- MG
- 102.3
- 2star
- D
- 6.8
- 1star
- K
- 3.3
- 1star
- HB
- 3.5
- 2star
- M
- 1.8
- 2star
- T
- 1.3
- 2star
- MG
- 102.3
- 2star
- D
- 7.2
- 2star
- K
- 3.6
- 2star
- HB
- 3.6
- 3star
- M
- 1.8
- 2star
- T
- 1.6
- 4star
- MG
- 114.8
- 2star
PLAYERCARDEND
Keane had hardly kicked a footy for 18 months.
“I had an Aussie rules ball over there but I hadn’t taken it out in so long, probably about two weeks before I got here,” he says.
Considering he had missed most of the Crows’ pre-season, his personal expectations for the year were low.
Being a sponge with his new coaches and teammates helped accelerate his progress.
“I settled in really well,” he says.
Keane is also sticking around for his first Australian Christmas.
He and the Crows agreed that his best chance at locking in a backline spot was by not going home during the festive season and instead have a good block of training.
When Keane returned from Ireland during the off-season, he had company.
Caoimhe has moved in to the place he shares with second-year Crows midfielder Hugh Bond.
“She loves being here, loves Adelaide,” he says.