What They're Saying - The Bulldogs Media Thread - Part 4

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JAMES Harmes was nervous when he walked into the Whitten Oval for the first time in November. And for good reason. Games between Melbourne and the Western Bulldogs have been ferocious either side of the 2021 Grand Final in Perth. They don't like each other.

Harmes was usually in the middle of the animosity, trying to get under the skin of Tom Liberatore or distract Marcus Bontempelli. Those memories have faded but not been forgotten, much to the amusement of many inside the Bulldogs since the deal was done.
The 28-year-old remembers a particularly willing encounter in a game played behind closed doors at Marvel Stadium during the pandemic in 2021. He was tagging Liberatore and copped it from everyone. They came for him again a couple of months later at the MCG – again in front of no one – before Harmes played a role in ending the Demons' 57-year premiership drought later in the year in the west.

Now Harmes and Liberatore are teammates after the Victorian was traded to the Bulldogs in exchange for a future third-round pick during last October's Continental Tyres AFL Trade Period.
After playing 152 games across a decade at Melbourne, Harmes needed a fresh start at the end of last season. Last winter was a slog. He fell out of favour at the Demons and out of love with the game. But he has rediscovered the passion this summer, building towards a round one clash against the side he just left on March 17.

"It was funny coming here, I remember most games against the Doggies and there were always words said to each other. I've tagged 'Libba' a few times and gone back and forth a few times. I remember a game in 2021, there was no crowd at Marvel and it was just me and him head to head. It was on," Harmes told AFL.com.au on the Western Bulldogs' pre-season camp in Mooloolaba.
"I've always had a lot of respect for 'Libba'. I'm glad we're on the same team now. He has been great since I got here. We just looked at each other and knew we've had some good rivalries in the past and smiled. But if I'm being honest, it was daunting coming in because I didn't know if the boys were going to like me. The first few weeks I was a bit standoffish, but it has become very normal quickly."

Harmes didn't think he would end up at the Western Bulldogs. Essendon came for him at the end of 2022, but with two years to run on his contract, Melbourne wouldn't let him go. Richmond also showed interest last year after former Demons midfield coach Adem Yze landed the gig at Punt Road.

But when Dogs list manager Sam Power and senior coach Luke Beveridge sat down with Harmes and his manager, Tim Hazell from Vivid Sport, last October, the move made sense for everyone. And it has made even more sense since Bailey Smith ruptured his ACL in December.

"I didn't think I'd be coming here. The Bulldogs would have been the last on the list, not because I didn't want to come here but because I didn't chat to the Dogs at all last year until the Trade Period started. It happened late," Harmes said.
"When they came to my manager, I was pretty surprised. Timmy rang me and told me the Dogs were super keen. When I sat down with Bevo and Sammy Power, it just felt right. The interview was only supposed to be an hour and we ended up spending more than two hours at Bevo's house.

"It felt like Bevo had a lot of confidence in me to play good footy again, which is probably what I lacked last year. I lost a lot of confidence and felt like the coaches didn't believe in me much even though I was playing good footy at VFL level."

https://www.afl.com.au/news/1073988/what-you-may-have-missed-at-your-club-in-the-off-season
Harmes knew he needed a change halfway through last year. After being a permanent fixture between 2016 and 2022, he played the first two games of 2023 before taking mental health leave. Things changed when he returned. He was squeezed out of the side, managing only seven more senior appearances – three as the sub – around 10 games for Casey in the VFL.

Footy had stopped being enjoyable and started being a grind. Turning up at the club each day was tough. By the end of the season, Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin did the right thing by him and told him to explore a fresh start to kickstart his career.

"It was a big grind for me to go into Melbourne every day. It was nothing to do with the boys or the coaches or the club, it was more about just me and where I was at in life. I'd been there for 10 years going into the same place. I think a fresh start was exactly what I needed," he explained.
"I had to have a little break from footy. I played the first two games, but I just wasn't enjoying myself. Even then it was a grind for me going in, even when I was in the ones. I just wasn't happy and felt like I needed some time away from the game. That really helped me and re-energised me. The Dees were really supportive, but I felt like when I came back I lost the trust of the coaches a little bit. I remember being the sub against Gold Coast and playing well and ended up getting COVID and form was good at VFL level, but got dropped again. Every time was a whack to the confidence.

"I really didn't enjoy my footy for six months. It was a grind for me to go in most days. By the end of the year, I needed to get out of there and they sensed that as well. 'Goody' and myself get along really well and he even said it is best for your footy to go and have a look around."
Harmes has invested a lot of time in his mental health since stepping away from the game last April. For a good-time guy from Devon Meadows, he wouldn't have been open to seeing a psychologist in the early stages of his career. That has changed. And the impact has been profound.

"It was a year of a lot of learning, not getting to that point where I needed some time away from footy. There are going to be more challenges in my career, so it is about dealing with them. I see a psych now and I'm not embarrassed about that, whereas I would have been embarrassed about that in the past. I definitely feel like my mental health is in a better place than in the past," he said.
"If I'm not in a good mental space, if I'm not happy it definitely affects the way I play, worrying about other things, my training habits and my life. It is just about staying on top of that, seeking help when needed. I feel like the stigma is not what it was 10 years ago. Everyone is going through something. I'm excited for this year because last year I wasn't in a good headspace and still found ways to perform, where this year I feel in a much better space."

Sometimes, change is as good as a holiday. Changing environments at this point in his career has reinvigorated Harmes.
"The first weeks are like going to a new school. The program is very similar in many ways, but seeing new faces and meeting new people and finding your spot in the group has freshened me up," he said.

"I was at the Dees from 18 and I was there for 10 years, it was all I knew. At the Dees I was pigeonholed to be the funny guy and carry on a bit, whereas here I have taken a step back and tried to slide in quietly. It has been good to learn new terminologies, new game styles and new gameplans."
Harmes has worked his way into his first pre-season at the Dogs. He was slow out of the blocks after contracting COVID-19 at his wedding just before day one, but since the start of January, Harmes has left his mark on the group.

He kicked four goals in hot, wet and humid conditions in the club's intraclub in Maroochydore last Thursday, showing the quality he can add to a stacked red, white and blue midfield that will also include pick No.6 Ryley Sanders.

"I will most likely play as an inside mid. That's where I've trained all pre-season," he said. "I'll spend a fair bit of time playing as that high half-forward as well, which I'm happy to do. I've done that my whole career. I haven't done any tagging this pre-season, but who is to say that I won't this season?"

Harmes will always be a Melbourne premiership player. He is still close with many former teammates, including captain Max Gawn, who nailed the MC duties at his wedding to American, Corey Taylor, in November. But now he has the jumpstart his career needed at the Western Bulldogs. Expect him to make the most of it.
 
I recall Wood winning a crucial one on one late in the 2010 season against Adelaide in the wet. This place was full of praise for him after that moment.
I have mentioned this a few years ago.
One of my favourite and cherished Easton moments. In the wet , a crucial moment, one on one with Kurt Tippet , a few minutes to go and this young pup won the battle .
A star was born.
Cheers Stephen , thanks for the memories.
 
Article on AFL website

JAMES Harmes was nervous when he walked into the Whitten Oval for the first time in November. And for good reason. Games between Melbourne and the Western Bulldogs have been ferocious either side of the 2021 Grand Final in Perth. They don't like each other.

Harmes was usually in the middle of the animosity, trying to get under the skin of Tom Liberatore or distract Marcus Bontempelli. Those memories have faded but not been forgotten, much to the amusement of many inside the Bulldogs since the deal was done.
The 28-year-old remembers a particularly willing encounter in a game played behind closed doors at Marvel Stadium during the pandemic in 2021. He was tagging Liberatore and copped it from everyone. They came for him again a couple of months later at the MCG – again in front of no one – before Harmes played a role in ending the Demons' 57-year premiership drought later in the year in the west.

Now Harmes and Liberatore are teammates after the Victorian was traded to the Bulldogs in exchange for a future third-round pick during last October's Continental Tyres AFL Trade Period.
After playing 152 games across a decade at Melbourne, Harmes needed a fresh start at the end of last season. Last winter was a slog. He fell out of favour at the Demons and out of love with the game. But he has rediscovered the passion this summer, building towards a round one clash against the side he just left on March 17.

"It was funny coming here, I remember most games against the Doggies and there were always words said to each other. I've tagged 'Libba' a few times and gone back and forth a few times. I remember a game in 2021, there was no crowd at Marvel and it was just me and him head to head. It was on," Harmes told AFL.com.au on the Western Bulldogs' pre-season camp in Mooloolaba.
"I've always had a lot of respect for 'Libba'. I'm glad we're on the same team now. He has been great since I got here. We just looked at each other and knew we've had some good rivalries in the past and smiled. But if I'm being honest, it was daunting coming in because I didn't know if the boys were going to like me. The first few weeks I was a bit standoffish, but it has become very normal quickly."

Harmes didn't think he would end up at the Western Bulldogs. Essendon came for him at the end of 2022, but with two years to run on his contract, Melbourne wouldn't let him go. Richmond also showed interest last year after former Demons midfield coach Adem Yze landed the gig at Punt Road.

But when Dogs list manager Sam Power and senior coach Luke Beveridge sat down with Harmes and his manager, Tim Hazell from Vivid Sport, last October, the move made sense for everyone. And it has made even more sense since Bailey Smith ruptured his ACL in December.

"I didn't think I'd be coming here. The Bulldogs would have been the last on the list, not because I didn't want to come here but because I didn't chat to the Dogs at all last year until the Trade Period started. It happened late," Harmes said.
"When they came to my manager, I was pretty surprised. Timmy rang me and told me the Dogs were super keen. When I sat down with Bevo and Sammy Power, it just felt right. The interview was only supposed to be an hour and we ended up spending more than two hours at Bevo's house.

"It felt like Bevo had a lot of confidence in me to play good footy again, which is probably what I lacked last year. I lost a lot of confidence and felt like the coaches didn't believe in me much even though I was playing good footy at VFL level."

https://www.afl.com.au/news/1073988/what-you-may-have-missed-at-your-club-in-the-off-season
Harmes knew he needed a change halfway through last year. After being a permanent fixture between 2016 and 2022, he played the first two games of 2023 before taking mental health leave. Things changed when he returned. He was squeezed out of the side, managing only seven more senior appearances – three as the sub – around 10 games for Casey in the VFL.

Footy had stopped being enjoyable and started being a grind. Turning up at the club each day was tough. By the end of the season, Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin did the right thing by him and told him to explore a fresh start to kickstart his career.

"It was a big grind for me to go into Melbourne every day. It was nothing to do with the boys or the coaches or the club, it was more about just me and where I was at in life. I'd been there for 10 years going into the same place. I think a fresh start was exactly what I needed," he explained.
"I had to have a little break from footy. I played the first two games, but I just wasn't enjoying myself. Even then it was a grind for me going in, even when I was in the ones. I just wasn't happy and felt like I needed some time away from the game. That really helped me and re-energised me. The Dees were really supportive, but I felt like when I came back I lost the trust of the coaches a little bit. I remember being the sub against Gold Coast and playing well and ended up getting COVID and form was good at VFL level, but got dropped again. Every time was a whack to the confidence.

"I really didn't enjoy my footy for six months. It was a grind for me to go in most days. By the end of the year, I needed to get out of there and they sensed that as well. 'Goody' and myself get along really well and he even said it is best for your footy to go and have a look around."
Harmes has invested a lot of time in his mental health since stepping away from the game last April. For a good-time guy from Devon Meadows, he wouldn't have been open to seeing a psychologist in the early stages of his career. That has changed. And the impact has been profound.

"It was a year of a lot of learning, not getting to that point where I needed some time away from footy. There are going to be more challenges in my career, so it is about dealing with them. I see a psych now and I'm not embarrassed about that, whereas I would have been embarrassed about that in the past. I definitely feel like my mental health is in a better place than in the past," he said.
"If I'm not in a good mental space, if I'm not happy it definitely affects the way I play, worrying about other things, my training habits and my life. It is just about staying on top of that, seeking help when needed. I feel like the stigma is not what it was 10 years ago. Everyone is going through something. I'm excited for this year because last year I wasn't in a good headspace and still found ways to perform, where this year I feel in a much better space."

Sometimes, change is as good as a holiday. Changing environments at this point in his career has reinvigorated Harmes.
"The first weeks are like going to a new school. The program is very similar in many ways, but seeing new faces and meeting new people and finding your spot in the group has freshened me up," he said.

"I was at the Dees from 18 and I was there for 10 years, it was all I knew. At the Dees I was pigeonholed to be the funny guy and carry on a bit, whereas here I have taken a step back and tried to slide in quietly. It has been good to learn new terminologies, new game styles and new gameplans."
Harmes has worked his way into his first pre-season at the Dogs. He was slow out of the blocks after contracting COVID-19 at his wedding just before day one, but since the start of January, Harmes has left his mark on the group.

He kicked four goals in hot, wet and humid conditions in the club's intraclub in Maroochydore last Thursday, showing the quality he can add to a stacked red, white and blue midfield that will also include pick No.6 Ryley Sanders.

"I will most likely play as an inside mid. That's where I've trained all pre-season," he said. "I'll spend a fair bit of time playing as that high half-forward as well, which I'm happy to do. I've done that my whole career. I haven't done any tagging this pre-season, but who is to say that I won't this season?"

Harmes will always be a Melbourne premiership player. He is still close with many former teammates, including captain Max Gawn, who nailed the MC duties at his wedding to American, Corey Taylor, in November. But now he has the jumpstart his career needed at the Western Bulldogs. Expect him to make the most of it.

It shows the human side of football, not everything that is said during the game is so easily forgotten... hoping he has a bit to say against his old mob in round 1.
 

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Easton Wood you say?

Lots of great memories, hard to go past this one though...

images - 2024-02-06T155652.439.jpeg
 
Come in peace guys as a swans fan who believes the better team won in 2016.

What chance is there if any of JUH making a potential move to the swans ? Will the salary cap allow Astro’s retention plus English contract renewal and Jamarra ? We went hard on Astro and depending on McDonald’s contract renewal might go hard on JUH this time around.

Cheers
 
Come in peace guys as a swans fan who believes the better team won in 2016.

What chance is there if any of JUH making a potential move to the swans ? Will the salary cap allow Astro’s retention plus English contract renewal and Jamarra ? We went hard on Astro and depending on McDonald’s contract renewal might go hard on JUH this time around.

Cheers

JUH’s the least likely of our OOC players to go anywhere. He’s said he’s not leaving, his best mates are Dogs heart and soul, and his family is much closer than they would be if he lived in Sydney. I imagine that if it came down to one of our big names having to go to retain the other two, it would be Smith first, English second, JUH a distant third.
 
Come in peace guys as a swans fan who believes the better team won in 2016.

What chance is there if any of JUH making a potential move to the swans ? Will the salary cap allow Astro’s retention plus English contract renewal and Jamarra ? We went hard on Astro and depending on McDonald’s contract renewal might go hard on JUH this time around.

Cheers

I reckon we would be prioritising Jamarra over English. I don't think Sydney would be able to outbid us given the amount of elite young talent on your list already who will be demanding the big bux
 
Come in peace guys as a swans fan who believes the better team won in 2016.

What chance is there if any of JUH making a potential move to the swans ? Will the salary cap allow Astro’s retention plus English contract renewal and Jamarra ? We went hard on Astro and depending on McDonald’s contract renewal might go hard on JUH this time around.

Cheers
JUH? Nada chance
English or Smith? Ja.
I speak to another clubs recruiter, word his heard is JUH is close to/already has signed a sizable deal with us.
 

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Come in peace guys as a swans fan who believes the better team won in 2016.

What chance is there if any of JUH making a potential move to the swans ? Will the salary cap allow Astro’s retention plus English contract renewal and Jamarra ? We went hard on Astro and depending on McDonald’s contract renewal might go hard on JUH this time around.

Cheers

Pretty unlikely tbh. I feel like he's the least likely to leave out of the guys out of contract at the moment. Things can change but he's given every indication he's staying at the moment.
 
With all due respect, can you not try and poach every bloody generational forward when they're coming into their prime
Yeah fair point. Really rate JUH as I do English, Darcy and Astro. You guys have amazing talent.

You know what it’s like in Sydney, always need a Box Office player to keep the fans interested as NRL is pretty strong so I think there will be a big push. I reckon an Astro sized deal could be offered - $11m over 10 years but realise it’s a long shot.

Cheers
 
The Age Article

Dogs young gun in line for round one debut​

Andrew Wu

Boom Western Bulldogs youngster Ryley Sanders is poised to break into the club’s midfield for round one after turning heads over the summer.

Selected with pick No.6 in last year’s draft, Sanders has impressed the Dogs coaches in his first preseason to the point he will start the season proper in the team if he can transfer his form on the track into the practice games.
A season-ending knee injury to Bailey Smith and a minor hamstring issue to three-time All-Australian Jack Macrae have opened up spots in the Dogs’ midfield.

A contested beast as a junior with a beautiful kick, Sanders can play as an inside and outside midfielder.

Dogs coach Luke Beveridge is not afraid of getting youngsters that he rates into the team, even if they appear shock selections from the outside.

Former cricketer James O’Donnell was playing senior footy just weeks after being signed as a category B rookie.
Beveridge tinkered with the Dogs midfield last year, giving gun half-back Caleb Daniel more time in the guts at the expense of centre square regular Macrae.

Sanders, 19, has impressed the Dogs with his professionalism and transition into senior ranks from junior football.

“His first session, he’s come in and straight in the midfield, I reckon he would have had about 20 touches in about 15 minutes,” Dogs defender Bailey Dale said, as the club marked 10 years of their Sons of the West program which focuses on men’s mental health and wellbeing in the west.

“He’s just got so much power. He’s a good user of the footy, and he’s going to really add to our blend in the midfield. “I think he’s putting his best foot forward. There’s plenty of spots up for grabs this early part of the season, so it wouldn’t surprise me at all if he’s in our starting line-up.
“He’s just going to grow every game he plays this year. I think he’s going to play a fair few.”
Macrae did not train with the main group as he recovers from hamstring awareness but is expected to be available for the Dogs’ first practice against Hawthorn on February 23.
Draftee Aidan O’Driscoll, defender Alex Keath and father-son recruit Jordan Croft were among a small group of Dogs players who did not take part in match simulation. The Dogs start their campaign in round one against Melbourne.
 
Channel 9 just reporting that Bevo and Grant have a “strained relationship”

Highly unusual that the coach doesn’t directly report to Grant, now he reports to Egan

Raising eyebrows in AFL circles
 
After Smithy getting the Heave Ho they were strained ( according to reporting at the time ).

Nothing to see here, move on... Must be pre-season if that 60 second " breaking news " clown fiesta is the best Channel 9 can put out.
 
Channel 9 just reporting that Bevo and Grant have a “strained relationship”

Highly unusual that the coach doesn’t directly report to Grant, now he reports to Egan

Raising eyebrows in AFL circles

''Raising eyebrows in AFL circles'' = slow news day, journo X needs something quick to fill a bit of space .
 
yep, even the “journo” looked like he was laughing that he pulled such an asinine story out of his arse and got it to run in prime time
 

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What They're Saying - The Bulldogs Media Thread - Part 4

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