Excitement builds in Tasmania as state gets behind Devils ahead of AFL entry | Joe Moore

A picture


When the original rules of the game were being written in Melbourne, Tasmanians were playing footy, too,It’s taken 160 years for the state to get its first genuine chance at the elite level, but early signs indicate the Tasmania Football Club is thriving,For now, the Devils are playing in the second-tier VFL competition, but that is only as a two-year pathway to a guaranteed place in the AFL and AFLW,Locals have been voting with their feet,In March, the Devils debuted by selling out their first game at North Hobart Oval.

On Anzac Day, they crushed the VFL’s home-and-away attendance record when more than 14,000 packed into Ninja Stadium.At the weekend, despite the pouring rain in Launceston, nearly 2,500 still turned out.Tasmania, a heartland Australian football state, is finally being represented on the national stage and the Devils have been driven into the national consciousness.The club is acutely aware of its responsibility to the community.Soon after the Devils were confirmed as the national competition’s 19th club in 2023, Kathryn McCann joined as executive director and continues to provide integral foundational leadership.

“We see our roles as a privilege,” she says.“This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to deliver something very special.”An incredible 216,000 foundation members signed on.That surge of support has sent junior participation numbers skyrocketing, and Tasmania now boasts the nation’s highest female participation rate.The men’s team have won four of their first five games and sit third on the VFL ladder.

In two weeks, the club’s VFLW side will enter the fray, building even further on the momentum already created.And, in a landmark deal, all of the club’s VFL and VFLW home games are being broadcast live on free-to-air TV.That provides unprecedented access.“We are a whole-of-state club, and not everyone can get to the games, but allowing people to join in and be part of that journey with us is so important, and it’s what we’ve based the club on from the start,” McCann says.Traditionally, parochial geographical divides have made uniting Tasmanians difficult.

However, joining McCann at the executive level are former Richmond CEO Brendon Gale and chair Grant O’Brien, both from the state’s north-west coast,This is not a club anchored to one corner of the state, but one that stretches across the island,Matches are not concentrated but dispersed,The Devils play in Hobart, Launceston and soon Penguin, where a mid-season doubleheader will be staged as a weekend-long community event,Last year, when political turmoil threatened the club’s existence, 15,000 Tasmanians rallied in support.

In addition to the record-breaking Anzac Day crowd, 107,000 Tasmanians tuned in to the television coverage, out-rating the state’s viewership of the traditional Collingwood v Essendon AFL match,McCann speaks of milestones happening almost every day,“I think we would all agree that the Devils have come along at a time Tasmanian footy needed it most,” she says,“We’re building a footy club, and now the community and the fans actually have some footy to engage with, and it’s really shifted the conversation and engagement,It’s super exciting.

“But, we’re not planning and preparing the organisation to play Coburg.We’re planning and preparing to play Collingwood.The next two years are so fundamentally important for pressure-testing the organisation.”Community is at the core of everything they do.The finer details reflect it.

The ever-popular mascot, Rum’un, was created by a local puppeteering company and made using fabric from recycled Tasmanian school uniforms.The club has also been instrumental in developing the Tasmanian Academy of Leadership and Sport, which provides young Tasmanians with a pathway into the elite sport sector.“We’ve got 90 students this year, and without these opportunities, some would’ve left the island,” McCann says.They are creating a tangible connection that Tasmanian footy fans like Tiana Brown gravitate toward.On Sunday, the dedicated Devils’ supporter who, alongside Mark Brown, has raised tens of thousands of dollars for charity while driving the “Yes Stadium” movement, travelled north along the Midlands Highway to Launceston.

After the Devils sealed victory over Sandringham, she said: “We deserve this.”“People have come and gone and died waiting for this team to happen.But now, we’re sitting here in the cheer squad with kids all around us, waving flags, shaking pom-poms, and joining in the chants.I am so immensely proud to be Tasmanian.”While the debate surrounding the proposed new stadium on Hobart’s waterfront has lingered – the project quoted to cost $1.

13bn prompted a “No Stadium” campaign just as visible and vocal as its counterpart – Salamanca’s streets are now filled with myrtle green,Pubs and cafes are alive with footy chat, and the state appears energised by what lies ahead,You can even order a pair of custom-designed Tassie Devils Blundstone boots,This is the club fans have been waiting for,
A picture

Willy’s, Margate, Kent: ‘It chortles in the face of small plates’ – restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants

This cute and jovial eatery is reason enough to make a break for the coastAs summer looms, and with it the urge to stampede towards the edges of Britain in search of paddling opportunities, I proffer another coastal dining idea: Willy’s in Margate – and, yes, that name does have about it something of the naughty seaside postcard. Tucked away in the back of Margate House hotel on Dalby Square, a few minutes’ walk from the seafront, Willy’s is a blur of frilly red-and-pink seaside adorableness. It’s cool, cute and jovial, with pork scratchings and apple chutney on the menu, as well as black pudding scotch eggs, sticky toffee pudding and Sunday lunches of beef rump and baked cauliflower cheese. This menu is short, intentional and hearty, rather than airy-fairy, and it chortles in the face of small plates.But, for the foodie/sippy crowd, the signifiers are all here: there’s a paper plane and a penicillin on the cocktail menu, throwbacks to New York’s iconic Milk and Honey bar

A picture

Helen Goh’s springtime spinach sponge cake with cream cheese icing – recipe | The sweet spot

There is a particular green that belongs to spring: pale and luminous, it’s softer than the dark foliage of winter, and quieter than the glossy abundance of summer herbs. Spinach, the colour of new growth, captures this moment perfectly. Tender and almost impossibly vivid, this cake loses its metallic edge in the heat of the oven, leaving a gentle, vegetal brightness. Baked in a shallow tin and spread with cream cheese icing, when sliced into squares, it produces the perfect ratio of cake to icing and tastes uncommonly good.Prep 10 min Cook 50 min serves 8-10For the cake120g baby leaf spinach, stems removed 120ml milk 200g plain flour 1½ tsp baking powder ¼ tsp bicarbonate of soda (baking soda) ¼ tsp fine sea salt 3 large eggs, at room temperature180g caster sugar Finely grated zest of 1 lime 120ml solid coconut oil, melted and cooled to tepid1 tsp vanilla extractFor the icing200g cream cheese 100g icing sugar, sifted Finely grated zest of 1 lime, plus 1 tsp juice80ml double creamLine the base and sides of a standard 23cm x 33cm x 5cm baking tin and heat the oven to 185C (165C fan)/360F/gas 4½

A picture

Why we care so much about preserving family recipes

“Chicken, leek, flour, a few more ingredients.” That was it: my grandma’s WhatsApp response to me earnestly asking if she’d mind sharing her time-honoured chicken pie recipe. She wasn’t being obtuse – well, not deliberately. She had simply never before committed a dish that was second nature to paper, let alone an iPhone screen.It wasn’t how she’d learned it and it wasn’t how I’d go on to learn it, either

A picture

When it comes to wines, it pays to look beyond the fashionable

The sommelier Honey Spencer, of Sune in east London, struck a real chord on Instagram earlier this year: “I’m so fucking sick of expensive wine,” she lamented. There followed an angry plaint about the “unrelenting rise” in the cost of bottles from “artisans making wine properly … and FORGET BURGUNDY”. In a difficult climate, this is “one of the hardest pills to swallow” for the restaurateur.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link

A picture

Rachel Roddy’s recipe for spaghetti with crab, chilli, herbs and lemon | A kitchen in Rome

My copy of the River Cafe Cookbook is silver, having lost its original blue sleeve some years ago. Naked, the hardback cover is completely plain, so it is my handwriting of “River Cafe blue” along the metallic spine, even though there is little chance of mixing it up with the yellow softback River Cafe Cookbook Two or the emerald cover of River Cafe Cookbook Green.Blue was first published in 1996, a sobering fact, because that’s the same year I enrolled at the Drama Centre London, as well as the year when Pierce Brosnan took on rogue agent Alec Trevelyan (played by Sean Bean) in GoldenEye. That was Brosnan’s debut as James Bond and Dame Judi Dench’s first appearance as M. Brosnan trained at Drama Centre between 1973 and 1976, which is why, when I bought the blue book in 1996, I had good reason to imagine my future career as looking a little like that of Pierce, or Judi, or both

A picture

How to turn old pitta into spiced chips – recipe | Waste not

Three years ago, I helped my friend, the chef Sam Webb, set up Babette, a street food stall at Newquay Boathouse. Webb and his team make everything from scratch and, wherever possible, using only local Cornish produce, from their hot honey (sourced from the Rescued Bee) to pitta with freshly milled flour from Cornish Golden Grains; he also grows his own produce with fellow restaurateur Matt Comley at Gannel Valley Gardens.As you might expect, saving food waste is at the top of Webb’s agenda, which is how he came to create waste-saving pitta chips to serve with hummus. It’s a recipe I couldn’t resist, not least because they take minutes to cook. What makes Webb’s pitta chips unique is their wonderful seasoning of sumac, za’atar and sea salt just before serving