From the Pocket: AFL finals fever cools as buds of the silly season shoot early

A picture


Winter is done, spring has sprung.The AFL season has finally found a wave of momentum.Port Adelaide leaned into their emotion, Collingwood and GWS Giants hung on in thrillers, Fremantle sealed their return to the finals.A neatly scheduled four days of football filled with tension ended as Brisbane reaffirmed their premiership credentials.The home-and-away season has reached a crescendo, and there is still one more game to play.

Gold Coast have been building toward this moment – to be the centre of attention in a cut-throat clash – for 15 years.They only need to defeat Essendon to leap over Western Bulldogs and snatch a club-first finals berth.But with the Bombers hit hard by injury and on a 12-match losing streak, the curiosity is not so much around whether the Suns will seize up for a third week in a row, as whether they will win by enough to finish in seventh or eighth spot.Yet even with a do-or-die midweek match that should have wildcard round crusaders salivating, finals fever has been cooled by the end-of-season pause.The space where finals hype should be blossoming with discussion of injuries or the availability of star players is being filled by the buds of the silly season shooting early.

Finals football has been pushed aside by trade talk, exit interviews, delistings, retirements and tepid takes much like this one.West Coast co-captain Oscar Allen has been pushed toward the exit as the wooden spooners eye a too-good-to-refuse compensation pick.Tom de Koning has bid farewell to his Carlton teammates with a cool “all the best”.Stop the presses, there’s news on the futures of Harley Reid and Jack Silvagni, and Steven May should depart Melbourne.Surely this is what October is for.

The pre-finals bye was introduced ahead of the 2016 season and after a brief period when finals-bound clubs rested players during the run home and especially in the last round,But as much as the AFL might want speculation and player movement to keep it in the spotlight during spring, the weekend without men’s football means it is now eating into its own appeal,The break is not only leaving fans and the seven confirmed finalists in limbo – as well as the Suns and Bulldogs in this unusual season – it has also been shown to have a huge impact on results during the finals series,This year’s pre-finals bye might help the likes of Brisbane and GWS Giants as they hope to recall injured players for the business end of the season, while it is likely to hinder the top two, Adelaide and Geelong, who would prefer to just keep rolling on,The Crows return to the finals for the first time since 2017 after winning their last nine matches and finishing on top of the ladder.

The Cats did much of their hard work early in the season before cruising past six sides already out of finals contention to finish one victory behind the minor premiers.But the benefit of finishing in the upper reaches of the ladder and earning a double chance has been dulled by the introduction of the pre-finals bye.Finishing in the top four was once a critical step on the path to the decider.From the 2000 season (when the current finals format was introduced) until 2015, every grand finalist began the finals series playing a qualifying final.The vast majority – 28 of 32 – even won in the first week of finals then made the most of the week off to back up in the preliminary final.

But since the introduction of the pre-finals bye in 2016, four teams – including last year’s premiers – have climbed from the lower half of the top eight and into a grand final.Sign up to From the Pocket: AFL WeeklyJonathan Horn brings expert analysis on the week's biggest AFL storiesafter newsletter promotionThe extended breaks on either side of the qualifying finals are widely seen as pivotal to the script being flipped in recent years.The Crows and Cats will play one game in 27 days if they win next week and progress straight through to a preliminary final.For the Magpies it would be at least a day longer.For those following the game, momentum has been slowed by the pre-finals bye, and it has come to a grinding halt for the teams that qualified highest.

A pre-grand final bye that could help avoid the scenario where a star player misses the decider due to a concussion, as Adelaide’s Chelsea Randall suffered in the AFLW in 2022, has its merits.But the break between the home-and-away season ending and the finals series starting should be sent off to pasture.This is an extract from Guardian Australia’s free weekly AFL email, From the Pocket.To get the full version, just visit this page and follow the instructions
trendingSee all
A picture

Ryanair to raise bonus to €2.50 for staff who spot oversized cabin bags

Ryanair will pay airport staff increased and unlimited bonuses of €2.50 for every non-compliant carry-on bag they take from passengers, the airline’s boss has announced.Passengers whose cabin cases exceed the maximum dimensions for a small suitcase are charged fees of up to £75 and their luggage is taken into the hold.The fines have outraged some travellers, especially when it emerged that staff at the boarding gate have been incentivised to spot oversized bags.However, an unrepentant Michael O’Leary, the chief executive of Ryanair, said the airline would be upping the bonuses to keep baggage to the correct size

A picture

Thames Water agrees payment plan for £123m sewage and dividend fines

Thames Water has agreed a payment plan with the industry regulator for fines it owes worth £123m, as it races to secure funding to avoid temporary nationalisation.The utility company, which serves 16 million customers across London and the south-east, is trying to pull together a deal to avoid collapse.The debt-laden utility company was hit with a record £104m fine by Ofwat in May over environmental breaches involving sewage spills, after failing to operate and manage its treatment works and wastewater networks effectively.At the same time, a further £18.2m fine was levied on Thames for breaking dividend rules, the first penalty of its kind in the water industry

A picture

US parents and teachers: share your experiences of AI in schools

Students in grades K-12 have been invited by Melania Trump to take part in a nationwide contest designed to encourage the use of artificial intelligence (AI) tools to help solve community issues. The first lady wants students to “unleash their imagination and showcase the spirit of American innovation” by participating in the government-sponsored contest.We want to hear from parents and teachers on their experiences of AI in schools. How do you feel about it being used in education? Do you support it or are you against it?You can tell us what you think of the use of AI in schools by filling in the form below.Please include as much detail as possible

A picture

Half of UK adults worry that AI will take or alter their job, poll finds

Half of adults in the UK are concerned about the impact of artificial intelligence on their job, according to a poll, as union leaders call for a “step change” in the country’s approach to new technologies.Job losses or changes to terms and conditions were the biggest worries for the 51% of 2,600 adults surveyed for the Trades Union Congress who said they were concerned about the technology.AI is a particular concern for workers aged between 25 and 34, with nearly two-thirds (62%) of those surveyed reporting such worries.The TUC poll was released as a string of large employers – including BT, Amazon , and Microsoft – have said in recent months that advances in AI could lead them to cut jobs.Britain’s job market is slowing amid a cooling economy, with the UK’s official jobless rate at a four-year high of 4

A picture

‘Really tough decision’: US captain Keegan Bradley does not pick himself for Ryder Cup

Keegan Bradley hopes a selfless act can turn into US points after the Ryder Cup captain resisted strong temptation to combine his role with ­playing duties at Bethpage in September. His confirmation ended the prospect of a first Ryder Cup playing captain since Arnold Palmer in 1963.The US turned to Justin Thomas, Collin Morikawa, Ben Griffin, ­Patrick Cantlay, Cameron Young and Sam Burns to back up the six automatic qualifiers in an eagerly awaited announcement made by Bradley on Wednesday.Bradley had finished ahead of Burns, Cantlay and Young on the US points table. The 39-year-old is the No 11‑ranked golfer in the world and eighth among Americans, but ultimately he decided it would be either unreasonable or unnecessary to ­perform two jobs at once

A picture

F1 race to the title: Norris and Piastri go toe-to-toe as Hamilton and Verstappen seek uplift

Returning from the summer break and with 10 races to go, there are plenty of targets remaining across the paddock besides McLaren’s shootoutRevitalised after the summer break, 10 races remain between this weekend’s Dutch Grand Prix and the finale in Abu Dhabi in December – and it will be Oscar Piastri and Lando Norris going head to head for the title.Only nine points separate the McLaren duo, who are in a two-horse race for the team’s first drivers’ championship since Lewis Hamilton’s triumph in 2008. The advantage has swung between them, at times from one race to the next, in the first part of the season, often with little to choose between the two. Neither driver has been able to definitively claim the upper hand entering the championship run-in. It looks set to remain a nip-and-tuck fight to the wire