The Sydney Morning Herald logo
Advertisement

This was published 10 months ago

‘Incredible bravery’: Demons star Christian Petracca speaks out to praise teammate Clayton Oliver

Danny Russell, Roy Ward, Jon Pierik, Andrew Wu and Steve Barrett
Updated ,first published
Loading
Pinned post from 11.11pm on May 3, 2025
Go to latest

‘Incredible bravery’: Petracca praises Oliver

By Roy Ward
Christian Petracca sings the club song.Getty Images

Melbourne star Christian Petracca has praised the courage of Clayton Oliver in speaking up and stepping back from this weekend’s match after having a downturn in his mental health in the past week.

Oliver, who has battled both mental health issues and physical injuries in recent seasons, had played every game in 2025 but was left in Melbourne after having what the club called “a bad week”.

“I just want to give him a massive shoutout for his incredible bravery and vulnerability to be able to speak up and say he is not all right,” Petracca told Fox Footy.

“We put our arms around him. We’ve come a long way as men, and I think it is incredible that he has the ability to own it – admit he is not going well.

“He hasn’t spoken to us at all – we’ll speak to him throughout the week. As males, we can get ridiculed or shut down for expressing our frustration or emotion, but for him to do what he did was really good.”

Pinned post from 7.26pm on May 3, 2025
Go to latest

Your view: Is there a future politician on-field tonight?

By

Latest Posts

That’s all for tonight

By

Thanks so much for joining us throughout today and tonight.

We appreciate all the support when the nation’s attention is also on the election results.

Please keep checking in with our sport sites throughout Sunday and next week for more AFL coverage.

See you all next round.

Bye for now.

‘Our players hang in’: Scott

By
Oliver Wiltshire of the Cats is congratulated by teammates after kicking a goal.Getty Images

Cats coach Chris Scott has praised his side’s ability to take on the Magpies and get on the front foot, despite their pressure defence.

“Last week was frustrating – it wasn’t a bad loss, we had the chances to win, but we played much better tonight,” Scott said.

“I don’t accept that professionals need a big occasion to lift. I like to think it was a bit more practical, and we worked on some things during the week.”

Scott said the form of Patrick Dangerfield gave “optimistic feelings” about this season, but so did the form of lesser-known players like Connor O’Sullivan.

“Dangerfield is amazing with the way he is playing at the moment, but there are other things that leave us optimistic. Connor O’Sullivan, Mark O’Connor did some good things,” Scott said.

“They [the Magpies] do some things really well, and you have to take that away from them. We had young players take the game on, and we needed to do that.”

‘We looked like winners regardless’: McRae

By
Nick Daicos of the Magpies is tackled by Oisin Mullin and Tom Atkins of the Cats.Getty Images

Magpies coach Craig McRae has praised his players’ response in the final term, despite losing on the siren.

McRae said his side did everything right to battle back into the game in the final minutes, and they can hold their heads high in how they took care of Jack Crisp after his post-siren shot missed the target.

“When he misses that kick, have a look at our response as a team. It’s a testament to the character and culture that we have. Straight away there was a group of players around him,” McRae said.

“I think we looked like winners, regardless of what the scoreboard said.”

Advertisement
Pinned post from 11.11pm on May 3, 2025

‘Incredible bravery’: Petracca praises Oliver

By Roy Ward
Christian Petracca sings the club song.Getty Images

Melbourne star Christian Petracca has praised the courage of Clayton Oliver in speaking up and stepping back from this weekend’s match after having a downturn in his mental health in the past week.

Oliver, who has battled both mental health issues and physical injuries in recent seasons, had played every game in 2025 but was left in Melbourne after having what the club called “a bad week”.

“I just want to give him a massive shoutout for his incredible bravery and vulnerability to be able to speak up and say he is not all right,” Petracca told Fox Footy.

“We put our arms around him. We’ve come a long way as men, and I think it is incredible that he has the ability to own it – admit he is not going well.

“He hasn’t spoken to us at all – we’ll speak to him throughout the week. As males, we can get ridiculed or shut down for expressing our frustration or emotion, but for him to do what he did was really good.”

Gawn stands tall as Demons beat Eagles for third straight win

By

Max Gawn has produced yet another rucking masterclass as Melbourne overcome a wasteful first half to post a 32-point AFL win over West Coast at Optus Stadium.

The Demons trailed by 12 points early in the third quarter of Saturday night’s match, but they kicked nine of the next 10 goals to secure the 16.12 (108) to 11.10 (76) in front of 41,991 fans.

Melbourne’s third win on the trot improved their record to 3-5, while West Coast (0-8) remain winless and on bottom of the table.

Gawn was the pivotal figure, racking up a career-high 35 disposals to go with 47 hitouts, nine clearances, 12 score involvements and a goal.

The 33-year-old also played match-winning roles in recent wins over Richmond and Fremantle, and he helped Melbourne win the clearance battle 48-26 and inside-50 count 59-43 against the Eagles.

‘It wasn’t to be’: Crisp speaks after emotional game

By Roy Ward
Crisp leaves the field with his family after his record-breaking night.Getty Images

After an emotional end to an emotional week, Jack Crisp still fronted up post-game to speak to Fox Footy, despite missing what would have been the match-winning shot for goal.

Crisp admitted he was hurting but didn’t have his final kick right in his 245th consecutive AFL game.

“I was feeling pretty content in my ability to kick the goal at the end there, but it wasn’t to be,” Crisp told Fox Footy.

“But after an emotional week, feeling the love from everyone inside and outside football, it would have been good to get the win, but credit to Geelong.”

Advertisement

The fairytale finish just wasn’t to be

By
This long-range shot from Jack Crisp would have won the game for the Pies, but it sailed wide.AFL Photos

Milestone man Jack Crisp missed the potential game winner after the final siren as the Magpies had their six-game winning streak broken by Geelong in one of the games of the season on Saturday night.

Crisp, on the night he broke Jim Stynes’ record for most consecutive VFL/AFL games, had the game on his boot after marking about 50 metres out directly in front of goal just as the final siren sounded. But his left foot shot went right, the Cats hanging on for a stunning three-point win at the MCG.

“It was like a footy gods moment … fortunately for us, unfortunately for Collingwood, it was a pretty special match,” Cats skipper Patrick Dangerfield said.

‘If he kicks it, I’m retiring’: Blicavs

By Roy Ward
Steele Sidebottom of the Magpies and Mark Blicavs of the Cats compete for the ball.AFL Photos via Getty Images

Cats ruckman Mark Blicavs almost went from hero to zero in the final seconds of tonight’s match.

With the Cats clinging to a four-point lead with 21 seconds left, Blicavs held the ball up twice after the centre bounce to waste precious seconds.

But the second time he was called for holding the ball and the Pies played on and sent the ball long to Jack Crisp who marked just before the siren.

His shot after the siren missed but Blicavs revealed he was considering drastic action if Crisp, who set a new record for consecutive games played, kicked the winning goal.

Gawn happy, but he wants more from the Demons

By
Melbourne star Max Gawn.AFL Photos

Demons skipper Max Gawn said his side was still leaking too many goals late in the game, but he was happy to take a third-straight win.

Gawn had 35 disposals and 47 hitouts while staying in the ruck for much of the match after Harrison Petty had to come off.

“We leaked a few late, which was disappointing but that response in the third quarter – West Coast has been in every game this year until half-time, and we knew if we got them on the front foot, especially at centre bounce then we would be able to do well,” Gawn told Fox Footy.

“We were able to keep at it and in the last quarter we were able to kick a few.

“We dug ourselves a little hole at 0-5, so we can’t look past the next match and that’s Hawthorn. It’s not about stacking wins and losses but whether we can walk off proud of how we played and, for a lot of that game, we were pretty proud.”

Advertisement

Full-time stats - Pies v Cats

By
Advertisement