Pinned post from 3.11pm on Feb 11, 2026
Go to latestYou’ve seen the teams, so who will win?
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There was a touch of Brownlow red carpet about the State Of Origin dinner in Perth on Thursday night.
While the players were decked out in state-issued suits – and the black-and-yellow WA outfits won hands down for mine – their wives, partners and girlfriends embraced the “cocktail attire” dress code for the official AFL Origin welcome function.
Prize for the fastest-dressed footballer went to Melbourne champion Max Gawn who was spotted in the Crown foyer in shorts and a T-shirt barely 10 minutes before formal proceedings kicked off.
But he was far from the best-dressed. Although don’t think for a minute I am going to give a detailed analysis of the more flamboyant outfits of the wives and girlfriends. I’ll stick to player ratings on game day.
There were also a number of Victorian greats scattered throughout the crowd, including Simon Madden and Kevin Sheedy.
There was also plenty of tongue-in-cheek “Kick A Vic” banter emanating from dignitaries, including league boss Richard Goyder and WA premier Roger Cook.
Sorry to disappoint you, footy fans, but Marcus Bontempelli does not hate Toby Greene.
He even bought him a coffee during a Big V bonding session in Perth on Thursday morning, which is contrary to a recently released trailer for an upcoming football documentary that portrays Bontempelli and the Giants skipper as stuck in a perpetual feud.
Word was that The Bont did not appreciate the promotional clip for Prime’s Final Siren: Inside the AFL, which shows Greene saying: “I wouldn’t have a beer with him”.
But the Victorian skipper would not go that far when asked about the relationship during a State Of Origin press conference at Perth Stadium on Friday.
There’s no man more excited in Perth right now than Garry Lyon.
If you don’t believe me, here’s what he had to say during Victoria’s training session today ahead of Saturday’s State of Origin clash.
“We got in last night, and they got their kit, and you could see them, you know, they’re smiling,” the Melbourne great said of the playing group.
“And this is always the day I reckon you look forward to when you actually get out on the deck and, you know, Bailey Smith is kicking it to Matt Rowell who is kicking it to Zak Butters. I mean, that’s just footy porn for us.”
Zach Merrett did not look nervous. He did not look uncomfortable, and he did not look out of sorts. But he did mutter a telling comment minutes before he fronted footy’s travelling press pack in Perth earlier this afternoon: “Let’s get this over with,” he said.
The former Bombers skipper is in Perth representing Victoria in the coming State of Origin clash against Western Australia, and it was his turn to stand before the microphones.
But he knew the questions would quickly turn from wearing the Big V to being back at Essendon. And they did. Thick and fast.
This is how it unfolded.
Western Australia have completed their first training session and the skill level was elite.
If this game is taken seriously, and we keep getting told it will be, the home state’s mosquito fleet could cause Victoria headaches. Particularly WA’s Indigenous quartet – Charlie Cameron, Shai Bolton, Kozzie Pickett and Brad Hill.
Expect to see Pickett and Bolton rotate through the midfield, while Hill is likely to start on a wing.
The Sandgropers are also looking to play Luke Jackson as a big-bodied midfielder – in tandem with skipper Patrick Cripps – leaving the ruck work to Darcy Cameron and Tim English.
There are so many “ifs” floating around the AFL’s attempts to resurrect State Of Origin football that it is difficult to have faith in it being a success.
While Melbourne skipper Max Gawn says he is behind the concept, he’s not convinced about the timing.
“The players have been lobbying for this for a while,” he said.
“I feel like any way to bring in more revenue and more eyes on our game should be looked at.
Victorian coach Chris Scott might not need to flip a magnet to have a successful trip to Perth.
His greatest move might come at the end of the season during the trade period.
That’s if you believe Ken Hinkley, who says Scott and WA coach Dean Cox have been handed an unfair recruiting edge over their clubland rivals by getting to spend four days in Perth with some of the best football talent in the land.
“It is an absolute advantage to those coaches and these clubs,” Hinkley told SEN.
Big Maxy Gawn had his hands full on Wednesday afternoon, carting around his luggage and two young sons who had made the flight to Perth for this weekend’s big Origin clash against the Sandgropers.
The whole weekend is shaping as a family affair with wives, girlfriends and kids forming part of the large contingent that flew out of Melbourne for the coming weekend. A point not lost on Gawn.
“That was pretty impressive flight,” Gawn said. “It was a weird flight with all the young kids and journos, and Garry Lyon was sitting relatively close to the front. In fact, driving the plane.”
For those not up to speed with Gawn’s dry sense of humour, Lyon, thankfully, was not flying the plane. It was 30-minutes late leaving Melbourne as it was, and a fair chance never to make Perth if Lyon was in the cockpit.
Speaking of amusing video clips. Carlton players are still defending their skill levels after footage of a pre-season training drill went viral a fortnight ago. For all the wrong reasons.
It seems skipper Patrick Cripps, who has carried the club on his shoulders with Atlas-like reliability in recent years, is carrying the blame for this one as well.
“It was our mate Cripp,” teammate Jacob Weitering said of the video that showed a number of skill errors, including a butchered left-foot kick from the Carlton skipper that was so far off the mark it cleared the boundary and landed in the Ikon Park stands.
“He had a bit of a laugh at it. It’s very hard to take a 30-40 second clip out of context in a three-hour training session.”
As far as precious cargo goes, the 1.30pm Virgin flight to Perth on Wednesday was stacked with some of the AFL’s greatest possessions. The State Of Origin playing group that is.
And while the Big Vic’s hierarchy – chief motivator Garry Lyon, coach Chris Scott and captain Marcus Bontempelli – were seated at the pointy end of the jet, the tall timber found themselves planted towards the middle of the plane.
Why? Extra leg room. The emergency exits became a veritable land of the giants.
Seated across rows 15 and 16 were Tim English, Sam Darcy, Darcy Cameron, Max Gawn, Rory Lobb, Jacob Weitering, Tom Barrass and Aaron Naughton. Not a crumbing forward in sight.
But even with the extra room, the big fellas still spent time in and out of their seats, stretching their extra-long legs and striding down the aisle to keep from seizing up.