AFL NEWS: Riewoldt's plea after Fisher drug charge, Docker faces 'serious misconduct' ban, Dangerfield out

By The Roar / Editor

St Kilda great Nick Riewoldt has made an impassioned plea to the AFL and players’ union to provide more adequate support to players as they transition out of the professional game.

Riewoldt’s call on Monday night came with former teammate Sam Fisher in jail after he was charged with trafficking large commercial quantities of illicit drugs.

Fisher, 39, played 228 games for the Saints before retiring in 2016.

“A lot of his close teammates knew that he had some issues, but to this extent, once it was all laid bare last week, I think a lot of us were surprised at just how bad the situation had become,” Riewoldt said on Fox Footy.

“But it landed heavy and, obviously, straight away you start to think about Sam and the situation he finds himself in, and his family and those close to him, and then you do a little bit of inward reflecting around ‘what more could we have done?’”

Riewoldt, a long-standing captain during Fisher’s time at St Kilda from 2004 to 2016, conceded questions would be asked of the club leaders and playing group from that era.

Former Saints Sam Fisher (left) and Nick Riewoldt. (Photo by Michael Willson/AFL Media/Getty Images)

“There have been a lot of Sam’s teammates who have done as much as they possibly could, myself included, and some that have gone to extraordinary levels involving conversations with family and friends and those really close to Sam,” Riewoldt said.

“As a group I think we did as much as we possibly could for Sam.

“But at a time like this you really realise how out of your depth you are as a teammate, when a player is facing challenges of the kind that Sam has faced.

“I understand those questions will come about us and our group and the leadership and all that sort of stuff, but you can put your head on the pillow knowing you did as much as you could.”

Riewoldt said he approached the AFL Players Association with his concerns about Fisher but had received a delayed and inadequate response.

The union has reportedly provided some support to Fisher but details are guarded by confidentiality provisions.

Riewoldt said the level of support for players exiting the AFL system is one of the biggest issues facing the league and players’ union, declaring “enough is enough”.

“There are not a lot of Sam Fisher-type incidents that we’re hearing about now but there are a lot of players that are slipping through the cracks,” Riewoldt said.

“That would be my assertion and my experience, that so many players right now are slipping through the cracks of the AFL system and when they come out the other side their lives are ending up in pretty horrific condition.

“Let this be the line in the sand moment. This is the cautionary tale.

“Something needs to be done because players and teammates can do as much as they like but they’re not experts in the space and they need help.”

Riewoldt said his plea is not about garnering sympathy for players.

“Players are paid really well, they’ve got all of these opportunities available to them as they go through the game, but somewhere along the line it’s not working because the condition that too many players are finding themselves in post-career is not at the level that it should be,” he said.

“We can do more as an industry and I think the AFLPA, in particular, need to take the lead on this cause and stop these situations occurring.”

Riewoldt also took aim at the AFL’s illicit drugs policy, of which he has been a vocal critic in the past.

“At the moment the policy that exists is one that allows players wiggle room to tap into those things,” he said. “I think that is an issue. Players who take drugs in the AFL system do so because the system allows them to.”

Docker sent to AFL Tribunal

Fremantle forward Sam Switkowski has been sent straight to the AFL Tribunal for a “serious misconduct” chicken wing tackle on Collingwood’s Jack Ginnivan.

After bringing Ginnivan to ground late in Sunday’s match at Optus Stadium, Switkowski grabbed his opponent’s wrist and pinned it behind the 19-year-old’s own back.

Switkowski continued to apply upward pressure on Ginnivan’s arm until the umpire blew the whistle for a ball up.

Although Ginnivan wasn’t hurt in the incident, the AFL match review officer deemed the offence was “serious misconduct”, and Switkowski has been sent to tribunal.

“I would say he knew what he was doing,” former Melbourne star Garry Lyon told On The Couch. 

“He (Ginnivan) got up in the end and was OK. But when you’re starting to jam their arm up their back it means that you’re going to be responsible for that. 

“If he gets a week or two weeks then he’s only got himself to blame.”

Chicken wing tackles aren’t common in the AFL, but in 2012 two-time Brownlow medallist Chris Judd received a four-week ban for one such offence against North Melbourne’s Leigh Adams. 

Judd’s tackle was more serious than Switkowski’s given that Judd was third man in and his opponent was injured in the incident. 

Ginnivan earned the ire of Fremantle fans in the final term of Sunday’s match when he outmarked Brennan Cox and celebrated in front of the Dockers’ faithful while he strolled in to kick the easiest of goals.

Magpies coach Craig McRae smiled when asked what he thought of the early celebration, which came a short time before Switkowski’s tackle on Ginnivan.

“What do you do there? You want them to be themselves,” McRae said.

“Kick the goal and then celebrate with your teammates might be the message.”

Dangerfield hobbled

Geelong star Patrick Dangerfield is unlikely to play again before the AFL club’s bye as the club takes a conservative approach to his recovery from another calf injury setback.

Dangerfield was substituted out of the Cats’ win over Port Adelaide on Saturday because of tightness in the same calf he injured earlier in the season

The previous injury – a strain in the same spot he had earlier corked – put him out of action for two weeks.

Dangerfield will now complete a mid-season training block in a bid to prepare him for the second half of the year.

It will likely rule him out of Geelong’s matches against Adelaide and the Western Bulldogs before the bye in round 13.

(Photo by Daniel Pockett/Getty Images)

“It is likely that a couple of weeks of training now would better serve Pat and provide the conditioning base required for the remainder of the season,” Geelong’s head of medical and conditioning services Harry Taylor said.

“Our medical and performance team are continuing to monitor Pat’s status.”

Rhys Stanley and Quinton Narkle were late withdrawals from the Port Adelaide clash because of ankle injuries and face tests in order to be cleared to take on Adelaide at GMHBA Stadium on Saturday.

“Rhys and Quinton were given every opportunity to play against Port Adelaide but unfortunately didn’t tick off the relevant medical and conditioning tests prior to the game,” Taylor said.

“They will continue with their reconditioning programs and will be assessed later in the week.”

Despite Dangerfield’s absence, Geelong will start hot favourites against his old club Adelaide.

The Crowd Says:

2022-05-26T03:22:35+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Needy.

2022-05-26T03:07:35+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


Again Don you see something that isn't there.

2022-05-26T02:14:08+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


And still you come. You don't need my agreement. You are going to have to move forward without it.

2022-05-26T01:31:56+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


Classic case of projection Don. Just for the record, I posted an opinion about Football, you didn’t like it so YOU made a personal attack, more than 24 hours after the orignal post. Almost text book “desperate need to troll”

2022-05-26T01:23:56+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Your constant frantic posting indicates that. What you say is usually rubbish and negligible. What you do...that desperate need to troll...is what indicates your need.

2022-05-26T01:15:11+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


Where did I say I was worried about your opinion of me? Once again what was written and what you interpet are 2 vastly diffferent things. "It is low when you have your episodes but it is quite high when you talk footy."So it is low when I disagree with you or point out your contradictions and high when I agree with you. Strange that.

2022-05-26T00:59:10+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Don't worry about my opinion of you. It is low when you have your episodes but it is quite high when you talk footy. You reference my opinion of you quite a bit. You don't need my affirmation. Just deal with your sadness or your elation.

2022-05-26T00:41:55+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


You said I was gainsaying when I predicted the Bulldogs would beat the Suns by a small margin as well Don. Just because my opinion is different to yours doesn't make it gainsaying, as a genreal rule it makes it correct.

2022-05-25T23:00:19+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


That's because you gainsay as a way of breathing.

2022-05-25T20:50:17+00:00

.kraM

Roar Rookie


https://www.foxsports.com.au/nrl/new-twist-in-nrl-drug-scandal-with-two-nsw-origin-players-linked-to-party-drug-suppliers/news-story/06a1386081e4ab9f2b449b3e959d4b8b

2022-05-24T22:59:28+00:00

Curmudgeon1961

Roar Rookie


Try Federal Parliament. Drug testing for welfare recipients went very quiet after a politician suggested they lead by example

2022-05-24T22:32:09+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


I would suggest Switkowski had much more intent to cause injury.

2022-05-24T11:25:55+00:00

Marty

Roar Rookie


Judd did damage that required treatment, Swita didn’t and has a clean record, pleaded guilty. 2 weeks is about right. The worse news is Amiss required surgery on his kidney after an injury playing for Peel and is out indefinitely.

2022-05-24T11:02:28+00:00

IvoryThunder

Roar Rookie


A huge number of people suffer from mental health - more so post covid. Plenty of those come from lower socio-economic, violent or broken homes with little to no real support from family or friends. They'll likely never experience the level of support, adulation and fellowship bestowed on a footballer and they certainly don't have a footballers bank balance and assets. If they do seek help via a medicare subsidised mental health plan... the out of pocket costs are substantial. Particularly if they mental health is preventing them from holding a steady job. Yet... they have to figure life out on their own and if they make a poor choice and go the crime route... nobody cares... so... Riewoldt should put the violin away...

2022-05-24T10:32:53+00:00

IvoryThunder

Roar Rookie


I agree. A development league made up of say 8 teams of the best 18/19 year olds... they essentially serve a 2 year footy apprenticeship; so too, the next generation of coaches. They receive a wage and attend life skills classes to prepare for a pro career. Broadcast the comp - it'd easily pull in viewers and sponsors; and give clubs with top picks are better chance of not picking a spud.

2022-05-24T10:22:05+00:00

Nick

Roar Guru


Haha. Perhaps. There have been some studies conducted about casual drug use at Australian universities. The number was very, very high. I'm trying to find the link.

2022-05-24T10:13:49+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


Switkowski got 2 weeks for his chicken wing tackle, didn’t Judd get 4?

2022-05-24T09:48:12+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Way different players and way different roles...but you're wrong! Nat Fyfe is probably the only player better than Davy.

2022-05-24T09:45:28+00:00

Brendon the 1st

Roar Rookie


I almost always agree with ya Don. Cept that I know, for 100% certain that Robbie Gray is a much, much better player than David Mundy, not even close me ol mate.

2022-05-24T09:18:38+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


You and I must run in very different crowds

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