‘Cost them their season’: Collingwood players called out over ‘disrespectful’ act and this might course him his…..

Cornes has taken aim at Craig McRae and his troops for not respecting the Swans midfielders.

Collingwood coach Craig McRae and his team have come under fire for showing disdain for their AFL rivals after their Friday night loss to the Swans in the fourth quarter. At the SCG, the Magpies led by as much as 27 points in the fourth quarter until Sydney’s Isaac Heeney and Chad Warner took the game by storm, winning it thrillingly by three points.

Furthermore, Kane Cornes has attributed the fourth-quarter fade-out on McRae and his team’s disrespect for the best players of rival teams. Cornes suggests that McRae should address the lack of accountability within his team, especially the midfielders who were overwhelmed by the Swans brigade, rather than talking about contentious umpiring decisions.

Pictured Darcy Moore left and Kane Cornes right

Kane Cornes has taken aim at Craig McRae and his troops for not respecting other teams’ star players.

“Collingwood have, I think, the most unaccountable midfield running around,” Cornes said on SEN’s Sportsday. “That’s their system, and they back their players in, and largely they show no respect to the opposition’s best players.

“Go back and look at how often the best opposition midfielder against Collingwood gets ridiculous numbers. You would love to play against Collingwood as a midfielder because they show you no respect. 14 (disposals) each for Warner and Heeney, and a goal each when the game was on the line, essentially cost Collingwood their season.”

Following Friday’s narrow defeat, McRae voiced his anger at Dan McStay not being paid a 50m free kick after Swans star Tom McCartin appeared to encroach on the mark taken by the Pies player just inside the centre square. McCartin took several extra steps forward before McStay decided to play on but the Pies weren’t awarded a free kick that would have given them an easy set shot to win the game.

And the Collingwood coach couldn’t help but voice his displeasure with the non-call from the umpire, with McRae suggesting things would have been much different if the match was plated in Melbourne. “I reckon if it was at the MCG it would have been paid,” McRae said in a post-match press conference.

SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA - AUGUST 09: Isaac Heeney (left) and Chad Warner of the Swans celebrate during the 2024 AFL Round 22 match between the Sydney Swans and the Collingwood Magpies at The Sydney Cricket Ground on August 09, 2024 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Michael Willson/AFL Photos via Getty Images)
Isaac Heeney (left) and Chad Warner led the Swans to an epic fourth-quarter comeback victory over Collingwood. Image: Getty

Discussing the incident on SEN radio, Cornes said while in his opinion it should have been a 50m free kick to Collingwood it was “a bit rich” for the Collingwood coach to harp on about favourable home team calls when the Magpies play so many games in front of their fans at the MCG – including last year’s grand final. “I’m not sure Craig McRae needed to go down this path,” Cornes said.

“C’mon Craig. 14 (games) at the MCG, 17 in Melbourne, you get to play the grand final on your home ground. So 14 times you get the rub of the green and one time you have to go and play in Sydney on a Friday night you’re complaining about that. It was the wrong time. I thought he was out of line.”

Cornes also believes McRae should consider moving up to the coaches box rather than looking like a spectator on the interchange bench. “Rather than standing on the interchange bench and looking like a spectator, get up to the coaches box and make some moves, if you need to, like John Longmire did with his assistant coaches,” Cornes said.

“Impact the game, rather than just standing there with your headset on looking bemused as your side gets run over again. The mystique of winning close games is now gone, and sides have worked out Collingwood.”

Be the first to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*