Spotlight turns to big-name recruit Kane Cornes amid AFL media shake-up
Chris Jones has always had an eye for talent and for cultivating relationships. As a cadet reporter with Leader Newspapers in Melbourne’s eastern suburbs, he struck up a friendship with a young local player, Sam Mitchell. He introduced Mitchell to his future wife. Their respective careers blossomed, and Jones was last year appointed director of network sport at Seven West Media, with a mandate to overhaul its footy coverage.
It’s a change that is long overdue. Seven’s coverage has been pretty dire in recent years. The additions of Jason Bennett, Alister Nicholson and Matthew Hill – the latter arguably the best race-caller in the world – were all well received. But all too often, their colleagues have reverted to witless, mind-numbing prattle, to hyperventilating when nothing’s really happening, and to dozing when someone pulls down the mark of the year.
Production standards have also slipped. Because they paid well over the odds for the TV rights (and the former AFL chief executive Gil McLachlan played them like a harp), the host broadcasters have had to slash costs. It’s meant dizzying camerawork, directors who have never embraced the concept of zooming out, and a solitary analysis show that was, frankly, a bit of a snoozer.
Jones was hired to address that. One of the first things he did was invite Kane Cornes over for dinner and lure him from Channel Nine. An argument could be made that Cornes is in the top three significant figures in the game, perhaps only behind Andrew Dillon and Laura Kane. If you consume even a fraction of the footy media on offer, chances are you hear two voices above all others – the first is the yahoo on the Sportsbet ads, and the second is Cornes.
Cornes is a divisive figure and a convenient person to pin all the sport’s problems on. But a lot of what he does is excellent. His play-by-play analysis shows someone who does their homework and sees the game well. His columns demonstrate a good nose for news, and a willingness to swim against the tide. He is beholden to no one in the game, except perhaps his former coach Ken Hinkley, who he adores. He’s found his niche, seized his opportunity, and shown his fellow former players that there’s more to a media career than donning tight suits and picking splinters out of their backsides.
And yet. He really does seem determined to drain everything that is enjoyable and interesting about the sport. Underpinning much of his work is a certain contempt for the modern footballer, a relish for the players and coaches who run aground. He was schooled in an unforgiving environment – physically, mentally and even financially – an era where you paid your dues, stiffened the sinews and kept your mouth shut. He is contemptuous of anything that strays from that – hence his rather tedious obsession with the length of contracts, with smiles and hugs after the siren, and with his “Top 10 Spuds” or whatever that morning’s hot take furnace is fanning.
Cornes’ new role will test him. His audience will be less rusted-on than what he’s used to. There’ll be more women, older fans and viewers who drift in and out of the sport. His biggest challenge will be striking the right balance between positivity and negativity. On Nine and SEN, he had no hand brakes. At Seven, he’s going to have to be conscious of his overall responsibility to the sport – to promote it, to not find fault in every passage of play, and to perhaps show a little more restraint when he’s talking about head knocks, long-term injuries, contract extensions or wayward young players.
Craig Hutchison, another with a longstanding professional and personal relationship with Jones, will produce much of Seven’s non-matchday programming. The last thing we need is more of these shows. But given that Fox Footy now has a mortgage on Saturday games, Seven needs a new hook. Agenda Setters, Unfiltered, Extra Time, The Wash Up and Kane’s Call all suggest a certain solemnity. But the hosts, panellists and defectors (or “list cloggers”, as Eddie McGuire called them) all bring something that’s been lacking at Seven and indeed Fox Footy – panellists willing to stick their neck out, journalists who can drive the news agenda and former players who aren’t just phoning it in.
Jones was in charge of Seven’s cricket coverage and he did a good job. He promoted new voices, hired more women, watered down the red cordial and helped make watching cricket on free-to-air TV a far less grating experience. In this role, he’s poached the right people, he’s been given an appropriate budget and he’s given every indication that the host broadcaster might actually be up to the task. For too long, Channel Seven has treated its audience with contempt. This, hopefully, is a step in the right direction.
Crunching the numbers
Ken Hinkley will step aside at the end of the season with Josh Carr to take over at Port Adelaide, while Luke Beveridge, Matthew Nicks and Justin Longmuir are among the coaches expected to face the most heat this year.
From the archives
The spate of pre-season injuries is a reminder of the wretched luck of David Schwarz. In his absolute prime after a breakout 1994 season, he first tore his ACL in a scratch match played adjacent to Albert Park Lake. He was carried off in a ute. He made one of the quickest ever recoveries in the history of knee injures and tore it again.
Nine months later, Schwarz returned in a reserves game at the Lavington Sports Ground near Albury. He changed direction, heard his knee crack and staggered off, vowing to retire and become a professional gambler. He also punched a corrugated iron interchange box, breaking his hand. Schwarz would return as “The Ox” a lot heavier and far less nimble, but he eked out a solid, if chequered career.
They said what?
The Bombers this week added the 25-year-old forward to their list after he impressed with four goals in a cameo against the Western Bulldogs. Clubs have until Friday to finalise their pre-season selections.
View from the stands (or the couch)
“Has to be looked at that incident from Ginbey on Lalor. Lalor in such a vulnerable position and the ball player needs to be protected. A form of tunnelling.”
The former Essendon great Matthew Lloyd took to social media platform X after Richmond’s No 1 draft pick Sam Lalor was injured in a marking contest with West Coast’s Reuben Ginbey in a pre-season clash on Monday. The young Tiger has been diagnosed with a fractured jaw as well as a concussion and is in doubt for round one.
Footy quiz
In which decade was the first VFL/AFL match broadcast on television? Bonus point for the exact year.
Answers in next week’s newsletter, but if you think you know it, hit reply and let me know!
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Fans will have to fork out for a subscription
to watch Saturday live coverage as matches go behind a paywall this season, whilemore players have joined the millionaires’ club
as the market booms for top-end talent.Bobby Hill booted four goals and Jy Simpkin ran rampant in the midfield as the
Indigenous All Stars thumped Fremantle
at Optus Stadium. Buoyed by the success of the exhibition match, the AFL boss, Andrew Dillon, has flagged thepossible return of state of origin
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