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Adam Cooney claims Brownlow Medal

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Adam Cooney has taken out this years Brownlow Medal, finishing on 24 votes, after having a stellar season with the Western Bulldogs. Once again the medal count went down to the wire and it wasn’t until round 21 that Cooney took the lead from the 2002 Brownlow Medallist from the Lions, Simon Black.

The 22-year-old became one of the Brownlow favourites early in the season but his odds drifted out in the second half of the season when the Bulldogs started to decline and it was reported Cooney was struggling with an injury.

Recruited by the Bulldogs in the 2003 Nation Draft, Cooney becomes the first ever number one draft pick to win a Brownlow Medal.

Once again Gary Ablett fell two votes short of taking home Charlie despite being a heavily back favourite throughout the year, joining Ablett on 22 votes was crowd favourite coming in at 33 years of age, Matthew Richardson, who had his best season for the Tigers playing on the wing.

James Bartel was no where to be seen despite being heavily backed by punters and after having a great run home late in the season with the Cats. Joel Selwood was a smoky coming into the night and gave it a good run finishing 6th on 19 votes.

Coming in forth and fifth spots were two ineligible players, two time Brownlow Medallist Adam Goodes and the star forward from the Hawks Lance Franklin.

Brent Harvey struggled to poll votes despite being one of the favourites and finished in 7th place on 17 votes along with Matthew Pavlich.

All-Australian skipper Chris Judd and Hawk Brad Sewell rounded up the top 10 both on 16 votes.

Do you think Cooney is a worthy winner of the Brownlow Medal? Comment below.

  1. The Brownlow medal has lost its prestige and credibility.

    Adam Cooney is a very good footballer who I rate highly. Adam Cooney is NOT the caliber of a Brownlow-medallist player. His win last night is the biggest disgrace to the Brownlow medal since Shane Woewoedin won it in 2000.

    Funnily enough, the winner of this year’s Brownlow was also decided by the same group of men who ridiculously deemed that Will Minson was the closest man to the contest when Brian Lake marked on the siren against Richmond earlier this year; who deemed that Jimmy Bartel was a 10-vote player in 2008; who deemed that Adam Goodes and Simon Black were in the top 5 players of the year; who deemed that Adam Goodes was second-best afield against Geelong in Round 5 when Cameron Ling smashed him; who deemed that Boomer Harvey’s 2007 season was greater than his 2008; and the list goes on and on and on.

    I can honestly say that I respect the AFL umpires – people don’t take the time to understand how much pressure they are consistently under and how much flack they cop. Unlike some other sports, they don’t get the benefit of replays: they make their decisions on the spot in a freakishly high-paced sport.

    But umpires should not decide the Brownlow, and 2008 is the ‘etch-it-in-stone’ proof.

    Adam Cooney would struggle to make the list of 2008’s top 10 AFL players. He was NOT the best and fairest player this year – yes, you’ll encounter opinions everywhere, but just as predominant in today’s society is the importance of facts. This is one of them.

    Congratulations to the man, I’d be rapt if I were him. But a part of me would be disappointed; a little self-conscious. “Should I really have this medal around my neck?” is that seed of doubt that over time, will grow in his mind. And the general public’s outrage at his questionable and charitable victory will be the spring rain on that seed.

    Dogs fans everywhere would be ecstatic, and Cooney will be written into the history books. But alongside his name on the list of Brownlow medalists, there should be an asterisk: an asterisk that indicates that Adam Cooney is a paper champion – and only a paper champion – just like Woewoedin.

    I question the AFL’s integrity. People need to understand that the AFL is as much a business as it is a sport. Try this on: the Dogs have been a struggling franchise for the last decade. What better way to promote its marketability and growth into a profitable franchise, than to whack a Charlie on one of its young guns and future leaders?

    Geelong’s stranglehold and dominance of the competition is not healthy for the AFL. If they are continuously raking in dominant wins, premierships, brownlows, MVP awards, etc, then supporters of other clubs will eventually get fed up, lose hope, and wait to spend their hard-earned money until the storm has passed. It’s like the Brisbane era of 2001-’03 which carried over to ‘04. By the end of it, people were tired of seeing the same thing over and over and for a while, had abandoned hope, which equals a loss in $$$ for Mr Demetriou.

    I believe the AFL have thrown the Dogs a bone to promote the hope and pride in their long-suffering supporters, and to inspire them to open their wallets. Just look at how proud the Geelong-folk were of Jimmy Bartel last year.

    The AFLPA’s MVP award, i.e. the Leigh Matthews trophy, is the new Brownlow medal; the new highest individual honour that a player can receive. It is decided by a large group of people who all eat, sleep and breathe Australian Rules Football. These men know exactly what the game is about and what needs to be done to succeed. They have time to thoroughly scrutinise and mentally digest individual performances, and as a result, accurately crown the best player in the competition – hence Gary Ablett Jr’s back-to-back victories in ‘07 and ‘08.

    On the other hand, Brownlow votes are cast on the spur of the moment by impressionable, star-struck men who seem to treat Brownlow votes as if they were SMS votes for their favourite Australian Idol contendor. This has no credibility.

    Adam Cooney’s Brownlow medal victory has done to the medal’s prestige, honour and integrity, what paint stripper would do to the Mona Lisa.

    Enjoy your gift Adam; but I’d much rather my competitors and own peers respect my football ability, than a group of predisposed puppets of the AFL’s agenda.

  2. lisa rentess says:

    I think the brownlow has lost is prestige, Cooney was not the best player by a long shot, I am a pies supporter, but I do wonder if Ablett is paying for his fathers’ sins. He was by far and away a better player than Cooney, how could he not poll in the last game, ridiculous. Adam Goodes, well I ask you, even his coach thought he was below his best, but he is flashy, and gets noticed. For Bartel, Riewaldt and Richo I feel so sad they deserved more from the umpires. To me, umpires are no longer in a position to judge this award, the game is too fast, they struggle to get the rules consistent, let alone find the best and fairest player on the day. It might be time for the AFL board to take the award over.

  3. I think that Adam Cooney was very deserving and is a very good player.!!!

  4. That is definitely excellent and so nicely written. Generally I do not ever make comments on post on blogs, However , I have got to give you props on this one. Superb blog

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