The Gold Coast Bulletin

Door opens in the wake of injuries

- ED JACKSON

CRISIS creates opportunit­y. That’s the view of Gold Coast coach Stuart Dew amid fears of an increased injury rate in the compromise­d AFL season.

Some coaches, including Brisbane mentor Chris Fagan, are worried short preparatio­n time after the COVID-19 shutdown will put players at risk of injury when the season resumes.

Already Sydney’s Lance Franklin (hamstring) and Collingwoo­d’s Adam Treloar (calf) have been sidelined while early evidence from Germany’s Bundesliga has indicated a rise in soft tissue injuries following that football competitio­n’s resumption.

Those concerns have the AFL contemplat­ing extending interchang­e bench numbers and Dew says players on the outer at clubs can use the situation to their benefit.

“If you’re any player on an AFL list now, train well, put your name up,” Dew said. “Sometimes it’s harder to get in and then easier to stay in.

“There’s definitely going to be opportunit­y for guys that may have thought they were a little bit further away. “Time will tell.” Perhaps the biggest hurdle for those on the fringes will be a lack of reserve matches in which to press their claims.

Dew says the Suns are working hard to try to arrange scratch matches with the Lions as well as Adelaide, West Coast, Fremantle and Port Adelaide – who will be based on the Gold Coast for at least the next four rounds of the competitio­n in an isolation hub.

The Suns coach says having so many AFL teams in their neighbourh­ood will make it easier than some to arrange such fixtures.

“We’re blessed here with three ovals in the precinct,” Dew said.

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