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All the latest Geelong Cats news ahead of GWS Giants clash

Veteran defender Mitch Duncan has revealed whether he expects to play next week as Geelong works to clear its injury list.

Mitch Duncan will not return next week. Picture: Michael Willson/AFL Photos via Getty Images
Mitch Duncan will not return next week. Picture: Michael Willson/AFL Photos via Getty Images

Geelong veteran Mitch Duncan has ruled himself out of a return against the Western Bulldogs in round 11 and will instead return after the bye.

The defender injured his hamstring with “about 30 seconds left of training” before last weekend’s loss to Fremantle and has been running this week.

Mitch Duncan fires a handball. Pic: Michael Klein
Mitch Duncan fires a handball. Pic: Michael Klein

But he hasn’t returned to training proper yet and said he would step back into sessions with his teammates next week.

While Duncan won’t return against the Dogs, Cats skipper Patrick Dangerfield is planning to overcome his own hamstring injury for the important clash, forward Gary Rohan (also hamstring) and recruit Jack Bowes (calf) are also eyeing a return.

Duncan has fallen into a block of Cats eyeing returns soon after the buy, including Max Holmes (knee), Cam Guthrie (toe)

“I have done a number of running sessions through the week so I will progress to a bit of footy next week and I dare say – I am going to put it out there – I won’t be playing next week,” Duncan told K rock.

“It looks like after the bye (for my return) so I am going to get a block of work in.”

Sam De Koning (facial fracture) and Ollie Henry (ruptured testicle) returned for Geelong against the GWS Giants on Saturday.

Cats ‘uncertain’ about Stanley return

Geelong premiership ruck Rhys Stanley’s return remains “uncertain” as he battles vision issues, while reigning best-and-fairest winner Cam Guthrie’s turf toe recovery has been slower than the Cats had hoped.

Stanley was sent for surgery after he suffered a fractured right eye socket in round 5 against West Coast.

Rhys Stanley is helped from the ground. Picture: Dylan Burns/AFL Photos via Getty Images
Rhys Stanley is helped from the ground. Picture: Dylan Burns/AFL Photos via Getty Images

While he has been able to train at times, Cats coach Chris Scott said Stanley’s eyesight has “been a little slow to return to normal”.

The Cats have called on Jonathon Ceglar to fill the ruck breach without Stanley and have been linked to former Sydney ruck Sam Naismith as a potential mid-season draftee.

“He had surgery and the complication around his return is more to do with his vision,” Scott said of Stanley.

“That is a really uncertain outlook as far as I am told. They (the medical team) were hopeful that would return really quickly but they couldn’t guarantee is and it has just been a little bit slow.

“He is able to train and do a lot of loading so I think when he comes good he will be able to play relatively quickly.

“His vision has just been a little bit slow to return to normal and there is no appetite to rush that process, he is certainly not going to play when he is suffering those symptoms.”

Prolific midfielder Guthrie, who shared the Carji Greeves Medal with Jeremy Cameron last year, was last seen in round 6 against Sydney.

Zach Tuohy and Cam Guthrie at training. Picture: Dylan Burns/AFL Photos via Getty Images
Zach Tuohy and Cam Guthrie at training. Picture: Dylan Burns/AFL Photos via Getty Images

Scott said Guthrie carried a sore toe into that game, was subbed off as a management decision and felt good on the Monday after the game.

But his toe worsened as that week wore on and given he hasn’t been able to run for a month, his return will come after Geelong’s bye over the King’s Birthday weekend.

“We thought it would still be a couple of weeks and he would likely get back and it just hasn’t progressed that way and it has got to the point now … he has had so much time without running or footy training that it is going to take a bit longer than we thought,” Scott said.

“We are still optimistic that it will be relatively soon after the bye but it certainly won’t be before that.”

Max Holmes is out. Picture: Paul Kane/Getty Images
Max Holmes is out. Picture: Paul Kane/Getty Images

In better news for the Cats, Scott said Max Holmes’ knee injury will be “on the quicker end of the scale”

Holmes had surgery this week after bumping his knee against Fremantle and will spend a couple of weeks off his feet but should return to running after the bye.

The Cats are hopeful of gaining hamstrung trio Patrick Dangerfield, Gary Rohan and Mitch Duncan back next week to face the Western Bulldogs.

Dangerfield eyeing round 12 return

Geelong skipper Patrick Dangerfield is confident his team can win the flag from outside the top four if it gets its form right in September as he eyes a return against the Western Bulldogs in round 12.

A grade two hamstring has sidelined the superstar since round 8 and despite Geelong consistently flagging his injury as minor, he will miss at least three weeks.

Patrick Dangerfield wants to return against the Western Bulldogs. Picture: Dylan Burns/AFL Photos via Getty Images
Patrick Dangerfield wants to return against the Western Bulldogs. Picture: Dylan Burns/AFL Photos via Getty Images

The midfielder had been in classical, dominating form before the injury and said the setback was “bloody frustrating”.

“Certainly the plan is to be right and ready to play next week,” Dangerfield told SEN.

“(I am) around the mark but it’s just getting days in the legs and high-speed metres in. It’s a more conservative route, which kind of makes sense with hamstrings I suppose.”

Without Dangerfield, Geelong has lost its last two matches and sits seventh, two games back from the top-four.

He said the Cats didn’t pay too much attention to earning the double chance, even if the 2016 Western Bulldogs remain the only side to win a premiership from outside the top four since the AFL adopted its current finals system in 2000.

The ice pack came out during the Adelaide game in round 8. Pic: Michael Klein
The ice pack came out during the Adelaide game in round 8. Pic: Michael Klein

“It’s not really something we focus on at all,” he said.

“Obviously top four, that’s a big part around executing your game and giving yourself the best chance. But with the side that we have got, I just feel like we just need to get out timing right and we will be OK.

“Our best footy is good enough and playing at the right time of the year is the most important thing.

“We have had seasons where we have accumulated a stack of wins but we haven’t had the right form at the right time of the year. There is a bit of that in (2017) and (2019), just around the timing.

“There is plenty of cause for optimism, I believe.”

Dangerfield said the next two games – at home against GWS Giants on Saturday and next week against the Bulldogs – were crucial before Geelong’s mid-season bye.

“We feel like if we can get the next couple of weeks right, it gives us a good springboard for the second half of the season where hopefully we get some availability back,” he said.

Dangerfield, who is also the AFL Players Association president, said negotiations between the player’s union and the AFL on a new collective bargaining agreement had not make progress in recent weeks.

josh.barnes1@news.com.au

Originally published as All the latest Geelong Cats news ahead of GWS Giants clash

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Original URL: https://www.thechronicle.com.au/sport/afl/all-the-latest-geelong-cats-news-ahead-of-gws-giants-clash/news-story/e03c35027bddb1727c5e863670a8af4d