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AFL great Adam Goodes playing soccer for Waverley Old Boys FC over-35s, says it's the game he always loved Adam Goodes (top, fourth from left) with the Waverley Old Boys FC over-35s side.
Goodes keeps fit by playing basketball each week with a group of former Swans players and for the past two years has competed in an over-35s soccer team. “I feel it’s come full circle,” he says.
Adam Goodes is returning to his first love, soccer. Source: Getty Images Adam Goodes has returned to an official sporting role, but not one his legion of fans may have expected.
Indigenous Australian Adam Goodes has been playing for the Sydney Swans since 1999. Michael Dodge/Getty Images. ... Soccer has also been grappling with high-profile incidents of racism.
Named for Adam Goodes' playing number and set in the era of the Sydney great's war cry, '37' tells the story of a down-on-their-luck country football team whose premiership prospects are boosted by ...
Adam Goodes had seen and heard enough when he retired in 2015 as one of the most illustrious Indigenous players in the Australian Football League.
Sydney star Adam Goodes to play predominantly up forward as he works his way back to full fitness Source: Foxsports. By Adrian Warren from Aap. June 26th, 2012 10:48 pm.
After 18 years of playing elite football – 372 games, 464 goals, two Brownlow Medals, two premierships – Goodes left the game in silence. Today Goodes is a mentor and a cultural warrior ...
Sydney's dual Brownlow Medalist Adam Goodes says he would like to see the profile of the AFL Players' Association's Most Valuable Player Award lifted after declaring on Tuesday that was the award most ...
A decade after Adam Goodes performed his iconic Indigenous war dance, it's been revealed how the Sydney Swans champion feels about reconnecting with the game that made him famous.
All too often racism undermines the notion of a level playing field. HARDtalk’s Stephen Sackur speaks to an athlete who made a stand. Adam Goodes was a star player in Aussie Rules football.
Adam Goodes had seen and heard enough when he retired in 2015 as one of the most illustrious Indigenous players in the Australian Football League. Nearly six years later, it appears the pain from ...
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