I Felt Backstabbed by Collingwoods Veteran cry’s

I Felt Backstabbed by Collingwoods Veteran cry’s

Hawthorn forward Jack Ginnivan says he is finally enjoying his footy again after leaving Collingwood on the back of winning the flag in 2023. The Hawks star says he is loving the freedom that he has been afforded to play with at the Hawks, stating it is a nice contrast to the “very structured” system at his former AFL club.

Ginnivan burst onto the scene in 2020 at the Magpies, kicking 40 goals to help lift his side from second last on the ladder to a preliminary final in just one season.

Collingwood AFL star Jack Ginnivan banned over drug use | Newcastle Herald  | Newcastle, NSW

But in 2023, Ginnivan struggled to recapture the same form during Collingwood’s premiership run and fell out of favour at the club, with GWS recruit Bobby Hill largely preferred over him.

Ginnivan was part of the starting 22 on grand final day against Brisbane last year but was largely played out of the game with just seven touches and no goals. While Hill was awarded the Norm Smith Medal for best on ground for his four-goal display.

In the weeks that followed, Ginnivan accepted a deal to join his boyhood club Hawthorn on the back of a tumultuous last 12 months at the Pies. Last year Ginnivan was banned for two matches for illicit drug use and landed in the headlines for attending the Mooney Valley races on grand final eve.

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But since making the move to Hawthorn in the off-season, the forward has recaptured the form that saw him become one of the AFL’s hottest prospects. In 2024, Ginnivan is averaging six more touches per game compared to last year, largely due to being given a licence to roam up the ground more as a forward. And Ginnivan puts his career resurgence down to the culture at the Hawks.

“Collingwood is a very structured system and it’s very hard to be a forward at Collingwood,” Ginnivan said on SEN on Monday. “Sometimes there were a few dark days where you’re wearing the invisible cloak.

“At Hawthorn, which has been so great for me, you’re allowed to be free and you can go and change over patterns and stuff — whereas at Collingwood you were stuck on one side and things like that. It’s been great to be able to roam free and be able to touch the ball more because I feel like when I touch the ball it can work really well for me.”

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