Updated June 15, 2026 â 7:12pm, first published 2:23pm
Gold Coast coach Damien Hardwick has escaped a fine but has been put on notice by the AFL that he faces a heavy financial penalty if he repeats his stinging criticism of the umpiring in Friday nightâs loss to Geelong.
AFL executive head of football Greg Swann called Hardwick directly on Monday to discuss the comments and express the leagueâs disappointment, but left the conversation with a warning and no fine.
Suns coach Damien Hardwick vented his frustration after Friday nightâs game. AFL Photos Hardwick complained about home-ground umpiring and decisions that went against his side as well as recommending a change to the lasso rule.
âI didnât have a problem with his issue around the lasso, but probably the next bit was a bit overstepping the mark. Weâll have a chat, and hopefully we can move forward from there,â Swann told The Age âs Real Footy podcast on Monday.
âI know from my experience in club land, we hated getting please-explain letters. I just think it is easier to pick the phone up and have a chat.â
Speaking on Fox Footyâs AFL 360 on Monday night, Hardwick said Swann was âdoing his jobâ.
âObviously, the umpires were disappointed, and Iâve got to be better with that â I understand that,â he said.
âBut he also understood Iâm there to protect my players and try and get the game played or looking at in a certain way, but I understood the conversation we had and, to his credit, he was very understanding of my point, but he made it very, very clear, Swanny, that I overstepped the mark.
âI commend him on his way that he does go about it â having the conversation, no need for emails, no need for letters, just a man-on-man conversation, so I really appreciate it.
âThe point was very well-made by the great man.â
When asked if he was now on a short leash with the AFL, Hardwick said with a laugh, âIâve been on a short leash for five years, I reckonâ.
âIt is something Iâve got to get better at, but I do wear my heart on my sleave,â Hardwick added.
âIâm a horrible loser, Iâm not going to lie. My mother has said that, [and] I spoke to her again tonight.â
Hardwick had suggested post-match that the decision-making was influenced by the raucous Geelong crowd at GMHBA Stadium.
âIt was like the Roman Colosseum. I reckon they [the umpires] were waiting for the crowd to do this one [thumbs down] then, all of a sudden, free kick,â Hardwick said. âAt the end of the day it is what it is, home-ground advantage, we understand that, we know youâre up against it from the start, but a couple of them, I thought, werenât there.â
Swann said umpires were trained to put crowd noise to one side and agreed that negative commentary about umpiring could deter young officials from being involved in the game.
âI think it does, but itâs hard to do a direct correlation. My personal view is there is a lot of media now around the game, and I just think itâs lazy journalism to focus in on umpires,â he said.
âThereâs games where itâs close and thereâs mistakes by players and potentially umpires, but in the main itâs players who are out there for most of the time who make a blue.â
Daniel Rioli was fined by the MRO for this collision with an umpire in the first quarter on Friday night. Channel Seven The Suns still face the prospect of a significant fine after defender Daniel Rioli was cited for making careless contact with an umpire. Rioli was slugged $1500 for the offence, his first of that nature.
But he has chosen to contest the charge, and if his challenge is unsuccessful he will become the fifth Suns players this season to be found guilty of making contact with an umpire, triggering an AFL fine of up to $50,000 for the club.
âGold Coast will get fined [if Rioliâs charge is sustained], weâve just got to work out how much that is and what it looks like,â Swann said.
âWe probably will have to wait until tomorrow [Tuesday] because Gold Coast have put in a submission this morning around the Rioli contact, so theyâre going to contest that. Obviously, weâll see where that lands because if they win then it goes back to four [offences] and if they lose then theyâre at five.â
Gold Coast, GWS and Collingwood were all told last week they had four player fines for umpire contact this season, meaning a club fine was pending if they had any further indiscretions of the same nature.
âThey [the clubs on four payers contact fines for the season] all got a notice last week to say youâre on the cusp,â Swann said.
âWe can fine up to $50,000, but it would be unlikely it would be that much, but weâll certainly fine them and put them on notice that thereâll be further fines if they turn into six[th] and seven[th] and eight[th offences].
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