March 29, 2026 — 10:34am
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Collingwood will be without skipper Darcy Moore as they enter a string of blockbuster games in April.
The Magpies confirmed on Sunday morning that a low-grade hamstring strain suffered during Friday’s win over GWS Giants would rule the star defender out for the next “three to four weeks”.
Darcy Moore (left) and Scott Pendlebury (centre) watch Friday night’s match from the bench.AFL Photos
That stretch includes the Thursday-night game against the Brisbane Lions at the Gabba which lead into the Easter weekend, followed by games against Fremantle at home, arch rival Carlton, and, possibly, the Anzac Day clash with Essendon.
It’s a bitter blow for Moore who was playing his first game for the season on Friday at Marvel Stadium.
Collingwood’s executive general manager of football Charlie Gardiner said scans taken since Friday night’s game showed Moore had an inflamed bursa behind his knee.
“We are obviously disappointed for Darcy. Scans yesterday showed he has sustained a low-grade hamstring strain along with an inflamed bursa behind his knee, which is expected to keep him out for the next three to four weeks,” Gardiner said.
“Darcy will continue to work closely with our medical and high-performance team as he progresses through his return-to-play timeline.”
Collingwood beat the Giants on Friday despite Moore being sidelined with what, at the time, was described as “hamstring awareness” and his predecessor as captain, Scott Pendlebury, also hobbled with an Achilles strain.
Moore spent long stints off the ground on Friday. Speaking to media after the match, Collingwood coach Craig McRae said Moore’s return to the field had been cautiously handled.
“It’s hamstring awareness,” McRae said. “For those following his rehab back to play, he had this about 10 to 12 days ago – the same thing – and we were just, ‘No risk, no risk, no risk’.
“But we were in the game, and you go, ‘Can he push through? Can he take some minutes?’ Because it’s important that, in terms of rotations, to see if he could take some minutes without risk.
“Now I say that, but I’m just backing in the high-performance team. That’s not my area, and so we did that.
“But he’s not right. He’s not 100 per cent. Has he done a hamstring? I’m not sure. I don’t think so… but we’ll obviously do all the investigations and find out.”
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Default avatarGreg Dundas – Greg is a desk editor at The AgeFrom our partners
