After moving forward from the backline in round 11, Griffin Logue perhaps had a bit more confidence to have some digs at a pair of Freo backs in the latest episode of Old Bull Young Buck.
He and host David Mundy welcomed Hayden Young and Heath Chapman for the episode, where Logue dug up some significant dirt on the guests.
Young copped the brunt, with the first blow coming when it was revealed his close mate Chapman never actually requested to live with his now former housemate.
“(Young and Chapman) are probably the more unspoken bromance going around at the Club,” Logue said.
“These boys have flown under the radar and always seem to be hanging out together, the dynamic duo at half back.”
Young said their friendship started when Chapman moved in following the 2020 NAB AFL Draft.
“I took Chap under my wing when he first got drafted, he came to live with me. That’s where it started,” Young said.
“Did you request to come and stay with me? Was that how it happened?”
It turns out it wasn’t, according to Chapman.
“Liam Henry lives with us as well, and I knew Liam previously, I played a bit of footy with him. So there was a bit of connection there and Youngy just happened to be in the same house.”
Logue continued as he proudly revealed that Young had attempted to woo his now long-term partner Rali with his knowledge of the Indonesian language on their first date at a Holy Moly in Frankston in Melbourne.
“You’ve done well here, this is true,” Young conceded.
“When I first started seeing her, it was right before my year 12 exams and I was studying Indonesian.
“Up to that time I had my oral exam coming up, so I was studying quite a bit and trying to remember my one minute speech.
“I thought I’d try and impress her and reel off the speech to her, which she thought was a bit strange but I was pretty happy with it.
“I think I did well in my exam too, so it was an interesting move, but it seemed to have worked.”
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Mundy respected the move.
“It’s working 100 per cent from the number of times I’ve heard that technique - one from one,” he joked.
While Chapman has been an elite defender at AFL level, Logue revealed that it wasn’t always smooth sailing for the West Perth product, with his first Auskick session apparently ending in tears.
“I can’t remember it, but Mum reckons my first day at Auskick, it was raining and I cracked it,” Chapman said.
“I probably started crying and I didn’t want to go out there and play.”
Logue kept digging, “did you say anything in particular…like how you wanted to live with her forever and drive a certain car?”
Chapman gave in, “potentially, yeah, a pink convertible. I might have been a bit different as a kid, a big mummy’s boy.”
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