MELBOURNE—Super Netball League outfit, New South Wales Swifts announced yesterday that it has parted company with ace Trinidad and Tobago goal shooter Samantha Wallace-Joseph.
The club indicated in a statement that the separation was a result of the behaviour of Wallace-Joseph, 30, in the team environment, but they did not elaborate on the details of the off-court saga that had brought it to this decision.
On Thursday evening the team confirmed the star shooter had left “by mutual agreement”.
“For the past number of weeks, the club has been working with Samantha Wallace-Joseph and her management in relation to a matter which concerned her behaviour within the team environment,” a statement read.
“For the wellbeing of all concerned the nature of the matter will remain confidential. However, it has been mutually agreed that parting ways is the best way forward for both Samantha and the club.”
The Swifts had previously stuck by Wallace-Joseph as she recovered from a serious knee injury, her return marred by anti-transgender comments made on social media.
Club statement
The NSW Swifts can confirm that the club has today parted ways with Samantha Wallace-Joseph by mutual agreement.
For the past number of weeks, the club has been working with Samantha Wallace-Joseph and her management in relation to a matter which concerned her behaviour within the team environment.
For the wellbeing of all concerned the nature of the matter will remain confidential. However, it has been mutually agreed that parting ways is the best way forward for both Samantha and the club.
The behavioural standard expected of everyone in the Swifts environment—across players, coaches, and staff—is a team first and there are no exceptions to that.
Wallace-Joseph played 84 games for the Swifts since joining in 2017 and won Premierships in 2019 and 2021. The Swifts thank Samantha for her service to the club.
The club will be making no further comment at this time.
Wallace-Joseph absent
from line-up
Earlier this week rumours continued to gather steam after Wallace-Joseph was again absent from their line-up for the second straight week after first being left out of the team due to a coach’s decision in a 56-64 Round Eight loss to Melbourne Mavericks on June 2.
The club remained tight-lipped about their reason for dropping Wallace-Joseph from the side, but they confirmed in a news release on Monday that it had nothing to do with a social media incident earlier this year when she questioned an overlap between Easter Sunday and international transgender day of visibility.
The 30-year-old Toco-born Wallace-Joseph apologised and said she was taken out of context, and Proud2Play, an Australian organisation, whose purpose is to reduce social isolation, stigma, and discrimination of LGBTQI+ folks through the power of sport and recreation to create safe and affirming spaces for participation, said the goaler was part of their education session during Inclusion Round last month.
Swifts confirmed that Wallace-Joseph would have been unavailable for selection while they dealt with a matter relating to behaviour within the team environment and that it was working with the player and her management team.
But media reports strongly indicate that all signs pointed to the negotiations leading to an unprecedented termination or mutual parting of ways.
Wallace-Joseph has been a beloved member of the Swifts since her signing seven years ago and helped the club win two SNL titles and won an internal vote to be named the Most Valuable Player of the club three times.
Wallace-Joseph injured
out for two seasons
She only returned to action this season after recovering from a career-threatening anterior cruciate ligament injury that put her on the side-lines from March 28, 2022, in their season opener when the Swifts began defence of their 2021 title against Giants, for two seasons and also forced her to miss the World Cup last year.
Following two years of recovery, Wallace-Joseph made her return to league play on April 13 this year for the Swifts 2024 season opener against Sunshine Coast Lightning.
Before getting injured in 2022, Wallace amassed 77 appearances for the Swifts over five seasons and scored 2,720 goals inclusive of 75 super shots (two points per shot) for the Swifts.
In her seven matches to start the 2024 campaign, she has converted 187 of 193 attempts in addition to seven of 16 super shots for a career tally of 2,914 goals, with her last outing for the Swifts being the Round Seven 58-33 loss to Adelaide Thunderbirds on May 25, in which she only contributed five goals from seven attempts.
Team-mates unfollowing
Wallace-Joseph
Over her time in Australia, there have been instances when Wallace-Joseph has thought about calling it quits, namely when her father suffered a stroke, when he passed away, and during a two-year injury recovery.
According to a report from Brittany Carter on the abc.net.au website, through difficult times, the Swifts have built their reputation on being a close-knit family, particularly for athletes living overseas or interstate without a support network.
As such, two team-mates were Wallace-Joseph’s bridesmaids at her wedding in March and their partners were also part of the bridal party as groomsmen. Plus, all 10 full-time contracted players and some training partners attended the nuptials before the season started.
Although the Swifts are adamant the recent issue has nothing to do with Wallace-Joseph’s gaffe at Easter, it seems undeniable that fractions in the group started to appear at this point.
The article also stated that fans have speculated about various teammates unfollowing Wallace-Joseph on social media and deleting photos from her wedding, but this may be overblown—it appears only one has unfollowed at the time of publication and there are plenty of happy snaps with her team-mates still in her tagged photos.
Another report suggested Wallace-Joseph failed to turn up at the airport for the Swifts’ flight to Melbourne last week, but the shooter had been dropped from the team and it is uncommon for a player outside the top 10 to travel unless it is for leadership reasons.
Following the parting of ways, the Swifts now have 21 days to name a replacement—temporary or permanent—and it could be any player they wish. It does not have to be one of their training partners.