No limit on what Mavs can achieve, says Diamonds star Price

March 12, 2026 BY

Despite plenty of changes to the playing roster for 2026, Diamonds star Jamie Lee-Price has hailed the Mavericks' pre-season as 'seamless'. Photo: MELBOURNE MAVERICKS

FOR star recruit Jamie-Lee Price, Melbourne Mavericks’ season opener against Giants in Bendigo will be all about her new team, not who they will be facing.

In a quirky sideline to round one of the 2026 Suncorp Super Netball season, the Australian Diamonds midcourter will open her career with the Mavs against her former side.

But don’t expect Price, who spent 2017-25 with the Giants, to be daunted by the prospect.

With both teams undergoing a substantial list makeover during the off-season, including at the coaching helm following the appointments of Gerard Murphy (Mavs) and Nerida Stewart (Giants), both are fresh-look enough to be considered significantly transformed.

Besides that, the Mavs, with Price in tow, have already met the Giants in the pre-season, the two teams clashing on the Gold Coast in a practice match three weeks ago.

“That was a blessing in disguise, playing them in the Gold Coast recently. That’s one way to get that out of the way,” the 31-year-old said with club’s round one fixture at Red Energy Arena on Saturday. March 14 in mind.

“Like us, the Giants are a very new-look team as well.

“When I look at the Giants, I see a lot of the girls who have been waiting for their opportunity, as well as a lot of new faces, including Ned (Stewart) as the new coach.

“I am playing my old team, but I don’t feel like it’s exactly my old team with those changes.”

A raft of ins for the Mavs this season not only includes Price, but goaler Reilley Batcheldor and goal keeper Tara Hinchliffe, both from Sunshine Coast Lightning, while defender Jessie Grenvold has been promoted after being the club’s 11th player last season.

In a vote of confidence in their development program, Uneeq Palavi and Sacha McDonald have won promotion respectively as a training partner and member of last year’s reserves team.

While Price, who departed the Giants after winning her third consecutive club MVP award, missed a fair chunk of the Mavs’ pre-season due to her commitments with the Diamonds in their 3-0 clean sweep of Jamaica, she has relished the change of scenery and the challenge of helping build a team still in their SSN infancy heading into a third season.

“Busy being in the Diamonds can sometimes be a bit disruptive to being in clubland; we were away for like 30 days with the Diamonds, so I’ve kind of been in and out of Mavericks,” she said.

Jamie-Lee Price shows the style and performance sure to endear herself to Mavericks fans during the 2026 SSN season.

 

“But every time I come back the girls are really welcoming and I feel like I’ve slotted in really nicely.

“We have such a new group … some key players who have stuck by and stayed on with the Mavericks, but obviously Gez (Murphy) as the new head coach, Richo (Nicole Richardson) who has been the assistant coach since the start, and we’ve got some exciting players, who have joined the Mavericks as well.

“We are still a really new team, but I’m enjoying the new perspective from coaching styles.

“For us, I think it’s a case of the more playing time we get together, the better we’ll get.”

Encouragingly for Mavs fans, she sees definite signs of progress and the team ‘coming together’ as a unit.”We’ve had a fair bit of match play the last couple of weeks,” Price said.

“We’re quite lucky we have an amazing group of girls who are in our reserves (team) and they are very talented.

“They come into trainings every now and then and obviously Gez is still mixed up with the Victorian men’s team, so we get the Victorian men’s players coming in and challenging us as well.

“It’s always good to play against different opposition – it allows us to try new things, but also learn things about each other that you can’t sometimes simulate in training.”

Among those training partners and reserves team members are a pair of Bendigo Strikers VNL stars in Charlotte Sexton and Teal Hocking.

Sexton, a member of Australia’s gold medal-winning 21-and-under World Cup team last year and the best and fairest in each of the Strikers’ first two seasons in the state’s premier netball competition, has crossed to the Mavs after being a training partner with last year’s SSN premiers Melbourne Vixens in 2025.

Hocking’s elevation as a Mavs training partner was announced only last week.

Price is a huge wrap for both youngsters.

“Charlotte has slotted in really well. Seeing her every week and the confidence she is gaining, she is learning lots from the likes of Richo and Gez,” she said.

“Her future is very bright, which is extremely exciting for a Bendigo local.

“It was a big year for her last year, getting picked in the under-21s Australian team, so she’s had a taste of what the international world is like.

“Coming to the Mavs for the opportunity to gain some more experience will be great.

“She will learn a lot from Richo, as she specialises in defence and is also the assistant coach of the Diamonds as well. She’s going to go far.

Price is a big wrap for Bendigo’s Charlotte Sexton, who is a training partner with the Mavericks this season.

 

“Teal’s been coming in a fair bit and is just a great inclusion into our squad.

“She is so cool, calm and collected and her timing is impeccable. She adds so much to our group.

“We have such great training partners and such a good group.”

It has not taken long for Price to be won over by her new teammates.

As an outsider coming in herself, she said the recruits and new acquisitions had fitted in seamlessly and demonstrated their preparedness to work hard.

“As clichéd as it sounds, I can’t single out anyone,” she said.

“All of the girls have impressed me; it’s just been really smooth sailing coming in.

“Even playing our pre-season games, we’ve made lots of changes and put out different line-ups, but it’s been really seamless. It’s what every coach dreams of.

“We have so much versatility within our group and that really excites me. We are challenging each other lot.

“I’m really excited to see where we get to as a group. Even though we are really fresh, the sky is unlimited.

“Whatever we believe, I feel we can achieve.”

Yet to play finals, the Mavs have shown more than encouraging signs in their first two campaigns to suggest a breakout is not far off.

Price is confident they can take another step in the right direction in 2026.

“As a group, we have very high expectations of ourselves and each other, which is great,” she said.

“But as we are such a new-look team, I feel we can do whatever we believe we can do.

“As we saw last year, as long as you make the top four, anything can happen,” she added in reference to the Vixens coming from fourth spot at the end of the regular season to clinch a fairytale championship.

“So top four is a huge goal for us.”