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BHP Streamer Screamer: How you can be amongst the first finalists with a chance to win $5000

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Nick RynnePerthNow
VideoWeek 1 of BHP Streamer Screamer

Massive hangs in the goal square, half-court buzzer beaters and even full-pitch goals scored by a goalkeeper.

The first week of the BHP Streamer Screamer competition has seen plenty, and there’s still time to get your entries in for a chance to win $5000.

Streamer, Australia’s most innovative community sports streaming platform, has partnered with BHP to discover and reward the best local sporting highlights out there.

You can send in your clips or a URL from Instagram, TikTok, YouTube or Vimeo at streamer.com.au/screamer to go into the running.

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Each week, three entries will be selected as the weekly winners, receiving a $100 Jim Kidd Sports voucher and having their highlights presented on 7NEWS Perth by West Coast great Josh Kennedy.

Each weekly winner then moves on to the voting stage, where the ultimate BHP Streamer Screamer will win $5000 for themselves and $1000 for their community club.

Whether it’s scoring a miracle goal, taking a spectacular mark, or just a hilarious blooper, if you’ve got vision of your sporting exploits, you will be a chance to win big.

To go in the running for the first batch of weekly prizes, you must get your entries in by 5pm Tuesday, August 8.

The BHP Streamer Screamer has unearthed plenty of epic moments, and some of them have a backstory to match.

Case in point, the Alkimos Pirates Lacross club. They submitted the jubilant scenes following their first win in five years - and you can sense the emotion which spilled over.

Streamer Screamer. The Alkimos Pirates Lacrosse Club Division two women. The club submitted a clip of the team’s first-ever win after losing every game for the first five years of the club’s existence. (L-R) Shayana Torney, Tamara Sanders, Marah Crane, Joanne Todd, Nikita Crane.
Camera Icon(L-R) Shayana Torney, Tamara Sanders, Marah Crane, Joanne Todd, Nikita Crane of the Alkimos Pirates. Credit: Jackson Flindell/The West Australian

“One of the girls wasn’t able to play and she’s been there from the beginning and she was in tears, as well as her mum,” team member Joanne Todd said.

“They rang one of the guys that plays in one the Division Three guys team and he basically rushed down to see it, because we were so close, and he was there to see us when our first game as well.

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