SAS Australia

SAS Australia

Monday-Wednesday 7.30pm

The eight recruits still on course in the hope of passing SAS selection are:

  • Dan Ewing – Actor
  • Heath Shaw – AFL Star
  • Jana Pittman – Dual Olympian
  • Jessica Peris – Sprinter
  • Jett Kenny – Ironman
  • John Steffensen – Olympic Medallist
  • Mark Philippoussis – Tennis Legend
  • Sam Burgess – NRL Star

Monday 7.30pm, recruits play dirty when pitted against each other in a do-or-die test of true grit and an excruciating five kilometre log haul through rugged terrain sees them drop like flies.

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There was a civilian series filmed back-to-back with the current series.

This next celebrity series is beginning filming soon (if it isn’t already started). Ant and the team were in hotel quarantine when the current series started airing. That could have been either for filming or a pre-production recon trip.

SAS Australia recruits 2022 celebrity cast

Seventeen stars volunteer for the toughest test of their lives

The most talked about show in the country, SAS Australia , is back in 2022 with a brand-new line-up of star recruits, ready to take on the gruelling SAS selection course.

Seventeen Aussie celebrities, including Olympians Geoff Huegill and Melissa Wu, AFL commentator Wayne Carey, singer/actor Melissa Tkautz, reality stars Locky Gilbert and Anna Heinrich, and champion boxers Ebanie Bridges and Michael Zerafa, have volunteered for the toughest test of their lives – a series of physical and psychological tests from the real SAS selection process.

These men and women will be cut off from the outside world at a secret base in spectacular terrain – where they will eat, sleep and train together in punishing conditions – with no allowances or exceptions made for their celebrity status or gender.

As they’re subjected to extreme physical endurance, sleep deprivation, interrogation and psychological testing, the celebrities will be pushed beyond their limits. Some will reach breaking point and withdraw. Who will have the mental strength to tough it out to the end?

The full line-up of star recruits set to take on SAS Australia in 2022 is:

  • Anna Heinrich, 34 – TV Personality

  • Barry Hall, 44 – AFL Great

  • Darius Boyd, 34 – Retired NRL Star

  • Ebanie Bridges, 35 – Champion Boxer

  • Ellia Green, 28 – Rugby Superstar

  • Geoff Huegill, 42 – Olympic Swimming Legend

  • Locky Gilbert, 32 – Reality TV Star

  • Melissa Tkautz, 47 – Singer / Actor

  • Melissa Wu, 29 – Olympic Diver

  • Michael Zerafa, 29 – Professional Boxer

  • Millie Boyle, 23 – NRLW Player

  • Orpheus Pledger, 28 – Actor

  • Paul Fenech, 51 – Comedian

  • Riana Crehan, 34 – Motorsports Presenter

  • Richard Buttrose, 49 – Convicted Drug Dealer

  • Simone Holtznagel, 28 – Model

  • Wayne Carey, 50 – AFL Commentator

The second season of SAS Australia , currently airing Monday-Wednesday 7.30pm on Channel 7 and 7plus, has grabbed the nation’s attention, reaching more than 6.1 million Australians and scoring an average total audience of 1.25 million nationally per episode.

The new celebrity season of SAS Australia will premiere in 2022.

SAS Australia: Hell Week

The special event series SAS Australia: Hell Week starts soon, featuring everyday Australians going to hell and back in the hope of passing SAS selection.

SAS Australia is produced by Screentime, a Banijay Group company, based on a Minnow Films format.

Heard of hardly any of them!

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Anna was picked by Tim Robards in the season 1 finale of The Bachelor. They married in June 2018 and Anna gave birth to a girl in November 2020.
Locky was the Bachelor in season 8 last year. He was also on Australian Survivor.
Richard Buttrose is the nephew of ABC chair Ita Buttrose. He married publicist and long-term girlfriend Tiffany Farrington in Sydney last week, a few days before he joined SAS Australia.

I heard most of the names on that list apart from Ebanie and Millie, so I had to Google their names.

According to today’s Sunday Herald Sun, filming only commenced yesterday (Saturday).

I remember Millie- she was the NRLW player that was in that saga for the kiss with the dogs player in the bathroom a few months ago

Why are you a celeb just because your a nephew of a chair of the media company?

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Not AFL Champion?

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A promo aired last night during the show for SAS Australia: Hell Week. Coming soon.

Featured civilians. So I guess it isn’t a whole season. Probably explains why Big Brother isn’t until November. This will probably bridge the gap from next weeks finale to BB.

SAS breaks three more recruits

Eight become five as Jett, Jessica and Heath call time on SAS journey

Tonight on SAS Australia, the remaining eight recruits were broken, battered and running on empty when Chief Instructor Ant Middleton explained they had a “disgusting” day ahead of them.

The first test of true grit saw recruits positioned on a narrow log, suspended over a torrent of rushing water, where they had to fight it out through a series of elimination rounds, in an effort to be the last man or woman standing.

It was every recruit for themselves and, when encouraged by the DS to play dirty, both Jessica Peris and John Steffensen chose to throw a handful of dirt at their opponents to get the upper hand, these ruthless tactics later sparking a healthy debate about one’s moral code on the course.

Surviving on basic rations, Jett Kenny had been struggling to fuel his depleted body and he chose to VW, telling mum Lisa on the phone: “The biggest thing I’ve learned is not to doubt myself as much or not to set my standards so high and if I don’t achieve them then I shouldn’t be so hard on myself.

“I came into this trying to find where my limit was, I wanted to see if I could break through that mental barrier, to push myself and I think I really did that. I’ll keep testing that limit and make myself either a better athlete or a better person.”

Recruits then faced a body-crushing log race, hauling a 150 kilogram log through five kilometres of unforgiving terrain to a rendezvous point high on a mountain peak, all in one hour.

Barley a kilometre into the back-breaking task, Jessica separated from the group and handed in her number, telling mum Nova on the phone: “It’s been absolutely brutal, but it’s been awesome.

“I’m happy, I’m one of the last girls so I did really well. I’m really proud of myself. Everything that I thought I couldn’t do, I did.”

Heath Shaw was next to falter in the excruciating log haul, handing in his number in a moment of weakness before being convinced to take it back.

As Ant debriefed recruits after the punishing task, an emotional Heath admitted he was empty and quit the course for good, saying: “I’m done, I’ve given my all.

“I’ve learned that when you think you’re done you can go a little bit more physically. If I could sum up my time on this course I would say it was the hardest, most uniquely positive experience I’ve had,” he reflected.

The five recruits still on course in the hope of passing SAS selection are:

Dan Ewing – Actor
Jana Pittman – Dual Olympian
John Steffensen – Olympic Medallist
Mark Philippoussis – Tennis Legend
Sam Burgess – NRL Star

Tuesday 7.30pm, recruits face a high speed, high intensity tactical driving mission which leads to an explosive dressing down, before an unexpected ambush tests their resolve.

Willie Mason has been forced to pull out of the third season of SAS Australia, after he ruptured his left pectoral muscle in pre-training. He was not among the 17 people named on the weekend to take part.
https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/entertainment/sas-injury-shock-for-nrl-great-willie-mason/news-story/98f3fd13876542bf55a79785cadf101d

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Hell Week starts next Monday 7:30 pm

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Jana reaches her limit

Dizzy heights then a dizzy spell for “Supermum” in final push to selection

Tonight on SAS Australia, with just 48 hours to go, Dan Ewing, 35; Jana Pittman, 38; John Steffensen, 38; Mark Philippoussis, 44; and Sam Burgess, 32, had to dig deep and embrace every remaining task in an effort to prove to the DS that they are worthy of passing SAS selection.

First up for the final five recruits was one of the most dangerous extraction methods in the Special Forces. Travelling on a high speed Zodiac, they had to dive into the water and swim against the hazardous downdraft of a chopper to a flimsy ladder, before hauling themselves up a terrifying 15 metre climb weighed down by their wet clothes and boots. Worse still, the task was to be complete in just 90 seconds without the safety of a harness.

All five recruits passed the strenuous task, including Jana, who became the first female ever to successfully complete the Ladder Troop Extraction on SAS selection.

John told the DS that it was the very first task he felt good about, “clear, calm and in control”, admitting later to Sam: “You know what I learnt with this, to pull up. I kind of feel like I found my purpose, like I really found it.

“I’ve never had limitations in my life, ever. Never. Full pelt everything, that was always the end result, aggression. But I realised it’s ok, it’s not weak. That’s what I got out of this. I’m feeling peace.”

In a grim test of the heart, recruits had to write death letters to their loved ones, and were overcome with emotion reading them out to each other.

Physically, psychologically and now emotionally drained, recruits then had to muster every ounce of strength for an extreme test of endurance – a merciless two kilometre assault course featuring several obstacles on water and land, designed to push them beyond their capabilities.

Forced to do lap after excruciating lap, the DS called an end to the task after a heavily fatigued Jana reached her limit and collapsed, telling the medic she was “super dizzy” and seeing spots. Asthma sufferer John also went down and needed to be treated with oxygen.

As the recovering recruits made their way back to camp, their car was hijacked by armed hostiles, who hooded and bound them.

Tuesday 7.30pm, the toughest test of their lives comes to a heart-stopping conclusion for the captured recruits. Which of the final five has done enough to pass SAS selection?

SAS Australia Final week continues Tuesday-Wednesday 7.30pm on Channel 7 and 7plus

I might be wrong but SAS seems like one of those shows that after a while might suffer from getting repetitive and drop in ratings (haven’t checked ratings for it since the last season)

You can change the people in it , but it’s not a reality show they can really change the format much over time if people get tired of it . Or can they? Different location… maybe…

Most people watch on 7plus. I watch it on that afterwards as I can get the uncensored version.

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From today’s Seven upfronts

From Upfronts:

The most talked about TV show in the country is back in 2022 with a brand-new line-up of star recruits, ready to take on the gruelling SAS selection course. Seventeen celebrities including Olympians Geoff Huegill and Melissa Wu, AFL star Wayne Carey, singer/actor Melissa Tkautz and reality stars Locky Gilbert and Anna Heinrich have volunteered for the toughest test of their lives. Plus, Chief Instructor Ant Middleton and DS Ollie Ollerton are joined by two new DS: retired US Navy Seal Clint Emerson and former British Special Forces soldier Dean Stott. SAS Australia is produced by Screentime (a Banijay Group company), based on a Minnow Films format, for the Seven Network.


As a viewer I definitely think it drags and gets very repetitive towards the end. Pretty sick of it to be honest. It hasn’t helped that some of the challenges haven’t been that great in the last half and are over very quickly like the tactical driving challenge. Having so many recruits bail so early has really hurt it as well, especially as they aren’t very dynamic or entertaining people left except John. They are all super exhausted as well which doesn’t exactly make for riveting television

I really love the location, so I don’t have a problem if they keep that the same.

Do they though? Are the time shifted ratings good?

Is the uncensored version really the uncensored version or is it just the swearing that isn’t bleeped out?

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Full swearing etc

Thanks, so no nudity?

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lol no :joy: (as in no tits and dicks)