Collingwood Fixture 2008

Collingwood Fixture 2008

Monday, June 15, 2009

[AFL-Review] AFL Round 12 Part 1

AFL Round 12 Part 1

 

Thanks to people who mailed in Brad Dick jokes, a few of you pointed out James Hird's "Dick's popped up from nowhere" on 'On The Couch', although Jim flushed violently right after which didn't help sell the line. Andrew Rodgers pointed out ABC radio's Dan Lonergan producing "Dick hard on the boundary-line", which isn't bad. Still prefer Tim Lane's effort from last week (which he's since admitted was deliberate), but it's early days yet. McAvaney, who likes to play on his camp persona, must be champing at the bit to do a Collywood game.

   

At Docklands:

Carlton    3.2   9.2   11.6   14.11.95

St. Kilda  7.2   9.5   13.7    16.8.104

 

There are many ways you can bet on the footy these days and if you'd backed Sainter defender Zac Dawson to kick the final and match-sealing goal here, very well done by you. This was a very good game in which the Bluies survived an initial Sainter onslaught and came back to compete very ruggedly. But Sinkilda managed to dig deep and find something to stay in front all night. Both teams emerged with credit, prior to their break. The Bluies made two selection changes following their good win in Brisbane, Jordan Bannister coming in for his first game of the year and Mark Austin was recalled, they replaced Bret Thornton (hamstring) and the dropped Brad Fisher. Seemed harsh, although Fisher did nothing last week. The Stainers lost Steven King for a month, suspended, and dropped Raphael Clarke and James Gwilt. Harsh too on Gwilt, but he probably hasn't been getting enough of the ball. They went to accommodate Sam Gilbert, Stephen Milne and Michael Gardiner, returning from injuries and suspension respectively.

 

Furious start from the Saints, their now trademark relentless tackling placed the Bluies under huge pressure, and the Bloobaggers wilted. The Blues were the better side in the first few minutes and managed a rushed behind before the Saints rattled on five straight goals. The Stains raced downfield from the kick-in of that point, Leigh Montagna passed towards leading Nick Riewoldt who was shoved under the ball by his man Paul Bower, but Stephen Milne ran onto the pill, executed a terrific blind-turn to avoid tackling and handballed for Adam Schneider to slam it through. From the following centre-clearance Saint man Andrew McQualter extracted the ball from a pack and lobbed a kick forward, the ball spilled from a Riewoldt-centered pack and as on-running McQualter roved the contest he was pushed over by Bloo Grigg. Free and there was a 50m penalty too for some reason, McQualter booted a simple goal. Riewoldt took the ruck contest for a ball-up at CHF, which he tapped down perfectly for Schneider to gather and boot another major. Riewoldt bagged some goals of his own, Justin Koschitzke lobbed a punt to the top o' the 'square and Riewoldt seized an excellent grab between Bloozers Bower and Hampson. 'Rooey' popped it through. A bit later Riewoldt goaled from the almost-identical spot as panicky Bower hauled him out of a marking contest. Twelve minutes in and the Stains led by 29 points. But the Blooze steadied a bit and managed to do something late in the stanza, led by the unlikely Kade Simpson. Simpson had already hurt Brendon Goddard with a slamming tackle, now Simpson found some rare space to run ahead and kick long, Max Hudghton spoiled Brendan Fevola but roving Eddie Betts gathered and saw his snap bounce through for the Blooze first goal. Riewoldt led out for another grab but his shot from 50m hit the post. The Bluies majored again, from a throw-in Marc Murphy was tackled without the ball by Farren Ray and Murphy's free-kick crept over the line from 50m. The Stains' lead was reduced to 18 points but they answered quickly, bad fumbling from Bluies Stevens and Scotland lost possession from the restart and handballs from Satiners Riewoldt and McQualter enabled Jason Gram to run inside 50, execute a great 360-degree blind-turn and slot a major. The Saints must practice blind-turns. Then a good sequence of passes involving Zac Dawson, ruckman Ben McEvoy and Milne ended with leading Riewoldt marking 45m out, 'Rooey' punted truly again and the Saints led by 30 points. That goal came with 34 seconds left in the korter, enough time for the Bluesers to score a major. Andrew Carrazzo wobbled a kick forward, it missed Fevola and Hudghton but Jeff Garlett ran onto the agget to gather and steer a running banana-kick for full points. Sinkilda led by 24 points at the first break.

 

The Bluesers scored an early goal in the second Mario, Simpson with a fairly weak free-kick as he dived following Gilbert's alleged high contact. Sinkilda continued to make the running though, Riewoldt again led out to mark 50m from goal and he speared a great pass for Gram to take a with-the-flight grab, Gram converted. Lenny Hayes, playing very well, won the following centre-clearance and kicked towards Riewoldt who clutched yet another grab, low-down. Bower could be consoled by the fact he'd be in all the highlights, but Riewoldt missed this shot. A minute later Bloo man Setanta O'hAilpin mongrelled a poor kick into the centre, causing an eventual turnover. Nick Dal Santo chipped a kick into the pocket for Justin Koschitzke to run out and mark, Koschitzke steered a sausage from the tight angle and the Saints led by 31 points. Stainer Sam Fisher snapped a point and Bloo spearhead Fevola appeared in the back-pocket to mark Gibbs's kick-in. Fev's first touch brought some sarcastic cheering but he'd had pretty ordinary service from his embattled midfielders. Then O'hAilpin produced another poor kick forward but Betts managed to collect it on-the-bounce and get a handball away to Shaun Grigg, he in turn found Carrazzo who snapped truly. The Saints led by 26 points as a change came over the game now, the Bluies lifted their intensity and started to become the hunters instead o' the hunted, exerting the pressure rather than being subject to it. But Carton also committed a few clangers to cruel their chances. Eventually Simpson's great, surging run from deep in defence set up a goal, Fevola gathered skillfully on-the-bounce and got a handball away for running Murphy to have a shot from 55m, Murphy's low kick was left by O'hAilpin to bounce and roll through for a goal. A bit later Sainter man Michael Gardiner marked at half-back and held the ball aloft, the 'sign' for the Stains to slow down prior to half-time, four minutes away. But it didn't work out that way. Soon Steven Browne was punting the Blooze into attack, an off-balance Gardiner flapped one-handed at the mark and his man Shaun Hampson gathered the ball to slot a goal off a step or two. Nick Stevens booted the Bluesers forward from the restart, after some scrap for possession Fevola's brilliant knock-on set up a snapped major for Grigg. Judd and Stevens combined to win the next centre-clearance, Betts roved a pack at half-forward and handballed for Jordan Bannister to curl a snap for full points. Four quick goals and five in-a-row from the Bluies, they trailed by 2 points. Riewoldt soccered a late behind to have the Saints a slender 3 points ahead at the long break.

 

The Saints recovered their steel to kick away again early in the third stanza. Maybe it had something to do with midfield rotations. Early on Gram collected the ball on the wing, aided by Gilbert's heavy shepherd, and jabbed a pass to Hayes, he in turn stabbed one for leading Riewoldt to mark wide on the flank and have a shot from 55m which just cleared Hampson on the line for full points. Close for a few minutes before Bloo Betts coughed up possession when tackled and Jarryn Geary kicked to unopposed Riewoldt on the wing, he chipped inboard to find running Dal Santo, then a handball ahead to Milne who finessed a bit before having a shot from just inside the 50, which bounced through. A bit later Grigg's free-kick from the back-pocket was sent suicidally towards a pack containing Riewoldt. Simpson scragged the red-hot Sainter, conceding a free-kick and worse, no Bluie guarded the mark, allowing Riewoldt to run in and bomb his fifth goal already. Gilbert's quick kick from hard on the boundary-line found Schneider marking 60m out, he handballed off for running Brendon Goddard to run inside 50 and roost a major. The Saints led by 27 points, but again the Bluebaggers responded in the latter half of the term. They did most of it without Chris Judd too, Juddy'd suffered a horribly broken nose in a clash-of-heads with team-mate Browne and the subsequent torrent of blood which gushed from Judd's hooter and mouth saw him frequently off the ground for ever-more elaborate bandaging. Fevola missed his first shot of the night but soon a smart switch-of-play saw Bannister marking on the 50m line, Bannister's shot just crept home. Some more behinds followed before the Bluies had some good luck in the final thirty seconds of the term, the Saints messed up an interchange which resulted in a free-kick to Fevola, 30m out and more-or-less right in front. Fevola converted and the Sainter lead was reduced to 13 points at three-korter-time. Why make an interchange 30 seconds before a break? Into the ultimate Mario and things tightened up considerably now, no goals in the first ten-or-so minutes of the stanza but a handful of behinds including misses from Bluies Betts and Fevola and Sainter Milne. Both sides were tackling hard, fewer risks were taken in playing-on. The Saints eventually managed a goal from a forward-flank throw-in, Bloo Murphy was flattened by a heavy bump and Schneider handballed backwards to Dal Santo, who lobbed a very good kick for the six-pointer to have the Satiners 17 points ahead. 'Dal' was pretty happy about it. Fevola rode Fisher for a great grab, but missed the shot. The Stainers lost the ball on the kick-in however and Carton managed a sausage, Ryan Houlihan chipped a poor pass which curved frustratingly away from leading Fevola but the ball eluded the Sainter backmen too and Betts raced onto the loose Sherrin to gather and spear the goal. A bit later Houlihan gathered Garlett's erratically-bouncing punt and fired a quick handball away, O'hAilpin did something good for a change by controlling a difficult ball very well before stabbing a short pass for leading Fevola to mark. Fev booted truly at last and the Satiners' lead was down to 4 points. The TV cut to Judd having several miles of tape wrapped around his bleeding schnoz. The Sainters replied, Steven Baker's smart kick found Goddard at half-forward, he handballed for Montagna to bomb a superb running kick for goal, from wide on the flank. Saints by 10 points. The Bluies' Browne tumbled a kick forward from the restart, it bounced away from leading Fevola but O'hAilpin collected the ball, sold a dummy and stabbed a goal. O'hAilpeeeen! and the Blues trailed by 4 points again. Then Bower's strong, back-pedalling grab set up a Bloo rebound, Simpson passed for leading Houlihan to mark on the 50m line but Houlihan's shot faded wide for a point. Saint Fisher drove the kick-in to a contest at half-back, the ball emerged to Hayes and he passed to leading Riewoldt on the wing, Riewoldt kicked ahead to find Schneider marking at half-forward. Schneider chipped a pass for Dawson to mark about 35m out on the right forward-flank. Not sure if he'd kicked a goal in his career before, but Dawson threaded this left-foot shot perfectly. The Saints led by 9 points with 1:15 remaining, Gram kicked the Stainers into attack from the next centre-bounce and they forced a series of ball-ups to the end. Tough win.

 

Sainter forward Nick Riewoldt (17 disposals, 10 marks, 5 goals) dominated poor ol' Bower, while Sinkilda midfielders Lenny Hayes (30 touches, 7 marks, 10 tackles), Nick Dal Santo (34 disposals, a goal) and Leigh Montagna (36 handlings, 11 marks, a goal) all continued their fine form. Max Hudghton (17 disposals, 6 marks) won praise for his game on all-important Bloo Fevola, although as mentioned Fev didn't have decent service or produce sufficient accuracy, the latter an ongoing problem. Hudghton was good, though. Clint Jones (15 possies) kept Judd pretty quiet, even before the latter's busted conk, Jason Gram (23 possessions, 2 goals) and Brendon Goddard (25 handlings, 8 marks, a goal) were handy. Adam Schneider bagged 2 goals. The Bluies were led into it by Kade Simpson (23 disposals, a goal) and Bryce Gibbs (25 touches). With the Blooze main midfield men squeezed out of it by the Sainter pressure, others like Steven Browne (18 disposals) and Shaun Grigg (28 possessions, a goal) stepped up to win the ball. Andrew Carrazzo (26 handlings, a goal) played well and defender Michael Jamison (11 disposals, 5 marks) did a very good job on Koschitzke. There are those who reckon Setanta O'hAilpin (10 possies, 5 marks, a goal) played well at CHF. He did some good things at the end there, but wasn't so great overall. Nick Stevens (19 possies) was alright. Marc Murphy, Jordan Bannister, Eddie Betts and Brendan Fevola kicked 2 goals each, Fev scored 2.3. Brett Ratten fingered the problem. "If you give the opposition five [goals] to zip in about fifteen minutes in a head start, against a team that's conceded on average about 58 points per game to the opposition . . . we made it pretty tough," Ratten said. "They got their hands on the ball really early and their cleanness with the footy . . . At one stage, it was 39 possessions to 12, when we yelled out in the [coaches'] box, so it was all going one way. The opportunities that were created for their forwards outweighed ours by tenfold, so from that point, we just played catch up. We tinkered with the centre-bounce structures and personnel, so we got it back on even keel by half time, but it took a bit of work . . . We asked the players to get on the front foot and we thought we could have a free hit - we had nothing to lose - let's have a go and let's see what could happen or eventuate and we kicked 3.5 in the last and blew an opportunity or a window right there in the end of the game . . . We spoke about how after today we'd actually see where we're at and how far we are off a legitimate team. They've played some fantastic footy, St Kilda, and they deserve to be where they are - they're got some great players and some dangerous players and to a man, they stick to their roles. They were a great challenge for our young group and I thought after the first 12 or 15 minutes, we stood up and we actually confronted and at times played better. But at end of the day, they actually just had a bit more skill and execution of the footy." Ross Lyon said "The competition is littered with teams that have been in strong positions and fallen away dramatically in the last seven or eight [rounds]. I've had a look at our draw and we still have got to go interstate three times and we've got the Hawks and Geelong and we've got Richmond after the bye which will be pretty tough with the new coach. So we've got a lot of challenges in front of us for sure." He was asked about Dawson playing in attack and the sealing goal. "We've had (the move) up, not up our sleeve, but we know he can play there," Lyon said. "(Dawson) played a lot for Box Hill up there when Hawthorn were experimenting with him and he kicked a lot of goals. He certainly knows what to do down there and he is really balanced and purposeful. I said to [assistant coach] Leigh Tudor: 'will he kick it?' and he said: 'yeah, he is a beautiful kick for goal at training'. So he was confident and it's what fairytales are made of; kicking a winning goal after you've been delisted and you come in."    

 

At Marrara Oval, Darwin:

Footscray      4.2   8.5   13.9   21.11.137

Port Adelaide  1.1   4.1    5.2     7.2.44

 

Footyscray have run into a rare patch of form, dishing out another thumping here in Darwin. Eade correctly identified this latest romp over the Powder as the best of the recent victories as it was a four-quarter effort, rather than just a half. We didn't learn anything new about Port. They're no good. Afterwards Flower coach Mark Williams reached for the injury excuse, with Chad Cornes, Travis Boak and Shaun Burgoyne heading a clutch of absent players, and Daniel Motlop succumbing to more ankle trouble in this one. But the Powder's efforts in all aspects are just far too weak. Josh Carr's recruitment and selection has been a disaster, admittedly speed has never been his asset but Carr was way off the pace here. At least the Power received $1 million from the AFL during the week to ease their financial problems. In selection the Doggies regained Scott Welsh and Robert Murphy from suspension and injury respectively, outgoing were dropped pair Stephen Tiller and Brennan Stack. Port regained Robbie Gray and Daniel Motlop and gave a debut to former Richmun flanker Danny Meyer. Luckless Travis Boak was out with a knee injury, he'll miss up to six weeks they reckon. Alipate Carlile missed with 'flu while Nick Lower was dropped.

 

Typically warm, steamy night in the top end with plenty of moisture in the air and on the ground. The Doggies had plenty of the ball early with Daniel Cross and Adam Cooney busy 'round packs, Ryan Hargrave picked up a welter of touches running off half-back. Hargrave was involved in the opening goal, lurking up to half-forward to accept Jason Akermanis's pass and then punt into the pocket where Brad Johnson held a strong back-pedalling mark under pressure from Chaplin. Johnno threaded it through. But not much happened for the next ten minutes as players struggled to handle and kick the greasy, dew-slicked ball. Eventually the Pups scored a second goal, with a switch-of-play and running Hargrave again passed for leading Akermanis for a mark on the 50m line, Aker bombed a kick to the goal-square where Will Minson out-marked Toby Thurstans and booted a goal. The Dogs led by 12 points. Port put together a decent move, Peter Burgoyne handballed for Robbie Gray to run forward and lob a pass for leading Daniel Motlop to mark and boot a very good major from 50m. Motlop's kick bisected two thin, leaning posts that appeared to be made of bamboo. The Dogs missed a shot and Port's Steven Salopek, who started well, drove the kick-in to pack from which the ball spilled, Doggy Lindsay Gilbee soccered the ball ahead and won a free for, um, something. Gilbee booted a goal. Late in the term the Pups had a throw-in in the forward-pocket and there was a bit of what thugby league folks refer to as aerial ping-pong before Ryan Griffen snapped a very noice goal. The Dogs led by 19 points at the first break and they eased away with two quick goals to start quartier le deuxieme. Cross extracted the agget from a pack at half-forward and handballed to Cooney, he chipped a backwards pass to tagger Liam Picken in space and Picken played-on to boot the sausage. A bit later Cooney grabbed the ball from another contest at half-forward, Kane Cornes smothered Cooney's kick but the ball rebounded to Hargrave, a handpass and Shaun Higgins passed for leading Josh Hill to mark and convert. The Dogs led by a handy 31 points now. There were a few tight minutes as Port battled a bit, they began to move the ball a little better. Ruckman Brendon Lade had a free at a ball-up on the wing, he honoured Warren Tredrea's long lead with an accurate pass and Tredders played-on quickly to kick for Brett Ebert to take a grab behind Dale Morris. Ebert majored. The Bullpups replied with string of short-passes to move inside 50, Higgins attempted one to no-one really but Powderman Rodan's diving punch knocked the ball to Bully Callan Ward, who slotted a goal. Carr won the ball from the restart for the Flowers and fed the ball wide to Tom Logan, he stabbed a pass back into the centre for Lade to mark and Lade passed for leading Tredrea to mark comfortably and boot truly. Port went on to score consecutive majors, Dean Brogan tapped a ball-up perfectly onto David Rodan's chest, D-Rod sped clear with a bounce, dummied around Gilbee, ran inside 50 with two more bounces and speared a terrific goal, much like a couple Rodan booted last week. The Dogs' lead was reduced to 22 points but they scored a late goal, Mitch Hahn passed for leading Minson to mark, just like the full-forward the Dogs have been trying to make him for a year or three. Minson converted and the Bullies led by 28 points at the long rest.  

 

There was a slow start to the third term, five minutes in Port's lack of interest showed when two blokes left Chaplin's pass for each-other and Doggy Nathan Eagleton nipped in to mark it, he jabbed a short kick to Hahn who played-on and bombed a 50m goal. The Dawgs led by 34 points and strained to put the Powder away. Hill rode Salopek for a great grab at half-forward but missed the shot, a minute later Hill marked in the pocket but sliced on-the-full. Akermanis marked in the opposite pocket but missed awfully. Finally, the Bullies opened a decisive gap with three quick majors. Burgoyne's long kick-in from the Aker miss was marked by Ward, he handballed to Murphy who passed for Akermanis to mark 40m out and convert this time. Murphy played in defence here, on Ebert. A minute later Higgins scooped up a loose ball with some skill and handballed to Matty Boyd, he handballed to Hahn who booted a terrific 50m goal off a couple of steps. Puppy ruckman Ben Hudson had a free at the following centre-bounce, he handballed off to Higgins who had a run-and-bounce and kicked long for Johnson to take an idiomatic back-pedalling mark in the pocket. Johnson dobbed it and the Bullies led by a handy 53 points. Aker reverted to missing and the Power managed a goal, Gray got a good handball away while being tackled and Danyle Pearce passed for leading Ebert to mark and boot truly. But the Pups had the final say of the term, Brian Lake gave a free-kick to Minson and he passed unusually sideways and backwards to Boyd, but Boyd played-on, dummied around a pathetic effort from Carr before booting a long major. A late Gilbee behind and the Doggies led by 55 points at the last change. Mist hung over the ground and Daniel Motlop didn't start the final quarter, due to ankle trouble. The Dogs moved further ahead, Picken won the ball smartly and fired a long handpass forward to Eagleton, he had a long shot which Daniel 'Guido' Giansiracusa marked by the point-post. Giansiracusa stabbed a pass back to Akermanis on a better angle, but the ump called the ball back. Giansiracusa hooked a left-foot snap for a goal, but the ump called the ball back. Giansiracusa chipped another inboard pass to Higgins, but the ump called the ball back. Finally, Giansiracusa was allowed to hook a second left-foot kick for the goal. Sheesh. A minute later Griffen sent a long, switching kick to Giansiracusa, he passed for leading Hill to mark and boot one. Dogs by 67 points. A bit later Burgoyne's chipped pass went straight through Cornes's hands but fortunately for Port their Justin Westhoff gathered and snapped a good major. Hudson grabbed the ball cleanly from the following centre-bounce and tumbled a kick forward, following a bit of pinball Hill grabbed the agget and slotted a running sausage. Burgoyne sent a pass over leading Tredrea but knock-ons from Ebert and Justin Westhoff and Rodan's handpass allowed Dom Cassisi to snap a goal. The Bullies were 62 points up but really flogged the Powders' corpse in the final minutes, with a burst of five goals in eight minutes to be more precise. Johnson kicked the first, with a lead-and-mark of Hill's pass, then a chain of handballs set up Hudson for a goal he very much enjoyed. There were some truly useless efforts from Port players to exert any pressure in that. Higgins slipped Jacob Surjan's tackle and fired an apparently mad handball forward, but Hill gathered it and handpassed back to Higgins who snapped a goal. Akermanis ran at full pace to gather a loose ball at half-forward, he twisted and turned away from chasing Pettigrew and hacked a tired snap towards the goals which might've bounced through for full-points, but Giansiracusa elected to soccer it through to make certain. Eagleton and Johnson combined to set up a mark and goal for Minson and the Bulldawgs led by 93 points. No goals in the final two minutes, at least. 

 

A very even effort from the Bulldoggies, rover Daniel Cross (37 disposals including 30 handballs) was pretty good and Ryan Hargrave (29 touches, 10 marks) ran about to good effect, as mentioned before Adam Cooney's form (35 possessions, 5 marks) has paralleled that of his team's. Jarrod Harbrow (22 disposals, 7 marks) played well again and Ryan Griffen (22 handlings, 9 tackles, a goal) did some useful things. Liam Picken (14 touches, a goal) kept Pearce quiet and Lindsay Gilbee (31 possessions, a goal) was his usual, classy self. Will Minson, Brad Johnson and Josh Hill kicked 3 goals each, Mitch Hahn and Danny Giansiracusa booted 2 goals each. Port didn't win enough of the ball. David Rodan (18 touches with 14 handballs, a goal) won some and Kane Cornes (36 disposals, 12 marks) and Dom Cassisi (19 touches, 9 tackles, a goal) plugged away, but they're not match-winners. Steven Salopek (18 possies, 5 marks) started well, but faded. Full-back Toby Thurstans (24 disposals, 7 marks) played alright and held Welsh goal-less and Warren Tredrea (15 handlings, 9 marks, a goal) did a bit. Brett Ebert kicked 2 goals. Mark Williams said "Anytime a result like that comes around, it is not good for the club or any individual - players, coaches and staff. So that's just how footy is . . . They really did expose us; their skills were outstanding. We made really fundamental errors that cost us. We noted how well the Bulldogs could execute their skills, and even when we did force a turnover, we could not get a result from it while they kicked nine goals from our turnovers. We tried to shut the game down . . . but nothing seemed to come off. So, we're really disappointed. There was not much spirit tonight, but our club and our players do have spirit - it is just it didn't shine out tonight, that is for sure. Our effort was not up to standard. We gave some people some opportunities and they did not play well tonight . . . We have too many sitting on the sidelines. Everyone has to share the load - and tonight we didn't. We're 6-6 and in the middle of a lot of teams. We just have to keep grinding away to find a way to make the finals by the end of the year." 'Choco' would go on to flog his blokes on the training track, including carrying lots of bricks around. Eade said "We thought we had been building since the Adelaide game and it's probably our best performance so far. The strength of the team is the even spread . . . we had an even contribution and that's probably what we're about, is selflessness and players playing their role, which I think has been a real positive. We don't rely on Johnno or Aka or Murph or whoever they are, and I thought four of our younger players were our better players tonight, which was good," he said. "Our pressure was consistent for four quarters and we spoke about that probably going into the Adelaide game, that we needed to lift in that area. I think we're starting to do that, we're starting to keep teams' uncontested marks down and Port are very good at that. We kept them under 80 tonight, which was pleasing . . . Certainly internally we have confidence we can compete with any side, but I think the top two have set the benchmark, we've got to bridge an area there. We think we can compete with any side in the competition."

 

At Docklands:

Richmond    5.6   8.8   10.12   13.14.92

West Coast  2.0   6.2    9.7    11.11.77

 

The Tiges can't even get tanking right. Perhaps it was the sacked-coach effect, then again the Weagles haven't won an away-game for two years. But new Tige coach Jade Rawlings bit the bullet by dropping a bunch of aging, under-performing players, going with the youth and being rewarded with a first-up win. Now, the Big Pu55y Cats are only three games out . . . Rawlings's appointment as the Tiges' interim coach was criticized on several bases; at 31, he's younger than several of the players; the Tiges also made Rawlings's interim status very clear, stating they'd be throwing the position open at the end of the season. The meedya couldn't understand this second point, even though Hawthorn did exactly the same thing with Donald McDonald before appointing Clarkson. Further fallout from Wallace's departure included the retirement of Kane Johnson, who becomes an assistant coach. The Tiges' immediate past-captain hadn't played a game this season due to a knee injury and finishes with 220 games, two premierships with the Camrys and a best-and-fairest for the Toigs in 2006. In selection Rawlings adhered to his yoof-brief by dropping Joel Bowden, Troy Simmonds, Jordan McMahon, Mark Coughlan and Kayne Pettifer from the side thumped by the Bulldogs, although Rawlings claimed the quintet were axed for form reasons which, with the exception of perhaps Bowden, would be fair enough. In came Shane Edwards, Angus Graham, Robin Nahas, Tom Hislop and first-gamer Tyrone Vickery, a dreadlocked ruckman from southern Melbourne's Haileybury College. The Weegs also had a debutant, an anticipated one in ruckman Nick Naitanui, the Fijian-born no. 2 draft-pick from last year, from Swan Districts. Daniel Kerr and David Wirrpanda also returned to the Weegle side, out went injured pair Andrew Embley (ankle) and Adam Hunter (shoulder) while Ben McKinley was dropped. 

 

Not the greatest game on paper (or on the ground, as it turned out) but it had some interesting features coming in; Rawlings's debut as Richmun coach, the playing debuts of Naitanui (in particular) and Vickery, and some bloke called Cousins playing against his old side. Mysteriously, Cuz escaped the axe in the Tiges' new youth policy and gave the in-room camera a poo-eating grin before the game. The Tiggers started with great energy and enthusiasm in the first fifteen minutes, there's a theory they set up the win right there. Those people haven't seen many Richmun games. Richard Tambling and Mitch Morton were key early protagonists, Morton had a hand in the opening goal as he led long to mark Brett Deledio's pass, then stabbed a wobbly kick which was probably meant for Tambling, who marked it at least. Tambling stabbed a short, centering pass for ruckman Angus Graham to mark and boot the major. A minute later Tambling led up to mark on the flank and he punted to the top o' the 'square where Morton held a sliding mark behind Matt Spangher, Morton goaled. Deledio marked in the centre and handballed off to running Tambling, he swapped handballs with Shane Tuck and kicked long where doubling-back Morton marked, played-on and hooked it through as he likes to do. The Tiges led by 19 points but had dominated possession and displayed an unusually skilful, disposal-heavy style. Tom Hislop missed a shot before the Weegs got on the board, some scrappy handballing from a throw-in fed the ball back and into the centre where full-back Darren Glass managed to get a kick forward, Mark LeCras gathered and hooked a blind punt which dropped handily into the arms of Josh Kennedy. Kennedy majored. The Tiggers continued to dominate possession but wasted it a bit with four consecutive behinds, including two terrible set-shot misses from Morton. When he can't run-out and hook it, he's not too good. Finally Deledio, also responsible for one of them misses, booted a good goal from the flank following a gutsy mark backing into a pack. A bit later Nathan 'Axel' Foley ran down the wing and chipped a centering pass for Andrew Collins to mark on the 50m line, he passed for the ubiquitous Morton to mark and boot his third goal of the stanza. The Tiges led by 30 points. The Wiggles scored a late major, at the following centre-bounce Jamie 'Wrong Way' McNamara had a free-kick and dished off to Brad Ebert, his wide kick was gathered by Mitch Brown who hooked a punt to the top o' the 'square where the absurdly athletic Nick Naitanui roved his won contest and handballed for Matt Priddis to banana-snap a goal. Tiges by 24 points at the first break.

 

The Weegs worked into it in the second stanza, led by Priddis and big forward Kennedy. Some tight early minutes before Weeg ruckman Dean 'Big' Cox tapped a ball-up at half-forward down to Priddis, his pass to David Wirrpanda switched flanks and Wirrpanda punted to the goal-square where Kennedy shoved off Alex Rance to mark and pop it through. The Tiggers' lead was back to 18 points. A bit later Toig skipper Chris Newman chipped a good pass for Adam Pattison to mark 60m out, Patto handballed inboard to Robin Nahas who sent one further wide for Shane Edwards to gather, Edwards booted a running goal. The Weegs answered, Kennedy led up to mark Cox's pass on the 50m line and boot a good long major. Then the Tiges, Morton led up to clutch a strong mark in front of Glass and kick to the pocket where Jack Riewoldt held a better grab ahead of Spangher, Riewoldt threaded it through. The Tiges led by 25 points, prior to a tightish spell in which the Weegs scored a couple behinds. The running and intensity the Coasters had against Geelong wasn't there this week, but they did cop a few breaks. Quinten Lynch drove a lengthy punt to the goal-square, Kennedy roved the pack and stabbed an easy goal. The Toigs responded following a lazy handball from Weeg Adam Selwood, Tige Pattison tapped-on to Morton who handballed to running Collins, his mongrelled kick forward was collected by Weeg defender Spangher who elected to put his head down and plough straight into a tackle from Hislop. The umps have eased-up on penalizing these in recent weeks but Spangher was done for 'bawl' and Hislop free-kicked a goal. But the Weegirls scored a late goal again, Pattison's under-hit centering pass arrived on the half-volley and was fumbled by Dean Polo, a turnover and Weegle Brown raced clear before bouncing a very low-percentage but ultimately accurate kick for a goal. The Tiggers led by 18 points at half-time.

 

The third term started slowly. Tyson Stenglein had replaced Glass as Morton's opponent, while Tigger Luke McGuane tightened up on Kennedy. Evidence accumulated to support this being a game between thirteenth and fifteenth. There were a couple of points each in the opening ten minutes before the Tiges scrambled a goal. Weeg Shannon Hurn bumped Collins off the ball to gain possession but Hurn was himself tackled by Trent Cotchin, who handballed to Nahas who gave one on to running Hislop. Glass dived superbly to smother Hislop's shot for goal but Hislop followed the ball into the pocket were it squirted free and Hislop snapped a sausage roll. A bit later Weeg rover Chris Masten, once hailed as 'The New Cousins', roved a throw-in and lobbed a kick to the top of the 'square where LeCras roved the pack and snapped truly. The Tiges led by 18 points, still. Weeg Mark Nicoski and Tigga Deledio kicked points before Collins wobbled a kick forward and new Tigger Tyrone Vickery had his arms chopped in the marking contest. Vickery's free-kick just squeezed through for a goal. The Weegs replied with some good play from Matt Rosa, Rosa speared a pass for leading Naitanui to mark on the 50m line, Naitanui handballed back to on-running Rosa who strode inside the 50 and booted a long goal. Richmen by 18 points again, some more behinds occurred before the Weegs scored, you guessed it, a late goal. From directly in front of the interchange benches their McNamara lobbed a centering kick for Scott Selwood to take a running mark, Selwood ran to the 50 and booted long where Adam Selwood appeared to shove Edwards in the back in order to take a grab, before playing-on and bagging a goal. Between marking and kicking, Selwood paused and looked back at the ump, kind of a giveaway you'd think. The goal stood though and the Tiges' lead was down to 11 points at the final change. But the Big Katz took charge with two quick goals in the final Mario, Ben Cousins played well to steady them. An early, defensive rebound and Cousins's long kick found Hislop marking at half-forward, he booted long where Morton shoved off Stenglein to mark and boot a regularly drop-punted goal. Daniel Jackson kicked the Toigs into attack from the restart, following some scrambling at half-forward Jackson arrived to have another go, hooking a punt to the goal-square where Morton clutched a pack-mark, ran wide for a hooky-kick and booted his fifth goal. Richmun led by 23 points, three minutes into the korter. Naitanui had given some glimpses of his ability and soon excited the Weegle supporters with a big ride on Polo and speccie-tacular mark on the point-line, unfortunately for the Weegs Naitanui missed the subsequent, very tight-angle shot. Newman's long kick-in spilled from his ruckmen and roving Weeg Priddis handballed for LeCras to pot a long major. The Wiggles were still hanging around, 15 points down. The Tiges clung on for a few minutes, Masten missed a shot while Tuck and Morton kicked behinds for the Tiges. In time-on the Tiggers had a throw-in in their forward-pocket and Foley pounced on the loose ball, he sped clear and handballed for Edwards to lob a left-foot kick for a goal. Effectively the sealer, as the Toigs led by 22 points. But Priddis won a free at the following centre-bounce and stabbed a pass wide to venturing Glass, he passed for leading LeCras to mark and boot a great goal from the flank. Naitanui showed his primary ability, winning clearances, at the following centre-bounce. He leaped over Graham to win the tap and also gather the ball, Naitanui handballed for McNamara to run clear, inside 50 but hook a poor kick for a behind, for the Eagles - you can never be sure with McNamara. Newman's kick-in required Cousins to take an overhead mark, as he did so Weeg Daniel Kerr barreled into Cousins's ribs. A 50m penalty to Cuz and he and Kerr had a chat and chuckle as they trotted up the field together. No doubt they had a big night later.

 

Rover Nathan 'Axel' Foley (31 disposals, 7 marks) was the Tiges' most consistent performer with Richard Tambling (28 possessions, 14 marks) interpreted by some meedya folk as having 'arrived' here. A big call, he requires consistency but has played okay in recent weeks. Mitch Morton (18 touches, 12 marks, 5 goals) seems happy Plough is gone and Ben Cousins (28 possies, 4 marks) played well, as did Brett Deledio (23 touches, 11 marks, a goal). Shane Tuck (30 disposals, 6 marks) found plenty of the ball again and Daniel Jackson (16 touches) engaged in a game-long wrestle with Kerr. Luke McGuane (23 touches, 8 marks) was good in defence. Tom Hislop and Shane Edwards kicked 2 goals each. Reliable rover Matt Priddis (33 disposals, 7 marks, a goal) was the Weegs' best. Josh Kennedy (12 possies, 7 marks, 4 goals) covered much territory in attack and David Wirrpanda (23 touches, 5 marks) played alright as the rebounding defender. Adam Selwood (20 handlings, 3 marks, a goal) battled on-the-ball and Chris Masten (29 possessions) found a fair bit of it. Mark LeCras (22 touches, 9 marks, 3 goals) was very handy in attack.  "We didn't get our hands on the ball early. They thrashed us at stoppages. We've been pretty good in that area," said Weevil coach Worsfold. "We get frustrated at times in the coaches' box, but the names that come up are the kids in their first dozen games that are making some mistakes. They're excited, they're nervous, they rush, they feel like they're under pressure the whole time. As they get used to it, they'll get a better realisation of how much time they may have and take that extra fraction of a second and use the ball better. The majority of the errors come when the ball is in the hands of the very young players and I'm prepared to wear that. They're aware of it and they're working on it, but they need to keep that focus and stay motivated to keep working on it – not drop their confidence or their bundle." Tigger man Jade Rawlings said "They (Tiges) are a good group and obviously a very young one that went out there tonight, but they enjoy each other's company and we had a good build-up during the week. The most pleasing thing for me was we were challenged a couple of times, particularly in the second half, and we were able to react. I thought we looked a bit shaky in the third quarter and at three-quarter-time we said to the players we need to score. We weren't going to hang on to the game because they (West Coast) were coming with a rush. We still turned the ball over too much and there are a lot of areas of our game that we can work on, but generally the messages we put out there were carried out reasonably well. As I said to the players last week, 'It's about the footy club, it's not about me'. I come in and I'm lucky enough to do this role. If they can keep focusing on what they can do for the team, this footy club will move forward at a rate of knots."

 

At York Park:

Hawthorn   3.3   6.5   7.7      7.9.51

Brisbane   2.4   3.9   7.13   13.15.93

 

Very good win for the Lyin's in cold, windy Tassie. Horforn's better ball-use in the first half had them ahead but after half-time Brisbun dominated possession. From the start of the third quarter to halfway through the last, the Hawks had seven inside-fifties. By then, the Lisbon Brians led by six goals and the game was over. Those concerned by injuries and substitutes could ponder a few things; the Brians played the second half with 20 men but out-scored the reigning premiers by ten goals to one. The Hawks complain about injuries but, apart from Cyril Rioli, no important Awk was missing here. Don't give me Trent Croad. You could argue a few Horks aren't fully fit, I guess, but the fact is Horforn are not playing well. Their president agrees, Kennett apologizing for and delivering sharp criticism of this effort on the club's website the next day. Comparisons are being made with the Essadun sides of 1993/4. The Orc side here didn't have Rioli (hamstring) or the league's youngest player Liam Shiels ('flu), but Campbell Brown returned along with Thomas Murphy. The Lyin's called up Jason Roe to help out with their defender-crisis and Troy Selwood returned, they replaced injured Josh Drummond (calf strain) and the dropped Travis Johnstone.

 

No rain but a stiff, icy breeze in Launceston. Wary of their under-manned back-lines and the opposition's power forwards, both teams had an extra man in defence, the Lyin's two at times. The Awks had Campbell Brown at full-back on Dan Bradshaw and Luke Hodge against Lyin' Jonathan Brown, although Robert Campbell was back there as the extra man and the Brisbun Brown was usually double-teamed. At the other end Brisbun had Lachie Henderson on Jarryd Roughead and Jason Roe against Buddy Franklin, with Jed Adcock as the extra man in the 'hole'. Luke Power was down there a bit, too. What it meant was the ball being locked at one end of the ground or another for lengthy periods, with both scoring and clearing difficult amongst all the congestion. The Hawks started with the aid of the steady, if diagonal wind, but the Lyin's managed the opening goal. Hawk Beau Muston threw the ball right in front of the ump and Lyin' Michael Rischitelli punted the resulting free-kick to the goal-square, Awks Simon Taylor and Tom Murphy towered over Lyin' Rhan Hooper but Taylor managed to drop the mark comically and Hooper bagged the roving major. A Daniel Rich shot hit the post as the Lyin's controlled the opening ten minutes. Hawk Franklin had a coupla early chances, but dropped a mark on-the-lead and later did mark one, but missed. About now the Lyin's lost a player, Troy Selwood suffering a dislocated shoulder as he dived in a marking attempt and had Hodge land on him as well. A Lyin' trainer wrenched Selwood's arm back into the socket in the full view of the crowd, who gasped and groaned along with the distressed Brisbun tagger. The Lyin's scored a couple more behinds before the Orcs managed to exert some pressure, their Travis Tuck appeared to be caught in possession at a throw-in but he got a handball away and Brad Sewell's wind-assisted punt from just inside 50 carried through for a major. Lyin' Jared Brennan won the following centre-bounce ruck contest and collected his own tap to boot the Brians into attack where Mitch Clark bullocked off Murphy for a mark and goal. The Lyin's led by 7 points, but very poor foot-passing was wasting their greater possession. Horforn scored two late goals, in contrast to most Lyin's Chance Bateman weighted a pass superbly for Michael Osborne to mark with-the-flight, Osborne played-on and stabbed a pass for leading Mark Williams to mark and convert. Awk skipper Sam Mitchell raced clear of the restart and his long shot was wide. Brisbun attempted some running, into-the-wind footy from the kick-in but Henderson was caught in possession by Osborne, who gave his resulting free to Stuart Dew, who passed for Williams to mark and boot another.

 

The Awks led by 5 points at the first break and they moved ahead a bit in the second term, despite kicking against the breeze. Dew saw an early shot blown off-target, a bit later Hodge's good mark on the defensive wing and a smart switch-of-play saw Mitchell kicking into CHF, Williams read the breeze-inhibited punt best to mark and boot his third sausage already. Hooper missed twice for Brisbun, including a poster from 20m. The Orcs manufactured a good move from the kick-in of that, they had some luck in the centre when Bateman's aimless handpass-while-tackled was collected by Campbell who passed for leading Franklin to mark and convert. Horforn led by 16 points. Lyin' Rischitelli ran clear of the restart but his long go was rushed through for a behind, there were a few of those over the next several minutes including poor misses from Lyin's Simon Black and James Polkinghorne, indicative of the Lyin's kicking display in general. Eventually Black roved a throw-in and stabbed a centering pass for leading Brown, finally receiving a kick-to-advantage, to mark and also thump accurately from 50m. But at the restart Brisbun's Cheynee Stiller was done for 'bawl' and quick handballs from Mitchell and Sewell allowed Osborne to kick long, Roughead out-marked Henderson and popped it through. The Orforn led by 14 points at half-time.

 

The Brians struggled along to 3.11 early in the third Mario, following misses from Polkinghorne and Power. At the other end Roughead blasted a shot into the post. But the Lyin's midfielders were winning more of the ball than their Hawforn opponents. Hooper roved Brown's contest on the forward-flank and finessed a bit before hooking a kick back towards retreating Brown, Campbell spoiled but Rischitelli roved at pace and ran clear to snap it through. The Hawks managed a reply from a throw-in on the wing, handballs from Lewis and Sewell put Dew into space and The Tubby One's running shot from just outside 50 carried through for a major. The Orcs led by 12 points and Brisbun lost another player, ruckman Mitch Clark with a thigh problem. He limped back on briefly later, but didn't do much. Brisbun began to finally convert possession into points late in the stanza, led by their captain. Firstly, Jonathan Brown ripped the ball free of a ball-up, twisted clear and snapped a great goal. A bit later Orc defenders Murphy and Muston managed to spoil each-other in a marking contest, Rischitelli gathered and lobbed a high kick which Brown marked, with the aid of a decent, un-penalized shove into Hodge's back. Brown goaled again, putting the Lyin's in front. Hawk Taylor's tap at a back-flank throw-in was collected by  Rischitelli, he handballed for Justin 'The Shermanator' Sherman to bounce a dribbly-snap through for full points. Brisbun led by 7 points. Late in the term Roughead wasn't paid a very good, low grab on the 50m line by the unsighted umpire. Osborne was awarded a soft free from the resulting ball-up, possibly a square-up.  But Osborne missed the shot and the Lyin's led by goal at the final break. They sealed the game quickly in the final stanza. Clark fully injured his thigh with an early shot, it dropped well short and Taylor marked. But as the Orcs tried to run the ball out Lyin' Tim Notting intercepted Bateman's handpass and bagged a goal, a terrific effort from the Brian veteran. A bit later Hork Campbell Brown marked at half-back and played-on hesitantly, Brown was forced into a hurried kick which Lyin' Ash McGrath gathered and he lobbed a punt into the pocket which Jonathan Brown marked strongly ahead of Campbell and Murphy. The prevailing wind helped push Brown's tight-angle shot between the big posts. Brennan, now Brisbun's sole ruckman, booted them into attack from the next centre-bounce and Albert Proud collected the bouncing ball, handballs from him, Power and Brown set up Sherman for a running slot. A bit later Brennan had a free-kick at a throw-in at half-back, he punted into the centre for Notting to take a with-the-flight grab, run on and chip a pass for Brown, unattended, to mark and boot another Lyin' sausage roll. The ball was now trapped continually in the Lyin's forward-line, prelude to another goal as Stiller scooped up the ball from a throw-in and ran clear to boot a great major from wide on the flank. Brisbun had snaggled five goals in about twelve final-stanza minutes and led by 37 points now. The sting went out of the game as the Horks managed some belated attacking, but still couldn't score. Roughead sliced a shot hopelessly on-the-full and frustrated Franklin engaged in some handbags with various Lyin's. But it's hard to blame the Awks' key forwards, you can't kick goals if the ball never comes down. A full-stop was put on the contest when young Lyin' Daniel Rich roved Brown's contest and thumped a 55m, wind-assisted goal off a step or two.       

 

Brisbun's captain Jonathan Brown (18 disposals, 6 marks, 5 goals - no misses) was the match-winner in the end but some great work was done by Simon Black (29 touches) and Jared Brennan (19 disposals, 4 marks, 12 hit-outs) before and during that, looks like Brennan might have to carry the ruck for a while. Michael Rischitelli (20 possessions, a goal) was very handy as a small forward and Luke Power (36 touches, 8 marks, 10 tackles) was very busy as usual, before being injured Mitch Clark (13 disposals, 4 marks, 18 hit-outs, a goal) was handy and Justin 'The Shermanator' Sherman (29 touches, 2 goals) did a bit. Kudos to Lachie Henderson on Roughead too, although the Hawk man had limited chances. Brad Sewell (28 disposals, 5 marks, a goal) and Sam Mitchell (31 touches, 6 marks, 10 tackles) worked hard for the Hawks, but they didn't have much help. Jordan Lewis (32 possessions, 8 marks) started well but faded, blokes like Bateman, Tuck, McGlynn and Xavier Ellis had very little influence, although Ellis (33 handlings, 9 marks) did see a lot of the ball. Michael Osborne (18 touches, 5 marks) did a bit and Campbell Brown (17 touches, 6 marks) played well at full-back, holding Bradshaw goal-less. Mark Williams (9 disposals, 5 marks) bagged 3 goals. "They smashed us for clearances; they smashed us for inside 50s, they smashed us for hardness at the footy. They taught us a footy lesson," said Clarkson. "We just weren't good enough in the second half and they showed us they're obviously a very good football side . . . If the ball's quickly spread from clearances and goes into the opposition half, you're just waiting for the dam wall to break really, and that's what happened. I put that influence down to the significance of Clark and Brennan in the ruck and when you've got smart small players underneath them like, particularly Black, but also Power and Rich . . . it makes it pretty hard to stop the onslaught. We can be as hungry as we like at the footy, but when they're dominating that area of the ground it makes it pretty difficult . . . We've got a lot of work to do at the footy club. When we're running well and creating opportunities for ourselves and working together well as a team we're a very, very good side, but when we're not, we're just very much middle of the pack and that's where we sit right at the current stage. We're going to need a very significant second half of the season to even make the eight, let alone feature prominently in September." Too right. Mick Voss said "All factors, when you put them into consideration, I think it was the best win (or the season), for sure. (The players) were very positive (at half time) and they knew they had their opportunities and we knew we were sort of butchering the ball a little bit and if we were able to turn that around that would be the major difference for our team. We started to hit our targets, we started to take our marks and kick our goals which were equally presentable in the first half. In the first half we just weren't able to do it . . . We're no different to probably a lot of other clubs at the moment. Post-bye we do get a lot (of players) back but at the same time you can't expect that it then happens for you . . . I know what Jonathan Brown means to us and if he's not one of the better players in the competition I think I could have a very long argument with you on that very thing. For St Kilda, Riewoldt is very important to their structure and Jonathan Brown is critically important to us. He's our captain, he's our physical presence that he gives us, the leadership he has will always put him in the top echelon. Whether he's the best, or the second best or third best (in the AFL) doesn't matter too much to me. He's critically important to us."

 

At Football Park:

Adelaide         2.4   3.6   5.9   9.14.68

North Melbourne  0.0   1.2   2.5    3.6.24 

 

Steady rain and wind and Norf's committed flooding made hard work for the Camrys, but Adderlayed kicked away in the end to win and climb to fifth, for the time being. Norf suffered more injury problems and have a long road ahead this season, although captain Brent 'Boomer' Harvey should return after the mid-season break. Hardly the ideal circumstances for Roo Adam Simpson to celebrate his 300th game. The Roo pack-warrior and keen amateur film-maker has been a great player for Norf. There's been a bit of debate about Dean Laidley's future as North coach, it's easy to mock his oddly naïve public performances but footy people claim he's a very good coach. Does Laidley lower expectation though, in order to magnify his successes? In pickin' here the Corollas had some trouble themselves, with Simon Goodwin (knee), Graham 'Stiffy' Johncock and Richard Douglas ('flu for both) unavailable following the high-scoring win over the Bommers. Goodwin was actually injured early in that game, something I overlooked. Replacements were Brent Reilly, Jared Petrenko and tagger Robert 'Don't Call Me' Shirley. Norf lost Ben 'Milky' Warren (fractured cheekbone), Matt Campbell (hamstring), Daniel Wells (ongoing hip/groin trouble) and Sam Wright (knee) from the Stinkilda game, and David Hale was a late withdrawal - when Laidley saw the weather, probably. Kanga replacements were experienced men Daniel Harris and Corey Jones, juniors Lachy Hansen and Jack Ziebell and first-gamer Cruize Garlett, a rookie-listed small forward from Perth and second cousin to Carton's Jefferey.   

 

Windy 'n' wet, but not really wild at Foopall Park, at least not that way. But a pretty decent crowd still turned out. If it'd been Norf's home game they wouldn't have broken three figures. The Ruse started with the wind at their backs but put plenty of blokes behind the ball, they did go inside the attacking 50 a few times in the first korter but there were no Kangers there. Laidley's a coaching genius. Camry Scott Thompson soccered the opening score, a point. In steady drizzle the Cressidas soon managed a goal, David Mackay executed a good pick-up and handball to Jason Porplyzia, he passed for Tyson Edwards to mark 40m out, play-on and dob it. Kanger backman Nathan Grima, who played alright, rushed a point before the Camry Thompson had a free-kick in the centre after 'Lethal' Leigh Harding dived on his back. Thompson delivered a great pass for leading Chris Knights to mark, Knights booted a typically long goal and the Coronas led by 14 points. A heavy dump of rain made scoring even more difficult to the end of the term, although Norf caught a late break when Camry Scott Stevens marked 15m out but was pinged for pushing Scott McMahon in the back. Marginal, but it was probably there. The Kanggers actually committed some men forward for the start of the second term and some tackling pressure brought an early goal. Camry Ben Rutten was tackled and fired a wild handball away, Corey Jones gathered and ran into the clear to stab a low kick for the major. The 200th goal of Jones's career and it's been a while coming. A bit later Simpson snapped a behind from a tightish angle and the Cows' lead was reduced to 9 points. But soon all the players and the ball were locked in the Camrys' forward-line again and very little happened. There was a slightly amusing bit where Addleaid's Stevens snapped the ball along the ground and right across the face of goal, where Petrenko gathered and did the same thing. Norf forward Aaron Edwards almost took a huge speccie on the wing, but he didn't. Very late in the stanza North's Edwards clutched a good grab 40m out but his into-the-wind shot didn't make the distance and the Camrys manufactured a decent rebound move, with the Ruse spread out a bit. Knights lobbed a good pass for leading Porplyzia to mark, Porplyzia converted and the locals led by 16 points. Andrew McLeod marked 40m out but the siren sounded just as he played-on, so it were still 16 points the difference at half-time.

 

Not much changed into the third Mario. The Camrys started it without the luckless Brent Reilly, a hamstring problem. Some more early attacking from the Ruse brought a coupla behinds, including a frustrating miss from Drew Petrie. Ten minutes into the term Porplyzia scooped up the Sherrin from a ball-up and snapped a goal, sending the Camrys 20 points ahead. Taylor Walker missed a set-shot but soon the Ruse actually constructed a decent move. Lachy Hansen, who's developed into a hefty lump of bloke, burst a tackle and kicked long to McMahon, he drove a centering kick for running Lindsay Thomas to collect, run inside 50 and miss. Good, but not perfect. Handily, Petrie marked the Corollas' kick-in and sent a pass towards McMahon, he couldn't mark but roving Roo Edwards gathered the ball and stabbed a goal. The Ruse trailed by 14 points. But Addleaid replied soon, as Norf tried the run the ball their Ben Ross lost it in a tackle, the Addleaid Scott Thompson gathered and handballed to McLeod who chipped a pass for Porplyzia to mark alone, 40m out. Porplyzia, who hardly ever misses, booted a goal. Young Roo Jack Ziebell suffered a leg injury late in the term, Camry Brad Symes slid sideways into his legs as Ziebell dived on the ball. Ziebell sustained a fractured leg and his season might be over. Very hard luck, Petrie jumped on Symes's head in retribution. Walker missed a shot after the siren, leaving the Cows 22 points ahead at the final change. From the opening bounce of the final stanza Roo Harding tapped-on for Petrie to gather the ball, Petrie's low, flat mongrel-punt was marked by Thomas who booted a goal and the Kangers were still a chance, 16 points down. But they had to stop flooding and open up the game in order to score and catch-up, and therein lay the Ruse downfall. Adderlayed began to press forward again and scored four consecutive behinds, the Roos were sloppy clearing their backline and were eventually punished more fully. Sam Power's attempted lob-pass to Hansen dropped short and was marked by Camry Nathan Bock at the back of the centre-square. Frustrated Hansen biffed Bock in the head, a 50m penalty and Bock kicked a goal. A bit later the Ruse were trying to run the ball out again when Daniel Pratt was tackled and lost possession, Camry Andy Otten collected the ball and handballed to McLeod and he passed for leading Kurt Tippett to mark and convert. Soon the Cows constructed a handball-heavy attacking move, McLeod again the assister as he punted forward and Walker marked strongly in front of Norf's Scott Thompson. Walker's subsequent sausage roll had the Camrys 38 points ahead, more than enough really. Tippett hit the post with a free-kick but soon Bernie Vince booted a long, wind-assisted goal after marking Mackay's short pass. The Camrys led by 45 points and as time ticked down the Ruse lost Thomas with a hamstring injury. Thomas was pretty upset about it, compounding a miserable evening for the Kangers.

 

Truly a team effort for the Camrys with Scott Thompson (31 disposals) and the very good wingman David Mackay (24 touches) probably the midfield stand-outs. No doubt Jason Porplyzia (20 possessions, 4 marks, 3 goals) was important in attack while running defenders Nathan Bock (19 touches, 6 marks, a goal), Brad Symes (25 handlings, 7 marks) and Andy Otten (20 disposals, 9 marks) were all important. Further afield Tyson Edwards (19 handlings, 5 marks, a goal) and Michael Doughty (31 possies, 7 marks) were pretty useful. Norf battlers Michael Firrito (22 disposals) and Adam Simpson (19 touches, 4 marks) worked very hard to win the ball for their side, they had trouble doing much with it, though. Brady Rawlings (20 touches, 5 marks) was in that category, too. Ruckman Hamish McIntosh (20 touches, 6 marks, 23 hit-outs) played well and backmen Nathan Grima (20 possies, 7 marks) and Scott Thompson (16 handlings, 7 marks) weren't bad. Laidley had the weight of the world upon him. "One man down again," Laidley reflected. "We have played twelve games and finished ten of those with twenty-one men, but it is still not an excuse not to run out the game like that . . . 60-odd possessions to 100-and-something in the last quarter (126-69) . . . Our intensity and our fight were super, but we turned over the ball at critical times when we had some good space, and our forward line was not functioning at all. It's a concern because I've felt apart from the Richmond game that our effort has been first class. Our forward line hasn't functioned all year and it's something we've got to look at over the break . . . What we've really focused on - because it's been such a revolving door (due to injuries) and the team is so young - isn't a hell of a lot of work on the opposition. It's been a lot about us and I think that's certainly the way to go . . . It's always disappointing to lose any game, but this one had a fair significance because (Adam Simpson is) a guy who's done so much particularly inside our football club because he's been one of those people that have held the football club together. He's led from the front, used his initiative within the playing group and he's got a very good feel of our culture and the people who exist in that culture, for a very long time." Neil Craig reflected on the Camrys' season to date. "We'd have to be rated as a pass-mark or average. I don't think we're an outstanding team," Craig said. "Prior to the last four weeks, our supporters saw us sort of chugging along, but without getting the sort of football they wanted to see. We've bought in five or six brand new guys this season and we've lost guys like Nathan Bassett and Kris Massie. With all due respect, people don't understand the holes that those players leave and you don't fill them overnight . . . Jason's (Porplyzia) sensational in wet weather, that's where he really shines and comes to the top. It's called talent, real football talent. Last week against Essendon there was a ground ball that Jason gave off to Andrew McLeod for a snap. Very few players would take that ball cleanly."

 

Ladder after part-Round 12

                Pts.       %    Next Week

St. Kilda        48    173.6    Bye

Geelong          44    153.0    Fremantle (Subiaco, Sunday)

Footscray        32    123.9    Bye

Brisbane         28    105.3    Bye

Adelaide         28    100.2    Bye

Carlton          24    114.5    Bye

Collingwood      24    107.7    Sydney (Stadium Australia, Sat. night)

Hawthorn         24     94.9    Bye

------------------------------------------------

Port Adelaide    24     89.6    Bye

Sydney           20     96.4    Collingwood (Stadium Australia, Sat. night)

Essendon         20     94.0    Melbourne (Docklands, Fri. night)

North Melbourne  16     76.3    Bye

West Coast       12     86.9    Bye

Richmond         12     79.8    Bye

Fremantle        12     79.7    Geelong (Subiaco, Sunday)

Melbourne         4     70.4    Essendon (Docklands, Fri. night)

 

Cheers, Tim.

 

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