Swans grind to victory over Cats

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Bleed Red Blood
    Senior Player
    • Sep 2003
    • 2057

    Swans grind to victory over Cats

    10:00:08 PM Sat 10 April, 2004
    David Wiseman
    Sportal
    The Sydney Swans notched up their second straight victory of the season when they defeated Geelong 10.13 (73) to 10.7 (67) at the SCG on Saturday night.

    It was a gut-wrenching defeat for the Cats who played outstanding football for three quarters only to come to a grinding halt in the last as the Swans outscored them 3.8 to 1.0.


    The Swans will be happy with the victory and the four points, but the manner of the win would be far from satisfactory for coach Paul Roos.

    The Swans disposal and decision-making was poor and they hardly had a winner on the field but it was though sheer tenaciousness that they came through.

    For the Cats, the loss will mean absolute devastation. They tried their hearts out for three quarters only to run out of legs.

    James Kelly was best on ground. With three goals and a game-high 19 possessions he lead the Cats' brigade. Not far behind him were Darren Milburn, David Haynes, Paul Chapman and debutant Andrew Mackie.

    Geelong coach Mark Thompson had devised the better of the match ups and this was frustrating for the Swans. Notably the Swans half backs, Leo Barry and Tadhg Kennelly were well-held, thus depriving the home team of much forward thrust.

    The Swans raced out of the blocks with quick goals to Ryan O?Keefe and Adam Schneider but the Cats' superiority at the clearances and their ability to slow down the game and frustrate enabled them to get back into match.

    Goals to Kelly and Kent Kingsley leveled the scores and the Swans went to a quarter time lead of six points thanks to a late goal to Jude Bolton.

    The Cats built on their burgeoning confidence in the second quarter and came out firing.

    Two goals to Chapman and one to Henry Playfair in the opening six minutes gave them a handy 12-point lead.

    With most of the Swans down on their game it was Jarrad McVeigh who broke the streak of three straight Geelong goals. When Barry Hall kicked his first scores were level.

    The sides then traded goals and it was only a goal deep into injury time to Paul Williams which saw the Swans trail by two points at the long break.

    Williams had an early kick for goal in the third quarter and his miss set the tone for the Swans as they proceeded to played lacklustre ineffective football.

    Poor decision-making highlighted by an overuse of handball played into the Cats hands.

    Goals to Cameron Mooney followed by a third to Kelly stretched the Cats' lead to 14-points heading into the final quarter.

    The Swans started the final quarter with three behinds followed by a goal to Williams. They followed this with three more behinds and hit the lead at the 15-minute mark with a goal to Hall.

    Adam Goodes kicked another one which gave the Swans a vital buffer which would prove invaluable as Kingsley would kick a goal with just one minute left.

    Sydney coach Paul Roos paid credit to Geelong, who were much better than their 0-3 start to the season suggests.

    "It was very much played at their tempo for probably three quarters, so it certainly suited them," Roos said.

    "They were very well-coached and obviously the players carried out their instructions very well, so it made it a frustrating night for us.

    "It wasn't until the last quarter when we were able to play some semblance of our game. You win the four points and you are happy then you dissect the game during the week."

    Roos said he didn't panic at three-quarter time when addressing his players.

    "I didn't think we could play as bad as we did for four quarters... well I was hoping," Roos said.

    "That was the main thing, we haven't played that well and we are only 14-points down, so let's go down swinging, let's have a crack and if we lose, we lose, but I reckon if we have a go we may get up.

    "So that was the main theme. I didn't have enough time to go over all the problems so I was just trying to make a sweeping statement."

    While gutted by the defeat, Geelong coach Mark Thompson was encouraged by the Cats? effort.

    ?This was the standard for the way we should play,? he said.

    ?If we would have played like that in the first two weeks I wonder if we would have won a game.?

    Thompson was lost for ideas when quizzed about why the Cats stalled in the final term.

    ?It was hard to know. We played a really good style of football and deviated from it in the final quarter,? he said.

    The Swans now face the unbeaten Kangaroos at Manuka Oval next Sunday with Geelong trying to regroup next Saturday night when they host Richmond at Telstra Dome.

    SYDNEY: 3.2, 7.3, 7.5, 10.13 (73)
    GEELONG: 2.2, 7.5, 9.7, 10.7 (67)

    GOALS: Sydney: Williams 2, Hall 2, O?Keefe, Schneider, J.Bolton, McVeigh, Crouch, Goodes
    Geelong: Kelly 3, Chapman 2, Kingsley 2, Playfair, Gardiner, Mooney
    BEST: Sydney: J.Bolton, C.Bolton, McVeigh, Kirk, James
    Geelong: Kelly, Milburn, Mackie, Haynes
    INJURIES: Sydney: O?Loughlin (groin) replaced in starting side by Buchanan, Kennelly (ribs), Williams (calf), Schneider (quad), Maxfield (neck)
    Geelong: Riccardi (groin) replaced in starting side by Rooke, Kelly (hip), Enright (wrist).
    REPORTS: Nil
    UMPIRES: Rosebury, Nicholls, Schmitt
    CROWD: 25,451 at SCG
  • CureTheSane
    Carpe Noctem
    • Jan 2003
    • 5032

    #2
    Firstly.... Henry Playfair....... LMFAO

    Secondly, I missed the game because I simply couldn't be bothered arranging friends to go out looking for a foxtel pub to see the game at.
    So I went out partying instead.
    Glad we won.
    Going to bednow.
    Goodnight....
    The difference between insanity and genius is measured only in success.

    Comment

    • Bleed Red Blood
      Senior Player
      • Sep 2003
      • 2057

      #3
      Swans edge tough Cats
      Sportal



      A late surge by Sydney has allowed the Swans to overcome a stubborn Geelong by six points at the SCG.

      In a gruelling, slogging match, Geelong was staring down the barrel of its first victory of the season but let a 14-point three-quarter time slip in a dramatic final term, succumbing 10.13 (73) to 10.7 (67) in front of a vocal crowd of 25,451.

      Majors to Paul Williams, Barry Hall and Adam Goodes in the fourth quarter turned a two-goal deficit into the Swans' second win of the season.

      However, the result was in doubt until the final siren after Kent Kingsley booted a goal with one minute to go, giving Geelong a chance to draw the match.



      However Heath James ensured any such thoughts were quickly quashed when he marked and held possession.

      Brett Kirk finished with 20 possessions, followed by Jason Ball and Paul Williams (19) for the home side.

      James Kelly led the visitors with a terrific match (22 possessions, three goals) while Tom Harley and Darren Milburn (18) were also effective.

      Sydney kicked the first two goals of the match through Ryan O?Keefe and Adam Schneider before Kelly and Kingsley squared the ledger.

      In the second quarter it was the Cats who bolted early, nailing the first three majors - two to Paul Chapman and one to Henry Playfair - before Sydney pegged two back. The sides then traded errors and goals before the Cats went into the main break two points in front.

      The third term was all Geelong as it kicked two goals but more importantly kept Sydney goalless. Sydney suffered several injures from the match with Stuart Maxfield (neck) failing to finish the match, while Tadhg Kennelly played on despite sustaining a rib injury.

      SYDNEY: 3.2, 7.3, 7.5, 10.13 (102)
      GEELONG: 2.2, 7.5, 9.7, 10.7 (67)

      GOALS:
      Sydney: Williams 2, Hall 2, O?Keefe, Schneider, J.Bolton, McVeigh, Crouch, Goodes
      Geelong: Kelly 3, Chapman 2, Kingsley 2, Playfair, Gardiner, Mooney
      BEST:
      Sydney: J.Bolton, C.Bolton, McVeigh, Kirk, James
      Geelong: Kelly, Milburn, Mackie, Haynes

      CROWD: 25,451 at SCG.

      Last edited by Bleed Red Blood; 11 April 2004, 10:36 AM.

      Comment

      • Bleed Red Blood
        Senior Player
        • Sep 2003
        • 2057

        #4
        Late rally ruins Cats hopes of victory
        April 11, 2004

        Geelong's James Kelly flies high in a bid to mark, despite the close attention of Swan Brett Kirk.
        Picture: Anthony Johnson


        SYDNEY - 3.2 7.3 7.5 10.13 (73)
        GEELONG - 2.2 7.5 9.7 10.7 (67)

        GOALS - Syd: Hall 2, Williams 2, J Bolton, Crouch, Goodes, McVeigh, O'Keefe, Schneider. Geel: Kelly 3, Chapman 2, Kingsley 2, Mooney, Playfair, Gardiner.
        BEST - Syd: Williams, J Bolton, Kirk, Ball, Crouch, James. Geel: Kelly, Chapman, Mooney, Harley Milburn, Ling.
        UMPIRES - Rosebury, Nicholls, Schmitt.
        INJURIES - Syd: Maxfield (neck), Kennelly (ribs) Geel: Riccardi (calf) replaced in the selected side by Rooke, Enright (wrist).
        REPORTS - Nil
        CROWD - 25,451 at the SCG.

        A last-quarter rally was enough to get Sydney home by six points and deny plucky Geelong an upset win at the SCG last night.

        Geelong led for much of the last three quarters, but the youthful and under-strength visitors could not seal the deal in the last term as Sydney eked out victory, 10.13 (73) to 10.7 (67).

        The Swans kicked 3.8 to 1.0 in the last quarter as they mounted almost constant pressure on a Geelong side notorious for its inability to register big totals.

        The Cats held the Swans goalless in the third quarter and entered the last period with a 14-point advantage.

        Hustled out of their stride for much of the evening, the Swans finally cranked up their intensity. Prime movers Paul Williams, Barry Hall and Adam Goodes, who had been well contained for much of the contest, kicked the first three goals of the last quarter to push the match beyond the visitors' reach and condemn them to their third consecutive loss.

        Hall and Williams headed Sydney's goal kicking with two apiece.

        Already missing several players, Geelong suffered another blow with the late withdrawal of Peter Riccardi.

        Yet, while Sydney kicked the first two goals of the night and led by seven points at the first break, the Cats fought back and grabbed the initiative. They dictated terms for much of the next two quarters and unsettled Sydney with their tenacious scrambling, chasing and spoiling.

        Geelong kicked five goals to four in the second quarter to lead by two points at the main break. It crept closer to an unexpected victory by kicking 2.2 to 0.2 in the third quarter.

        Youngster James Kelly sparked much of Geelong's good work, kicking three goals and accumulating a match-high 22 possessions.

        He was paid the compliment of having Sydney's chief tagger Brett Kirk moved on to him in the second half.

        Despite question marks about the potency of its forward line, Geelong looked lively in that area during the first half with Paul Chapman contributing two goals, and David Haynes, Kent Kingsley and Henry Playfair also taking some good grabs.

        Kirk tallied 20 possessions for Sydney, while Williams and Jason Ball each had 19.

        Several Sydney players received injury treatment during the game, including Stuart Maxfield and Tadhg Kennelly.

        Comment

        • Bleed Red Blood
          Senior Player
          • Sep 2003
          • 2057

          #5
          Spirited Cats' feel agony against Swans
          11 April 2004 Herald Sun
          Jackie Epstein

          GEELONG'S season went from embarrassing to agonising after the Cats went down by a goal to the Swans in a nail-biter at the SCG last night.

          Playing like a different team to the one that meekly surrendered to Carlton last week, the Cats led for most of the match before being swamped in the final quarter.

          A 14-point lead at the final break was not enough and it was a familiar story as the Cats ran out of legs and forgot how to win.

          Geelong had pressured and strangled the Swans' free-flowing game for most of the match.

          But from the first bounce of the final quarter Geelong was under siege and it could have been worse had the Swans converted more chances.

          Paul Williams should have caused more damage for Sydney, but he had Barry Hall and Adam Goodes bobbing up when it counted most.

          Leading by two goals with two minutes to play, Kent Kingsley goaled from 55 metres to give the Cats a sniff, but it was all too late.

          The Swans' midfield, which had been outpointed all match, got on top through Jason Ball and the freshness of Jared Crouch, Jude Bolton and Brett Kirk was telling.

          Geelong's dire situation was not helped when Corey Enright ran off favouring his left wrist midway through the final quarter.

          From there, the Swans took complete control and the Cats were left devastated when the final siren sounded.

          Although it was an improved performance by Geelong, it is still without a win this season.

          Savaged last week by coach Mark Thompson, the Cats responded with a spirited effort built around the performance of James Kelly in the middle.

          Up by two points at half-time, it was always a question of whether the Cats would run out of legs on Sydney's home turf.

          Obviously stung by recent performances, the players fought back with a determined attack on the ball.

          A restructure set them on their way, with Cameron Mooney starting in the ruck and Paul Chapman at full-forward flanked by Kingsley and Charlie Gardiner.

          Kelly and Cameron Ling were prolific in the midfield and the withdrawal of Peter Riccardi forced debutant Andrew Mackie into a role at half-forward with success.

          Kelly moved forward and kicked three goals, snapping a vital one late in the second term to help his team regain the lead.

          He was so dangerous that Kirk was tagging him early in the third term.

          Chapman kicked two goals in five minutes in the second quarter and was a strong force in attack.

          That all came despite a horror start when Matthew Scarlett's attempt to clear was intercepted by Ryan O'Keefe to open the Swans' account.

          Mistakes marred much of the match as a result of the intense pressure.

          Thompson's plan seemed to revolve around dragging Leo Barry and Stuart Maxfield out of the play and it threw Sydney off its game plan.

          David Haynes filled an important role on Barry, leaving room for Kingsley to lead. Goodes started in the middle and rotated with Ball in the forward line, but the Cats dominated the centre clearances.

          Darren Milburn made a welcome return to the fold from a knee injury, controlling half-back after receiving a heavy knock in the first quarter.

          At the other end, the Sydney defence was being sorely tested by Henry Playfair and the athletic Gardiner.

          Tadhg Kennelly went off midway through the first term after copping a knee to the midriff. After receiving treatment in the rooms he bravely played on.

          Craig Bolton and Heath James were solid enough in defence to cover, but the injury toll was mounting.

          Adam Schneider, Barry and Ball needed to spend time on the bench, with Maxfield coming off second best after a heavy collision with Josh Hunt.

          Jarrad McVeigh provided a spark pushing forward off the wing. He was a much-needed option, with Scarlett keeping Hall quiet and Schneider struggling to find the ball.

          The Swans managed only two points in the crucial third term, with Williams and O'Keefe missing shots.

          The Cats were still without Brenton Sanderson (calf), Ben Graham (chest), Riccardi (groin), Gary Ablett (osteitis pubis) Steven King (ankle), Steve Johnson (ankle) and David Loats (knee), but they will not be looking for excuses after letting another game slip.



          HITOUTS: 44
          50m PENALTIES: 1
          GOALS: Free 2; Play 3; Mark 5
          DISTANCE OF GOALS: 0-15m 2; 15-30m 1; 30-40m 2; 40+m 5

          http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/foo...0,8033,9247500^19773,00.html

          Comment

          Working...