Eagles Resurgence Takes Next Step

Fast Start Allows Eagles to Coast Home

West Coast showed that they would be a significant improver on their 2010 wooden spoon finish with a comprehensive nine goal win over Melbourne at Subiaco Oval.

The Demons had also been expected to rise after a strong finish to the 2010 season and started the season with two wins and a draw from their first four games.

However, they were no match for the Eagles’ famed forward press as West Coast locked the ball in their forward half for much of the night. The Eagles bounced to a five goal quarter time lead off the back of an astonishing 22-3 inside 50 advantage and they never looked like relinquishing the lead.

After their first four matches had been decided by 18 points or less (for two wins and two losses), Eagles coach John Worsfold was pleased to have the match out of the opposition’s reach early.

“We’ve had four pretty tight games leading into this one so to actually get the margin out a little bit is some good reward for the players”, Worsfold said.

Over 36,000 fans attended the rare Thursday night fixture in Perth, with the Eagles and Demons both coming off byes in round 5. West Coast made three changes to the side that lost to Hawthorn a fortnight earlier with Will Schofield and Mitch Brown unavailable due to injury and Bradd Dalziell omitted.

Mark LeCras returned for his first game since damaging a groin in the opening round, with Ashley Smith selected for his first match of the season and Patrick McGinnity also included. The Demons smashed newcomers Gold Coast by 90 points before the bye, with the Demons coaching staff sticking with the same 22 for the trip west.

However, it wouldn’t be long before Dean Bailey would have wished he could have called on more reinforcements.

Nic Naitanui took clean possession from the opening bounce and sent the ball deep into the Eagles’ forward line in what would prove indicative of the rest of the term. The Demons defence were under siege and the Eagles arguably could have led by more at the first break.

Jack Darling kicked the home sides first major shortly after and by the time Andrew Embley waltzed through for his second goal just before quarter time, there had been a distinct difference in level between the two sides.

It was much of the same for the second term before Melbourne briefly brought some life to the contest on the brink of half-time. Two goals in a minute to Colin Sylvia and Aaron Davey reduced the margin at the major break to 26 points but West Coast reasserted themselves in the second half, coasting to their third win of the year.

The tale of the match was told in the stats, with the Eagles well ahead in most areas. The Eagles had 40 more disposals on the night, which translated into a 65-36 inside-50 count, following their opening quarter blitz. The Eagles also out-tackled the Demons 68-57 and claimed a win in the clearances 35-29.

West Coast also made the most of the advantage they had in their forward line, with the likes of Kennedy, Lynch, Darling and the resting ruckmen of Naitanui and Cox proving too strong for the smaller Demon defence. The Eagles took 22 contested marks for the match, and had 14 marks inside 50.

Individually, Matt Priddis was the leading ball winner on the ground with 33 disposals (9 kicks, 24 handballs), while also amassing eight clearances and seven inside 50’s. Daniel Kerr tallied 27 possessions, six clearances and seven inside 50s with Matt Rosa picking up 26.

Dean Cox wasn’t as proficient as previous weeks but still managed 23 disposals and 12 marks to go with 20 hit-outs in an intriguing duel with Demons ruckman Mark Jamar. Jamar was easily the Demons best player and only four-quarter performer with the pair breaking even in their contest.

Ashley Smith gathered 25 disposals in his first senior outing of the year, Sam Butler had 21 and laid nine tackles, while Mark Nicoski was again lively in his new role across half forward. Nicoski kicked two goals and had a hand in several other goals from 15 disposals.

Young forward Jack Darling put in his best performance of his burgeoning career with three goals from 14 disposals and nine marks while Andrew Embley and Quinten Lynch also each booted three goals.

Apart from Jamar, it was slim pickings for the Demons.

With the ball spending much of the night in their defence, Jack Grimes finished with the most disposals (27), while Colin Garland (19) and James Frawley (18) also saw plenty of the pill. Nathan Jones collected 23 possessions, while Colin Sylvia tried hard through the middle and across half forward with 21 disposals, seven tackles and a goal.

Coach Dean Bailey couldn’t hide his disappointment after the match.

“It is a poor performance, it is a poor performance”, Bailey lamented.

“We turned the ball over too much. We’ve got to go back to the fundamentals of the game and get better in those areas.”

“You don’t start well, you get what you deserve really.”

The win catapulted the Eagles back into the top eight, into seventh spot ahead of Melbourne who slipped to eighth. With three wins, the Eagles were equal on points with Hawthorn, but there was already separation at the top of the ladder.

The last two premiers were the trendsetters early in the year, with both sides undefeated at the end of Round 6. The Magpies were a game clear, courtesy of having played an extra game, with Geelong, Hawthorn and Fremantle (who had started the year with four wins from five matches) all having byes this round.

Carlton overcame Sydney in the final quarter to record their fourth win of the season and move up to third behind the Magpies and Cats and in front of the Dockers who rounded out the top four. Essendon pushed up to fifth after they were the latest team to annihilate the Suns. The Bombers kicked a record 15 goals in the first term to lead by an astonishing 93 points at quarter time, ultimately ‘easing’ to a 139 point win. The victory bumped their percentage by almost 27 percentage points.

West Coast sat two points ahead of the Demons, Swans and Tigers who defeated the winless Brisbane by 26 points. The Lions were left last on the ladder after North Melbourne earned their first win of the season with a ten goal triumph over Port Adelaide.

The Eagles had showed in their win over Melbourne that the early season form was sustainable and three wins from five matches had put the team in good stead for a return to finals action ahead of a tough month with matches to come against Essendon, Fremantle, the Bulldogs and reigning premiers Collingwood.

Back In The Pack

Consecutive Losses See Eagles Slip Down Ladder

After a bright start with wins over North Melbourne and Port Adelaide to open the season, the Eagles soon found themselves with a squared ledger after dropping games against Sydney and Hawthorn.

In a throwback to the classic encounters of the mid-2000’s, the Eagles and Swans played out another tight match, with the margin never going beyond three goals for the entire game.

Adam Goodes would be the difference between the two sides in the final term switching to the midfield after spending much of the first three quarters playing forward.

With West Coast holding a 12 point after Luke Shuey goaled inside the first minute of the quarter, Goodes provided the response to draw the Swans within six points, before adding a second major later in the term to level the scores. Goodes would finish with eight disposals for the term, along with three centre clearances and four contested marks as Sydney booted six goals to three to claim a narrow 13 point win.

The match itself was far less a spectacle and more a bruising battle, as the hardened Sydney midfield overwhelmed their younger opponents. The Swans laid 111 tackles (to West Coast’s 69), with Jude Bolton applying a game record 19 tackles himself.

The Swans got the quick jump with Jesse White booting the opening two goals of the match, but Quinten Lynch also managed a brace for the quarter which saw the two teams tied at the first change after Nic Naitanui floated home a goal on the siren.

Again Sydney got out to a two goal lead, with Goodes registering his first goal, but Lynch added two more goals, either side of a Lewis Jetta major, to keep the Eagles within touching distance. Andrew Embley put the Eagles in front, but Rhyce Shaw restored the Swans’ lead with the visitors in front by three points at the main break.

Dean Cox then took a hold of the match in the third quarter, putting in a quarter that matched the efforts of Goodes in the final. The Swans opted to play Shane Mumford as their sole ruckman against the pairing of Cox and Naitanui, with Mark Seaby – who had crossed to the Swans in the off-season – and Canadian Mike Pyke both left out of the side.

Sydney moved to a game high 17 point lead after Ben McGlynn and Jude Bolton both kicked majors when Cox stamped his authority. The Eagles ruckman picked up nine disposals for the term and kicked the final goal of an Eagles four-goal run that saw West Coast head into the final quarter with a six point lead.

Luke Shuey then made it five majors on the trot early in the last before Goodes drove his side to the line. Goodes finished with 21 disposals and three goals, complementing the workhorse Swans midfield group. Kieran Jack was the leading ball winner for the Swans, collecting 23 touches while also restricting Eagles dynamo Daniel Kerr to just 13.

Josh Kennedy also had 23 possessions, 18 of which were contested, while Jesse White joined Goodes in booting three goals.

Matt Priddis was one of the best for West Coast with 27 disposals and six clearances, doing what he could to match the Swans outfit. Cox’ strong start to the season continued, finishing with 20 disposals, two goals and 38 hit-outs. Naitanui tallied 28 himself with the Eagles winning the tap 68-38 but the Swans were still able to claim the clearances 49-34. Crucially their dominance through the middle in the final quarter saw them maintain their unbeaten record, following a draw with Melbourne in the opening round and a five point win over Essendon.

The Eagles on the other hand had been dealt their first loss of the season which saw them drop to ninth on the ladder.

The Eagles then made the long trek to Launceston to tackle the Hawks in what proved to be another narrow defeat. The match featured two of the upcoming forwards in the game, with Lance Franklin kicking six of the Hawks’ 10 goals, while Josh Kennedy booted four of the Eagles’ nine.

For the second week in a row the Eagles led at three-quarter time, but were run over by a more experienced side in the final quarter. Franklin kicked three of his six goals in the final quarter, as he got the better of young defender Mitch Brown.

With two points separating the sides at the final change, the Hawks broke the game open with the first four goals of the term, leading by 26 points as the term ticked into time-on. However West Coast finished with a rush, kicking the final three goals in the match but ultimately falling short by seven points.

The Eagles were made to pay for their early inaccuracy, as they failed to capitalise on their control of the match in the first quarter. The Eagles had twice as many inside-50s but kicked three goals to the Hawks’ two.

Josh Kennedy kicked his second late in the quarter to put the Eagles ten points ahead, but he was one culprit of missed chances, with three other efforts on goal either failing to score or going out on the full.

West Coast continued to hold the ascendancy in field position as the Hawks struggled to break through the Eagles forward press. However, the Hawks were devastating when they got the ball forward. Hawthorn booted the first three goals of the second term before Andrew Embley added one late for West Coast to reduce the Hawks’ lead to a solitary point.

While Franklin was proving a handful forward of centre, Sam Mitchell was racking up disposals in the irregular position of half back. Mitchell had averaged 27 disposals across the opening three rounds, but had matched that effort by half time.

The Eagles booted two goals to one in the third term to grab the lead before Franklin stepped up in the final term.

Mitchell finished with 37 disposals for the match as he was moved onto Kerr in the second half, who was also playing out of the middle, across half forward. Grant Birchall and Matt Suckling gathered 30 and 23 disposals, respectively, in defence while Brad Sewell was the enforcer through the middle with 19 possessions and 12 tackles.

The Eagles were well served once again by Matthew Priddis in the middle of the ground and Matt Rosa was strong on a wing with 25 touches and a goal. Josh Kennedy was the only multiple goal scorer for West Coast, while in defence Darren Glass was supreme in his 200th AFL match.

With Brown tracking Franklin and Eric Mackenzie lining up on Jarryd Roughead at full forward, Glass was released to play on the resting ruckman in either David Hale or Brent Renouf getting the better of both players. Mackenzie held Roughead to just one disposal for the first half to be one of the Eagles best.  

Sam Butler, Jack Darling and Andrew Embley all had 24 touches, with Darling outstanding in the first half with 18 possessions.

The Eagles were now 2-2 for the season and dropped down to 10th on the ladder ahead of their bye in round five. With Gold Coast entering the competition as the 17th team, the competition had an uneven number of teams for the first time since 1994, with each side scheduled for two byes throughout the 24 round season.