Brad Agnew does battle with Eddie Betts as Bryce Gibbs awaits outcome
|
| 1st
| 2nd
| 3rd
| Final
| Pts
|
Glenelg
| 4.2
| 8.3
| 15.4
| 15.6
| 96
|
Adelaide
| 4.4
| 8.7
| 11.8
| 14.10
| 94
|
|
Glenelg Oval. Crowd 4,011
By ZAC MILBANK
It was nothing short of a monumental minor round victory for the Glenelg Football Club.
In an encounter befitting of a finals clash, the Tigers got the ideal tune up for September when it hung tough to overcome a star-studded Adelaide line-up by two points at ACH Group Stadium.
Still without hard-working forward Josh Scott and classy Geelong recruit Cory Gregson, the Bays stayed true to their team mantra to hold firm against the likes of Eddie Betts, Bryce Gibbs, Sam Jacobs and Richard Douglas.
”It’s a huge win for the club – that’s four big wins in a row,” Glenelg midfielder Luke Partington, who led the way for his team with 31 disposals, told Channel 7.
”They (Adelaide) were quality opposition and fortunately we had enough to hold on in the end.”
After bolting out of the blocks to kick the first three goals of the game, the hosts went toe-to-toe with the Crows in an entertaining first half which continued to ebb and flow with significant momentum swings.
Former Tiger Darcy Fogarty appeared to give the visitors some meaningful purpose when he nailed a set shot from 40m to give his side an 11-point lead three points into the third quarter.
Darcy Le-Cornu celebration after first goal
Second-game Tiger forward Darcy Le Cornu had his hair ruffled after his first career goal
before a defining three-goal cameo from classy Glenelg forward Luke Reynolds late in the third quarter gave the Bays punch leading into the final change.
”It certainly helps when the ball is coming out of the middle the way it did so it was good to have an impact in the third term,” said Reynolds, who booted 4.1 to match his fellow forward Liam McBean.
Powerade Breakthrough Player contender Brad Close nailed a long set shot on the three-quarter time siren to earn a 20-point lead for the Tigers with a quarter to play.
But there was still plenty of sweat to be spent by the Bays as Adelaide veteran Betts, making his Statewide Super League debut, showed why he’s been one of the best small forwards in the modern era.
Just three minutes into the fourth quarter, Betts kept his feet to swoop on a loose ball and snap truly along the ground from 15m.
Midway through the final stanza, Betts struck again when he snuck up on Tiger defender Will Gould to catch him holding the ball 20m out directly in front, trimming the lead to just two points.
After Hugh Greenwood’s quick snap in traffic fell wide for a behind, McBean soon after had a chance to put the Crows out of the contest when he had a set shot from 45m on a slight angle.
But his shot sailed wide, allowing Heath Younie’s men to quickly sweep the ball through to the other end where Greenwood marked strongly and passed to another experienced Crow in Richard Douglas.
Douglas, who finished with 34 disposals and three goals, was unable to boot a fourth when his set shot from 55m fell short at the top of the goal square.
After two stoppages with the Tigers’ defenders – including captain Chris Curran who took two memorable marks with the game on the line – desperately holding the ball in, the final siren sounded much to the joy of the Bays’ faithful.
”It was a bit shaky towards the end but I was always confident we could win – it was
like finals footy really,” Curran told Channel 7.
”I was down a bit early so it was good to snare a couple of marks towards the end.”
Securing the premiership points has all but sewn up the minor premiership for the Bays, who now boast a four-point advantage over the Crows at the top of the table.
Matthew Snook, Andrew Bradley and Marlon Motlop all played strong roles in the win to assist Partington in the centre square while tough-tackling Brad Agnew enjoyed a strong first half with two goals.
Gibbs was the only player on the ground to crack 40 disposals, displaying strong work-rate to get his touches at various points on the field while Douglas also pushed his claims for an AFL recall.
First-year Crows draftee Chayce Jones lifted his output to tally 19 touches and a goal while Betts’ attitude was typically superb as he booted four goals without a miss to go with his 14 disposals.
Veteran ruckman Sam Jacobs had a hard-fought duel against former Collingwood bigman Jesse White, with ”Sauce” booting two clever goals in the first term to make his intentions felt.
LEADING DISPOSALS –
Glenelg: Partington 31, Snook 24, Bradley, Motlop 21, Curran 19, Scharenberg 18, Agnew, Schott 17.
Adelaide: Gibbs 40, Douglas 34, Greenwood 23, Sholl 22, Jones, Seymour 19..
GOALS –
Glenelg: L. McBean 4, L. Reynolds 4, B. Agnew 2, B. Close, J. White, L. Partington, D. Le Cornu, M. Motlop
Adelaide: E. Betts 4, R. Douglas 3, S. Jacobs 2, J. Gallucci, M. Wright, D. Fogarty, C. Jones, H. Greenwood
BEST
Glenelg: A. Bradley, J. White, C. Curran, L. Partington, B. Agnew, J. Scharenberg
Adelaide: R. Douglas, E. Betts, B. Gibbs, H. Greenwood, T. Hutchesson, P. Seymour
MAGAREY MEDAL VOTES -
3. Reynolds (G)
2. Gibbs (A)
1. Partington (G)