Crucially,in what will be noted most by envious rivals,Geelong have managed to persuade key players to accept fewer dollars,with Dangerfield,Hawkins and Selwood all understood to be playing for well below market rates in their dotage. Ditto for gun defender Tom Stewart and even ex-Giant superstar Jeremy Cameron.
Intaking the Norm Smith Medal with his second team,Smith,33,became a four-time premiership player. He relished the spaces of the ’G to garner 32 disposals,11 forward entries,14 score involvements and four goals,two of them in the first quarter when the match was alive;his game – and the result – will prompt mixed feelings in Hawthorn hearts.
Tom Hawkins and Joel Selwood take a victory lap.Credit:Scott Barbour
Skipper Selwood joined Smith in the four-flag club,the first Geelong player to do so,in his record 40th final (beating Hawk Michael Tuck) and was among the catalysts for the opening blitz with a dozen disposals.
If Selwood chooses to retire,as many think likely,he will bow out as he began his career in 2007 – as a premiership player and warrior nonpareil.
Whereas the Melbourne flag of last year prompted dynasty predictions – by the Demons,largely – and prior premiers often carry that expectation,the large body of 30-plus players in Geelong’s team and the age of champions meant that this premiership was more the culmination of a super era than the beginning of one.
That said,Geelong have changed the paradigm of what is possible and who will say they’re too old and slow next when their best pair were fleet-footed 33 (Smith) and 32 year-olds (Dangerfield).
Geelong people aside,many will remember the occasion more for the pre-game performance of Robbie Williams – his singalong version of John Farnham’sYou’re The Voice and duet with Delta Goodrem – than for the one-sided match,which did not meet the standard of an exhilarating season. The AFL nailed the entertainment,having botched Friday’s river parade,which punctuated a troublesome few days for the AFL. The lead-in to the grand final was shadowed by the major ramifications of the awful Hawthorn racism scandal since Wednesday.
A less consequential cloud had hung over Sydney key forward Sam Reid,who was played despite an adductor injury that forced him out of the preliminary final. Sydney’s punt reached an embarrassing end when a limping Reid was subbed out just after half-time and replaced by Braeden Campbell.
Reid’s outstanding 203-centimetre,20-year-old opponent De Koning was among the most influential afield while they were matched,and those with an historical bent would recall that his Collingwood brother Ben was injured in 2011 when opposed to a match-turning Hawkins in Geelong’s last flag. Geelong,conversely,hadleft out hamstring victim Max Holmes,who was replaced by Mark O’Connor.
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“We made a mistake,” Sydney coach John Longmire admitted after the game.
If Smith was an easy choice for the Norm Smith,he had competition from Dangerfield,who claimed his first flag in his 15th season. Like Selwood and Hawkins,he was especially potent early,and went on to gather 19 disputed balls – more than Sydney’s Isaac Heeney,Tom Hickey,Jake Lloyd and Ollie Florent combined. Hawkins had set the boulder rolling when he booted the match’s opening two goals via his patented move of plucking the ball from a throw-in.
For the Swans,this was their third consecutive grand final defeat since the upset of Hawthorn in 2012’s epic,and meant that they have been unable to win a premiership over the nine years of Lance Franklin’s $10 million-plus contract.
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“Buddy,” who will play on,was utterly suffocated by Jack Henry,having just five touches and no goals. In fairness,Franklin also had scarce opportunity,as Geelong won the territorial battle so decisively,doubling Sydney’s meagre 32 entries.
Heeney did not touch the footy in the first term,James Rowbottom did little and while the flint-hard Luke Parker gave effort and fellow midfielder Chad Warner ended with semi-respectable numbers,they were mute in terms of impact. Only defender Robbie Fox,opposed to Cameron,can be said to have delivered on the grandest stage.
Sydney failed,but the Swans remain a super club. In 2022,though,Geelong’s longevity – of players,contention and finally flags – makes them the greatest club of all.
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