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SuperCoach late mail: Every SuperCoach score from Round 11

It was a dirty day for the Dogs, two SuperCoach studs posted promising totals while Macrae and Bontempelli failed to fire. Meanwhile, an enigmatic Eagles forward led all comers. SEE THE ROUND 11 SCORES

You would be all smiles if you have Stephen Coniglio in your SuperCoach team. Picture: AAP Image/Dan Himbrechts.
You would be all smiles if you have Stephen Coniglio in your SuperCoach team. Picture: AAP Image/Dan Himbrechts.

A pair of Bulldogs SuperCoach forwards have continued their purple patch of form.

Caleb Daniel and Josh Dunkley led the way for their side in its thumping loss to the Eagles, with both posting 110-plus points.

The duo will be highly sought after the Bulldogs’ bye in Round 12, with each player hitting their Round 11 break even.

Meanwhile, Bulldog stars Jack Macrae and Marcus Bontempelli produced underwhelming scores.

For the Eagles, unpredictable forward Jack Darling reached a game high 135 SuperCoach points thanks to his monster six-goal haul.

CRIPPS CLAMPED BY CLARKE

Watch out SuperCoaches, there’s a new tagger coming for your beloved premiums

Blues superstar Patrick Cripps was barely sighted in their loss to Essendon, blanketed by young inclusion Dylan Clarke.
The SuperCoach stud managed to power his way to a respectable score of 85 SuperCoach points, with 9 contested possessions and seven tackles saving him from a nightmare total.

Clarke - priced at just $147,700 - is one to watch in the coming weeks after he registered 99 points in his first game for the season, collecting 23 touches and 10 tackles in the tagging role.

Meanwhile, Sam Walsh posted his worst score of his career in the wet.

MARSHALL SHINES IN SHANGHAI

It was a disappointing day for the Saints in Shanghai but one man stood tall while his teammates struggled.

Rowan Marshall posted a career high 139 SuperCoach points up against Power ruck duo Scott Lycett and Paddy Ryder.

Meanwhile, teammates Jack Billings and Robbie Young failed to have an impact as stars Travis Boak and Robbie Gray dominated.

ILLNESS RULES OUT TWO SAINTS

Two Saints defenders have been ruled out of their clash in China after an illness swept through the St Kilda camp.

Cash cow Jonathon Marsh and fellow defender Daniel McKenzie have been replaced by bubble boy Darragh Joyce and youngster Nick Coffield, who will line up for his first game of the season.

Fortunately, Saints gun Jack Billings is playing despite doubt surrounding whether he would face the Power, welcome news for more than 17,000 SuperCoaches.

The Saints flew in re-inforcements on Friday after a myriad of Saints — including Billings — missed training due to illness.


Jack Billings didn’t train on Saturday. Pic: AFL Photos
Jack Billings didn’t train on Saturday. Pic: AFL Photos

ABOUT LAST NIGHT

We didn’t want to believe Angus Brayshaw’s Instagram story was real.

But on Saturday night, Melbourne confirmed the worst fears of about 100,000 SuperCoaches when Marty Hore withdrew from its team to face Adelaide.

The SuperCoach rookie of the year has thrown plans into turmoil, with many coaches already trading and without cover due to Zac Williams and Jay Lockhart being unavailable.

Brayshaw posted an Instagram story on Thursday which showed Hore’s calf heavily bandaged, but any concerns were dismissed when he was named in the Demons’ side.

That was until Saturday night, when he was replaced by Jay Kennedy-Harris in Melbourne’s final team.

Marty Hore’s late withdrawal had coaches scrambling on Saturday night. Picture: AAP Image/Daniel Pockett.
Marty Hore’s late withdrawal had coaches scrambling on Saturday night. Picture: AAP Image/Daniel Pockett.

Earlier on Saturday, the 200-mark was hit.

GWS ball magnet Stephen Coniglio returned to form in spectacular fashion on Saturday, smashing through the 200-point barrier with a dominant outing against Gold Coast.

With 36 disposals and three goals, Coniglio finished with 207 SuperCoach points in the most-complete individual game of the year.

While there were big scores from Scott Pendlebury and Nat Fyfe at the MCG, Saturday belonged to Coniglio after his heroics.

You would be all smiles if you have Stephen Coniglio in your SuperCoach team. Picture: AAP Image/Dan Himbrechts.
You would be all smiles if you have Stephen Coniglio in your SuperCoach team. Picture: AAP Image/Dan Himbrechts.

Meanwhile, Richmond superstar Dustin Martin was public enemy No. 1 in SuperCoach.

At Round 11, the Brownlow Medallist has us considering whether we should trade him back in after another strong performance.

See all the SuperCoach scores below.

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NORTH MELBOURNE V RICHMOND

Late mail: No late changes for either team.

KANGAROOS

The heroes: Ben Cunnington led from the front all night and was the top scorer on the ground with 133 points on the back of 31 disposals, while Shaun Higgins found some SuperCoach form by scoring 127. The pair were two of six Kangaroos to hit the SuperCoach ton, with captain Jack Ziebell (110 points) and Ben Brown (107 from five goals) both playing one of their best games for the season.

The villains: Jamie Macmillan injured his calf in the first half and didn’t reappear, finishing the game on 47 points, burning owners for the second week in a row. Cash cow Nick Larkey was OK but didn’t manage to crack 60 points, falling just short at 58.

SUPERCOACH SCORES

Ben Cunnington 133

Shaun Higgins 127

Jack Ziebell 110

Cameron Zurhaar 108

Ben Brown 107

Jared Polec 104

Mason Wood 99

Todd Goldstein 96

Jy Simpkin 95

Trent Dumont 94

Jed Anderson 92

Luke Davies-Uniacke 86

Jasper Pittard 73

Shaun Atley 72

Robbie Tarrant 69

Nick Larkey 58

Luke McDonald 56

Scott D. Thompson 55

Tarryn Thomas 52

Jamie Macmillan 47

Marley Williams 45

Kayne Turner 41

TIGERS

The heroes: Bachar Houli is in red-hot form and Friday night was no different as he did as he pleased across halfback to notch up 139 points. Is Dustin Martin back? He was electric in the first half, scoring 77 points before slowing down in the second half, like most of his teammates, but still finished with 113 points. Sydney Stack (107 points) and Liam Baker (85) have been exceptional bargain-basement price rookies.

The villains: Noah Balta has rewarded SuperCoaches for their loyalty but Friday night he was back to his old low-scoring ways as he could manage only 47 points. He wasn’t alone, however, with Shai Bolton (34) and Jack Higgins (37) quiet.

SUPERCOACH SCORES

Bachar Houli 139

Dustin Martin 113

Sydney Stack 107

Dion Prestia 92

Brandon Ellis 91

Josh Caddy 86

Liam Baker 85

Shane Edwards 84

Jason Castagna 76

Trent Cotchin 69

Kamdyn McIntosh 58

Nick Vlastuin 57

David Astbury 57

Tom J. Lynch 55

Ivan Soldo 52

Dan Butler 50

Noah Balta 47

Jack Higgins 37

Nathan Broad 35

Dylan Grimes 34

Shai Bolton 34

Ryan Garthwaite 26

Nat Fyfe led the way in Fremantle’s upset win over Collingwood on Saturday. Picture: Graham Denholm/AFL Photos/Getty Images.
Nat Fyfe led the way in Fremantle’s upset win over Collingwood on Saturday. Picture: Graham Denholm/AFL Photos/Getty Images.

COLLINGWOOD V FREMANTLE

No late changes

Heroes: Nat Fyfe was simply superb, inspiring Fremantle to a victory few saw coming on the road against one of the flag favourites. Michael Walters picked up more than 20 points for his matchwinning goal, while Connor Blakely sent a reminder of his quality and could be a real POD in defence. Scott Pendlebury and Brodie Grundy went big for the Magpies, but there were several disappointments from their teammates.

Villains: What has happened to Dayne Beams? He started the season as a premium midfield pick but hasn’t hit the heights and only managed 34 on Saturday. Adam Treloar’s owners would have been disappointed with a total of 68, while Jack Crisp (73) hasn’t progressed to be the defensive premium many coaches were hoping for. Look away now if you paid $588,700 for David Mundy (40). Alex Pearce (12) can be forgiven after being injured.

MAGPIES

Nat Fyfe 145

Michael Walters 127

Connor Blakely 105

Bradley Hill 100

Rory Lobb 98

Luke Ryan 95

Reece Conca 94

Nathan Wilson 88

Jesse Hogan 86

Darcy Tucker 83

Brandon Matera 80

Ed Langdon 76

Andrew Brayshaw 74

Sam Switkowski 61

Taylin Duman 58

Ethan Hughes 55

Brett Bewley 47

Adam Cerra 43

David Mundy 40

Joel Hamling 37

Brennan Cox 31

Alex Pearce 12

DOCKERS

Scott Pendlebury 135

Brodie Grundy 124

Brayden Maynard 105

Will Hoskin-Elliott 91

Steele Sidebottom 90

Jordan De Goey 89

Jeremy Howe 82

Jordan Roughead 78

Levi Greenwood 75

Chris Mayne 75

Jack Crisp 73

James Aish 71

Darcy Moore 68

Adam Treloar 68

Josh Thomas 67

Travis Varcoe 67

Tom Phillips 63

Jaidyn Stephenson 62

Brody Mihocek 57

Ben Reid 48

Callum L. Brown 43

Dayne Beams 34

Stephen Coniglio scored the first SuperCoach double hundred of 2019. Picture. Phil Hillyard
Stephen Coniglio scored the first SuperCoach double hundred of 2019. Picture. Phil Hillyard

GWS GIANTS V GOLD COAST

No late changes

Heroes: Look no further than Stephen Coniglio. The Giants on-baller posted the first 200 of the season, capping a huge outing with two last-term goals. Seven Giants reached 100 in their side’s 83-point win as those who traded in Jeremy Cameron (109) and Josh Kelly (138) this week were vindicated. Jarrod Witts (127) and Darcy MacPherson (119) were the only Suns to managed triple figures.

Villains: Lachie Whitfield was a popular trade target this week but a combination of a tag from Nick Holman and two heavy hits meant he only reached 65. He finished the game with a shoulder/collarbone concern and that could be a huge issue for coaches who already held him when he missed a few weeks after the Sydney derby.

GIANTS

Stephen Coniglio 207

Josh Kelly 138

Jeremy Finlayson 131

Jacob Hopper 125

Matt de Boer 116

Jeremy Cameron 109

Phil Davis 101

Sam J. Reid 94

Heath Shaw 93

Brett Deledio 91

Isaac Cumming 90

Brent Daniels 84

Nick Haynes 82

Harry Perryman 72

Tim Taranto 71

Harry Himmelberg 69

Lachlan Keeffe 68

Adam Kennedy 67

Lachie Whitfield 65

Toby Greene 60

Adam Tomlinson 53

Shane Mumford 53

SUNS

Jarrod Witts 127

Darcy MacPherson 119

Lachie Weller 95

Brayden Fiorini 92

Peter Wright 75

Anthony Miles 74

Jesse Joyce 66

Jack Martin 65

George Horlin-Smith 59

David Swallow 55

Wil Powell 52

Nick Holman 50

Josh Schoenfeld 47

Jordan Murdoch 44

Ben King 40

Josh Corbett 38

Charlie Ballard 34

Chris Burgess 33

Jack Lukosius 32

Jack Hombsch 24

Jack Bowes 18

Alex Sexton 17

Patrick Dangerfield made a strong return to the Geelong team. Picture: AAP Image/Julian Smith.
Patrick Dangerfield made a strong return to the Geelong team. Picture: AAP Image/Julian Smith.

GEELONG V SYDNEY

Late change: Rhys Stanley replaced by Zac Smith.

Heroes: When Patrick Dangerfield fires, 70 per cent of SuperCoaches rejoice. After we were forced to take Robbie Young’s 17 last week with Danger out injured, he returned in style with a team-high 130 against Sydney. Dane Rampe and Luke Parker were the topscorers on the ground, while Jake Lloyd continued his incredibly consistent season as he shapes as the top defender of the year. Esava Ratugolea was the surprise packet for Geelong with 114, so don’t expect to see two-gamer Darcy Fort for a while.

Villains: Lance Franklin looks done as a SuperCoach prospect. Buddy hasn’t scored one ton this year and has posted 39 and 50 since returning to the Sydney team from injury. He’s going to be very cheap, but it’s probably best you don’t get tempted. Isaac Heeney continues to score below premium numbers with 75, while Joel Selwood’s 69 was his seventh game without a hundred.

SWANS

Dane Rampe 135

Luke Parker 135

Jake Lloyd 123

George Hewett 103

Jordan Dawson 96

Sam Reid 92

Callum Sinclair 88

Colin O’Riordan 81

Will Hayward 76

Isaac Heeney 75

Tom Papley 72

Oliver Florent 71

Aliir Aliir 70

Robbie Fox 66

Callum Mills 65

Nick Blakey 51

Lance Franklin 50

Lewis Melican 50

Tom McCartin 49

Jarrad McVeigh 45

Daniel Menzel 39

Ryan Clarke 12

CATS

Patrick Dangerfield 130

Esava Ratugolea 114

Brandan Parfitt 104

Luke Dahlhaus 102

Mitch Duncan 101

Tom Stewart 99

Tim Kelly 92

Tom Hawkins 91

Mark Blicavs 79

Mark O’Connor 74

Jordan Clark 73

Zac Smith 69

Joel Selwood 69

Cameron Guthrie 69

Tom Atkins 67

Zach Tuohy 61

Harry Taylor 51

Gryan Miers 50

Jake Kolodjashnij 49

Jack Henry 42

James Parsons 40

Gary Rohan 30

Lachie Neale produced again. Pic: AAP
Lachie Neale produced again. Pic: AAP

BRISBANE v HAWTHORN

Heroes: Lachie Neale has been a SuperCoach stud in 2019 and while he didn’t go as large as some weeks, his triple-figure return had thousands of SuperCoaches smiling. Harris Andrews (131) was the dominant player on the ground while Shaun Burgoyne (127) showed age isn’t slowing him down.

Villains: Those who were tempted by classy Lions ballwinner Hugh McCluggage (79) in recent weeksa might have hoped for more. But things were worse if you own either of Hawks goalkickers Jack Gunston (61) and Luke Breust (57). They weren’t the only Hawks who were down on their usual output.

LIONS

Harris Andrews 131

Jarryd Lyons 127

Lewis Taylor 122

Darcy Gardiner 119

Lachie Neale 114

Mitch Robinson 102

Stefan Martin 89

Dayne Zorko 85

Luke Hodge 80

Hugh McCluggage 79

Daniel Rich 78

Ben Keays 73

Noah Answerth 71

Rhys Mathieson 71

Archie Smith 66

Eric Hipwood 65

Lincoln McCarthy 64

Nick Robertson 63

Charles Cameron 55

Cam Rayner 51

Daniel McStay 51

Alex Witherden 46

HAWKS

Shaun Burgoyne 127

James Sicily 108

James Worpel 99

Ricky Henderson 97

Jaeger O’Meara 95

Tom Scully 78

Paul Puopolo 72

Mitchell Lewis 72

Marc Pittonet 70

Liam Shiels 69

Blake Hardwick 62

Jack Gunston 61

Jarman Impey 58

Tim O’Brien 58

Luke Breust 57

James Cousins 54

Isaac Smith 53

Ben Stratton 51

Jonathon Ceglar 46

Conor Glass 43

Chad Wingard 43

James Frawley 26

Max Gawn was huge, but his side suffered another heartbreaker. Pic: Getty Images
Max Gawn was huge, but his side suffered another heartbreaker. Pic: Getty Images

MELBOURNE V ADELAIDE

Late changes: Weideman in for Salem, Kennedy-Harris in for Hore, McKay in for Hartigan.

Heroes: Max Gawn did what Max Gawn does and could have gone even bigger than his 158 points had his late shot at goal sailed through. Clayton Oliver (122) was prolific, while Crows trio Brad Crouch (127) — on the back of his first three-goal haul — Rory Laird (111) and Tom Lynch (109) all fired.

Villains: Oh no, Rory! Not Crows champ Rory Sloane’s fault, but that hamstring proved costly. Sloane managed 35 points before his night ended. Bryce Gibbs (59) was only so-so in his return, while Dee Tom McDonald (54), after looking like getting back to his best, struggled to have a big influence.

DEMONS

Max Gawn 158

Clayton Oliver 122

Nathan Jones 104

Jack Viney 99

James Harmes 95

Angus Brayshaw 91

Bayley Fritsch 85

Michael Hibberd 84

Tim Smith 82

Jeff Garlett 71

Christian Petracca 71

Oskar Baker 69

Sam Weideman 61

Sam Frost 61

Jayden Hunt 58

Josh Wagner 55

Tom McDonald 54

Jay Kennedy Harris 51

Billy Stretch 44

Mitch Hannan 40

Charlie Spargo 38

Oscar McDonald 38

CROWS

Brad Crouch 127

Rory Laird 111

Tom Lynch 109

Jake Kelly 107

Hugh Greenwood 98

Wayne Milera 97

Brodie Smith 96

Cameron Ellis-Yolmen 88

Eddie Betts 85

Jordan Gallucci 82

Rory Atkins 76

David Mackay 72

Alex Keath 69

Daniel Talia 67

Josh Jenkins 67

Bryce Gibbs 59

Luke Brown 55

Reilly O’Brien 52

Paul Seedsman 48

Taylor Walker 47

Rory Sloane 35

Lachlan Murphy 21

ST KILDA V PORT ADELAIDE

Late changes: Jonathon Marsh (illness) and Daniel McKenzie (illness) replaced by Nick Coffield and Darragh Joyce.

Heroes: While it was the Power who dominated proceedings in Shanghai, it was young ruckman Rowan Marshall (139) who lead all comers. Marshall tallied 24 disposals, 23 hitouts, seven marks on his way to a monster score. Travis Boak (131) and Robbie Gray (122) were dominant for the Power, while cash cow Zak Butters (112) posted his maiden SuperCoach ton. Fellow rookie Xavier Duursma (92) backed up his century last week with another fruitful score.

Villains: He was lucky to survive the axe last week, and Robbie Young (33) served up another SuperCoach stinker. Young appears likely to return to the twos to regain some form. We knew Jack Billing’s (56) form was too good to be true. Coach Alan Richardson played him forward and his score paid the price, registering just 14 touches for the match.

Rowan Marshall stood tall for the Saints in China. Pic. AAP
Rowan Marshall stood tall for the Saints in China. Pic. AAP

SAINTS

Rowan Marshall 139

Jade Gresham 105

Tim Membrey 86

Jack Sinclair 77

Jack Newnes 73

Sebastian Ross 71

Josh Bruce 68

Luke Dunstan 67

Jack Steele 67

Dean Kent 65

Ben Long 63

Callum Wilkie 60

Josh Battle 59

Ed Phillips 56

Jack Billings 56

Nick Coffield 48

Jarryn Geary 46

Matthew Parker 45

Shane Savage 44

Darragh Joyce 38

Robbie Young 33

Nathan Brown 31

POWER

Travis Boak 131

Robbie Gray 122

Scott Lycett 115

Zak Butters 112

Jarrod Lienert 112

Karl Amon 98

Dan Houston 98

Riley Bonner 94

Dougal Howard 93

Xavier Duursma 92

Darcy Byrne-Jones 90

Connor Rozee 81

Justin Westhoff 80

Tom Jonas 78

Steven Motlop 75

Paddy Ryder 73

Tom Clurey 70

Ryan Burton 67

Sam Gray 62

Sam Powell-Pepper 62

Kane Farrell 59

Matthew Broadbent 39

ESSENDON V CARLTON

No late changes

Heroes: There were few SuperCoach relevant heros, but skipper Dyson Heppell (153) was piovtal in his side’s win. Teammates Michael Hurley (132) and Darcy Parish (129) also went big, with cash cow Dylan Clarke (99) nearly raising the bat in his first game of the season.

Villains: Many SuperCoaches were let down by Patrick Cripps (85), especially those who chucked the ‘C’ on him. The Blues superstar was blanketed by Bombers youngster Dylan Clarke — who was the real villain today — keeping him to a meagre 11 possessions. Cripps was fortunate to score the total he did, going at 90 per cent disposal efficiency and laying seven tackles. Blues cash cow Sam Walsh (67) posted his worse score for the season and is ripe for the trading.

Blues superstar Patrick Cripps was tagged superbly by young stopper Dylan Clarke. Pic. Getty Images.
Blues superstar Patrick Cripps was tagged superbly by young stopper Dylan Clarke. Pic. Getty Images.

BOMBERS

Dyson Heppell 153

Michael Hurley 132

Darcy Parish 129

Cale Hooker 106

Anthony McDonald-Tipungwuti 105

Andrew McGrath 101

Dylan Clarke 99

Conor McKenna 99

Kyle Langford 97

Matt Guelfi 96

Tom Bellchambers 88

Jayden Laverde 85

David Zaharakis 85

Zach Merrett 85

Ben McNiece 70

Mason Redman 69

Mark Baguley 66

Adam Saad 60

Aaron Francis 46

Josh Begley 44

Patrick Ambrose 37

Shaun McKernan 25

BLUES

Matthew Kreuzer 121

Charlie Curnow 93

Patrick Cripps 89

Sam Petrevski-Seton 85

Caleb Marchbank 84

Jacob Weitering 79

Ed Curnow 76

Paddy Dow 71

Nic Newman 70

Levi Casboult 69

Sam Walsh 67

Will Setterfield 64

Liam Stocker 61

Michael Gibbons 60

Harry McKay 59

David Cuningham 55

Lachie Plowman 52

Jack Silvagni 41

Zac Fisher 36

Darcy Lang 32

Alex Fasolo 31

Matthew Kennedy 30

WEST COAST V WESTERN BULLDOGS

No late changes

Heroes: Who would’ve thought Jack Darling (135) would score back-to-back tons five weeks ago? The tall forward has repaid the faith of his owners, booting six goals in a dominant display. Ball-magnet Andrew Gaff (121) continued his super run of form, SuperCoach guns Caleb Daniel (124) and Josh Dunkley (119) who were in the points for the Bulldogs.

Villains: Adam Simpson is the major culprit here. Shannon Hurn (85) was on his way to another ton for the entire final quarter, with no sign of injury in sight. The veteran spent just 57 per cent time on the ground for the match. Star Bulldogs duo Jack Macrae (84) and Marcus Bontempelli (73) were well below their usual output.

Jack Darling is back in-form. Pic. Paul Kane/Getty Images
Jack Darling is back in-form. Pic. Paul Kane/Getty Images

EAGLES

Jack Darling 135

Andrew Gaff 121

Jamie Cripps 105

Luke Shuey 97

Dom Sheed 91

Elliot Yeo 90

Jake Waterman 87

Nathan Vardy 86

Shannon Hurn 85

Brad Sheppard 80

Jeremy McGovern 79

Lewis Jetta 77

Liam Duggan 77

Josh J. Kennedy 77

Mark Hutchings 68

Will Schofield 58

Liam Ryan 56

Oscar Allen 56

Tom Cole 51

Willie Rioli 49

Jack Petruccelle 48

Jack Redden 46

BULLDOGS

Caleb Daniel 124

Josh Dunkley 119

Jason Johannisen 116

Tim English 96

Jack Macrae 84

Tom Liberatore 83

Toby McLean 78

Bailey Dale 75

Sam Lloyd 73

Patrick Lipinski 73

Marcus Bontempelli 73

Lachie Hunter 72

Easton Wood 72

Zaine Cordy 66

Billy Gowers 58

Bailey Williams 57

Bailey Smith 56

Lachie Young 53

Matthew Suckling 53

Ryan Gardner 41

Jackson Trengove 34

Aaron Naughton 26

Originally published as SuperCoach late mail: Every SuperCoach score from Round 11

Original URL: https://www.couriermail.com.au/sport/afl/supercoach-news/supercoach-late-mail-mitchell-hinge-and-darcy-fort-dumped-dangerfield-moore-back/news-story/6e2f6965aa6f06ded58bc59b8471017e