ST KILDA 7.9 (51) d GOLD COAST 7.6 (48)
KEY POINTS
WORST GAME OF THE YEAR
There was a game in the 1990s when then Western Bulldogs coach Terry Wallace blew up at a journalist who had cheekily suggested they were playing so poorly the league would need to lock the gates to keep the fans in. The same line could have been used tonight. One of the worst games of the season was saved only by its closeness - because the Saints could not turn their domination in the first half into a lead of any significance. At half-time, the Saints were +21 for contested possession, five ahead in clearance and had seven more entries inside 50, but their advantage was just 14 points. Many will pin this on Ross Lyon’s defensive style, but you have to doubt whether he would have wanted his men to move the ball in such a sloppy manner. Too often, the Saints pulled the trigger on their inside-50 kick from too far out, resulting in shallow entries in less threatening areas which also denied them repeat entries to keep the ball locked near goal. Instructively, one of their best forays forward produced the match-winning goal from an off-the-ball free kick. A short kick which found Tim Membrey leading into space in the middle created panic in the Suns backline, pressuring Mac Andrew to hold Max King. King, who can be shaky near goal, converted from 20 metres out. Many in the partisan but small crowd of 17,902 would have been glad they came, but there’d be many more at home even happier to have given this one a miss.
WHAT THIS GAME MEANS
The Saints’ three-point win keeps their finals flame flickering, two games and significant percentage out of the eight with 10 games to play. They will have to play a lot better to threaten but this, and the narrow victory against West Coast, will give them belief they can make a run in the second half of the year. Their injury list has also dwindled in recent weeks. The most pleasing aspect of St Kilda’s performance was their work at the contest, winning clearances by 10 and the contested ball by 20, against a Gold Coast team that views this area as one of their strengths. Their defence, missing Dougal Howard from the opening minutes, also stood up, particularly in the last quarter when the Suns made a belated charge. Jack Sinclair’s kick for touch from deep in defence in the closing seconds was, to borrow commentary great Dennis Cometti’s phrase, centimetre perfect. As for Gold Coast, this was another wasted opportunity. A win would have had them in the firing line for the top four, now they will be out of the eight by the end of the round. Rarely will they get a better opportunity to win on the road. Their record away in the past two seasons now stands at a dismal 2-15.
IS WINDHAGER ROSS’S STEVIE BAKER II?
Steven Baker used to drive opposition stars batty with his uncompromising style. Ross Lyon may have found another tagger for his second coming to Moorabbin in Marcus Windhager. A week after shutting down Harley Reid, Windhager clamped down on Suns skipper Touk Miller. This was an old-fashioned hard tag. Wherever Miller went, Windhager followed, often with his arm across Miller. At times, it appeared they were conjoined at the hip, so close was Windhager. The tag had gone out of vogue in an era of team defence but teams can draw a massive advantage by shutting out the opposition’s best midfielder. The Suns missed Miller’s hard run to create overlap, particularly as they were well beaten at the source. Miller had more impact in the second half, his goal putting the Suns in front with seven minutes left, but finished with only 14 disposals to Windhager’s 15. You’d have to give the points to Windhager.