Bulldogs 110 defeated Demons 59
KEY POINTS
Dogs loom as a flag chance: The Western Bulldogs - err, Footscray - have become one of the AFL’s hottest teams, seemingly out of nowhere.
Since copping a 48-point hiding from Port Adelaide at Adelaide Oval, Luke Beveridge’s Dogs have taken down Carlton, Geelong, Sydney and Melbourne in highly impressive fashion.
The 51-point thumping of the hapless Demons at Marvel Stadium provisionally propels them inside the top four with a whopping percentage of 122.4.
With Adelaide, North Melbourne and the Giants to finish the home and away season, the Bulldogs can dare to dream about not only playing finals but making a run at the flag.
From bad to worse for Dees: Reality must be hitting Melbourne at this point.
A club that looked primed to win multiple flags after their 2021 breakthrough exited the past two finals series in straight sets and almost certainly won’t even be part of September this year.
Steven May is back in hospital after reinjuring his ribs, while Christian Petracca won’t play again until next season, while Clayton Oliver and Jack Viney are a shell of themselves.
The silver lining to May’s setback is coach Simon Goodwin might finally abort his Harry Petty-as-a-forward experiment, which has failed miserably
That said, could a drop on the ladder and subsequent high draft pick serve as a launching pad for the Demons, a la 2019?
Clearance woes: Don’t let the final clearance count fool you. Melbourne conceded the first 15 clearances against Fremantle a fortnight ago, then the first 10 against the Bulldogs on Friday night.
The Demons rebounded to win only four fewer than their conquerors by the end of the game, but were playing catch up after their awful start and never truly recovered.
The match would have been over as a contest if Jamarra Ugle-Hagan (2 goals six) and the rest of the Dogs kicked straighter in front of goal. Whatever is going wrong in the middle for Melbourne must be addressed in the last three rounds, and be critically analysed in the off-season because what was once a strength is no longer.