Collingwood came into Saturday night’s clash with a clear intent: make St Kilda tagger Marcus Windhager’s night hell.
They bumped him, pushed him and tackled him to the turf every chance they had.
It was an intriguing subplot in an entertaining game as the hunter became the hunted.
The battle between Marcus Windhager and Nick Daicos was must-watch viewing all night.Credit: AFL Photos
As Collingwood fought off a determined Saints outfit to post a workmanlike 34-point victory at Marvel Stadium – 16.12 (108) to 11.8 (74), kicking the last four goals of the game, they also gave their star midfielder enough support to allow him to fight off his minder.
First Steele Sidebottom lined up Windhager for attention after the Magpies kicked their first goal. Then club legend Scott Pendlebury chested the Saint as he followed Daicos off the ground.
Next it was Jamie Elliott getting in Windhager’s face.
Collingwood had clearly drawn a line in the sand after the King’s Birthday clash.
If hard-running Melbourne wingman Ed Langdon had written a new book on how to stop Daicos, the Magpies were determined to add another chapter: Make the tagger pay the price.
“There was going to be cameras on it, there was a spotlight on it and I just said to Nick, when he came off for the first break, we don’t want him to fight the battle – we’ll fight them for him,” Magpies coach Craig Mcrae said after his star midfielder had driven Windhager into the ground and given away a free kick.
“As a group, and as a team, we want to look after him. I thought tonight, as a collective – Nick’s had 30 possessions, so I’d say that his performance was pretty impactful – the way we looked after Nick I was more proud of than what we have in recent times.”
Tim Membrey had some telling moments against his former side.Credit: AFL Photos
Their efforts reaped rewards at the 14-minute mark of the final term. Daicos found a centimetre on his shadow and snapped a goal with Windhager hanging off his shorts.
As the goal umpire raised the flags, the Magpie army almost lifted the Marvel roof.
The Collingwood players swamped Daicos as if he had kicked the first goal of his career.
“Can you see how much we enjoy it when he does things well? He means a lot to us,” McRae said.
To his credit, Windhager stuck to his task. The Saint managed five clearances in his 15 disposals.
“I loved his spirit,” Saints coach Ross Lyon said. “Stress under load equals growth. I’m sure he was stressed playing on a great player, against an incredibly experienced team.
“They came after him. I think Marcus gets stronger, and he’ll be forged a little bit more and gets harder. I said to him, ‘It reminds me of Ryan Crowley, Clint Jones and Cameron Ling’. I said, ‘I love it, mate’.”
Saints fans will have been heartened by their side’s efforts after they were embarrassed last week against the Bulldogs.
Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera continues to boost his stocks, amassing a game-high 35 disposals off half-back, while Jack Macrae had 29 disposals and their system challenged the Magpies.
St Kilda kicked the opening two goals of the final term to trail by just 10 points, but they then coughed up the last four majors of the match because they could not contain the Magpies’ depth.
“I think we started well. There was just one issue – we had two quarters, the second quarter and the fourth quarter, where we turned it over,” Lyon said.
“We know they are a good pressing team and a good pressure team, but how much of it was their good pressure, and how much was [it] our decision-making and system?
“They [Collingwood] just went back and scored. That’s where most of their turnover score came from.”
Collingwood’s depth was evident in their scoring spread. They had 11 individual goalkickers, while five players booted two apiece – Tim Membrey, Pat Lipinski, Daniel McStay, Darcy Cameron and Jamie Elliott.
“I thought they were really hard to play against tonight, particularly in the second quarter,” McRae said.
“Their clearances got going and we lost a lot of territory that way. I just kept saying to the guys, ‘Hang in there, we have just got to hang in there and embrace the struggle and the wrestle of this and we’ll have our time’. And it didn’t come until late.”
Collingwood lost Beau McCreery to hamstring soreness in the first term, while St Kilda had to swing a last-minute change after Mattaes Phillipou suffered calf soreness during a warm-up drill.
Cameron had five shots on goal as a ruckman.
“He’s important to us behind the ball – he’s been intercepting the ball – but tonight he went forward a bit more and challenged the Saints,” McRae said.
“Playing the Saints in recent times, they do get numbers back to make it hard to score.”