Essendon coach Brad Scott has labelled the Bombers’ after-the-siren loss to Gold Coast as “extremely frustrating” as he rattled off last-quarter statistics that should have won them the game
In a wasteful final term Essendon kicked just one goal nine from a flood of opportunities and set themselves up for a heartbreaking defeat.
After failing to bury the game from continual forward entries, they then watched on in horror as Gold Coast star Mac Andrew marked in the dying seconds and then goaled after the siren to give the Suns a one-point victory at Marvel Stadium.
A win would have seen Essendon move into seventh spot on the live ladder with the Western Bulldogs and Carlton playing matches on Sunday. Now they sit precariously in ninth.
“You don’t need me to necessarily recite the statistics to you, but in the last quarter, when you know the ball’s in your front half for 84 per cent of the quarter, and you have 19 inside 50s to eight, you have 11 scoring shots to two, you’re giving yourself opportunities aren’t you?” Scott said.
“So that’s the hardest thing in footy. The execution comes with practice, and we need to drill that better, but it’s just extremely frustrating because the hardest thing is giving yourself opportunity. In the last quarter, we certainly did that.”
Scott said it was the nature of the competition that sides could lose to teams below them on the ladder on any given weekend.
Indeed, on Saturday, the Bombers lost by a point, Port Adelaide defeated Melbourne by two points, Geelong scored an 11-point victory against Fremantle in Perth, the Lions went down by 18 points against the Giants at home and the Kangaroos lost by five points to the Eagles in Hobart. They were all tight games that could have swung either way.
“We’re not a team that is good enough at the moment to come out and expect to just blow teams off the park,” Scott said.
“Every game that we have played this year has been a tight tussle at most stages. Outside probably two games, every game has been tight. So that’s just the nature of the competition and where we sit within it.”
It was a devastating loss for the Bombers considering they are fighting to make the eight and win an elusive final.
“I think it’s pretty obvious how everyone’s feeling,” Scott said. “For all of our supporters and the club, it is just extremely frustrating.
“You can come up with all sorts of words to describe it, but you’re obviously disappointed, but that doesn’t help anything.”