Chris Scott delivers a coaching masterclass over stale John Longmire

By Cameron Rose / Expert

The King is dead. Long live the King.

The Sydney Swans, widely thought to be the best team in the competition, and rightly so given their record since coming off a 0-6 start to the season, were knocked out of the 2017 finals series by a Geelong outfit stung into action after their humiliating loss to Richmond last week.

» Five talking points from Geelong vs Sydney
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This was a story of coaching.

Chris Scott, who had over-thought selection against the Tigers and made a mistake dropping Dan Menzel, wiped the floor with John Longmire, who has always been more astute man-manager than tactical genius.

The first surprise for the Cats was Patrick Dangerfield not just starting forward, but staying there for the entire first half. The Swans would have been expecting him to spend five-minute periods inside 50, but not the first hour of the game.

Dangerfield kicked a couple of early goals, the first from a mark and the second to a free kick against his opponent, Dane Rampe. All of a sudden, he was shaping the game from the goal-square, and the Sydney defence was rattled.

Rampe, normally so composed, was shaken by Dangerfield’s early scoring opportunities, and his confidence ebbed away. All of a sudden, he had to focus on an opponent that was beating him, rather than helping out his fellow defenders and providing rebound from the back half as he usually does so well.

(Photo by Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

Mark Blicavs was used as a tagger on Josh Kennedy, and wore the Sydney inside bull down. Blicavs had a match-high 14 tackles, Kennedy kept to a season-low three clearances. Huge win to the Cats.

All week, Chris Scott had been positive in the media. Talk wasn’t of an opportunity blown against Richmond. It was about the opportunity still in front of them, with a premiership to win.

The most important thing for the Geelong players was keeping the game on an even keel in the first term, and were always going to come out fired up after a week of feeling the media heat. A siege mentality and being whacked all week still provides a lift, even in finals. Psychology is a funny thing.

In the second term, they broke the game open, kicking six goals to one and taking a match-winning 36 point lead into half-time.

What was evident in the first quarter, and continued on as the game evolved, was the patience of the Cats whenever they took a mark or won a free kick. Chris Scott and his team had clearly watched a lot of tapes of Hawthorn games against Sydney at the MCG, who we know have had a stranglehold on the Swans there.

The Hawks control the ball, and spread Sydney better than any other team, forcing them wide and into space, away from their natural environment of contested ball and team defence. The Geelong players executed this perfectly.

By half-time, Sydney were -22 in contested possessions and -55 in uncontested, which are enormous numbers to be down. Geelong were winning it on the inside, despite not having Dangerfield in the middle, and were killing them on the outside. By the end of the match, both of those figures were even bigger.

Geelong took 129 marks to Sydney’s 53. That’s one team playing perfectly to a plan, and the other with no answers.

Scott’s plan to leave Dangerfield couldn’t have worked unless his lesser-light teammates picked up the slack and raised their games. To a man, they did, especially given Joel Selwood was struggling for influence.

(AAP Image/Julian Smith)

Mitch Duncan should have been an All-Australian wingman, and showed why with his 36 touches, most of them precise, to go with a couple of goals. Steven Motlop was superb, breaking the game open with twinkle-toed movements and laser passing, complemented by pressure and tackling.

Sam Menegola was back to his best after a poor first final. Scott Selwood was as hard as ever, out-pointing the Sydney inside mids. Darcy Lang played the match of his career. Jed Bews and Jake Kolodjashnij were better for last weeks experience.

In opposition, the Sydney coaches and players were soundly beaten. Funnily enough, the year ended as it started for the Swans. Their best players were down, their depth players unable to pick up the slack.

Questions must be asked about why John Longmire can’t convert the most talented top end players in the competition into a premiership. The next time he wins a match-day coaching battle, will be the first time.

However, Sydney’s season is over. They are now yesterday’s news.

Geelong heads over to Adelaide, for Patrick Dangerfield to take on his old side in a preliminary final, a story that will dominate headlines all week. Chris Scott will be sure to have more tricks up his sleeve, but Don Pyke has proven himself an exceptional coach in his two years at the helm of the Crows.

I’d watch.

The Crowd Says:

2017-09-19T07:17:56+00:00

Mark

Guest


Focusing on the first 6 and ignoring the next 17 would have been the foolish thing to do, actually.

2017-09-19T07:12:46+00:00

Mark

Guest


And Sydney beat the ever-choking Tigers.

2017-09-17T09:44:02+00:00

Simoc

Guest


So cameron, We'll see your mastercoach, Chris Scott up against the beginner Don Pyke. It will at least demonstrate to the readers your knowledge of AFL football and how the game is all about the coaches.

2017-09-16T20:18:54+00:00

Patricia

Guest


Whinging about free kicks again, or is it having to play games at the MCG? So over your pathetic excuses. You were just outcoached and outplayed.

2017-09-16T12:53:43+00:00

Leonard

Guest


Um, "interstate sides always struggle at the G", except, maybe in the GFs for 1992, 1994, 1997, 1998, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006? Not counting wins at the G which got them into those GFs, of course.

2017-09-16T11:20:12+00:00

Nick

Guest


Buddy, Sinclair and Reid were all held equally as Danger, Jack was tripped - Rohan holding ball (Motlop tackle) was identical to Selwood (Jack tackle) - but only one paid - Scott outcoached Longmanure no doubt - but the umpires were pist poor - Sydney will probably be thereabouts next year

2017-09-16T10:48:18+00:00

Dier-ba-zor

Guest


Actually you would tolerate this in soccer, it's not so much tolerated at it is supported.

2017-09-16T08:08:34+00:00

Raimond

Roar Guru


It always seemed that the Swans had one more poor game left in them. The people touting them as the team to beat were battling history, and ignoring their first six matches seemed odd to me.

2017-09-16T08:08:27+00:00

fairsuckofthesav

Guest


Re Joe Crows will be tanned buffed and refreshed: ready to go.

2017-09-16T08:05:58+00:00

Mattician6x6

Guest


Lol your boys are setting up for a epic fall, i admire the passion much like i did freos fans in 2013 but as the tigers are the dockers of the east coast things dont look thatgood mate ;)

2017-09-16T07:06:02+00:00

Basil

Guest


Do you mean like the West Coast v Swans, or Port vs Brisbane Grand Finals? Hmmmmmm

2017-09-16T06:11:07+00:00

anon

Roar Pro


Dustin Martin is a good honest footballer who doesn't stage for kicks. Easy to look at the neck tattoos, association with his father, look at the protracted negotiations, and reach the wrong conclusion about Martin. He doesn't spend spare time in front of the mirror honing a persona or media image. Gets on stage to accept his MVP, thanks his teammates, then gets off. I love how he plays the game. The game itself as well as the media game. Dangerfield has to get this diving out of his game. It's unbecoming. Same with Joel Selwood gaming the system by trying throw his head into opposition bodies. You wouldn't tolerate this kind of staging and diving in soccer, so why accept it from the some of the highest profile players in the AFL.

2017-09-16T05:59:13+00:00

truetigerfan

Guest


Would love to play the Weagles next week. Lay down maseire!

2017-09-16T05:07:40+00:00

DB

Guest


What about Buddys free?

2017-09-16T05:04:43+00:00

DB

Guest


Geelong dominted even winning the tackle count which is rare for a 10 goal win. And the frees were only +2 for geelong. Cats eere slaughtered by the umps. Ever seen a spoil called deliberate? Well it happened last night

2017-09-16T04:42:55+00:00

Joe

Guest


"completely throws any sort of momentum out and saps confidence" Oh come off it, it was the first quarter. If your momentum and confidence can be sapped by two goals in the first quarter, you don't deserve to be in the finals. What a terrible excuse. As Cat has mentioned, the one truly terrible free was kicked out on the full by Danger anyway.

2017-09-16T04:35:33+00:00

Joe

Guest


I imagine they're tipping the extra week off to screw with both the Crows and the Tigers, like last year. Just a reminder, they'll be going into those prelims having played just 1 game in the previous month. It won't break them, but it might put them off.

2017-09-16T04:32:12+00:00

mickyo

Guest


Yep, summed up my observations pretty well.

2017-09-16T04:20:06+00:00

Razzle Dazzle

Guest


The Swans looked cooked to me. Punch drunk morning hangover needing a puck me up espresso beforehand! Jerkyl and Hyde with form reversal for both teams.

2017-09-16T03:26:39+00:00

Mattician6x6

Guest


Its a awesome fact no one is rating wce andrew, as im sure you know creating a us vs everyone else mindset can build belief greater than a parochial home crowd. If we get up over the giants i will be glad to face richmond as again the pressure on them is immense.

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