The games and moments that defined the 2019 AFL season

By Marnie Cohen / Expert

When a new AFL season fixture is released there’s often a two-part process for every footy fan.

  1. Highlight when your own side is playing and where
  2. Lock in the mouth-watering games you simply cannot miss

And then, when reflecting upon the season that was, we realise most of those games did nothing for us, nor did they impact the season like we thought they would have done.

So I’ve gone through the year and picked out some of the 2019 season-defining games that shaped the sport on the field and off the field and discussion throughout the season.

I tried to keep it to ten but went slightly over. Read on and you’ll understand why.

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When the Giants reached new heights – Geelong vs Greater Western Sydney, Round 4
This was a real ‘statement’ victory for the Giants, even though it came in the first month of the season. Co-captain Callan Ward went down with an ACL injury very early on in the piece. Up against an undefeated Geelong outfit at GMHBA, it was already going to be a tough ask. The Giants were 22 points down early in the third quarter but managed to work their way back in front to win the game by four points. It was a great victory on the day, but the importance of it grew as weeks went by. This was Geelong’s only loss in the opening half of the season and only loss at home for the year – a giant effort by GWS.

No headline of stars? No worries – Port Adelaide vs Richmond, Round 4
No Dustin Martin, no Jack Riewoldt, no Trent Cotchin, no Alex Rance, no wins for Richmond outside of Melbourne since 2017? No worries. This afternoon at Adelaide Oval was a big statement win for the eventual premiers. Not many people gave them a chance given a number of key players missing and their horrific recent form on the road, but they did it. Led by Tom Lynch and Dylan Grimes, the Tigers steadied after quarter-time and recorded their first victory on the road in over a season in superb fashion.

A very Good Friday – West Coast vs Port Adelaide, Round 5
Incredibly, the Good Friday night game between the Eagles and Port was the first marquee game between two non-Victorian teams. This doesn’t include fixtures like the showdown or derby or when fixtures like Anzac Day fall on a weekend; I mean this game between two non-Victorian sides was scheduled in a marquee slot on purpose. And it will be done again in 2020. It’s very, very good for our national competition. Brisbane hosting Collingwood the night before was also a good move and will also be there in 2020.

Goalpost gate – Sydney vs Essendon, Round 8
I have seen many distraction tactics by opposition players in my lifetime, but I’d never have thought Dane Rampe climbing up a point post would be one of them. It was just so bizarre. Rampe climbed up the post as Essendon’s David Myers had a shot on goal after the siren. The kick fell short and Sydney took the victory, but many were left wondering if Rampe should’ve been penalised instead of simply warned by the umpire. It sparked a weeklong debate and Rampe was fined. I don’t remember much of the discussion, to be honest. I just can’t get the footage out of my mind.

From cubs to Lions – Brisbane vs Adelaide, Round 9
Most of the AFL community sensed 2019 would be a year of improvement for the Brisbane Lions, but few picked a surge into the top two by season’s end. They had a good start to the year, but the one-point victory against Adelaide was the first time both the Lions and the outer AFL community realised they had arrived in a big way. Both sides were 5-3 going into the game, but the Crows had won four on the trot and were sitting third on the ladder. After this game, Brisbane went on to win ten of their next 13 games. Adelaide? Just five.

The last hoorah –
North Melbourne vs Western Bulldogs, Round 10;
Carlton vs Essendon, Round 11;
Geelong vs St Kilda, Round 17;
Fremantle vs Essendon, Round 22; and
Adelaide vs Western Bulldogs, Round 23

So I’ve gone with fives games here, but they all have the same theme: they were the last games coached by the departing coaches of 2019. Only Brad Scott managed a win in his last outing as coach, but that game was probably the strangest of them all as news of his departure was leaked the day before the game and two days before his eventual resignation.

The last loss – Adelaide vs Richmond, Round 13
It’s incredible to think that after Round 13 Richmond was sitting eighth on the ladder with a percentage of 92. A Thursday night loss to Adelaide was Richmond’s third on the trot and they weren’t looking like the frightening Tigers outfit we’ve become accustomed to. That pre-bye loss would be their last of the season. Fifteen weeks later they won the premiership.

Twenty-one goals to zip – Essendon vs Western Bulldogs, Round 21
It was quite unbelievable what happened at Marvel Stadium that night. Essendon kicked the first goal of the evening and then watched in horror as the Dogs piled on 21 unanswered goals. It resulted in a 104-point loss and a massive seven per cent lost. The Bombers, who were sitting seventh at the time, fell to eighth by season’s end and had to face West Coast in Perth in an elimination final. The Dogs went on to win their next two games and leapfrogged the Bombers, but it only ended in an elimination final hiding at the hands of GWS.

(Michael Willson/AFL Photos via Getty Images)

Victory once and for all – West Coast Eagles vs Collingwood, Round 17
This Collingwood victory was big on a number of levels. Firstly, West Coast in Perth is one of the hardest road trips in football no matter who you are and where you sit on the ladder. Secondly, Collingwood had lost their previous four matches to the Eagles, including last year’s grand final. Third, it was a thriller. It was a high-scoring and entertaining opening quarter before West Coast pulled away slightly. In the final quarter Collingwood kept the Eagles to a solitary behind while scoring 2.6 and claiming victory. They would end up making the top four and earning a double chance while West Coast finished fifth.

Speaking of that ladder positioning…

The end of West Coast’s back-to-back dream – West Coast Eagles vs Hawthorn, Round 23
At the start of Round 23 West Coast sat third on the ladder and just needed a win at home against Hawthorn (sitting ninth) to secure a double chance and real crack at a second consecutive premiership. In 120 minutes of football fans watched on as a top-four spot slipped away from the Eagles. On Friday night Collingwood topped Essendon and on Sunday Richmond defeated the Lions to secure third and fourth spot on the ladder respectively, forcing West Coast out of the top four. While winning four finals on the trot wasn’t impossible, it wasn’t to be for the Eagles, who lost the semi-final at the MCG against Geelong.

The grand final – Richmond vs GWS
This is the ultimate prize, what teams play for year in and year out, so it would’ve been a crime to not put this in. The premiership was going to be significant for both sides. It could’ve been the Giants’ first premiership since inception, while the Tigers were aiming for their second flag in three years. Sadly the game was a fizzer and will likely only be replayed by Richmond supporters this off-season. But it was a huge statement from the Tigers, who went from a club in disarray at the start of the decade to two-time premiers by the end. Only the Hawks with three flags in ten years did it better. An incredible achievement for a club that appears to have more in the tank.

Honourable mentions
Greater Western Sydney vs Essendon, Round 15; Melbourne vs Gold Coast, Round 8; Essendon vs Collingwood, Round 6; and Greater Western Sydney vs Hawthorn, Round 21.

Those were my 2019 season defining games. What are yours?

Next week I’ll give you my guide to the games that’ll get you through the off-season.

The Crowd Says:

2019-11-16T11:25:24+00:00

A Iyer

Guest


GWS v Bombers Rd 15 and Crows v Bombers Rd 18 - Especially at the Oval, coming back from 30-odd points down.

2019-11-12T21:09:30+00:00

RT

Roar Rookie


They didn’t ban those grounds at all, just encouraged clubs to leave them. Otherwise I agree, Perth teams should not have to play there, or at the very least schedule around a bye.

2019-11-12T09:50:47+00:00

Seymorebutts

Guest


Exactly, to be honest I think the WA sides should get together and refuse to play in Tasmania. Its an extra flight there ...then back..waiting for connecting flights etc. The pair of them have barely won a game over there, and they have lost a few games the following week at home. Tasmanian games are a disaster for the WA teams. To be honest, I dont see how that stadium down there conforms to AFL standards in the first place, they banned Victoria Park, Arden St, Windy Hill etc. If that same criteria were applied to Tasmania that was applied to suburban Melbourne grounds I think you will find its not suitable for top class AFL games.

2019-11-12T06:09:24+00:00

The real SC

Roar Rookie


The GWS v Hawthorn (r21) match being played in Canberra was a memorable one because they had to be used to snowy conditions for the first time. It was the first time that an AFL match has been played in snowy conditions. Go back to 2000 and a Canberra Raiders v West Tigers was played in snow. Melbourne v Adelaide game in Round 10. After Melbourne Demons lead during the entire game, they started to falter during the final quarter in the final minutes. Adelaide took the lead and the Crows won the match by 2 points. Fremantle v Geelong (Round 20). Geelong were the favourites to win the match. After a slow start for Fremantle, they managed to pile on a few goal during the match. Fremantle has upsetted top of the table, Geelong at Optus Stadium.

2019-11-12T05:51:43+00:00

TomC

Roar Guru


I was also going to nominate the Port game.

2019-11-11T15:03:23+00:00

Goalsonly

Roar Rookie


It looks like you've picked great games and used them to prove a bigger point about the season. Surely Geelong being undefeated so long against all expert opinion needs to be included to define the season at that point in time. What game tells that story best? Also just picking the last game for all those coaches is a little lazy and disrespectful but a point worth making. I suppose the number of coaches is the story there so I see what you've done. Maybe it's good old public opinion that really decides the season and how each club supporters feel about their year is the mystery that need to be explored and work backward from there. There is no ultimate defining as such but acknowledging what was done by all is important if just to realize it and move on. If footy was just about flags we wouldn't bother keeping stats on anything else after some time.

2019-11-11T12:38:10+00:00

J.T. Delacroix

Guest


Getting an SMS from a fellow Richmond supporter soon after the Crows debacle in round 13 basically saying “we’re gone”, but with far more colourful language. And then just sitting back after the bye & watching the rest of the season unfold & realising just how ordinary the other teams can be on their day. One after the other. All easy prey.

2019-11-11T11:50:42+00:00

Julian

Roar Rookie


It also cost West Coast a genuine shot at top 2. As an Eagles fan, I felt losing that game was the end of our premiership hopes. Realistically it's near impossible to win a flag from WA finishing outside the top 2 and it appeared that on some level the club felt the same when they turned in that insipid effort against Hawthorn. The Rioli debacle shattered any spirit gained in the Essendon win, but really it was that Richmond game that spelt the end of our season.

2019-11-11T10:04:55+00:00

RT

Roar Rookie


We just fake that when WC or Freo are ready to leave.

2019-11-11T10:04:21+00:00

PriddisJunior

Roar Rookie


Won’t forget the 91pt derby win any time soon, fitting end to Ross’ reign. They won’t be the same without him, can’t see JLo being as hands-on. :silly: Brisbane getting up by 1pt vs Cats was about as entertaining as the season got.

2019-11-11T09:00:58+00:00

6x6 perkele

Roar Rookie


But Melbourne weather causes so many delays Freo and wce get stuck at Perth airport for 2hours plus after check in :silly:

2019-11-11T08:39:12+00:00

6x6 perkele

Roar Rookie


Just another Melbourne journo who hasn't broken the shackles to realise whether west to east or east to west it's hard and wce and Freo do it harder than anyone. Alot of Melbourne journos are embarrassing to the profession but whilst they reiterate Melbourne is the world's epicenter like it's comparable to Berlin, London, New York etc we'll always hear this dribble.

2019-11-11T06:22:38+00:00

Gary

Roar Rookie


From a Freo POV : - rd1 82pt smashing of North, made us think high scoring was now in our repertoire... this would be undermined repeatedly throughout the season - beating GWS and Collingwood away, clearly the easiest road trips on the calendar - 1pt victory over Brisbane at home... although a bit frustrating at times, it was a heart stopper in that last qtr - 34pt victory over Geelong at home So many disappointing games though.

2019-11-11T06:12:38+00:00

RT

Roar Rookie


Well I don’t know if no one said it, but maybe it is all relative. For Hawthorn or any other Melbourne team it is their toughest road trip (excl. China) but for West Coast it is worse to go to Brisbane or Tasmania. Anyway, flight times Perth to Melbourne are 35 minutes less than the other way around, so I guess it is not as tough. Another unfair advantage to the Western Australian teams! :silly:

2019-11-11T06:05:22+00:00

Gary

Roar Rookie


It was a very good game... differing styles, tight contest. 6 days later Eagles lost to Hawks at home... no one says the Eagles had one of the 'toughest road trips on the calendar' to play Tigers at the MCG, but Hawks travelling to Perth is ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

2019-11-11T05:50:32+00:00

Gary

Roar Rookie


It's funny isn't it... a Victorian team travelling to Perth is regarded as the toughest road trip on the calendar. Imagine trying to psych up for that one trip a year, or first trip in 2 years... so hard. No mention of Perth teams travelling to QLD, or vice versa, or travelling to Tassie... and the several trips to Victoria. A Victorian team travelling to Perth once a year, is f'kn easy.

2019-11-11T01:38:11+00:00

Neil from Warrandyte

Roar Rookie


I loved both preliminary finals- Collingwood v GWS for the sheer drama and Richmond v Geelong which really turned out to be the Grand Final, played 1 week early.

2019-11-11T01:21:15+00:00

6x6 perkele

Roar Rookie


Agreed, the Collingwood loss was the difference between top four in the end, after the Richmond match was no surprise wce dropped to hawthorn we looked flat and out of legs.

2019-11-11T01:19:02+00:00

RT

Roar Rookie


Richmond vs West Coast for me. Richmond had to win top make top 4 and it was the best H&A game I saw for the season.

2019-11-11T01:01:23+00:00

Paul D

Roar Guru


That was pretty epic. Everyone knew at that point West Coast were stuffed. Went from 2 finals at home to having to win 2 away to make the grand final. My favourite win for the Lions was when we beat Adelaide by 1 point at home & then went down and beat port in a howling rainstorm. Hinkley talking a big show about terrorising Neale and wound up enough egg on his face to make mcmuffins for a year. That was most enjoyable given how much the state of South Australia has tormented us in recent years.

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