AFL Finals Focus: Dockers' comeback for the ages completes the best weekend of finals EVER

By Cameron Rose / Expert

We can all exhale now. Although it might take a few days to calm down.

If this wasn’t the greatest finals weekend of all time, I defy anyone to show me another. Four genuine classics. A weekend that truly had it all.

Before Fremantle v Western Bulldogs, there was a feeling that this would be the “dud” game of the weekend. There had to be one, and the other three had exceeded expectations. There must be one that wouldn’t.

And for a time, that’s exactly how it looked. The Dockers simply didn’t show up. The Dogs were waltzing around as if they owned the joint, despite being outnumbered in the stadium a hundred to one.

While the previous three games had been see-sawing affairs with countless lead changes, one thing we hadn’t seen yet was a from-the-clouds comeback. And that’s exactly what we got.

Despite conceding a 41 point start, not only did Freo win, they won going away, and looked like they could have played another half.

The Bont

It’s easy to forget, given the exploits of Christian Petracca and the Melbourne Football Club, that in last year’s grand final, Marcus Bontempelli had taken control of the game in the second quarter. He drove his Dogs to a half-time lead and looked every bit the Norm Smith medalist.

Of course, that grand final was at the same ground as tonight’s game, and he transferred that imperious form to the opening stanza. At his effortless best through that term and indeed the first half, he sidestepped, dodged, broke free and delivered with class over and over again, either kicking goals or setting them up.

The Dogs were +17 in contested possessions at quarter time, led inside 50s 18-10, and had 10 shots at goal to one. They had the lion’s share of the of the finals experience on the ground, and that’s exactly what it looked like.

The sniff

The first half of the second term wasn’t much better than the first. The Dogs were still in control and had the only two scores of the quarter after 10 minutes to build a 41-point lead, but at least Freo had stemmed the tide. They weren’t leaking goals.

As is generally true in AFL football, shoring up the defence is the first priority, and once done you can focus on scoring. The Dockers had ticked the first box, had neutralized the midfield, and could now set their minds on the latter.

Michael Walters has had his ups and down under Justin Longmuir, but had been looking somewhat dangerous the few times Fremantle had gone forward. He already had two behinds to his name before he kicked Freo’s first goal, and continued to have an impact for the rest of the game.

Andrew Brayshaw never plays poorly, but was part of the midfield that was outmuscled early. He was getting the ball enough, but barely had a hard touch to his name, and hadn’t laid a tackle at half-time. You’d like him to get his hands a bit dirtier in future finals. But he kicked a leader’s goal from long range when it was needed, which gave his team a glimmer.

Caleb Serong snapped a clever one to keep the momentum going, and it was three goals in eight minutes. Then as the siren sounded, second-gamer Jye Amiss, who had missed from point-blank range earlier in the quarter, kicked truly to give Freo all the belief it needed at half-time.

Four goals in 10 minutes to end the half, the Dogs had only kicked one goal for the quarter and despite a 15-point deficit, it felt like anyone’s game.

The speed

Brandon Walker, Michael Frederick, Sam Switkowski and Jordan Clark aren’t the most well known players in the league. They probably aren’t even in the top 10 most important or recognisable at their own club. And their stats tonight, with a combined 54 touches between them, don’t scream influence.

But what these four are is quick. Seriously quick.

The Dockers struggled to move the ball for most of the first half, lacking energy and spark. But the four players mentioned above were vitally important in the third quarter, in keeping momentum going Fremantle’s way.

Whether they got the ball on the receive, ran hard without reward, crashed through a pack, or were putting on chasing pressure or laying tackles, seeing them flash across the ground gave the impression that there were more Dockers on the park than Dogs, and there was no-one in the opposition that could match them.

Another three goals to one in the third term, giving Fremantle seven goals to two after quarter time, and they were within a kick with one stanza to go.

Blake Acres and Luke Ryan of the Dockers celebrate. (Photo by Will Russell/AFL Photos via Getty Images)

The pressure

Finals are always about pressure. Always, always, always. Always. Who can apply it. Who can absorb it. Who can play their game and produce high skill under it.

Fremantle couldn’t handle it early. Disastrously so. Most times when that happens in an elimination final, it’s season over, and you try and learn from it in the off-season and have to wait seven months to apply the lessons.

Yet the Dockers, through their own strength and resilience, learned from it, corrected it, modified behaviour and not just got the win, but get gain more experience next week.

Their pressure ramped up and up through the course of the game, and in the final quarter it finally matched what we had seen from Geelong, Collingwood, Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Richmond in the first three matches. It took all game, but finally, Fremantle looked like they belonged in this finals series.

And in terms of high skill under pressure, how about Nathan O’Driscoll’s goal in the last quarter to ice the game? For a 20yo with only 11 games under his belt, he’s kicked some special goals already, and looks a future gun. It was the last of a series of unbelievable boundary goals this weekend.

What’s next?

For Fremantle, a trip to Melbourne to play Collingwood in a semi-final. They beat Melbourne in their only game at the MCG this year, so they’ll have no fear of the venue. They do need to find another level or two, and won’t be favoured to do so.

For the Western Bulldogs, another disappointing year. They’re the toughest team to get a read on in the competition. They’ve never finished top four under Luke Beveridge but have a premiership and grand final to their name, but haven’t been able to back it up either time.

The Dogs’ forwards went missing after quarter time, albeit Jamarra Ugle-Hagan and Sam Darcy are so young, their midfield is great when it’s on their terms but too often has no answers when it’s not, and their defence isn’t strong enough to stand up under pressure when the other areas are getting beaten.

Next week, we also have Melbourne taking on Brisbane, and few will be giving the Lions a chance.

But for now, let’s bask in the aftermath of a sensational weekend of football. We might never see another one like it.

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The Crowd Says:

2022-09-05T10:22:53+00:00

Bernie

Guest


I think Freos Clark is underrated or is because I live in the east he doesnt get the rave reviews - the AFL has always had a problem with home town decisions esp because there are marginal calls in the view of everyone at the contest and the huge home crowd roar whereas in NRL they pull out the odd decision to balance up the game - see NRL instructions to refs 2020

2022-09-05T09:10:27+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


The Eagles beat the Pies by two points, notably because McGuane couldn't hold a mark. Geelong won by five points. Those games were gripping. Carey's ten marks,four goals made it a one-man show. Melbourne was also too strong. The games,overall,were not as good as this weekend gone. The AFL,in 2014, labelled the 1994 first week as the best. They'll have to change their tune.

2022-09-05T07:26:24+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


JL also recognised they did all those things better...for 3 quarters. Why is your desperately sad focus on one quarter? What kind of a comment is that? All of those little things always get corrected in the breaks. The easy comeback indicates how the breeze was their friend when they got the ball first. They had 3 first quarter shots that fell short because of the wind and 2 that went out on the full. Bont put the ball on the foot twice from 50 metres for 2 goals, goal post high, because they carried 15 metres further. How did we get those shots in forward 50 if we didn't get the ball there?

2022-09-05T07:19:55+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Quite likely. Why do you think it's not possible? Do you think humanity has reached its peak? That would explain why you are thinking at a lower level...especially if you are relying on AI for your instinct.

2022-09-05T06:06:23+00:00

FlipperTC

Roar Rookie


The first weekend of ’94 should sit back down and be quiet. It’s not even close…and I was at 2 of those games in ’94. You had 2 very close games and 2 decent games that weren’t as intense as most of the stuff this weekend. This past weekend kills that ’94 start. I agree recency bias is annoying as hell (David King and Dwayne Russell drive me and with it) but its just as annoying when us older guys always say the old stuff was waaay better when it wasn’t. I normally push against the “best ever” crap but on this weekend and about this season, its not hyperbole, its well and truly defensible.

2022-09-05T05:59:50+00:00

NeilM

Roar Rookie


"We didn’t handle the contest well. We fumbled. Their pressure was a lot better than ours but I thought the way we used the ball invited their pressure. We tried to handball over, and once we started to drive our legs and take the game on and force them to actually stick good tackles the game opened up for us." (Justin Longmuir press conference)

2022-09-05T05:55:18+00:00

Al

Guest


As good as Kennedy was he was never a "regular 80-100 a year goal kicker". Your claim is that this Amiss bloke is going to surpass not just Kennedy but every single key forward in the game. Basically you reckon this bloke will end up being as good as Franklin in his prime. There's one eyed and then there's delusional, and it's even funnier when your club is a completely forgettable, mediocre club that has done nothing of any note since its inception 27 years ago except for rivalling Hawthorn in having the ugliest colours and jumpers.

2022-09-05T05:21:06+00:00

Mattik

Roar Rookie


All the free kicks were going the Dogs way to begin with. As soon as Freo get a couple back the you decide to complain. In the end the Bulldogs got more freekicks and were lucky they got such a lead in the first place. Dockers clearly better and if they weren't as in-experienced in finals and didn't let Dogs get a 41 point lead then we'd be talking about a 60-70 point belting. It was never going to be a Dogs win, it was either Freo win it or lose it.

2022-09-05T05:10:52+00:00

1dawg

Roar Rookie


Pies have to pay extra for finals ? :happy:

2022-09-05T05:09:12+00:00

1dawg

Roar Rookie


Ooooooh !

2022-09-05T04:22:06+00:00

jutsie

Roar Rookie


Dogs supporters would know how to spot a soft free considering how many your team of divers and duckers get every week.

2022-09-05T02:21:29+00:00

Naughty's Headband

Roar Rookie


They said it last year too. I think people just forget what finals footy is like.

2022-09-05T02:20:30+00:00

Naughty's Headband

Roar Rookie


I said to my brother that the umps will find a soft free for Freo in the forward 50 and end the game - and like clockwork they plucked the hold the ball against Dunkley, game over. I guess the silver lining is that it put us out of our misery and we get a better draft pick.

2022-09-05T02:17:26+00:00

Naughty's Headband

Roar Rookie


Overs. Taranto isn't that good.

2022-09-05T02:16:58+00:00

Naughty's Headband

Roar Rookie


The "sniff" was the softest free kick I've seen in a long time. That was backed up by Richards (the offender in the first free kick) being manhandled less than a minute later whilst Freo kicked their second goal in a minute. Same umpire, no more than 15 metres away with an unimpeded view of both incidents. Don't you love footy. Anywho, that's all I'm going to write, my boys can't play 4 quarters so they don't deserve to win. I'm looking forward to some pretty big changes over the off-season, in terms of playing list, gameplan and coaching staff.

2022-09-05T01:56:45+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Kate Shrubbery! Loved that album.

2022-09-05T01:48:07+00:00

Pumping Dougie

Roar Guru


DTM I've always been of the view that free kick stats are irrelevant, it's only the errors that are relevant. Some teams (like the Dogs) are better at not giving away frees, because they execute tackles lower and better, get in for the ball first, etc. So those stats are completely irrelevant. Just calling it as I see it. But well done to Freo - they showed great mental fighting qualities to overcome that horror start and reel the score back in. As I said, they were the better team for three quarters so deserved the win, no complaints there.

2022-09-05T01:45:09+00:00

Pumping Dougie

Roar Guru


Yeah, not damaging at all. He even looks a bit gentle out there. At least I saw him running hard defensively a few times, which is uncommon for him.

2022-09-05T01:07:59+00:00

DTM

Roar Rookie


C'mon Dougie, you are better than that. The free kick count was 13/16 in Bulldogs favour - all the free kicks/penalties you mentioned were there. If others weren't paid, that's no reason for not paying these. If you look at the long term finals record of the Doggies, they've had a pretty good run with the umps. Since 2016, they have played in 10 finals and won the free kick count 8 times. Sometimes by large variations when the game was close! In fact, in those 10 games, the Bulldogs have received 32% more free kicks than their opponents. Maybe there should be an inquiry into this finals bias?

2022-09-05T00:08:16+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


My 3 Desert Isle Albums are "Blood on the Tracks", "Rust Never Sleeps" & "The Kick Inside"

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