Heartbreak at the death
Petracca #Petracca
COLLINGWOOD has hung on to defeat a wasteful but fast-finishing Melbourne by seven points in the qualifying final.
The Pies kicked just two points to the Demons’ 3.2 in the final term, holding firm in the final minutes to win 9.6 (60) to 7.11 (53) in a somewhat spiteful affair.
Melbourne had an inside-50 advantage of 69-37 – will now face the winner of the elimination final between Carlton and Sydney next week, while Collingwood will enjoy a week off and has qualified for the preliminary final.
Unlike Melbourne’s forward line had been for three quarters, it sprung to life in the final term, with goals to a rusty Tom McDonald, Joel Smith and Bayley Fritsch chipping the margin down from its three-quarter time break of 25 points. Fritsch also nearly missed his boot in a set shot that harmlessly sailed out on the full.
With all players on edge early with finals nerves, the tinder sparked when Brayden Maynard jumped high to spoil Angus Brayshaw, charging out of the stoppage. He brought his hands down as he landed, his shoulder collecting Brayshaw’s head, the Dee appearing to be knocked out cold before being taken off on a stretcher.
It resulted in close to an all-in brawl; Maynard never one to take a backward step, and Jack Viney particularly keen to stick up for his mate, losing his jumper in a second instigation.
Melbourne finally broke through for its second goal 15 minutes into the second quarter after Kysaiah Pickett took a clever juggling contested mark.
It was a period of control for the Demons – who won the inside-50 count 20 to eight – but they only added 1.4 to trim just three points from the margin.
The match broke open somewhat in the third quarter, Dan McStay recovering from a knock to the head to kick two goals, while centre clearance wins almost guaranteed a goal as the teams traded majors.
In the absence of Brayshaw, Christian Petracca spent more time in the midfield and tried his best to haul the Dees back into the game in the fourth term.
Nervous MRO wait for Maynard and van Rooyen
The Maynard incident on Brayshaw – ostensibly a football action that went horribly awry – will be the subject of discussion for days to come. The decision between a careless and intentional classification will be a major factor, with there being no doubt of the incident being high contact and severe impact. Melbourne forward van Rooyen caught McStay with a glancing elbow, seeing the Pies forward undergoing a concussion test but returning.
Gawn does it all
There were pre-match concerns Collingwood had gone into the game too tall, with its two recognised rucks to Melbourne’s one in Gawn, but the Pies didn’t appear to be too slow around the ground. However, it takes more than two rucks to defeat Gawn in a final. Smoked in the hitouts early, Gawn’s work around the ground (31 hitouts, 27 disposals, 10 clearances) was second to none, and he also ran hard to block up the Pies’ attacking lanes.
COLLINGWOOD 4.2 5.3 9.4 9.6 (60)MELBOURNE 1.0 2.4 4.9 7.11 (53)
GOALS Collingwood: Hill 3, McStay 2, Mihocek, De Goey, Crisp, CameronMelbourne: Fritsch 2, Sparrow, Smith, Pickett, Neal-Bullen, McDonald
BEST Collingwood: Sidebottom, Crisp, Quaynor, Hill, Moore, De GoeyMelbourne: Petracca, Gawn, Oliver, Viney, Pickett
INJURIES Collingwood: NilMelbourne: Brayshaw (concussion)
SUBSTITUTES Collingwood: Jack Ginnivan (replaced Darcy Cameron in fourth quarter)Melbourne: Bailey Laurie (replaced Angus Brayshaw in first quarter)
Crowd: 92,636 at the MCG