Sydney triumph over fast-finishing Adelaide in AFL
Adelaide #Adelaide
Sydney have survived a late charge to pip Adelaide by one point and strengthen their grip on a finals spot.
But the Crows’ playoff hopes ends with a heartbreaking 11.8 (74) to 10.13 (73) result on a rain-soaked Adelaide Oval on Saturday night.
The Swans were 44 points up late in the second quarter but Adelaide stormed in the last quarter, booting 4.8 to 0.1 only to fall just short.
Crow Ben Keays thought he’d given his side the lead with 60 seconds to go but his shot hit a goal post.
Sydney take seventh spot by two premiership points into their last home-and-away game – an SCG clash against top-four fancy Melbourne.
But 13th-placed Adelaide’s chances of sneaking into the finals disappear.
Swans winger Errol Gulden continued his fine season with 30 disposals, Chad Warner (25 touches) was a standout and Oliver Florent (21) and Tom Papley (one goal) had patches of influence..
Heeney’s scoring polish in attack was supported by Hayden McLean (two goals) while Nick Blakey (21 disposals, seven marks) was prominent in Sydney’s stingy defence.
Adelaide entered the round as the competition’s highest-scoring team but failed to flourish in attack until their last-term press.
Taylor Walker and Josh Rachele kicked two goals each and Crows on-ballers Rory Laird (31 possessions), Matt Crouch (26) and Jake Soligo (28) revelled in the wet.
The Swans found four goalkickers in their strong 4.3 to 1.3 opening term.
And when Heeney slotted two goals in 90 seconds – a roved snap followed by a set shot – Sydney’s lead blew out to a dangerous 30 points.
Adelaide’s Harry Schoenberg replied before the Swans stamped their authority with three consecutive goals creating a 44-point advantage.
Crow forwards Walker and Shane McAdam scored late to reduce Sydney’s lead to 32 points at halftime, 9.5 to 4.3.
Adelaide couldn’t make inroads in a slog of a third quarter although Crow Izak Rankine produced a highlight as both teams scored two goals.
Rankine collected possession on a boundary and, from the tightest of angles, threaded an instinctive checkside goal.
The Crows turned 32 points down and were given a pulse with three consecutive goals inside four minutes of the final term.
After a series of behinds, Keays celebrated what he believed was the go-ahead goal with a minute remaining only for the ball to brush a goal post.