Dees stalwarts dream of fairytale finish still alive
Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin hasnât ruled out a shock fairytale finals comeback for favourite son Nathan Jones.
A combination of a calf injury and the premiership favourite Demonsâ embarrassment of riches have limited the 33-year-old to just eight matches so far this season, including one in the past four months.
Nathan Jones celebrates a goal with Tom McDonald and Charlie Spargo earlier this season.Credit:AFL Photos
Goodwin made a bee-line for Jones, Melbourneâs captain from 2014 to 2019 and a three-time best-and-fairest winner, and embraced him shortly before the Dees linked arms for the team song following Saturday nightâs resounding qualifying final victory against Brisbane at Adelaide Oval.
âComing back from a calf injury, his last five weeks of match simulation of VFL footy have been outstanding,â Goodwin said of the 302-game veteran.
âHeâs put himself right in selection calculations through form.
âNateâs given an enormous amount to our club - 16 years of service.
âYou certainly feel for him at the moment.
âI know the one thing Nathan would love to be doing is playing in the 22 and being a full part of it.
âHis contribution around the locker room, change room, and at training is having a big effect on our playing group.
âHeâs very proud of his footy club. If the opportunity presents itself, heâll be ready.â
It will be no straightforward task for Jones to squeeze into such a strong side, which Goodwin insists is a cut above his 2018 outfit which endured a goalless first half en route to a humiliating preliminary final trouncing at the hands of the Eagles in Perth.
âWeâre a completely different side than we were in 2018,â Goodwin said.
âWeâre a lot more consistent in the way we play. Weâve put ourselves in a better position and weâre in better form.â
Bayley Fritsch snaps at goal against Brisbane.Credit:AFL Photos
Forward Bayley Fritsch is in career-best touch, bagging four goals against the Lions, while captain Max Gawn, midfielders Christian Petracca and Clayton Oliver, and backmen Jake Lever and Steven May illustrated why they were all handed All-Australian jackets.
Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin was all smiles after the qualifying final win over the Lions.Credit:AFL Photos
After a free-flowing opening quarter, the Demonsâ vaunted defence, statistically and rationally the best in the competition, answered every question Brisbane asked of it.
âDefensively after quarter-time, we were really sound,â Goodwin said.
âWe tidied up some things behind the ball. We were playing the best offensive team in the competition and to keep them to five goals after quarter-time I thought was an outstanding performance.
âWeâve really established ourselves with the way we defend.â
The Lions will be without centre half-forward Daniel McStay for next weekendâs semi-final at the Gabba, where they will host the winner of Sundayâs knockout final between the Western Bulldogs and Essendon.
Concussed and bleeding heavily, McStay staggered off Adelaide Oval in the opening term against Melbourne after accidentally smashing his face into teammate Nakia Cockatooâs knee.
His absence impacted Brisbaneâs forward structure and will force a selection change.
âIt was a decent hit - he smashed his nose and his face and had concussion,â Lions coach Chris Fagan said.
âYou donât normally have a player to replace a key position forward sitting there as the medi-sub. It changed things for us a fair bit. You practice a way to play, and suddenly one of your key pillars is not there.
âIt was a blow, no doubt. Obviously he wonât be able to play next week under the protocols, which is a pity.â
Fagan is confident his side, the highest scoring in the league this year, can cover McStayâs absence and also challenge the inevitable external âoverreactionâ to a week-one finals defeat.
âWeâve been the best offensive team in the competition. We wonât jump off the ship after one poor performance,â Fagan said.
âIâve been at various clubs who have finished top four, lost that first final, and been able to bounce back.
âWe always tend to overreact to the team that loses that qualifying final and think the team that wins the elimination final is in great form. We had a number of players who played below their best and in a big final like that against a great team like Melbourne, you canât afford to have any passengers.
âWe worked hard to get the double chance, and we have the opportunity to bounce back. Thatâs what weâll be trying to do.â
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