Geelong Advertiser

Eagles clip Hawks’ wings

- MICHAEL RAMSEY

WEST Coast has gone a game clear on top of the AFL ladder with a nailbiting 15-point win over Hawthorn at Etihad Stadium.

The Eagles were made to fight for everything in a see-sawing encounter yesterday afternoon, but did enough to outclass the Hawks for an 11.9 (75) to 9.6 (60) victory.

It is the Eagles’ ninth consecutiv­e win and their first over Hawthorn in Melbourne since 2006, taking them a game clear of reigning premier Richmond.

Scores were level at half-time and the game was well and truly up for grabs in the fourth quarter as the Eagles went to the final break up by a goal. In the end, it was the Eagles’ big names who stood tall.

Nic Naitanui was the first to hit the scoreboard in the final quarter, soaring for a huge pack mark and calmly slotting his shot at goal.

Dual Coleman medallist Josh Kennedy then earned a free kick and slotted his third major to extend the Eagles’ lead to a game-high 19 points.

“I felt like our leaders and Nic stood up for the small period there and really helped get ascendancy,” Eagles coach Adam Simpson said.

“It was a difficult, scrappy game at times but to win in that manner and to stand up when it counted, I’m really proud of our players.”

Off-contract star Andrew Gaff delivered a complete performanc­e in the midfield, gathering 35 disposals, seven clearances, 12 marks and a goal. Liam Shiels (29 disposals) and Jaeger O’Meara (three goals) led the way for Hawthorn.

“They’ve been playing high-quality football, so to keep them to 11 goals we thought was a pretty good effort,” Hawks coach Alastair Clarkson said.

“Unfortunat­ely we didn’t have the polish with our own ball use.”

In-form spearhead Jack Darling went goalless but the Eagles still had plenty of firepower with youngsters Willie Rioli (two goals) and Jake Waterman (one) both important contributo­rs. Rioli delivered one of the highlights of the game when he took a spectacula­r mark on the half-back flank, then helped set up a Mark LeCras goal with a silky-smooth pass.

But the Eagles livewire could face match review scrutiny for an incident involving umpire Ray Chamberlai­n late in the first quarter.

Rioli gave away a 50m penalty for dropping his knees into the back of a prone Blake Hardwick, then gave Chamberlai­n a friendly pat on the backside.

West Coast has a six-day break before hosting St Kilda at Optus Stadium on Saturday night.

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