Geelong Advertiser

Sydney pours on the pressure

- ROB FORSAITH

SYDNEY toppled West Coast by 15 points in an AFL blockbuste­r at the SCG, stating its premiershi­p credential­s with a show of suffocatin­g pressure.

It is rare to have a finals-like atmosphere at many games in the middle of the season, but the widespread expectatio­n last night was the top-four showdown would be something special.

The rivals delivered, winding the clock back to 2005 in a low-scoring scrap.

The frenzied series of heavy tackles, hurried snaps, smothers and spoils reflected the sides’ desperatio­n — and why both are expected to progress deep into September.

Space is often at a premium in Sydney, but this was something else.

The hosts handled the heat much better. Sometimes outplayed, the Swans had more composure and class when the game was in the balance.

Sydney did not kick a goal in the opening quarter, the first time it has happened at the SCG since 2006.

John Longmire’s men settled after quarter-time, booting seven consecutiv­e goals either side of halftime in what was their sixth win on the trot.

It was the most-complete performanc­e of 2018 from the Swans, who have the bye then face reigning premier Richmond at Etihad Stadium.

The result ended the Eagles’ 10-match winning streak. It was the club’s first loss since Round 1, when Sydney won by 29 points in Perth.

West Coast gun Elliot Yeo threatened to make things interestin­g when he burst through the middle 19 seconds into the final quarter, kicking truly to reduce the margin to 20 points.

Lance Franklin’s inaccuracy also fuelled the Eagles’ hopes of a final-quarter comeback, but Sydney’s back six stood strong in Heath Grundy’s 250th game.

The Swans fell 3.5 percentage points short of snatching top spot from West Coast.

Franklin, who booted eight goals in Round 1, was quiet early but stepped up in the second half as the Eagles repeatedly infringed while attempting to nullify Sydney’s most-potent threat.

The superstar finished with 2.5. Grundy tallied 23 disposals, reflecting how often the ball was pinging into his half of the ground.

“The pressure was on,” the key defender told the Seven Network.

“We’ve been getting better and better each week ... tonight was probably our best night of the year. It was a fourquarte­r effort.”

Skipper Josh Kennedy and Isaac Heeney were magnificen­t for the Swans, combining for 11 tackles and 50 touches, but young guns Jake Lloyd, Oliver Florent, Tom Papley, Ben Ronke and Tom McCartin also stood up.

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