Geelong Advertiser

Only time will ease pain, but Adams still proud of effort

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THE hurt still lingers, but Collingwoo­d can see brighter days ahead after its gutwrenchi­ng Grand Final defeat.

The despair at losing such a close match was made plain by Collingwoo­d’s midfield kingpin Taylor Adams, who said he expected to wallow in the pain for some time.

“There’s no words that are going to make us feel any better,” Adams said. “The only way we were going to be happy after this game is if we won. And we didn’t win.

“There’s more to life than footy, but for the next couple of days its going to be tough to feel good.”

In time, many Magpies will come to be at peace with their grand final performanc­es; notably Adams.

The 25-year-old was a bulldozer in midfield, collecting 18 contested possession­s to finish runner- up to Norm Smith Medallist Luke Shuey.

Others were also outstandin­g.

Chris Mayne brought superb pressure, laying 14 tackles. Jordan De Goey threatened throughout while at the other end, Tom Langdon was magnificen­t in his commitment.

Bayden Sier and Jaidyn Stephenson were fantastic for first-year players. Travis Varcoe was lively, and Adam Treloar had moments of brilliance.

All creditable performanc­es, and reason enough for Collingwoo­d to believe it can compete for the 2019 premiershi­p.

“I’m proud of this footy club and what we’ve built,” Adams said. “It’s much more than what one performanc­e shows. It runs deeper than that. We’ll bounce back. It’ll take time, but we’ll get over it and move on.”

 ??  ?? A dejected Taylor Adams.
A dejected Taylor Adams.

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