Mercury (Hobart)

Devils break the duck and get competitiv­e

- ADAM SMITH

GLENORCHY’S Perri King will go down in the history books as the Devils girl’s first ever goalkicker after breaking the side’s NAB League duck yesterday.

A week after being humbled by 102 points in its competitio­n opener and kicking only two behinds, Tasmania put in a much improved effort on the road against Eastern Ranges. The Devils trailed by a single point at quarter-time before being overpowere­d 10.6 (66) to 1.3 (9), but the side left Kilsyth with their heads held high.

King, a New Norfolk product, was the ice breaker when she coolly slotted the historic first goal on the run from 25m at the 15-minute mark of the first term, much to the excitement of her teammates.

AFL Tasmania female talent manager Leigh Elder couldn’t have been prouder of the improvemen­t shown

“We were only a point behind at quarter-time, there was a strong breeze to be fair so we had that in the first and third quarters,” Elder said.

“But the endeavour was fantastic. What we saw is we were happy to be first to the ball rather than be reactive, but our defensive pressure was pretty good.

“There is still a bit to learn about the game, the amount of experience that the Victorian teams have compared to us, we are talking an average of 30plus games against 120-plus.

“That takes a fair bit to catch up on but we can compete at the level, there is no doubt about that.”

Meghan Gaffney collected a team-high 11 disposals, King had double figures to go with the goal while the defensive workrate of Charlie Lovell and Camilla Taylor was highlighte­d by a combined 15 tackles.

“She has improved her kicking out of sight Perri King,” Elder said. “It [the goal] went straight through the middle so that was a nice celebratio­n. We actually should’ve kicked two goals prior to that.”

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