Marlborough Express

AFL star wins title after getting stuck in a lift

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Geelong’s Isaac Smith has emerged from the passing of his beloved grandfathe­r and getting stuck in a lift pre-game to become the oldest winner of the AFL’S coveted Norm Smith medal.

The 33-year-old Smith claimed the gong for best-afield in the Cats’ 81-point grand final hammering of Sydney on Saturday.

The previous oldest medallist was Richmond’s Kevin Bartlett, who was 32 when best on ground in the Tigers’ 1980 premiershi­p.

Smith collected 32 disposals, booted three goals and produced a batch of eye-catching statistics: 14 score involvemen­ts, 11 inside-50s, five clearances, a dozen marks and a game-high 771 metres gained.

The build-up to his fourth flag – to go with three won at Hawthorn – included the death of his grandfathe­r, who Smith spent time with in Albury in NSW after last week’s preliminar­y final, on Wednesday night.

‘‘I made a mad dash to Albury and spent 24 hours with him,’’ he said. ‘‘And I will be forever grateful that he was still mentally there and we had a great 24 hours together, although it was very upsetting.’’

On grand final morning, Smith became stuck in a lift at the team hotel.

‘‘The only time I got nerves this year was I got stuck in the lift for 15 minutes at the hotel this morning,’’ he said.

‘‘I thought, ‘Oh, s..t, I might not make it’. The technician said he was an hour away.

‘‘Fortunatel­y the opened.’’

Smith is the fifth Geelong player to win the medal, following Gary Ablett Sr (1989), Steve Johnson (2007), Paul Chapman (2009) and Jimmy Bartel (2011).

‘‘It certainly doesn’t fit comfortabl­y with me. I feel a little doors bit silly and a bit awkward because these things don’t happen to me,’’ he said.

‘‘We have got a star-studded side and blokes that have huge lists of personal accolades.

‘‘But I was fortunate enough today to win it and I am sure I will sit back in a few years’ time with a nice bottle of Grange or something and think about it.’’

Smith moved to the Cats as a free agent, at the behest of coach Chris Scott, after playing 210 games for the Hawks between 2011 and 2020.

‘‘I owe Isaac to an extent because I would completely understand if he didn’t buy what we were selling a couple of years ago,’’ Scott said.

‘‘It was easy to listen more to the people on the outside who thought that our time was over.’’

Meanwhile, Geelong superstar Patrick Dangerfiel­d was pleased to ‘‘shut the haters up’’ after the Cats defied the march of time with a scintillat­ing AFL grand final performanc­e.

After a number of near-misses since their 2011 premiershi­p, Geelong are back on top of the AFL world after winning a fourth flag in 15 years, and 10th overall.

Only three players – captain Joel Selwood, star forward Tom Hawkins and Mitch Duncan – were part of Geelong’s triumph 11 years ago.

Fielding the oldest team in VFL/AFL history at 28 years, 206 days, Geelong smashed the young and upcoming Sydney Swans off the MCG.

Dangerfiel­d never stopped believing the Cats could eventually deliver on grand final day.

‘‘I always had belief in this team, our coaches, we all did,’’ Dangerfiel­d said.

‘‘We get written off every year and we joke about it internally.

‘‘It’s nice to shut a few of the haters up, but we don’t do it for that reason, we do it for each other.’’

Dangerfiel­d arrived at Geelong ahead of the 2016 season after an already brilliant career with Adelaide and has delivered on what he set out to achieve.

The grand final was Dangerfiel­d’s 303rd AFL appearance, just two behind Hawthorn legend Shane Crawford for most games played before winning an AFL premiershi­p.

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