Crows stumble to fierce Swans
The Sydney Swans have won an intense qualifying final by 29 points over Adelaide at AAMI Stadium
THE SYDNEY Swans have booked themselves a home preliminary final in a brutal 29-point win over Adelaide at AAMI Stadium, which claimed the seasons of Swan Ben McGlynn and Crow Daniel Talia.
McGlynn was in tears on the interchange bench after badly injuring his right hamstring in the third term, while the loss for Adelaide was compounded by a suspected broken wrist to NAB AFL Rising Star Daniel Talia suffered in the final term.
McGlynn was in fine touch before the injury with 13 touches and a goal, but hobbled down into the rooms for some time before emerging to solemnly watch the final term from the interchange bench.
The game was in the balance when Talia landed awkwardly in the fourth quarter and was helped from the ground with his right wrist wrapped in a makeshift sling.
The Crows appeared overawed in the first half with nine players making their AFL finals debut, in stark contrast to the Swans, whose only player in the same boat was 25-year-old Mitch Morton.
Despite winning their share of the football early, Adelaide uncharacteristically fumbled and missed targets.
Ryan O'Keefe led from the front and superstar Adam Goodes looked in ominous touch with the club's first two goals.
The Swans smothered and countered attack after attack from Adelaide and, unlike the Crows, made the most of their opportunities, booting five second-term goals to take a 25-point lead into the main break.
Just three contested possessions separated the sides as the best in the business heading into the final and it was even tighter in the first half at 69 contested possessions apiece, but the Swans were tackling with far more intensity and, despite trailing inside 50s 16-30, looked more dangerous when in attack.
Adelaide continued to burn the ball in the third and, when they did pump it into attack, Swans Ted Richards and Lewis Roberts-Thomson were waiting to send it back out.
The effort was there for the Crows, but their ability to execute skills under pressure just wasn't matching their opposition's.
Great play from Swans Daniel Hannebery (27 disposals), Josh Kennedy (35 disposals, one goal), Goodes (three goals) and O'Keefe (37 disposals) held the Swans in great stead and, despite a slight challenge from the Crows in the last quarter, the visitors had all the answers from start to finish.
ADELAIDE 1.3 2.7 3.10 5.12 (42)
SYDNEY SWANS 2.2 7.2 8.4 11.5 (71)
GOALS
Adelaide: Callinan, Johncock, Sloane, Van Berlo, Walker
Sydney Swans: Goodes 3, Jetta 2, Morton 2, Kennedy, McGlynn, Parker, Reid
BEST
Adelaide: Thompson, Mackay, Sloane, Doughty, Reilly
Sydney Swans: O'Keefe, Richards, Kennedy, Goodes, Shaw, Roberts-Thomson, Jetta
INJURIES
Adelaide: Talia (broken wrist)
Sydney Swans: McGlynn (hamstring)
SUBSTITUTES
Adelaide: Aidan Riley replaced Ian Callinan in the fourth quarter
Sydney Swans: Luke Parker replaced Ben McGlynn (hamstring) in the third quarter
Reports: TBA
Umpires: Farmer, Stevic, Schmitt
Official crowd: 44,849 at AAMI Stadium
The views in this article are those of the author and not necessarily those of the AFL or its clubs