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2018 AFL Grand Final

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Grand final of the 2018 Australian Football League season

Australian rules football match
2018 AFL Grand Final
Panorama of theMelbourne Cricket Ground, five minutes prior to the start of the match

West Coast

Collingwood
11.13 (79)11.8 (74)
1234
WCE2.2 (14)4.3 (27)8.7 (55)11.13 (79)
COL5.1 (31)6.3 (39)8.7 (55)11.8 (74)
Date29 September 2018, 2:30 pm
StadiumMelbourne Cricket Ground
Attendance100,022[1]
FavouriteCollingwood
UmpiresBrett Rosebury,Shaun Ryan
Matt Stevic[2]
Ceremonies
Pre-match entertainmentThe Black Eyed Peas,Jimmy Barnes,Mike Brady[3]
National anthemMahalia Barnes[4]
Post-match entertainmentJimmy Barnes[5]
Accolades
Norm Smith MedallistLuke Shuey[6]
Jock McHale MedallistAdam Simpson[7]
Broadcast in Australia
NetworkSeven Network[8]
CommentatorsBruce McAvaney (host and commentator)
Hamish McLachlan (host and master of ceremonies)
Brian Taylor (commentator)
Wayne Carey (expert commentator)
Cameron Ling (expert commentator)
Daisy Pearce (boundary rider)
Matthew Richardson (boundary rider)
Leigh Matthews (analyst)
Jimmy Bartel (analyst)

The2018 AFL Grand Final was anAustralian rules football game contested between theWest Coast Eagles and theCollingwood Football Club at theMelbourne Cricket Ground on 29 September 2018. It was the 123rd annual grand final of theAustralian Football League (formerly Victorian Football League), staged to determine thepremiers for the2018 AFL season. The match, attended by 100,022 spectators, was won by West Coast by a margin of five points, marking the club's fourth premiership and first since2006. West Coast'sLuke Shuey won theNorm Smith Medal as the player judged best on ground.

It is regarded as one of the greatestgrand finals as well as one of the greatest games inAFL history, finishing first in a public poll of the AFL's 50 greatest games of the last 50 years in 2020.[9]

The presentation ceremony following the match was themost-watched television program in Australia for the 2018 calendar year, marking the fifth year running the AFL grand final topped television viewership, with 2.62 million viewers across the five largest Australian metropolitan cities.[10]

Background

[edit]
See also:2018 AFL finals series

Beaten byGreater Western Sydney in theprevious season's semi-finals,[11]West Coast recorded its best season in three years, with a 16–6 win–loss record, to finish second on the ladder. The club hosted third-placedCollingwood in the second qualifying final atPerth Stadium and overcame the Magpies by sixteen points to advance to a preliminary final.[12] There, the Eagles hosted Melbourne and won comfortably by 66 points to advance to the grand final for the first time since losing the2015 AFL Grand Final toHawthorn.[13]

Collingwood had missed the finals for the past four years and finished the 2017 season in thirteenth position, so was not considered a credible premiership chance at the start of the year. Despite this, the club produced its best season since2011, finishing third. Collingwood faced the West Coast Eagles in Perth in its qualifying final and had led at various stages of the match before being overrun in the last quarter to lose by sixteen points. They rebounded to defeat Greater Western Sydney in the second semi-final by ten points, then had an upset win against reigning premiersRichmond by 39 points in the preliminary final to advance to the grand final.[14]

Entertainment

[edit]

As pre-match entertainment,the Black Eyed Peas performed a number of their hit singles, including "Where Is the Love?", "Let's Get It Started", "I Gotta Feeling" and their new single "Big Love". Filipina singerJessica Reynoso filled in on vocals for former band memberFergie. Their set was followed by singerJimmy Barnes, who started his performance with a rendition of "Flame Trees".[15][16]Mike Brady performed "Up There Cazaly", his own traditional grand final song, while the national anthem was sung byMahalia Barnes, Jimmy Barnes' daughter.[4]

Match summary

[edit]

First quarter

[edit]

Collingwood dominated most of the opening quarter. West Coast spearheadJosh Kennedy had the first score of the game—a behind—before the Magpies scored the first five goals. The first goal came fromTravis Varcoe at the five-minute mark, followed by two in quick succession from young forwardJaidyn Stephenson, one fromJordan De Goey at the 16-minute mark, and another fromWill Hoskin-Elliott after 22 minutes, increasing the margin to 29 points. West Coast scored two late goals in the final couple of minutes of the quarter to reduce the margin to 17 points at quarter time: the first, after 27 minutes, was scored from a ricochet offWillie Rioli's shin on the goal-line and needed a video review to uphold the on-field decision; and the latter was scored by Kennedy from a set shot in the 29th minute.[17][18][19]

Second quarter

[edit]

The second quarter was low-scoring, with only two behinds scored during the first twenty minutes of the quarter: one from West Coast'sMark Hutchings at the four-minute mark, and a rushed behind to Collingwood almost eighteen minutes into the quarter. De Goey broke the drought with his second goal of the afternoon, restoring Collingwood's lead to a relatively comfortable 23 points. But, as in the opening quarter, the Eagles scored two late goals: one from Hutchings at the 22-minute mark, and the other fromLuke Shuey at the 26-minute mark, to reduce Collingwood's lead to only twelve points at half time.[17][18][19]

Third quarter

[edit]

West Coast and Collingwood traded goals in the third quarter. A very early goal to Kennedy inside the first minute of the quarter reduced the margin to six points, before tall forwardMason Cox kicked a goal in the fifth minute to restore Collingwood's two-goal lead.Jamie Cripps kicked a goal for West Coast in the eighth minute, and thenTaylor Adams kicked one for Collingwood only a minute later, again restoring the Magpies' lead to two goals.Jack Darling scored his first goal of the match nine minutes later to bring the margin back to a goal.

In the 21st minute, a pivotal moment occurred: Adams attempted to clear the ball from Collingwood's backline with a dangerous miskick which went towards Stephenson at centre half-back. CollingwoodrunnerAlex Woodward, who was in the area delivering another message at the time (since runners were still allowed on the ground during general play at the time, as the rule limiting their access to the ground was introduced only in 2019[20]), accidentally impeded Stephenson's access to the marking contest, allowing West Coast midfielderElliot Yeo an uncontested intercept mark from which he kicked a 50-metre (55 yd) set shot and put West Coast ahead for the first time since the beginning of the game. There were no more goals in the quarter, with the Magpies initially edging ahead once again with three consecutive behinds in time-on, and Shuey levelling the scores at 8.7 (55) apiece with a late behind, which stood as the three-quarter time score.[17][18][19]

Fourth quarter

[edit]
Dom Sheed, who kicked the winning goal, with the premiership cup after the grand final

The final term started off rapidly, with three goals scored within the first four minutes. Collingwood started the quarter withBrody Mihocek kicking a goal off the opening passage of play after just 34 seconds, and De Goey scoring his third goal for the match only a minute later to extend the margin to 12 points.Nathan Vardy kicked a goal at the three-minute mark to bring the deficit back to 6 points. Cox scored his second goal at the seven-minute mark to extend the margin back to 11 points, and Kennedy responded with his third goal 90 seconds later to bring the deficit back to five points.

The Eagles dominated the contest from this point forward, at one point leading the inside-50 count for the quarter 14–3; however, they repeatedly failed to convert, as four consecutive shots at goal in the middle portion of the quarter were behinds, narrowing the margin to one point. Collingwood's final score of the game, a behind, came from Hoskin-Elliott in the 22nd minute.

If he kicks the goal, I think West Coast can win the grand final. Two minutes and just under. Massive, Sheed from the boundary, needs to be inch-perfect, he is. He's got the most impossible goal. Unbelievable, the most acute angle in footy and Sheed has kicked a remarkable grand final goal.

– Channel 7 commentatorBrian Taylor callingDom Sheed’s goal with under two minutes remaining in the game.

With less than three minutes remaining, West Coast put together a sequence of play starting from a spectacular mark by McGovern in defence, continuing with marks from Vardy andLiam Ryan before ending with a mark in the forward pocket byDom Sheed – who was aided by a contentious shepherd in the marking contest by teammate Rioli on opponentBrayden Maynard.[21] From a distance of about 45 metres (49 yd) and almost on the boundary line, Sheed kicked a goal to put West Coast in front by four points with less than two minutes left. West Coast attacked again from the ensuing centre clearance, and Darling dropped an uncontested mark in the goal-square from which he would almost certainly have sealed victory for the Eagles. Collingwood managed to force a behind to extend the margin to five points inside the final minute, but they could not rebound the ensuing kick-in with Shuey taking an intercept mark from it. The siren sounded shortly after to give West Coast a five point win.[17][18][19]

Norm Smith Medal

[edit]
Norm Smith Medal voting tally
PositionPlayerClubTotal votesVoting summary
1st (winner)Luke ShueyWest Coast Eagles113,3,3,2
2ndTaylor AdamsCollingwood73,2,2
3rdDom SheedWest Coast Eagles42,1,1
4th (tied)Tom LangdonCollingwood11
4th (tied)Jeremy McGovernWest Coast Eagles11
Luke Shuey, winner of theNorm Smith Medal, celebrating West Coast's victory

With 11 votes out of a maximum possible 12,Luke Shuey was awarded the Norm Smith Medal, after collecting 34 disposals, eight clearances and a crucial second-quarter goal. The award was presented by2001 Norm Smith medallistShaun Hart. Chaired byGavin Wanganeen, the voters and their choices were as follows:[22]

VoterRole3 Votes2 Votes1 Vote
Gavin WanganeenFormer AFL playerTaylor AdamsLuke ShueyJeremy McGovern
Wayne CareyChannel 7Luke ShueyTaylor AdamsDom Sheed
Bridget LacyThe West AustralianLuke ShueyTaylor AdamsDom Sheed
John LongmireSydney Swans CoachLuke ShueyDom SheedTom Langdon

Teams

[edit]

The teams were announced on 27 September 2018. Both sides went into the match unchanged from their preliminary final teams.[23]

West Coast Eagles
Collingwood
West Coast
B:25Shannon Hurn (c)37Tom Barrass31Will Schofield
HB:28Tom Cole20Jeremy McGovern23Lewis Jetta
C:8Jack Redden6Elliot Yeo7Chris Masten
HF:34Mark Hutchings27Jack Darling2Mark LeCras
F:44Willie Rioli17Josh Kennedy15Jamie Cripps
Foll:29Scott Lycett13Luke Shuey4Dom Sheed
Int:1Liam Ryan14Liam Duggan18Daniel Venables
19Nathan Vardy
Coach:Adam Simpson
Collingwood
B:25Jack Crisp8Tom Langdon37Brayden Maynard
HB:18Travis Varcoe6Tyson Goldsack38Jeremy Howe
C:21Tom Phillips10Scott Pendlebury (c)7Adam Treloar
HF:2Jordan De Goey41Brody Mihocek32Will Hoskin-Elliott
F:35Jaidyn Stephenson46Mason Cox24Josh Thomas
Foll:4Brodie Grundy13Taylor Adams22Steele Sidebottom
Int:36Brayden Sier14James Aish16Chris Mayne
19Levi Greenwood
Coach:Nathan Buckley
Umpires

The umpiring panel, comprising three field umpires, four boundary umpires, two goal umpires and an emergency in each position is given below.[24]

2018 AFL Grand Final umpires
PositionEmergency
Field:8Brett Rosebury(8)9Matt Stevic(6)25Shaun Ryan(7)18Ray Chamberlain
Boundary:Nathan Doig(5)Chris Gordon(3)Michael Marantelli(3)Mark Thomson(6)Brett Dalgleish
Goal:Steven Piperno(1)Stephen Williams(1)Matthew Dervan

Numbers in brackets represent the number of grand finals umpired, including 2018.

Scoreboard

[edit]
Grand final
29 September (2:30 pm)West Coastdef.CollingwoodMCG (crowd: 100,022)Report
2.2 (14)
4.3 (27)
8.7 (55)
11.13 (79)
Q1
Q2
Q3
Final
5.1 (31)
6.3 (39)
8.7 (55)
11.8 (74)
Umpires:Rosebury,Stevic,Ryan
Norm Smith Medal:Luke Shuey
Television broadcast:Seven Network
National anthem:Mahalia Barnes
3:Kennedy
1:Sheed,Hutchings,Shuey,Darling,Yeo,Cripps,Vardy,Rioli
Goals3:De Goey
2:Cox,Stephenson
1:Hoskin-Elliott,Varcoe,Mihocek,Adams
Shuey,Sheed,Barrass,Kennedy,Hutchings,Schofield,McGovernBestAdams,Langdon,Crisp,Treloar,De Goey,Mayne
NilInjuriesNil
NilReportsNil

Media coverage

[edit]

Radio coverage

[edit]
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StationRegionPlay-by-play commentatorsAnalystsBoundary rider(s)
Triple MNationalJames Brayshaw,Luke DarcyChris Judd,Paul Roos, Ash Chua (statistician)Neroli Meadows,

Dr. Rohan White

ABC RadioNationalAlister Nicholson, Clint WheeldonMark Maclure,Shane Woewodin,Brad SewellKelli Underwood
AFL NationNationalPeter Donegan,Stephen QuartermainTerry Wallace,Kane CornesAbbey Holmes
3AWMelbourne,VICTim Lane,Tony LeonardLeigh Matthews,Jimmy Bartel,Matthew LloydDaniel Harford
SENMelbourne,VICAnthony Hudson,Gerard WhateleyGarry Lyon,Danny FrawleyJack Heverin
6PRPerth,WAAdam Papalia,Karl LangdonBrad HardieFrizz Ferguson

References

[edit]
  1. ^"2018 AFL grand final stats".SBS News. Special Broadcasting Service. AAP. 30 September 2018. Retrieved2 October 2018.
  2. ^McKay, Ben (25 September 2018)."AFL names umpires for 2018 grand final".The Age. Retrieved2 October 2018.
  3. ^Edwards, Nat (14 September 2018)."AFL reveals Grand Final entertainment".AFL.com.au. Australian Football League. Retrieved2 October 2018.
  4. ^ab"AFL Grand Final 2018: Full schedule and entertainment guide".Herald Sun. 29 September 2018. Retrieved2 October 2018.
  5. ^Edwards, Nat (14 September 2018)."AFL reveals Grand Final entertainment".AFL.com.au. Australian Football League. Retrieved2 October 2018.
  6. ^Beveridge, Riley (29 September 2018)."Shue-in: Eagle swoops on Norm Smith Medal".AFL.com.au. Australian Football League. Retrieved2 October 2018.
  7. ^Browne, Ashley (30 September 2018)."After the siren: Coaching's new golden ticket".AFL.com.au. Australian Football League. Retrieved2 October 2018.
  8. ^"2018 AFL Broadcast Guide".AFL.com.au. Australian Football League. 29 September 2018. Retrieved2 October 2018.
  9. ^Foxsports.com.au
  10. ^Knox, David (7 February 2018)."2018 ratings: the final word".TV Tonight. Retrieved28 February 2018.
  11. ^Moir, David (16 September 2017)."AFL Finals: GWS thump West Coast by 67 points in Sydney to advance to the preliminary final".ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved2 October 2018.
  12. ^King, Travis (8 September 2018)."Match report: Eagles into prelim after classic".AFL.com.au. Australian Football League. Retrieved2 October 2018.
  13. ^"AFL Finals: West Coast progress to the AFL Grand Final with monster win over Melbourne".Fox Sports Australia. 22 September 2018.
  14. ^"Collingwood upset Richmond in stunning preliminary final win".The Australian. 21 September 2018. Retrieved2 October 2018.
  15. ^Bednall, Jai (30 September 2018)."Black Eyed Peas hit out at critics".News.com.au. Retrieved1 October 2018.
  16. ^"AFL Grand Final 2018: West Coast Eagles v Collingwood, pre game entertainment, Black Eyed Peas, Jimmy Barnes | Fox Sports".Fox Sports Australia. 29 September 2018. Retrieved1 October 2018.
  17. ^abcdBowen, Nick (29 September 2018)."Match report: Eagles clinch flag in a thriller".AFL.com.au. Australian Football League.
  18. ^abcdMcGarry, Andrew (29 September 2018)."AFL grand final: West Coast beats Collingwood by five points at the MCG in classic decider".ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved2 October 2018.
  19. ^abcd"Match statistics 2018 Scoring progression".AFL Tables. Retrieved2 October 2018.
  20. ^"New rules revealed: nine changes for 2019 season".AFL.com.au. 11 October 2018.
  21. ^Jon Ralph (3 October 2018)."AFL open to a red card system for serious on-field offences".Herald Sun. Melbourne, VIC. Retrieved7 February 2022.
  22. ^[1] AFL
  23. ^McGowan, Marc (27 September 2018)."Teams: Eagles, Pies lock in Grand Final sides".AFL.com.au. Australian Football League. Retrieved1 October 2018.
  24. ^Ryan Davidson (25 September 2018)."Grand Final umpires confirmed". West Coast Eagles. Archived fromthe original on 2 October 2018. Retrieved2 October 2018.

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