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2017 AFL Grand Final

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Grand final of the 2017 Australian Football League season

Australian rules football match
2017 AFL Grand Final
Panorama of the Melbourne Cricket Ground during thenational anthem prior to the start of the match

Adelaide

Richmond
8.12 (60)16.12 (108)
1234
ADE4.2 (26)4.7 (31)5.10 (40)8.12 (60)
RIC2.3 (15)6.4 (40)11.8 (74)16.12 (108)
Date30 September 2017, 2.30 pm
StadiumMelbourne Cricket Ground
Attendance100,021
FavouriteAdelaide
UmpiresMatt Stevic,Simon Meredith,Shaun Ryan
Coin toss won byAdelaide
Kicked towardCity End
Ceremonies
Pre-match entertainmentThe Killers,Mike Brady
National anthemDami Im
Post-match entertainmentThe Killers
Accolades
Norm Smith MedallistDustin Martin
Jock McHale MedallistDamien Hardwick
Broadcast in Australia
NetworkSeven Network
CommentatorsBruce McAvaney (host and commentator)
Hamish McLachlan (host)
Brian Taylor (commentator)
Wayne Carey (expert commentator)
Cameron Ling (expert commentator)
Tim Watson (boundary rider)
Matthew Richardson (boundary rider)
Leigh Matthews (analyst)
Nick Riewoldt (analyst)
Daisy Pearce (analyst)
← 2016AFL Grand Final2018 →

The2017 AFL Grand Final was anAustralian rules football game contested between theAdelaide Football Club and theRichmond Football Club at theMelbourne Cricket Ground on 30 September 2017. It was the 122nd annualgrand final of theAustralian Football League (formerly the Victorian Football League) staged to determine thepremiers for the2017 AFL season.[1] The match, attended by 100,021 spectators, was won by Richmond by a margin of 48 points, marking the club's eleventh VFL/AFL premiership and first since1980. Richmond'sDustin Martin was awarded theNorm Smith Medal as the best player on the ground.

Background

[edit]
See also:2017 AFL finals series

Adelaide claimed theminor premiership for the second time in their history, finishing on top of the2017 AFL ladder with 15 wins, 6 losses and 1 draw, edging outGeelong via a better percentage.[2] The Crows recorded two dominant wins in thefinals series, defeatingGreater Western Sydney by 36 points in the qualifying final and then overwhelmingGeelong to win the preliminary final by 61 points.[3][4]

The Tigers improved immensely from their 13th-place finish in 2016, ending the home-and-away season with 15 wins and 7 losses, placing them third on the AFL ladder, their percentage placing them ahead of fourth-placed Greater Western Sydney. Like Adelaide, Richmond faced tough opposition in the finals series but emerged with convincing victories. After a close first half, they ran away in the last quarter to defeat the higher ranked Geelong by 51 points in a tough away qualifying final, which earned them a week's break and a home preliminary final against Greater Western Sydney, which they won by 36 points. Both were played at theMelbourne Cricket Ground before crowds in excess of 90,000.[5][6]

This was Richmond's first grand final appearance in 35 years since1982, the club having last won a premiership in1980; and it was Adelaide's third appearance in the grand final, the club having won its previous two grand finals in1997 and1998. The two clubs were on the longest grand final droughts in the competition at the time. The clubs' normal guernseys were deemed to be clashing; so, as the lower-ranked team, Richmond wore its away guernsey, yellow with a black sash.[7]

The two teams met only once in the home-and-away season in 2017, in Round 6, with Adelaide recording a 76-point win at theAdelaide Oval.[8]Bookmakers installed Adelaide as the favourites to win the grand final, with the Crows regarded bySportsbet as $1.72 favourites compared to Richmond valued at $2.15 for the win.[9]

Entertainment

[edit]

As has become custom in recent grand finals, the 2017 AFL Grand Final featured both pre-match and post-match entertainment on the ground. Several weeks before the match, the AFL announced that Americanrock bandthe Killers would headline the entertainment line-up and would be joined by Australian football singerMike Brady. A former Australian representative at theEurovision Song Contest,Dami Im, sang thenational anthem.[10][11] The Killers' pre-match and post-match performance was praised highly by several news and entertainment outlets, some of whom described their sets as "the best ever" performed at a grand final.[12][13] Among others, the band played signatures songsMr. Brightside,Somebody Told Me andWhen You Were Young, as well as newer songThe Man and a cover ofMidnight Oil'sForgotten Years.[14] The band also returned to the ground for a free concert following the game where Richmond's Jack Riewoldt performed with the band.

The respective club ambassadors who carried the premiership cup onto the field before the game wereMark Bickley for Adelaide andMatthew Richardson for Richmond. Both worked the game as media members – Bickley as a colour commentator for FiveAA and Richardson as a boundary rider for the Seven Network telecast. Richardson also presented the trophy to Trent Cotchin and Damien Hardwick during the on-field award ceremony.

Skills events

[edit]

Richmond'sConnor Menadue won the sprint event at half-time, with Jarrod Pickett ofCarlton taking second and Josh Williams ofNorth Melbourne taking third. Broadcast host Basil Zempilas was the sprint host, whileCollingwood'sScott Pendlebury was honorary starter.[15]

In the longest kick event on the Yarra, sponsored by Foxtel, Melton South captain-coach and retired Carlton starBrendan Fevola won with a 66.1-metre kick, with retiredEssendon championDustin Fletcher taking second and theWestern Bulldogs'Matt Suckling taking third. Other competitors included AFLW stars Katie Brennan (Western Bulldogs) and Sarah Perkins (Adelaide) as well as wildcard entry James Pennycuick.Bounce hostsJason Dunstall,Danny Frawley andBrian Lake presented the event, broadcast on Fox Footy.[16]

Match summary

[edit]
The view from the Great Southern Stand at theMelbourne Cricket Ground prior to the match.

Weather conditions

[edit]

The Grand Final was played in cool, mostly cloudy conditions with light winds coming in from the southwest. Rain briefly fell at points during the second quarter but not enough to seriously influence the game.

First quarter

[edit]

Adelaide started the game strongly, withMatt Crouch findingRory Sloane who kicked the Crows' opener. Shortly afterwards,Nick Vlastuin slipped over near the Adelaide goal mouth andEddie Betts kicked the Crows' second. Richmond full forwardJack Riewoldt missed a string of chances for goal, and it took until the 16-minute mark for the Tigers to score their first goal whenJosh Caddy marked in the left forward pocket, ran round and converted. This was followed shortly after with a goal toBachar Houli, which briefly gave Richmond the lead, before Sloane andHugh Greenwood answered with crumbing majors for Adelaide to give the Crows a lead of 11 points at quarter-time.[17][18]

Second quarter

[edit]

The Crows had the first two scoring shots of the second term – behinds to Betts andTom Lynch – but Richmond dominated the rest of the quarter. Tigers' defenderAlex Rance provided a pivotal moment three minutes into the term. With the Crows 13 points up and charging into attack, he effected a desperate diving spoil to deny Adelaide captainTaylor Walker on the lead at centre half-forward. Moments later, Riewoldt finally got on the board but he needed some sloppy defending from Adelaide, letting his kick bounce through with no one on the line andJake Kelly's late lunge ruled ineffective by a score review.Jacob Townsend, who had not played a game in the senior team before round 22, was then awarded a free kick in a marking contest just inside the 50 metre arc, and he converted the set shot to put Richmond within two points.Jack Graham, the youngest player on the field at 19 years old and a former South Australian under-18 captain playing only his 5th AFL game, kicked Richmond's fifth deep in time on to put Richmond in front, and they never trailed from there. A minute later, Martin pushed deep forward and orchestrated a mismatch againstLuke Brown, marked and kicked the Tigers' fourth straight to put Richmond nine points up at half time.[19]

Third quarter

[edit]

Richmond started the second half in the same manner as they left off in the second. Three minutes into the term, a free for a high tackle from Sloane sawJack Graham kick his side's seventh. At the eight-minute mark,Shane Edwards managed to find an unguardedShaun Grigg who converted a mark from 40 metres out. Ninety seconds later, Grigg in turn passed to an openKane Lambert at full forward, who snapped the Tigers' ninth and the lead was out to 28 points. At the 14-minute mark, Richmond's string of unbroken goals was finally halted at seven asWalker marked inside 50 and converted, the Crows' first major for a quarter and a half. But Graham soon answered with his third goal of the game and eventually finished as this Grand Final's leading goalscorer. In time on, Martin took possession 25 metres out and fed the ball out toJason Castagna, who snapped over his shoulder to effectively put the game beyond the reach of Adelaide, who trailed by 34 points at three quarter time.[18]

Final quarter

[edit]

Adelaide needed a record-breaking comeback to win, but Richmond opened the quarter with even more pressure. Riewoldt opened the quarter with his second goal from a well-contested mark inside the forward 50 and then found Lambert in open space with a handball to make a long run and then pass toDion Prestia to finish. The Crows tried to make a game of it, kicking two goals in 90 seconds through Walker andBrad Crouch. But any last hope for Adelaide was snuffed out as Townsend intercepted a kick-in and converted the mark for his second goal, and thenDan Butler added another for the Tigers before Martin kicked his second during time on.Charlie Cameron scored a late consolation goal for Adelaide.[19]

Overall report

[edit]
Richmond players celebrate on stage following the 2017 AFL Grand Final

Richmond dominated the game after quarter time with a streak that included 11 of 12 goals. The Tigers dominated the Crows in contested possessions (170-140) and also won the clearances (45-39). Richmond kept Adelaide to their lowest score of the year and completely nullified a team that looked to have as potent an attack as seen in recent years, with the Crows kicking only four goals in the last three quarters and eight in the game.[17]

Norm Smith Medal

[edit]
Norm Smith Medal Voting Tally
PositionPlayerClubTotal VotesVoting Summary
1st (winner)Dustin MartinRichmond133,3,3,3,1
2ndBachar HouliRichmond103,2,2,2,1
3rd - tiedAlex RanceRichmond22
3rd - tiedShane EdwardsRichmond22
3rd - tiedDion PrestiaRichmond21,1
6thJack GrahamRichmond11

With 13 votes out of a maximum possible 15, Dustin Martin was awarded the Norm Smith Medal, becoming the first player in VFL/AFL history to win a premiership, the Brownlow Medal and the Norm Smith Medal in the same season. Bachar Houli was the runner-up with 10 votes, while no other player earned more than two votes. Three quarters of Martin's 29 disposals were contested, and he collected 6 clearances and two goals.[20][21]

The 2000 winner,James Hird, was the presenter, which was notable as it was the Essendon champion's first public AFL appearance since being hospitalised after a drug overdose in January in the wake of the Bombers' performance-enhancing drug scandal during his tenure as senior coach. The voters and their choices were as follows:[22]

VoterRole3 Votes2 Votes1 Vote
Terry WallaceAFL NationBachar HouliShane EdwardsDustin Martin
Chris JuddTriple MDustin MartinBachar HouliJack Graham
Daisy PearceChannel 7Dustin MartinBachar HouliDion Prestia
Jake NiallFox FootyDustin MartinBachar HouliDion Prestia
Mark McClureABCDustin MartinAlex RanceBachar Houli

Teams

[edit]

The teams were announced on 28 September 2017. Both sides went into the match unchanged from their preliminary final teams.[23][24] Injured Adelaide forwardMitch McGovern failed to recover in time for selection, with Crows' coachDon Pyke ruling him out of contention on the Wednesday of grand final week;[25] and Richmond captainTrent Cotchin was scrutinised for an incident involving Greater Western Sydney midfielderDylan Shiel in thepreliminary final, but was cleared of any charge by the AFL Match Review Panel on the Monday of grand final week.[26]

It was the first time since theinaugural grand final in 1898 that neither team fielded any players who had previously played in a grand final.[27]

Adelaide
Richmond
Adelaide
B:29Rory Laird15Kyle Hartigan6Jake Lever
HB:11Paul Seedsman12Daniel Talia16Luke Brown
C:14David Mackay9Rory Sloane21Rory Atkins
HF:23Charlie Cameron4Josh Jenkins18Eddie Betts
F:27Tom Lynch13Taylor Walker26Richard Douglas
Foll:24Sam Jacobs2Brad Crouch44Matt Crouch
Int:3Riley Knight8Jake Kelly20Hugh Greenwood
22Andy Otten
Coach:Don Pyke
Richmond
B:5Brandon Ellis18Alex Rance2Dylan Grimes
HB:14Bachar Houli12David Astbury1Nick Vlastuin
C:33Kamdyn McIntosh9Trent Cotchin21Jacob Townsend
HF:23Kane Lambert4Dustin Martin22Josh Caddy
F:40Dan Butler8Jack Riewoldt17Daniel Rioli
Foll:25Toby Nankervis3Dion Prestia6Shaun Grigg
Int:10Shane Edwards34Jack Graham35Nathan Broad
46Jason Castagna
Coach:Damien Hardwick
Umpires

The umpiring panel, comprising three field umpires, four boundary umpires, two goal umpires and an emergency in each position is given below. All three field umpires,Matt Stevic,Simon Meredith andShaun Ryan, had umpired in previous AFL grand finals.[28]

2017 AFL Grand Final umpires
PositionEmergency
Field:9Matt Stevic(5)21Simon Meredith(5)25Shaun Ryan(6)Brett Rosebury
Boundary:Mitchell Lefevre(1)Matthew Konetschka(1)Rob Haala(4)Damien Cusack(1)Brett Dalgleish
Goal:Luke Walker(7)Adam Wojcik(4)Matthew Dervan

Numbers in brackets represent the number of grand finals umpired, including 2017.

Scoreboard

[edit]
Grand Final
Saturday, 30 September (2:30 pm)Adelaidedef. byRichmondMCG (crowd: 100,021)Report
4.2 (26)
4.7 (31)
5.10 (40)
8.12 (60)
Q1
Q2
Q3
Final
2.3 (15)
6.4 (40)
11.8 (74)
16.12 (108)
Umpires:Matt Stevic,Simon Meredith,Shaun Ryan
Norm Smith Medal:Dustin Martin
Television broadcast:Seven Network
National anthem:Dami Im
2:Sloane,Walker
1:Betts,Cameron,B. Crouch,Greenwood
Goals3:Graham
2:Riewoldt,Martin,Townsend
1:Houli,Prestia,Caddy,Butler,Castagna,Grigg,Lambert
M. Crouch,Jacobs,B. Crouch,Sloane,LairdBestMartin,Rance,Houli,Prestia,Edwards,Graham,Grimes
NilInjuriesRioli (ankle)
NilReportsNil

Media coverage

[edit]

The match was televised by theSeven Network. The match commentary line-up includedBruce McAvaney andBrian Taylor as play-by-play commentators,Wayne Carey andCameron Ling were the analysts, whileTim Watson andMatthew Richardson were on the sideline as boundary riders.Hamish McLachlan andBasil Zempilas rotated hosting duties andLeigh Matthews,Nick Riewoldt andDaisy Pearce provided punditry as part of the pre-game panel.

This was the first grand final commentated by Brian Taylor on commercial television, replacing veteran broadcasterDennis Cometti who retired from television duties at the end of the 2016 season. McAvaney called his seventeenth grand final. It was also the first grand final in which Daisy Pearce was a member of the broadcast team.

Fox Footy also had pregame and postgame coverage by a panel including hostEddie McGuire,Dermott Brereton,Jonathan Brown,David King andGerard Healy.

The grand final was themost watched television program in Australia for the 2017 calendar year, for the fourth year running, with 2.72 million viewers in the five largest Australian metropolitan cities.[29]

Radio coverage

[edit]
StationRegionPlay-by-play commentatorsAnalysts and boundary riders (If known)
ABC GrandstandNationalGerard Whateley, Clint WheeldonUnknown
Triple MNationalJames Brayshaw,Luke DarcyChris Judd,Mark Ricciuto,Neroli Meadows,Nathan Brown
1116 SENVictoriaAnthony Hudson, Matt GranlandGarry Lyon,Mick Malthouse,Danny Frawley
3AWVictoriaTim Lane, Tony LeonardJimmy Bartel
5AASouth AustraliaDavid Wildy,Stephen RoweMark Bickley
6PRWestern AustraliaAdam Papalia, Mark ReadingsBrad Hardie
KROCKGeelong, VictoriaTom King, Darren BerryUnknown
AFL NationNational (regional only)Stephen Quartermain, Peter DoneganUnknown
NIRSNational (regional only)Bary Denner, Peter CardamoneUnknown

International coverage

[edit]
Region[30]Rights holder(s)
Asia PacificAustralia Plus
CanadaCanadaTSN2
ChinaChinaGZTV
IndiaIndiaAustralia Plus
Republic of IrelandIrelandBT Sport,ESPN
Middle East and North AfricaMiddle EastOrbit Showtime Network
New ZealandNew ZealandSky Sports,TVNZ
RussiaRussiaVIASAT
United KingdomUnited KingdomBT Sport,ESPN
United StatesUnited StatesFox Soccer Plus
WorldwideWatchAFL.com.au

References

[edit]
  1. ^In 1897 and 1924 there were no grand finals and instead the premier was decided by a finals play-off. In 1948, 1977 and 2010, there were grand final replays after initial draws.
  2. ^"2017 AFL season ladder".AFL.com.au. Telstra Media. Retrieved12 September 2024.
  3. ^"Adelaide Crows storm into the preliminary final with a 36-point win over GWS at Adelaide Oval".ABC News. 7 September 2017.
  4. ^"Brilliant Adelaide Crows fly into AFL Grand Final after crushing Geelong".The Age. 22 September 2017.
  5. ^"Richmond demolishes Geelong by 51 points at the MCG to reach preliminary final".ABC News. 8 September 2017.
  6. ^"Richmond Tigers vs GWS Giants: Tiger Army in sight of dream premiership".The Age. 23 September 2017.
  7. ^"AFL rules Richmond will wear clash jumper in AFL grand final, and Kevin Bartlett is irate".News.com.au. 24 September 2017.
  8. ^"Richmond thrashed by brilliant, creative Crows".The Age. 1 May 2017.
  9. ^"2017 AFL Grand Final Tipps and Odds".Sports News First. 25 September 2017. Archived fromthe original on 29 September 2017.
  10. ^"AFL Finals 2017: The Killers to headline Grand Final entertainment".The New Daily. 6 September 2017.
  11. ^"The Killers 'locked in' for Grand Final".The Sydney Morning Herald. 9 June 2017.
  12. ^"Fans hail The Killers AFL grand final performance the best ever".The Australian. 30 September 2017.
  13. ^"The Killers' Grand Final gig is already being deemed one of the best ever".tonedeaf.com.au. 1 October 2017.
  14. ^"ICYMI, check out The Killers' huge AFL Grand Final Performance".ABC News (Triple J). 2 October 2017.
  15. ^WATCH: Richmond's Connor Menadue wins AFL Grand Final sprint Brendan Bradford forThe Sporting News
  16. ^2017 Foxtel AFL Longest Kick YouTube (originally broadcast by Fox Footy]
  17. ^ab"Match report: Terrific Tigers end premiership wait".AFL.com.au. 30 September 2017.
  18. ^ab"AFL grand final 2017: The moments that mattered in Richmond's win over Adelaide".The Age. 30 September 2017.
  19. ^ab"AFL grand final: Richmond earns a famous victory, beating Adelaide by 48 points to end a 37-year drought".ABC News. 30 September 2017.
  20. ^"AFL grand final: Richmond's Dustin Martin wins Norm Smith Medal to complete record-breaking season".ABC News. 30 September 2017.
  21. ^"Social media reacts to Norm Smith Medal voting: Was Bachar Houli robbed?".Herald Sun. 30 September 2017.
  22. ^2017 Norm Smith Medal Voting Triple M
  23. ^"2017 AFL Grand Final teams".AFL.com.au. 28 September 2017. Archived fromthe original on 28 September 2017.
  24. ^"TEAMS: Crows, Tigers name Grand Final sides".AFL.com.au. 28 September 2017.
  25. ^"AFL grand final: Adelaide's Mitch McGovern to miss Saturday's clash with Richmond".ABC News. 27 September 2017.
  26. ^"Richmond captain Trent Cotchin free to pay in the grand final".The Age. 25 September 2017.
  27. ^"Adelaide, Richmond to make AFL grand final history, with no players having previous experience".ABC News. 29 September 2017.
  28. ^"AFL Grand Final 2017: Field, boundary and goal umpires announced".Fox Sports Australia. 26 September 2017.
  29. ^Knox, David (2 February 2018)."2017 TV: the final word".TV Tonight. Retrieved2 February 2018.
  30. ^"2017 AFL Grand Final – International Broadcast Schedule".World Footy News. 28 September 2017.

External links

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