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BFNL Review Round 16


Scoop' Reviews Round 16

In Round 16 of the McDonald's Ballarat Senior Men's competition, David slew Goliath. Sunbury has been pushing to collect a big scalp all year, but nobody could have predicted it would be the Bloods that fell to the Lions.



Darley

15.16.106

Def

Bacchus Marsh

15.6.96

Devils coach Dan Jordan has his feet firmly on the ground despite securing a memorable finals berth with an entertaining 10-point win over the Cobras. In a local derby touted as 'one for the ages' the match didn't disappoint in front of, arguably, the biggest crowd of the BFNL season.

The Devils banked an all-important ninth win of the season to move two games clear of North Ballarat and Bacchus Marsh. The result for the club is significant, a return to finals on the back of a winless 2021.

Leading Devils' goal scorer Nick Rodda booted five goals for the winners while the run and carry of the Devils' midfield (Luther Baker, Dylan Landt, Brett Bewley) between the arcs was paramount to their success. Devils' key defender Matthew Brett endured a classic tussle with Jake Owen (2 goals) before the Cobras captain was heavily concussed following a head collision with teammate Michael Culliver. Owen will miss Saturday's all-important meet with Redan. In the absence of Owen came the emergence of 17-year-old Joel Freeman (5 goals), who nearly stole the win for Bacchus Marsh late, after the game looked a foregone conclusion.

While you're likely to find Nick Stuhldreier and Michael Culliver top the stats list for the Cobras, it was the run of Harry King and Jack Parente late that had the Devils a little nervous. Mathew Brett saved the day in the final term for the Devils with a number of intercept marks as the 'Owenless' Cobras fought tooth and nail adding six goals to three in the last quarter. In a nutshell, the Devils' 24-point advantage at the final change would prove a bridge too far for the Cobras, hanging on for a much-deserved win.

What the coaches said:

German (Bacchus Marsh): Darley got the jump on us multiple times and it was hard to claw back. They used the ball well going forward where at times we didn't.

Jordan (Darley): (I was) pleased with the win and the maturity and the growth of our boys to stand up under serious pressure in the last quarter. Full credit to Bacchus Marsh on their effort and endeavour to win the game.


East Point

17.15.117

Def

Lake Wendouree

13.12.90

Reigning dual Premiers East Point set up a comfortable 27-point win over the Lakers despite being outscored nine goals to seven in the second half. The tenth win of the season for the Kangas came off the back of a dominant first half, amounting to a 40-point lead. Essentially, game-over.

Credit to the plucky Lakers for not throwing the towel in given the absence of coach Jack Fitzpatrick (in Birmingham!). The Lakers recorded their highest score of the season since Round 1 while the Kangas brought up their sixth return score of 100 or more.

Kangas utility Jacob Brown booted five goals and Jordy Johnston two, providing the Lakers with a few headaches in their back half while midfielders Mickitja Rotumah-Onus and Joe Dodd were significant.

Experienced Laker Callum McKay (5 goals) gave home fans something to smile about while Bayley Thompson and Jacob Coxall finished with two majors. In a losing side, Joel O'Connell, Scott Carlin and Brayden Helyar flew the flag with McKay but, unfortunately for the Lakers, chances were virtually done and dusted at quarter time after trailing by 31 points.

The Kangas have ladder leaders Melton this week before their bye. Jake Bridges' boys can still finish second, but could also slide to fourth or even fifth (results pending). The Lakers face Sebastopol and Melton. There's no tougher pairing for any other side as the 2022 McDonald's Ballarat Seniors Home & Away season reaches its climax.

What the coaches said:

Fitzpatrick (Lakers): I've actually just touched down in Birmingham as my partner plays in the Australian Netball team, so I'm watching them and unable to make comment. Apologies.

Bridges (East Point): We learned a lot from the game. Our contested ball and handball to kick ratio were inconsistent and we wrestled momentum back when we needed to. (We've) still plenty to refine and work on.


Sebastopol

11.9.75

Def

North Ballarat

8.12.60

Brendan McCartney's North Ballarat might need to win their last two games (Melton South (h), Darley (a)) of the Home & Away season to earn a finals berth after suffering a third loss on the trot, this time against Sebastopol. Boasting an imposing 5-1 win/loss record at home heading in, the game started well for North leading at quarter time by five points. But the 'Burras, fresh off the bye, raised the bar before going to win the remaining three-quarters of the game to win by 15 points. 

Connor O'Shea, Hugo Papst (3 goals) and James Keeble (2 goals) were named best for the winners in a second success in as many hit-outs over North Ballarat in 2022. Despite the dominance of dangerous North forward Jack Riding (4 goals), the 'Burras were able to contain McCartney's boys to just eight goals for the game.

In the narrow defeat, Riley Polkinghorne, Simon McCartin and Harry Loader played the support role for Riding to keep North in the hunt but were found short against a 'Burras outfit. The Roosters are still a handful shy of their best 22. North is expected to bounce back against Melton South this week before a potential do-or-die game against the Devils. If Bacchus Marsh beat Redan and Sunbury in their final hit-outs, the equation for North is simple. Beat the Panthers and the Devils or miss the finals.

Sebastopol can still finish as high as second with Lake Wendouree and Ballarat both at Marty Bush Reserve to come. A double chance beckons for the 'Burras on the march! 

What the coaches said:

McCartney (North Ballarat): We stuck at it and had a great crack. Sebastopol were more polished when it counted and tackled well. We had our chances in the second half.

Searl (Sebastopol): (I was) really pleased with our ability at the contest. We applied great pressure and I thought after quarter time, we were really disciplined across the board. We couldn't shake them but pleasing to grind out a hard-fought victory. Huge in the context of our season.


Sunbury

9.14.68

Def

Melton

8.5.53

The Lions confirmed this year's flag race is not a done deal after an upset 15-point win over the Bloods at the Clarke Oval. It was five goals to one in the final quarter that was the catalyst in the Lions' win, only their fourth of the season. If I told you Sunbury would win just one quarter for the game to get the job done you'd have every right assuming I had rocks in my head. But that's how it unfolded! The Lions also won the shots on goal battle scoring 23-13.

While the Lions' midfield buoyed with VFL talent (Mitch Lewis, Josh Guthrie) was always going to be a test for the seasoned Bloods, it was again their organic growth at the forefront of the win. Harry Power, Jack Newitt and Thomas Werner finished among the better players while Tyson Lever and Harry Minton-Connell delivered once again with their rebound off half-back. Jake Sutton finished with three goals.

For Melton, some comfort in loss can be gained by the easing of pressure on their heavily weighted flag favourites tag. Bloods coach Aaron Tymms has had to negotiate a year of expectation on a team who hasn't won a flag since 2005. It must be tiresome. While they remain firm favourites, the Bloods are proven 'gettable' and must win at Mars Stadium - if they get there! Wake-up call after the bye delivered, a timely reminder may work in the Bloods' favour having welcomed back Jack Walker (best) and Jacob Hickey (3rd best). Only Luke Heeney missed for the Bloods on a day dangerous trio Ryan Carter (0), Liam Carter (1) and Braedyn Kight (0) managed just one goal between them.

All honours to Travis Hodgson's Sunbury. Despite just a fourth win of the season, you don't want to see them in the last two rounds of the season (Ballarat away, Bacchus Marsh at home).

What the coaches said:

Hodgson (Sunbury): (We) played the way we have been for a while now but played it for longer. Winning a close one after losing plenty of them strengthens belief. The arrow is pointing in the right direction.

Tymms (Melton): We were really poor with our basic fundamentals. (For a) second time this year we haven't come to play after the bye. Big pat on the back Trav (Hodgson), Sunbury (is) much improved since our last meeting and wanted it more. (I'm) confident we will bounce back.