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- 7 September 2007
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What do you think of playing Steven King in place for Mark Blake? Blakey had a shocker...
What the hell are you talking about?Think the commentators have a lot to do with the perception.
Listening to a call from Commetti youd swear ANY Vic team 8 goals down were simply toying with the opposition.
When over there for the 97 Crows win against St Kilda after the game we couldnt get served in a resteraunt.Melbourne was in morning and basically showed you the direction to the SA boarder.
If you people from Victoria could maybe take a step back and see how the commentators and other media think about the AFL, you would really understand how non Victorian teams feel about it.
Has a non-Victorian team ever been on the bottom of the ladder?
What percentage of Grand Finals have been won by a non-Victorian team since the inception of the AFL?
How many Brownlows have been won by a player not playing in a Victorian team?
Yet we still get comments like this one I heard last week "Playing for a Victorian Team is the ultimate AFL experience"
prospector ....Were you in Adelaide when they won back-to-back premierships?The whole town rocked! For weeks.
Of course the Vics should be happy about getting a team into the Grand Final, it is a rare event for themand should be treasured; and I suspect that Geelong might actually win. Which will make the Geelong fans happy
Geelong, Port Adelaide in Australian Rules grand final
The Associated PressPublished: September 22, 2007
MELBOURNE, Australia: The Geelong Cats are one game away from capping a most impressive season in Australian Rules football — and winning their first championship in 44 years.
The Cats advanced to the Sept. 29 grand final against Port Adelaide with a 13.14 (92) to 13.9 (87) win over Collingwood. Port Adelaide joined them in the Australian Football League title match with an easy 20.13 (133) to 5.16 (46) win over the Kangaroos on Saturday.
Geelong finished the regular season in first place with a record of 18 wins and four losses — 12 points ahead of second place Port Adelaide (15-7). But Port Adelaide is the only team to have beaten Geelong in the past five months.
On Friday, the Cats scraped past a stubborn Collingwood side before 98,002 fans at the Melbourne Cricket Ground — the biggest crowd at the stadium since the 2000 grand final between Essendon and Melbourne. That attendance mark will likely be surpassed for the grand final at the same ground.
The Cats are in their first grand final since 1995. The team, based in the port city of Geelong about an hour's drive southwest of Melbourne, has a strong chance to win its first league title since 1963.
Cats coach Mark Thompson said some of his players might have been complacent after having a bye last weekend following a win in the first round of the playoffs.
"The problem with having the week off ... is that there's a possible chance that some players would think they would win this game before they'd actually won it," Thompson said.
"I'm expecting us to be a lot better next week with our approach to the game. We're not having to sit around for 13 days waiting to play."
On Saturday, Port Adelaide dominated throughout, leading by 22 points at halftime and extending it to nearly 80 at the end of the third quarter. Port kicked seven goals to the Kangaroos' one in the third quarter — six of them in 11 minutes.
after all if it wasn't for the Carlton's, Collingwood's and Melbourne's of the competition there wouldn't be an AFL.
RafaRegardles, 10 teams in Victoria is unsustainable...
needs to be reduced to 8 at the very least...
Rafa
at the very least ?
or the very most ?
sorry pedantry is contagious lol.
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