WESTERN BULLDOGS 13.17 (95) d GEELONG 7.6 (48)
Serious Stumble For Geelong
In this craziest of seasons, Geelong’s surge into the top four has dramatically stalled.
After losing by 47 points at GMHBA Stadium, they sit precariously in fourth and will most likely slip into the bottom half of the eight by the end of this round.
A win would have seen them jump to second on Saturday night.
In contrast, the Bulldogs were all but written off after a dismal showing against Port Adelaide in round 17. They were insipid and few could see them making the eight. Luke Beveridge called the result a nightmare and said that he was trying desperately to forget the memory.
Since then they have beaten second-placed Carlton and third-placed Geelong. On the back of that fortnight, the Bulldogs are shaping as a serious September contender, sitting outside the eight with a positive ledger of 10-8.
They have done so by shedding the inconsistent tag and becoming a team of desperate Dogs.
Geelong can rebound against the Kangaroos in Hobart next Saturday, while the Bulldogs face another true test by travelling to Sydney on Sunday to tackle the Swans.
Dogs Reign In The Rain
On a soggy night, the most telling factor came from unexpected sources.
The victorious Western Bulldogs had 49 more handballs than the Cats. That is not usually the recipe for winning wet-weather football.
Last week against Collingwood, Geelong controlled the ball, having 70 more marks than their opponents.
Against the Dogs, they could not get hold of the ball. The Bulldogs scrapped and bustled around the contest and were able to continually gain forward territory.
They did so through their on ball brigade of Tim English, Marcus Bontempelli (27 possessions), Tom Liberatore (23 possessions), Ed Richards (28 possessions) and Adam Treloar (31 possessions).
Treloar was huge after pulling out of last week’s game at the last minute with a sore calf. He kicked three goals.
Tom Stewart and Max Holmes were solid for the Cats, and Patrick Dangerfield flashed in and out, but there were far too few other contributors.
Gryan Miers was quiet, Brad Close did not see much of the ball and Mark Blicavs did not find himself in the action at any stage of the night.
Key Bulldog defenders Buku Khamis and Rory Lobb had complete control of Jeremy Cameron and Gary Rohan.
At the other end of the ground, the Bulldogs were able to play three tall forwards - Jamarra Ugle-Hagan, Aaron Naughton and Sam Darcy - to great effect. They were mobile, well coordinated and fought hard in the air and on the ground.
Richards Revels In Midfield
The evolution of Ed Richards as a midfielder continues to pay dividends for the Western Bulldogs.
With Bailey Smith on the long-term injury list, Jack Macrae flirting with form and Josh Dunkley almost two years out of the kennel, Richards has stepped into the breach.
The former halfback has been a great mix of dash and grunt.
He can get down and dirty like Tom Liberatore or bust the game open with his raking left foot like Bontempelli.
Last week he played a significant part in the Western Bulldogs being able to subdue the influence of Patrick Cripps and Sam Walsh.
On Saturday night in Geelong, he outshone Patrick Dangerfield and Tom Stewart.
At 25 years of age and 119 games into his career, Richards has arrived as a significant player for the Bulldogs.