Western
Derby: Bowers gets her hooks into Dana
Watching the first AFLW match
between West Coast and Fremantle, played in front of over 35,000 fans, there
seemed to be a feeling of payback in the Dockers’ 45 point win over their new
cross-town rivals. Seven former Dockers lined up for the Eagles, including
former fairest and best winner Dana Hooker. Fremantle laid a massive 78 tackles
on West Coast, and Roxy
Roux’s celebration after slotting through a goal
seemed to sum up the joy they got in showing they are the premier team in the
west.
Eighteen of those tackles were
from Kiara Bowers, who comfortably led the league in tackles and pressure
points last season, and was runner-up in the Most Valuable Player award. Bowers
kept Hooker quiet early, and while Hooker ended up with the same number of
disposals as Bowers (13) for the match, the Dockers had well and truly skipped
ahead by the time she started finding the ball. Katie-Jayne Grieve had 11
tackles as well (and two goals), a big step up from the 2.4 tackles per game
she averaged last year.
The Dockers in general have
built their game on
pressure, and kicking the ball long. Freo recorded only four more
disposals than West Coast in the match, but had 16 more kicks, and 30 to 19
inside 50s. Carlton surprised them in the finals last year, but the Dockers are
looking like they will again be among the contenders to make it to the final
week this season.
The Demons also play like a contender
There was a happier result for
a player against her old club this week, as Libby Birch and her new team
Melbourne beat comfortably beat their original
rivals the Western Bulldogs. The Dogs seemed to enjoy getting stuck into
Birch even more than the Dockers got into their ex-teammates. With Birch in the
side the Demons’ defence has been much stronger so far this year, conceding
just two scoring shots on the weekend, and only five against the Kangaroos last
week (ranking them #1 overall – see chart below).
In contrast to the Roos though,
the Bulldogs could barely get it forward in the first place, with Melbourne
playing much of the game in their forward half. Their personnel in that half of
the ground has always been strong, but this year so far it seems to be even a
touch better. Karen Paxman, Elise O’Dea and returning captain Daisy Pearce have
always been major ball winners, but improvement has come from Shelley Scott,
who is averaging five more disposals per game, and Maddison Gay, who is
averaging over five tackles.
And the Demons still have
All-Australian ruckman Lauren Pearce to return. Demon and Docker fans might be
starting to dream that their women’s teams could finally snag the premiership
that has eluded their clubs for so long.
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