The Brisbane Lions shot past everyone to reach the top.
The Lions break through
In
what shaped as a close AFLW finals series, most of the results went (sometimes
barely) as the rankings predicted. That was until the Grand Final at Adelaide
Oval, where the travelling Brisbane Lions finally won a Grand Final at their
third attempt, beating the two-time premiership team and home team the Adelaide
Crows. Many observers might have been at least mildly surprised given the
Crows’ success and home ground advantage, but the top sides were very close
this season, and each showed they were highly capable of beating the others
throughout the year.
Brisbane
had less of the ball forward, but they had more of the ball
If you asked some people (and
commentators) what the key to Brisbane’s Grand Final win was, they would likely
say it was how well the Lions’ defence stood up against the Crows’ forward
entries. Adelaide had 44 inside 50s – the sixth most ever recorded in an AFLW
match – to just 24 for Brisbane. That differential is a little inflated by
nearly every player camping in Adelaide’s forward half in the final quarter,
but there is still little doubt Brisbane’s intercept marking in defence was
important.
However, another part of this
is that Brisbane had a lot more of the ball in uncontested situations compared
with the Crows. The Lions recorded 130 uncontested possessions to Adelaide’s
92, and had 46 marks to the Crows’ 31. Seven of the top ten players for
disposals in the Grand Final were Lions. The Lions’ disposal efficiency was
pretty good at 61 per cent, compared with 54 per cent for the Crows.
Brisbane controlled the
possession, even if they did not control the territory.
The
premiership side and the most improved one
In the 2020 AFLW season the
Lions were basically a mid-level side. They won three matches out of six with
one draw, had a percentage of 107.0, had a ranking of -2.0, and were knocked
out in the first week of the finals.
This all changed very quickly in 2021. The Lions jumped out of the gate, winning their first three matches – albeit against lowly-ranked sides – by a combined total of 137 points. Their season after that was then fairly emblematic of the AFLW season as a whole. First they played mostly higher-ranked sides, as the AFLW took advantage of the otherwise disadvantageous situation of determining the fixture a week ahead to schedule more competitive match-ups. Second they won three out of their five matches against those higher-ranked sides, all determined by margins of 15 points or less, showing how closely matched those top sides were. If Collingwood had kicked one more goal against the Lions in the preliminary final, Brisbane would have not been at Adelaide Oval at all.
That does not matter now though, and few AFLW fans would deny the worth of the Lions’ achievement of winning away against the competition’s powerhouse to date. After their previous heartbreak in Grand Finals, the Lions’ win was probably the most popular AFLW premiership of all.
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