Thursday, November 29, 2018

AFLW 2019 Preview: Collingwood Magpies

ROAR - Joel Shepherd

(AAP Image/Joe Castro)
The Magpies have done a great job to put what looks like a strong team on the park this season, considering what happened to them in the off-season.
The Pies didn’t get raided so much as strip-mined by BHP. Gone are most of their high-profile forward line, from Mo Hope to Jasmine Garner and Jess Duffin, plus arguably their second-best player in Christina Bernardi.
As if that weren’t enough, Caitlyn Edwards left to pursue a rugby career, speedy midfielder Amelia Barden left for Carlton, and then in the worst blow of all, gun teenager and 2018 MVP Chloe Molloy injured her foot in the VFLW Preliminary Final and will miss the season.
Given the way Collingwood’s first two seasons have gone, Pies fans could be forgiven for investing in salt baths and spell books for the breaking of curses.
But all is not lost for the Pies. With all the players they lost, Collingwood were able to acquire a whole bunch of very juicy draft picks, and have stacked up on young talent accordingly.
Starting with the midfield, their biggest remaining star, Jaimee Lambert, will now find herself with probably more talented midfield teammates than she’s had in her career (outside of exhibition games, naturally).
Second-round pick Katie Lynch is a remarkable player, and represents the coming sea change in women’s football where not everyone over 5-8 need automatically play forward or back.
Not only tall, she’s remarkably skilful, rarely missing a kick in many U18 championship games, and always seeming to get in the middle of the action.
With Lynch and Lambert will be Mikala Cann, one of the fastest, strongest athletes in the draft and a tackling machine. A former basketballer, she can also jump, run, and do other good things.
The Pies also still have Britt Bonnici, who had a very good second half of last season, and those four between them form the nucleus of a quality midfield.
The Pies’ backline looks even better. Netballer Ash Brazil was a revelation in limited game time last season, and is nearly impossible to outmark.
Nicole Hildebrand was one of Brisbane’s best defenders, and Stacey Livingston, Emma Grant and Stephanie Chiocci are all good.
Best of all, the Pies have added junior star Jordyn Allen to their halfback line with their first draft pick, where her run and skills will link up with the revamped midfield to cause problems further up the ground.
And then in the forward line… well. There’s former Demon Maddy Shevlin, and the always entertaining Sarah D’Arcy, but the fact remains that all the Pies’ most recognised forwards have traded black stripes for blue (or for Bernardi, whatever colour GWS call that jumper) and have not been replaced.
It could have been so different if Molloy hadn’t been injured — prior to last year she’d been tearing up the TAC Cup in the forward line, and simple speculation was that if the Pies could find strong replacements for her in the backline, they’d swing Molloy forward and gain an unstoppable force in front of goals.
With the addition of Hildebrand and Allen, it would have worked perfectly – but alas, the Collingwood curse struck again, and so I’m predicting a seventh-place finish instead of fourth or third.
No doubt the Pies will look to the Bulldogs’ second season for inspiration of what to do when you’ve got a good midfield and a crushing backline, but no forwards.
The Dogs did brilliantly converting smaller players into a mosquito fleet up forward, and Collingwood now have good defenders to spare, like Ilish Ross and last year’s second-round pick Darcy Guttridge, who missed the season with a broken collarbone (speaking of the Collingwood curse).
And then there’s the wildcards, like star netball recruit Sharni Layton, but while stranger things have happened, it’s hard to imagine her becoming a key forward target in her very first year — just as AFLW midfields are improving, AFLW backlines are becoming very tough indeed, which will make life extremely tough for novice forwards of any athletic caliber.
Reliably strong forward lines are somewhat rarer in the AFLW, as coaches have realised that when building a team’s foundation, backlines and midfields come first.
Collingwood appear to now have the first two in place, but like many teams are lacking the third. Maybe next year.

Prediction: Seventh
Collingwood AFLW 2018 Draw

Wednesday, November 28, 2018

Collingwood Magpies' List For 2019 After AFL Trade And Draft Periods

Sporting News - Mick Stirling

After a Grand Final finish this year the Pies look even better placed for 2019, but what about the long run?


The dust has finally settled on AFL post-season activity and all 18 clubs have completed their lists for 2019. Who’s come in via trades, free agency and the national and rookie drafts? Who’s gone out the other way? And, most importantly, how does the list look after all the changes?
This week, Sporting News is looking at Collingwood's changes to analyse whether steps have been taken forwards, backwards or if they’re just treading water.

IN
Trade: Dayne Beams (Brisbane), Jordan Roughead (Western Bulldogs)
Free agency: NA
Draft: Isaac Quaynor (13 - Oakleigh Chargers), Will Kelly (29 - Oakleigh Chargers), Atu Bosenavulagi (77 - Oakleigh Chargers)
Rookie: Tim Broomhead (Collingwood), Sam Murray (Collingwood)
Will Kelly with father Craig
OUT
Traded: Alex Fasolo (free agency)
Delisted: Jarryd Blair, Tim Broomhead (redrafted as a rookie), Sam McLarty, Sam Murray (redrafted as a rookie), Adam Oxley, Josh Smith
Retired: Kayle Kirby

Collingwood’s 2019 list
Bringing Beams back to Collingwood is a big boost to an already star-studded midfield and will have obvious benefits, but the Pies did pay a hefty price for a guy who can miss a fair bit of footy and is getting on in years.
Blair, Oxley, Smith and Fasolo didn’t get on the field very often in 2018 but they did provide good list depth. Filling that gap shouldn’t be much of a problem though, with the losses well covered by Roughead and the ready-to-go Quaynor, with Kelly not far behind.
IMAGE
Verdict
The team that finished up falling just short of a premiership has only made itself stronger and, with a bit more luck on the injury front, Collingwood should be right in the frame for another flag shot.

Links

Friday, November 23, 2018

2018 Draft: Welcome to Collingwood

Will Kelly will follow in his famous father Craig's footsteps in representing Collingwood.
Welcome Selection No. 29 – Will Kelly

Position: Defender
Height: 196cm
Weight: 87kg
Age: 18
Recruited from: Oakleigh U18

Profile
An athletic tall defender who has the ability to play one-on-one and negate his direct opponent. Grew in confidence playing for Vic Metro this year, reading the angles well with his intercept marking. As the son of Collingwood premiership player Craig Kelly, he is eligible for the Magpies as a father-son selection.

2018 TAC Cup statistics
Club: Oakleigh U18
Games: 9
Average Disposals: 13.4
Average Marks: 4.6
Average Round 50s: 2.2
Average Tackles: 1.5

Did you know? 
  • The defender has modelled his game on Collingwood star Jeremy Howe, who he spent time training alongside during the 2017/2018 pre-season
  • Kelly’s brother, Jake, plays for Adelaide. He played a handful of games for the Magpies’ VFL team as a top-up player in 2013
  • Playing for Scotch College, he played most of his school football in attack, but is primarily a backman
  • He played the final four games of the TAC Cup season, including Oakleigh’s Grand Final loss to Dandenong, with a stress fracture in his ankle


Isaac Quaynor was the runner-up in Oakleigh's 2018 best-and-fairest.
Welcome Selection No. 13 – Isaac Quaynor

Position: Defender
Height: 180cm
Weight: 83kg
Age: 18
Recruited from: Bulleen-Templestowe/ Beverley Hills / Oakleigh U18

Profile
The Collingwood Next Generation Academy prospect can play in defence and in the middle. The versatile Under-18 All-Australian defender can play on both medium and small opponents and is quick and agile. A good decision maker, Quaynor uses the ball effectively by hand and foot. The 18-year-old models his game on Bulldogs speedster Jason Johannisen and Demons defender Neville Jetta, and shapes as a top-20 pick on draft night. Quaynor also surprised himself, winning the goalkicking test at the Draft Combine with a perfect score.

2018 TAC Cup statistics
Club: Oakleigh U18
Games: 13
Average Disposals: 16.3
Average Marks: 3.8
Average Round 50s: 4.1
Average Tackles: 3.2

Did you know? 
  • Quaynor has supported Collingwood since he was a child, growing up in Melbourne’s eastern suburbs
  • He began playing competitive football at the age of 12
  • The 18-year-old played soccer, athletics and basketball as a child
  • He was sitting behind the Collingwood Cheer Squad during the 2018 Grand Final against West Coast


Bosenavulagi celebrates a goal for Oakleigh during the 2018 TAC Cup Grand Final.
Welcome Selection No. 77 – Atu Bosenavulagi

Position: Midfield / forward
Height: 180cm
Weight: 81kg
Age: 18
Recruited from: Oakleigh U18

Profile
The rugby union convert's form has built across the season and he has taken the eye of club scouts with his pace, hardness and tackling in the TAC Cup, making him a late draft or rookie chance. Collingwood has access to the Fijian-born prospect through its Next Generation Academy.

2018 TAC Cup statistics
Club: Oakleigh U18
Games: 18
Average Disposals: 14.8
Average Marks: 2.8
Average Inside 50s: 2.2
Average Tackles: 4.5

Did you know? 
  • The Next Generation Academy product kicked nine goals in his last four TAC Cup matches of the 2018 season, including Oakleigh’s Grand Final loss to Dandenong
  • Collingwood Cheer Squad legend Joffa Corfe has a long-standing connection to Bosenavulagi’s family. “He’s definitely a second grandpa to me,” Bosenavulagi told Channel Seven during draft week
  • Bosenavulagi grew up a Western Bulldogs supporter, something he will need to change once he arrives at the Holden Centre
  • He represented Australia at junior level in rugby seven’s

Thursday, November 01, 2018

Collingwood 2019 Draw

Round One
Collingwood v Geelong
Friday 22 March
MCG, 7.50pm
Round Two
Richmond v Collingwood
Friday 28 March
MCG, 7.20pm
Round Three
Collingwood v West Coast
Saturday 6 April
MCG, 7.25pm
Round Four
Collingwood v Footscray
Friday 12 April
MCG, 7.50pm
Round Five
Brisbane v Collingwood
Thursday 18 April
Gabba, 7.35pm
Round Six
Essendon v Collingwood
Thursday 25 April
MCG, 3.20pm
Round Seven
Collingwood v Port Adelaide
Friday 3 May
Marvel Stadium, 7.50pm
Round Eight
Carlton v Collingwood
Saturday 11 May
MCG, 1.45pm
Round 10
Sydney v Collingwood
Friday 24 May
SCG, 7.50pm
Round 11
Collingwood v Fremantle
Saturday 1 June
MCG, 1.45pm
Round 12
Collingwood v Melbourne
Monday 10 June
MCG, 3.20pm
Round 13
BYE
Round 14
Footscray v Collingwood
Sunday 23 June
Marvel Stadium, 3.20pm
Round 15
Collingwood v N Melbourne
Saturday 29 June
Marvel Stadium, 7.25pm
Round 16
Hawthorn v Collingwood
Friday 5 July
MCG, 7.50pm
Round 17
West Coast v Collingwood
Friday 12 July
Optus Stadium, 6.10pm
Round 18
GWS v Collingwood
Saturday 20 July
Sydney Showground, 4.35pm
Round 19
Collingwood v Richmond
Friday 26 July
MCG, 7.50pm
Round 20
Collingwood v Gold Coast
Sunday 4 August
MCG, 1.10pm
Round 21
Melbourne v Collingwood
Saturday 10 August
MCG, 1.45pm
Round 22
Adelaide v Collingwood
Saturday 17 August
Adelaide Oval, 4.05pm
Round 23
Collingwood v Essendon
MCG, Date/Time TBC

Collingwood News - Anna Carew-Reid

Collingwood will play 14 matches at the MCG in 2019, nine of which have been fixtured as home games, including the Queen’s Birthday clash against Melbourne.
Released on Thursday, the AFL fixture also has the Pies playing three games at Marvel Stadium as well as five interstate matches in Brisbane, Sydney, Perth and Adelaide.
Season 2019 will mark Collingwood’s return to Thursday football with three matches scheduled, including a Good Friday Eve clash with Brisbane at the Gabba.
Collingwood CEO Mark Anderson said the club was pleased with the outcome of the draw.
“The fixture is as we expected,” Anderson said.
“Finishing second, we knew that we would be playing more of the top-six teams twice. And this is how it has played out, with us meeting West Coast, Richmond and Melbourne twice next year.
“We’ll face the Lions in Brisbane on Easter Thursday in the first of our five interstate games.
"This match is a great opportunity for our fans to travel to Queensland to support the team and stay on for the Easter long weekend.
“We have some marquee matches to look forward to and the season kicks off in a big way, with our first four matches being Thursday, Friday and Saturday night games at the MCG prior to ANZAC Day.
"We’re delighted to be hosting the Queen’s Birthday match for the first time since 1999 and we’ll continue to work with Melbourne in our joint and committed support of Neale Daniher’s Fight MND campaign."
“It is a fixture which will support big Collingwood crowds and great television coverage, so I am confident that our members and fans will be pleased with the outcome as we all look forward to season 2019.”

AFL - Riley Beveridge

COLLINGWOOD will be the darlings of prime time next year, with the Magpies handed 11 blockbusters matches following the release of the official 2019 AFL Toyota Premiership Season Fixture.
In addition to the annual Anzac Day and Queen's Birthday matches, the Pies will feature in two Thursday night games and seven Friday night games throughout next season.
It comes as the AFL announces a fixture with eight Thursday night matches, one more than last season, with an emphasis on last year's big entertainers getting more games in primetime television slots.
There will be five Thursday night games in the first five rounds of the season and a further three during the bye rounds.

ABC

The AFL has rewarded Collingwood for its rapid rise up the ladder in 2018 by making it one of the headline acts of the 2019 fixture.
The Pies will play nine games on Thursday or Friday night in 2019, the traditional Anzac Day blockbuster on a Thursday afternoon and Queen's Birthday clash on a Monday, taking its number of marquee games up to 11.
Collingwood's rise from 13th to the grand final this year was somewhat of a surprise, but the league seems to be banking on a similar jump from Essendon, which has also been rewarded with a primetime-heavy fixture.
The Bombers have seven games on Thursday or Friday nights, on top of the Anzac Day match on a Thursday afternoon.
It is a choice that seems a direct reaction to the criticism the AFL received in 2018 for a draw that placed a number of struggling teams in highly sought-after positions.

Herald - Sun - Ben Higgins 

Collingwood is confident it can replicate its 2018 despite a tougher draw next year.
According to Champion Data, the Magpies face the toughest draw in 2019 as they play West Coast, Richmond, Melbourne, Essendon and the Western Bulldogs twice.
However, Magpies CEO Mark Anderson said it was a draw that fans would be pleased with.
“Finishing second, we knew that we would be playing more of the top-six teams twice," he said.
“We have some marquee matches to look forward to and the season kicks off in a big way, with our first four matches being Thursday, Friday and Saturday night games at the MCG prior to ANZAC Day.
“We’re delighted to be hosting the Queen’s Birthday match for the first time since 1999 and we’ll continue to work with Melbourne in our joint and committed support of Neale Daniher’s Fight MND campaign.
“It is a fixture which will support big Collingwood crowds and great television coverage, so I am confident that our members and fans will be pleased with the outcome as we all look forward to season 2019.”

The AgeMichael Gleeson

The AFL has turned to its powerhouse clubs Essendon and Collingwood to rescue the highest-profile, marquee slots on Thursday and Friday nights after disastrous fixturing in 2018.
After crowds stayed away for lowly pair St Kilda and Carlton last season, those clubs have have been banished from the prime slots in 2019.
Collingwood play nine Thursday or Friday night games as well as Anzac Day and Queen's Birthday.
Having been runner up in the grand final Collingwood's draw might be high-profile but it is also tougher than last season, when they were coming off a low finish in 2017 and so had a soft bottom third of the ladder draw.

Links

Collingwood 2019 Women's Draw

Monday, October 29, 2018

2019 Pre Season Draw + 2019 Season Round 1

Collingwood News

2019 Pre Season Draw
  • Monday, March 4
    Fremantle v Collingwood at HBF Arena, Joondalup, 3.40pm WST 
  • Monday, March 11
    Collingwood v Carlton at Morwell Recreation Reserve, 2.10pm AEDT
Collingwood will take on Fremantle and Carlton in early March as part of the 2019 JLT Community Series.
The Pies will travel to Western Australia to take on the Dockers in a Monday evening game at Joondalup.
They will then meet arch-rival Carlton in the Gippsland city of Morwell on Victoria's Labour Day public holiday.
The match in Morwell is part of Collingwood's strengthening relationship with the Latrobe Valley.
The Pies' AFLW team will play the Giants in Morwell on Sunday, February 24.


Collingwood News

2019 Season Round 1
  • Friday, March 22
    Collingwood v Geelong at the MCG, 7.50pm AEDT
Gary Ablett and Lynden Dunn have a laugh during the clash between the Cats and the Pies in round eight, 2018
Collingwood will kick off its 2019 home and away campaign by hosting Geelong in a huge Friday night game at the MCG.
The round one fixture was revealed over the weekend, with the Magpies' clash with the Cats among the key talking points.
As has been the case in recent years, Carlton and Richmond will get the season underway on the Thursday evening.
The full 2019 premiership season fixture will be released at midday on Wednesday.

Saturday, October 27, 2018

AFLW Pies To Play At Victoria Park

Collingwood News - Meagan Lechucki

Katie Lynch and Jordyn Allen were Collingwood's first two selections in the 2018 AFL Women's Draft.
Photo: collingwoodfc.com.au
Collingwood’s AFLW team will play two games at the club’s spiritual home, Victoria Park, in 2019.
In a season of firsts, the AFLW Magpies will also be competing in a conference, the fixture for which was unveiled today at Victoria Park.
Collingwood has been placed in conference B together with the Brisbane Lions, Greater Western Sydney, Carlton and Geelong.
Over the seven-week season, the Pies are set to play all four teams in Conference B as well as three cross-conference matches against Conference A, which includes the Western Bulldogs, Melbourne, Adelaide Crows, Fremantle and North Melbourne.
Victoria Park will play host to two of the club’s AFLW matches in 2019; the first in round two against Melbourne and the second in the final round against Brisbane Lions
Holly Whitford, Jordyn Allen and Katie Lynch wear their Collingwood jumpers 
in the Ryder Stand at Victoria Park.
Photo: collingwoodfc.com.au
While the AFLW Magpies have not before played at Victoria Park, the venue has welcomed women from its inception with an exclusive stand for women, a Ladies Pavilion, built in time for the first match played at the ground in May 1892. A timber grandstand installed a month later became the first in Melbourne to provide reserved seats for women.
The ground was the official home of the Collingwood Football Club from 1892 to 1999 where the Pies played a total of 863 matches, including 643 wins, 215 losses and five draws. In 2010 Collingwood’s VFL team returned to Victoria Park with the Pies’ VFLW team joining them in 2018.
In welcoming the AFLW team to the ground, the State Government recently announced a commitment of $2 million to fund a major upgrade of facilities in the Sherrin Stand as part of the Change our Game initiative designed to support the development of women’s sport at Victoria Park.
Collingwood Chief Executive Officer Mark Anderson said it was a welcome homecoming to Victoria Park for the club’s AFLW team.
“It’s wonderful to continue our rich and storied history at our spiritual home, opening a new chapter with our AFLW team at Victoria Park,” Anderson said.
“The ground means so much to so many of the Collingwood faithful, and it’s very exciting for a new generation of Collingwood players and supporters to be able to share in and experience what is so unique to our club.”
The team will play two other home matches, one at Morwell Recreation Reserve and another, a double header at Marvel Stadium.
Collingwood’s return to the Latrobe Valley will come in round four against GWS Giants.
The club’s AFL, AFLW and netball teams have each spent time competing and training in the region as part of a three-year partnership with the State Government for the Latrobe Valley Sports and Community Project.
“We are very pleased to be able to bring the excitement of AFLW to the Latrobe Valley region again in 2019,” Anderson said.
“We have been fortunate enough to host all of the sports housed under the Holden Centre roof in the region and it is always sure to create a wonderful spectacle for the community.”
The Pies will again open the AFLW season in 2019, albeit with a new opponent in Geelong Cats at GMHBA Stadium on Saturday 2 February.
Learning about the significant role played by women in the continuing story of Victoria Park.
Photo: collingwoodfc.com.au
“The opening round of the AFLW season is a highlight of the sporting calendar and it is a great honour to be able to open the season again in 2019 and welcome Geelong into the league.”
Following a busy travel schedule in 2018, Collingwood will take flight only once in 2019, to take on Fremantle at Fremantle Oval in round three. The light travel schedule will also mean that the Pies have no five-day turnarounds in their schedule.
“While in 2018 we saw our first win on the road in Alice Springs, I’m sure the team will appreciate the extra time for recovery with no five-day breaks.”
Under the new conference system, teams will earn points for every match played and will only be ranked against the teams in their own conference, with two ladders running throughout the 2019 season.
At the conclusion of the season, the two top teams in each conference will qualify for preliminary finals with the top team in Conference A hosting the second team in Conference B and the top team in Conference B hosting the second team in Conference A.
The team with the most points and/or greater percentage will then host the Grand Final.


Holly Whitford, Katie Lynch and Jordyn Allen will take to the field at Victoria Park in 2019.
 Photo: collingwoodfc.com.au

Thursday, October 18, 2018

Trade Wrap

Collingwood’s 2018 Draft Picks: 41, 44, 51, 56, 57, 93
IN: Dayne Beams (ex Brisbane) Jordan Roughead (ex Footscray) picks 41, 44, 57
Out: Alex Fasolo (Carlton bound)
2019 first-round picks: 18, 56, 75

Magpies’ List Manager Ned Guy:
When working through it with Brisbane, we knew that we weren’t going to get Dayne (Beams) for nothing. We knew we were going to have to come up with something that was going to satisfy their needs, but we also had a key focus on the future and a big part of that was making sure we brought back some picks for the draft coming up next month. A big part for us was making sure we got those picks back from Brisbane to ensure we have a stronger draft hand than we would have had we not....We couldn’t be happier with the list we have and to achieve what we have achieved so far this year. To be able to add some depth through a midfield that is really strong; we’ve only strengthened it tonight. With Jordan (Roughead), he can come in and play multiple roles for us, so we think we’re in better shape for 2019 than we were 24 hours ago.

Gary Buckenara (Herald Sun):
Dayne Beams is a huge get for Collingwood and gives this club probably the best midfield in the competition. They did pay overs but at the end of the day when you’re committed to bringing a player into your footy club, you need to get the deal done. The Pies also got some picks back, which will allow them to hopefully secure next generation academy player Isaac Quaynor and father-son Will Kelly — both very highly-rated young players. Jordan Roughead is a shrewd pick-up. He provides depth as a key defender, in the ruck and as a key forward — he’s a good utility type who can play a variety of roles. The list really needed that type of player and to get him so cheaply, for pick No.75, is great value. The Pies also managed to re-sign Darcy Moore and Tom Langdon, which was also a huge win. So they haven’t lost any players but improved the list with Beams and Roughead — big tick.

Dayne Beams:
I was honest as I could be with them (Brisbane) ... I let them know that in two years time that I wouldn't sign another contract and I would be coming back to Melbourne. I wanted this to work for both parties but my preference was to get back to Melbourne as soon as possible.... I always used to say to my dad that I'd end up finishing my career at Collingwood. My heart has always been at the Pies, but four years ago the circumstances were that I needed to get back to Brisbane to be with my dad. I can't thank both clubs enough for allowing me that opportunity.

Wednesday, October 17, 2018

Seven Pies Re-Sign | Two Irish Sign In | One Pie Signs Out

Seven Pies Re-Sign



Collingwood has much of its 2019 AFL squad in place following a swathe of new or recent re-signings.
With retention and development from within being a strategic focus for the club, many of the players out of contract at the end of the recently completed campaign have recommitted.
In the back half of the ground, defenders Lynden Dunn (1yr), Darcy Moore (2yrs), Tom Langdon (3yrs) and Flynn Appleby (2yrs) have penned new deals.
Further afield, Tim Broomhead (1yr), Jamie Elliott (1yr) and Josh Thomas (3yrs) have set themselves for 2019.
While Broomhead continues to make a good recovery from a broken leg he suffered in the second round of the season, he will be delisted with a guarantee from the club to re-draft him as a rookie for 2019.
Appleby, who joined Collingwood as a rookie for 2018, will remain on the rookie list next year.
Collingwood list manager, Ned Guy, said that retaining a majority of the squad that played the club into the 2018 grand final was a priority.
“This is a squad that is still discovering how good it can be, a squad that is still to ripen,” Guy said.
“For a majority of the players on our list, the prime years of their careers are out there in front of them.
“A lot of work over a number of years went into piecing the squad together and if you combine the profile of the list, the improvement we witnessed this year and the improvement to come then keeping largely with what we have and adding to it through select trading and drafting is prudent.”


Two Irish Sign In

Collingwood’s historically productive search for alternative athletes continues, with the signing of two outstanding Irish key position prospects in Mark Keane and Anton Tohill.
Keane, at 194cm, and Tohill, at 198cm, recently returned excellent AFL Draft Combine results off the back of training for much of the last 12 months under the tutelage of fellow Irishman and former Collingwood player, Marty Clarke.
Clarke, Collingwood’s first international recruit who has since been followed by the likes of American Mason Cox, played 73 games for Collingwood in two stints with the club, from 2007-09 and 2012-14.
Keane and Tohill attended an international AFL Academy in the USA last January and tested exceptionally well at a similar combine in Europe.
At the recent AFL Draft Combine in Melbourne, Keane finished second in the goal kicking test won by Collingwood Next Generation Academy prospect, Isaac Quaynor. Tohill, at the same event, finished 12thin the overall kick testing. Both recorded excellent speed and agility results.
Keane hails from Cork and Tohill from Derry in Northern Ireland. Both are 18 years old.
The Tohill name will be familiar to some. Anton is the son of former Gaelic and International Rules star Anthony Tohill who spent time with the Melbourne Football Club in the 1990s.
Collingwood national recruiting manager, Derek Hine, said both players stand to become athletic key position players in the medium to long term.
“Mark and Anton will really add to our developing key position depth,” Hine said.
“They are different to each other in the manner in which they play. Anton has the makings of a tall utility who will be capable at both ends of the ground, with the potential to play minutes in the ruck.
“Mark is very strong overhead and has natural game sense. We can see him playing as a key forward or key defender.”
Keane and Tohill will join the club next month, ahead of the commencement of pre-season training for the 1-4 year players.


One Pie Signs Out

Alex Fasolo
Collingwood will receive a third-round draft selection as compensation for the departing unrestricted free agent, Alex Fasolo.
The selection will be at the end of the third round (currently pick No. 57) as Fasolo has chosen to continue his career with the Carlton Football Club.
Fasolo joined Collingwood as pick No. 45 in the 2010 National Draft and went on to play 101 games over eight seasons with the club.
The 26-year-old kicked 133 goals in the Black and White stripes, booting 25 goals in 2016 to finish as the club’s leading goal kicker for the season.
A shoulder injury interrupted Fasolo’s pre-season in 2018, his first appearance coming in Round 9 where he sustained an ankle injury and was unable to break into the senior side for the remainder of the season.
Collingwood List Manager Ned Guy thanked Fasolo for his contribution to the club.
“Alex has given a lot to the football club over his time with us and we appreciate his dedication to the program,” Guy said.
“He’s a popular figure who I’m sure will be missed by many around the club.
“We wish him the very best for his future with Carlton Football Club and beyond.”
As the draft order stands at present, Collingwood's selections are 18, 51, 56, 57 and 75.

Saturday, October 06, 2018

E.W. Copeland Trophy winners: Sidebottom and Grundy

Collingwood News


2018 Collingwood Season Details

The 2018 Collingwood Football Club season was the club's 122nd season of senior competition in the Australian Football League (AFL). The club also fielded its reserves team in the VFL and a women's team in the AFL Women's competition.

Steele Sidebottom and Brodie Grundy have capped off career-best seasons by sharing the 2018 E.W. Copeland Trophy.
The pair, both All-Australians for the first time in 2018, tied for the Collingwood best and fairest award with 203 votes and could not be separated on a countback.
Their shared victory is the first tied result since 1994, when Nathan Buckley and Gavin Brown each took home Collingwood’s highest individual honour.
Five-time E.W. Copeland Trophy winner, Scott Pendlebury, finished third (178 votes) in the count which was held tonight at Crown Palladium, with defender Jack Crisp fourth (160) and Taylor Adams fifth (159).
For Sidebottom, the victory is further recognition for an extended and rich vein of form that saw him claim his first Copeland in 2017, win an All-Australian blazer last month and collect the Gary Ayres medal as the best player of the 2018 finals series.
The 27-year-old has now either won or placed top five in the Copeland count for seven consecutive seasons.
Grundy polled a single vote in the Grand Final to draw level with Sidebottom, who did not poll in the season’s decider.
The 24-year-old was one of the two standout ruckmen in the competition in 2018 and a pillar of a Collingwood side that blossomed and began to reflect the years of recruiting and coaching which preceded the 2018 campaign.
Six of the top 10 place getters in the Copeland count – Grundy, Crisp, Adams, Tom Phillips (sixth), Jordan De Goey (eighth) and Brayden Maynard (tenth) – are 25 years of age or younger.
Other notable winners on the night were Jaidyn Stephenson, who added the Harry Collier Trophy to his Rising Star award as Collingwood’s best first year player, Adams who won the Bob Rose Award as Collingwood’s player of the finals and De Goey, who won the Gordon Coventry Award as leading goal-kicker (48).
Defender Marty Hore claimed the Joseph Wren Award as best VFL player, while midfielder Jaimee Lambert earned top honours in the VFLW competition. In Collingwood’s VWFL team, Richard Amon won the best and fairest award and Orfeo Cecconato was named best player in the Grand Final.

2018 E.W.Copeland Trophy top ten
  1. E.W. Copeland Trophy Steele Sidebottom 203 votes
  2. E.W. Copeland Trophy Brodie Grundy 203 votes
  3. J.J. Joyce Trophy Scott Pendlebury 178 votes
  4. J.F. McHale Trophy Jack Crisp 160 votes
  5. Jack Regan Trophy Taylor Adams 159 votes
  6. Tom Phillips 134 votes
  7. Jeremy Howe 132 votes
  8. Jordan De Goey 127 votes
  9. Josh Thomas 122 votes
  10. Brayden Maynard 107 votes
Awards
  • Gavin Brown Award (pressure): Jack Crisp
  • Bob Rose Award (player of the finals): Taylor Adams
  • Gordon Coventry Award (leading goal-kicker): Jordan De Goey (48)
  • Harry Collier Trophy (best first year player): Jaidyn Stephenson
  • Darren Millane Perpetual Memorial Trophy (best clubman): Lynden Dunn
  • Joseph Wren Award (best VFL player): Marty Hore 
  • VFLW best and fairest: Jaimee Lambert
  • VWFL best and fairest: Richard Amon

Saturday, September 29, 2018

2018 Grand Final West Coast 79 Collingwood 74

WEST COAST         2.2.14   4.3.27   8.7.55   11.13.79
COLLINGWOOD     5.1.31   6.3.39   8.7.55   11.8.74

GOALS - Collingwood: De Goey 3, Cox 2, Stephenson 2, Hoskin-Elliott, Varcoe, Mihocek, Adams

BEST - Collingwood: Adams, Langdon, Crisp, Treloar, De Goey, Mayne

NORM SMITH MEDAL: Luke Shuey, West Coast

INJURIES - Nil

REPORTS - Collingwood: Nil

OFFICIAL CROWD -  100,022 at the MCG

THE MEDIA

AT half-time Jack Darling and Mason Cox had touched the ball just four times between them.
For the Eagles star it was a case of a nightmare repeating itself from his horror 2015 Grand Final performance.
As for Collingwood’s big American he was staring at being labelled a one-hit wonder after his preliminary final heroics.
In the next hour both not only redeemed themselves but they provided auditions for being their respective team’s premiership hero.
Eventually the title went to Darling although in keeping with this crazy game he nearly blew it in the final 90 seconds.
With the Eagles hitting the front at the 28-minute mark of the final term, courtesy of a brilliant Dom Sheed set shot goal from the boundary line, a chance to ice the game fell Darling’s way.
Yet somehow he botched a straight forward mark two metres out from goal with no-one around him.
It handed Collingwood one last chance but a Brayden Maynard attempted torpedo from the kick-in didn’t work with the Eagles then able to control the ball and win the premiership.
Before that clanger, Darling had exorcised his demons with an extraordinary third quarter.
After a horror first quarter, the Eagles had at least neutralised the game and with a couple of late goals in the second quarter the margin was back to 12 points.
They call the third term the premiership quarter and that’s when Darling decided to resurrect his standing in the game.
The Eagles forward was a different person and in that 30 minutes he had seven kicks, six marks - four of which were contested - and kicked a goal.
He had an able assistant in Norm Smith Medallist Luke Shuey who had 11 possessions for the quarter to lead all-comers on the ground with 29.
But the Darling explosion saw the Eagles kick four goals to two which meant scores were tied at the final break.
Enter Cox.
The seven-foot giant had been the story of the preliminary final, taking eight contested marks to destroy Richmond.
He’d been one of the biggest stories of Grand Final week with some of the biggest papers in the world back in his homeland wanting a piece of this remarkable story.
At half-time he’d had just one kick.
A nice mark on the lead early in the third quarter got Cox his first goal but it was in the early stages of the final term where he took over with good things starting to happen every time the ball was in his vicinity.
When he took a massive pack mark at the six-minute mark and slotted the goal from 45 metres, the Pies had kicked three of the opening four goals of the final stanza.
Cox the premiership hero was starting to have a nice ring about it.
However, for the rest of the game the ball effectively lived in the Eagles forward half. The inside 50m count was off the charts - at one stage it was 14-3 for the term - but they couldn’t score.
Josh Kennedy kicked his third goal for the day at the eight-minute mark and then it was another 20 minutes before Sheed, who had been prolific all day, put in his nomination for premiership hero with the goal which iced the game.
Before that they’d been in serious danger of blowing away the flag but Collingwood simply couldn’t find a way.
Cox had a set shot at the 25-minute mark but didn’t make the distance from 50m while a few half-chances just didn’t go the Pies way.
The Eagles defence deserves some serious love here with Tom Barrass enormous all day with 10 marks while Jeremy McGovern stood up despite his injury-plagued preparation.
In a bizarre way the Pies seemed to control the game for longer periods than the eventual premiers.
They kicked the opening five goals of the game with some crucial cameos happening everywhere.
Rising Star Jaidyn Stephenson kicked two goals in as many minutes in the first quarter, Jordan De Goey kicked three goals for the game and loomed large all day while Taylor Adams tried his guts out with 31 disposals which included 18 contested possessions and nine clearances.
Travis Varcoe kicked the opening goal of the game and seemed inspired by the memory of his late sister with his tackling a highlight.
Then there was the unheralded Tom Langdon who looked like being a Brian Lake-like Norm Smith Medallist early doors such was his intercept marking dominance.
Unfortunately the Pies ‘Mr September’ Steele Sidebottom was blanketed by Mark Hutchings and had just 14 possessions while Collingwood’s tagger Levi Greenwood was serviceable on Elliot Yeo early but no good when switched to a rampant Shuey in the second half.
In the end the Grand Final is probably best summed up by borrowing a line from a Divinyls classic: “It’s a fine line between pleasure and pain.”
Just ask Jack Darling and Mason Cox.



DOM SHEED has capped off a West Coast comeback that will go down as one of the club's finest moments and one of the classic Grand Finals.
After trailing Collingwood for most of Saturday's Grand Final at the MCG, Sheed marked 40m out from goal on a tight angle with less than two minutes to play.
The Eagles had dominated general play in the last term but trailed by two points at that point, having missed their previous four shots at goal.
However, when his team needed him most, Sheed went back and coolly split the big sticks to put West Coast four points up and send Eagles fans into a frenzy.
It looked like the visitors would ice their fourth premiership soon after, but Jack Darling, who had memorably missed a pivotal chest mark in West Coast's 2015 Grand Final capitulation to Hawthorn, somehow botched an unopposed mark on the goalline.
It gave the Magpies one final chance, but when Luke Shuey marked a long kick-in in the centre of the ground in the dying seconds West Coast was able to hang on for a thrilling 11.13 (79) to 11.8 (74) victory.
Earlier it had looked like the crowd of 100,022 at the MCG would be forced to endure a boilover when the Magpies piled on the game's opening five goals to open up a 29-point lead late in the first term.
At that stage West Coast looked as overawed as its class of 2015 had been against Hawthorn three years earlier.
However, this year's Eagles team was made of sterner stuff and on the back of a massive third term from one of 2015's biggest villains, Darling, they briefly hit the front before going into the final break on level terms.
It set up a thrilling final term and the teams gave the fans at the MCG a finish they will long remember.
Again, the Eagles were slow starters as the Pies goaled twice within the opening two minutes, through Brody Mihocek and Jordan De Goey.
But, again, the Eagles were far from done. They kicked two of the next three goals, via Nathan Vardy and Josh Kennedy, and then peppered the goals for just four behinds before Sheed stepped up to play the hero.
Luke Shuey (34 possessions, nine clearances, eight tackles, eight inside 50s and one goal) was a thoroughly deserved winner of the Norm Smith Medal, while Sheed (32 possessions, eight clearances and six inside 50s) was also outstanding, his contribution extending far beyond his match-winning goal.
Josh Kennedy was held goalless in the 2015 Grand Final, but rebounded strongly against the Magpies to finish with 3.2 and 11 marks, while Darling overcame a slow start – and his last-minute brainfade – to get the Eagles back in the game with six marks in the third quarter.
West Coast's defence was also superb, especially in the first half when Collingwood was on top. Tom Barrass kept Mason Cox on a tight leash until late in the game, Will Schofield gave little room to De Goey in the first half and Steele Sidebottom in the second half, while a noticeably sore Jeremy McGovern took some telling marks when the game was on the line.
Run-with midfielder Mark Hutchings also kept Sidebottom so quiet the Magpie star was thrown deep into attack midway through the third term.
In winning their fourth flag, the Eagles moved past Brisbane (three) for the most premierships won by teams that have joined the competition since 1987.
They have now also won more flags in that time than any other club bar Hawthorn (seven), while their win broke a streak of five Grand Finals when Victorian teams had defeated interstate opponents.
The Magpies were brave in defeat, but missing the chance to equal Carlton and Essendon on a record 16 premierships will sting.
Taylor Adams (31 possessions, nine clearances and one goal) starred for the Magpies through the midfield, while Tom Langdon (23 possessions, seven marks, and 11 one-percenters) and Jack Crisp (25 possessions and nine marks) stood up strongly in defence.
Adam Treloar (26 possessions, five clearances and 11 tackles) was also a tireless worker through the midfield, Jeremy Howe waged an entertaining battle with Darling and Travis Varcoe was influential with his unrelenting pressure.
With Saturday's loss, Collingwood's Grand Final record slumped to 15-27 and two draws.
The Magpies had set up their two finals wins leading into the Grand Final with first-quarter blitzes and they stuck to the same formula on Saturday, piling on the game's opening five goals to jump to a 28-point lead after just 22 minutes of play.
Varcoe kicked the game's opening major with a clinical finish on the run from 40m at the five-minute mark, and NAB AFL Rising Star winner Jaidyn Stephenson announced his arrival on the game's biggest stage soon after with two goals in two minutes.
De Goey then brushed off attempted tackles from Shannon Hurn and Jack Redden and snapped truly from near the boundary line, and when Will Hoskin-Elliott converted from 40m out on the boundary line it seemed the Magpies could do no wrong.
On the other hand, the Eagles started as poorly as they had in the 2015 Grand Final.
However, they saved some face when with the final two goals of the first term, with Willie Rioli toeing a major on the goalline – confirmed after a video review – and Kennedy converting with an around-the-corner set shot after marking strongly in front of Tyson Goldsack.
The second quarter's opening goal did not come until the 20-minute mark when De Goey played on and kicked truly from outside 50m to put the Magpies 23 points up.
West Coast quickly hit back when Hutchings gleefully accepted a Mark LeCras handball in the goalsquare and converted, while Shuey ensured his team entered the half-time break with a sniff when he goaled on the run after a boundary throw-in to cut the margin to just 12 points.
It turned that sniff proved enough to inspire the Eagles to one of the great Grand Final triumphs.

MEDICAL ROOM
Collingwood: Brayden Maynard came from the ground after copping a heavy bump to the body from Liam Ryan midway through the second quarter. The defender returned soon after but was off again within minutes after appearing to suffer a left shoulder injury. However, he returned with his shoulder strapped and played out the match.



When it comes to grand final heartache no club has felt the pain more so than Collingwood and few in the game more than Nathan Buckley. In 2018, they had their hearts broken again in close to the cruellest fashion imaginable as West Coast came from behind to claim a memorable grand final.
The Magpies led for close to the entire game, the Eagles for just a few minutes but they were in front when it mattered after Dom Sheed threaded the winner through from the boundary line with only one minute, 45 seconds left on the clock.
In a 5-point thriller, the West Coast Eagles beat the Collingwood Magpies in the 2018 AFL Grand Final.
A shattered Buckley had his head in his hands in the coaches' box and his players lay stricken on the MCG turf as the ecstatic Eagles celebrated their five-point triumph in a thrilling grand final.
It's too early to assess exactly where this sits in the pantheon of September folklore but it belongs up there with some of the best deciders we've seen.
There were momentum swings, heroic acts, high skill, bravery and, most importantly, a contest that was still anyone's to claim until the dying seconds.
The Eagles had been the second-best team all year, yet when the top seed was knocked out they were still the underdogs. In tennis, you would not bet against Rafael Nadal if Roger Federer was knocked out but here many believed Collingwood would be the last team standing.
Many may still believe the best team did not win, as for long periods the 2018 cup seemed headed across the road to Collingwood HQ instead of across the Nullarbor.
The Pies kicked the first five goals of the game and, with the scores locked at three-quarter time, started the last quarter with two in 96 seconds.
Luke Shuey claimed the Norm Smith Medal, fitting reward after lifting his team back into the game in the second and influential in the third when they charged. Without him and Jeremy McGovern, one of few Eagles to keep his head in the first quarter, it could have been a day to forget.
For the Pies, Taylor Adams, with 31 possessions and 18 contested, capped off a sterling finals series with another strong performance. Tom Langdon was almost the equal of McGovern in defence. In the first half, he and Shuey were setting the Norm Smith pace.
The start was a case of shock and awe for the Pies, shocked and awful for the Eagles. Memories of their debacle in 2015 were getting harder to repress with every fumble and black-and-white surge.
They gave up five goals in the first term that year, and again here. There were bungles at either end of the ground, denying them goals on one hand and giving them away on the other.
One team turned in one of the worst quarters seen by a subsequent premier, the other was playing inspired football. From contest to contest, the Pies swarmed on the Eagles, who made errors under pressure – real or imagined. Thirty-one tackles in a quarter does that to you.
When Collingwood had the ball, their speed opened up the Eagles defence. They goaled from pockets and from long range.
Emboldened by two late goals before quarter-time, the Eagles were well and truly in the game in the second. The Pies, however, were getting a more even contribution while the Eagles were relying on too few – and their forward weapons of Jack Darling and Josh Kennedy could not get into the game. Goals were at a premium.
It took until time-on for the first goal to come, through Jordan de Goey, who was being limited to cameo displays, but the Eagles won the quarter.
The match clicked into another gear in the so-called premiership term. Darling, hitherto unseen and coming off a poor decider three years ago, was colossal. Whereas he had previously approached contests with caution, now he was attacking them with vigour. Elliott Yeo was also gaining confidence.
In a final term in which the Eagles dominated the first half and the Pies the second, neither side could lay the killer blow.
The Eagles were wayward in front of goal when they had the running, reducing the gap point by point after repeatedly attacking through the same spot. When the Pies had their turn, they too could not find space in a convocation of Eagles near their goal. Illogically, the goal that sealed the game was the most difficult shot of all.


Thursday, September 27, 2018

2018 AFL Grand Final: The Team

2018 AFL Grand Final

COLLINGWOOD
v
WEST COAST


Time & Place:
Saturday September 29, 2:30pm EST
MCG
TV: 7mate / Fox Footy

Weather:
Min 6 Max 14
Chance of rain 20%: < 1mm
Wind: SW 13kph

Betting:
Collingwood $1.68
West Coast $2.25
 TEAM
No Change

B: Brayden Maynard, Tom Langdon, Jack Crisp

HB: Jeremy Howe, Tyson Goldsack, Travis Varcoe

C: Adam Treloar, Scott Pendlebury, Tom Phillips

HF: Will Hoskin-Elliott, Brody Mihocek, Jordan De Goey

F: Josh Thomas, Mason Cox, Jaidyn Stephenson

Foll: Brodie Grundy, Taylor Adams, Steele Sidebottom

Int: Brayden Sier, James Aish, Chris Mayne, Levi Greenwood

Emg: Jarryd Blair, Ben Reid, Callum Brown, Flynn Appleby

Collingwood has named its team for Saturday's Grand Final against West Coast at the MCG.
The Pies have selected the same 22 players who lost to the Eagles at Optus Stadium, then rebounded to defeat the Giants in a semi-final and Richmond in a preliminary final.
Jeremy Howe (ankle) has been named on a half-back flank after proving his fitness during the team's final training run at the Holden Centre on Thursday.
It is remarkable that the Pies have been able to field the same team in each of their finals, given they endured a terrible run with injuries during their home and away campaign.
There was some talk during the week that Ben Reid or Darcy Moore could come into the team to bolster the backline, but Reid has instead been named as an emergency.
Moore is not in the 26-man squad.
The only change the Pies have made to the squad named for last Friday's clash with the Tigers is the addition of mid-sized backman Flynn Appleby to the list of emergencies.
Appleby has replaced tall defender Jack Madgen.

Further Information



Wednesday, September 26, 2018

2018 AFL Grand Final Preview: ROAR

ROAR

2018 AFL Grand Final

COLLINGWOOD v WEST COAST

Time & Place:
Saturday September 29, 2:30pm EST
MCG
TV: 7mate / Fox Footy
Weather:
Min 6 Max 14
Chance of rain 40%: < 1mm
Wind: SW 14kph
Betting:
Collingwood $1.68 West Coast $2.25
After 198 regular season matches, the distribution of 1,188 Brownlow Medal votes and eight finals matches, we are down to the final two teams.
Collingwood and the West Coast Eagles are left to fight it out for the AFL premiership this Saturday afternoon.
Entering this season, neither the Pies or Eagles were considered serious premiership contenders. Nathan Buckley’s men missed the finals in four consecutive seasons, while many predicted Adam Simpson’s side to slide down the ladder this year after losing several star players to retirement at the end of last season.
However, both clubs have defied the odds to make it to the summit match of the 2018 AFL season, which will be a battle of the birds for the second time in four years.
After winning a vote of confidence from the board last August following a dismal 2017 season, Buckley faced some early criticism after the Pies dropped their first two matches of the season against Hawthorn and the GWS Giants, both at the MCG.
Magpies coach Nathan Buckley (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)
But from that point on, they would drop only five more matches en route to a third-place finish on the ladder – their highest placing since the 2012 season, when they finished fourth in what was Buckley’s first year as Pies coach.
His efforts in lifting the club from 13th place last year to potential premiers this Saturday has won him the AFL Coaches Association’s coach of the year.
Foremost to their season of improvement was the good form shown by Steele Sidebottom, who finished runner-up to Tom Mitchell in the Brownlow Medal count with 24 votes, as well as the emergence of young stars such as Jaidyn Stephenson and Brady Mihocek.
They then lost a pulsating qualifying final against the West Coast Eagles in Perth before rebounding to defeat the GWS Giants, and then Richmond, in consecutive matches to qualify for its first Grand Final since 2011.
The win over the Tigers, regarded by many as the upset of the season, was orchestrated by a stunning ten-goals-to-two first half – at the end of which they led by 44 points.
It also broke the Tigers’ 22-match winning streak at the home of football, but that win will mean nothing if they cannot overcome the West Coast Eagles this Saturday afternoon at the MCG.
Adam Simpson’s men entered this year having been convincingly beaten by the Giants in their semi-final last year, after which Matt Priddis, Drew Petrie and Sam Mitchell retired from the game.
Many predicted they would slide down the ladder this season, with Robert Walls even going as far to predict that they’d win the wooden spoon.
The Eagles started the year with a 29-point loss to the Sydney Swans in the first game to be played at the new Optus Stadium, but from that point on, they’d win ten matches in a row, including thrashing reigning premiers Richmond by 47 points at home, before the run came to an end with another loss to the Swans at the SCG in Round 13.
Two further losses to Essendon and the Adelaide Crows followed, before they got back on track, winning six of their final eight regular season matches, including defeating Collingwood at the MCG for the first time since 1995.
It was in that match where their season appeared to take a turn for the worse, when ruckman Nic Naitanui suffered another serious knee injury which will see him not return until at least past the halfway mark of next season.
Shortly after, Andrew Gaff copped an eight-match suspension from the judiciary following his sickening blow to the face of Andrew Brayshaw; Saturday’s Grand Final will be the sixth match he will miss, and it also means he will miss the first two rounds next year.
Those distractions wouldn’t prevent the Eagles from finishing second on the ladder, the second time in four seasons that they’ve finished this high.
Jack Darling and Josh Kennedy of the Eagles (Photo by Will Russell/AFL Media/Getty Images)
After earning a week off thanks to another win over the Pies in the qualifying final, they destroyed Melbourne with just about one of the most devastating halves of football ever seen in recent memory.
The Eagles kicked ten goals to nil and then got on with the job in the second half to comfortably qualify for their second Grand Final in four seasons, where they’ll start underdogs against a Collingwood side which will be aiming to join Carlton and Essendon on a record-equalling 16 flags.
Twelve Eagles players will return for a second shot at the big prize, after they were part of the team humiliated by Hawthorn three years ago.
Josh Kennedy, Jack Darling and Elliot Yeo were among the players who easily had their colours lowered, with Kennedy, the 2015 Coleman Medallist, being held goalless by James Frawley, who’d just crossed over from a Melbourne side once labelled “an impediment to the industry”.
From their preliminary final side, only Lewis Jetta has tasted the ultimate success, having been part of the Sydney Swans side that was victorious against the Hawks in 2012. Thus, an Eagles win this Saturday would be the perfect sixth anniversary for him.
That win by the Swans is also the last time any non-Victorian side has won the flag, so Adam Simpson’s men will have their work cut out for them if they are to capture their fourth flag, and first since defeating the Swans in that classic 2006 decider by a solitary point.
Adam Simpson could feel the heat (Photo by Daniel Carson/AFL Media/Getty Images)
There are no remaining players from that side, with Sam Butler, the last survivor, having featured in that said side against the Hawks in 2015 before calling time at the end of last season.
Now that you’ve got the info, it’s time to crunch all the important numbers below.

This season
  • West Coast Eagles 15.12 (102) defeated Collingwood 9.13 (67) at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in round 17
  • West Coast Eagles 12.14 (86) defeated Collingwood 10.10 (70) at Optus Stadium in the second qualifying final
The stats that matter
  • This is Collingwood’s 42nd Grand Final (excluding the 1977 and 2010 replays), while for the West Coast Eagles this is their seventh.
  • Collingwood are shooting for a record-equalling 16th flag, which would see them level on Carlton and Essendon on that many flags, while the West Coast Eagles are going for their fourth flag but first since 2006.
  • Nathan Buckley is the first man since John Worsfold to captain and coach the same side into a Grand Final. While he couldn’t lead the Pies to a flag in either 2002 or 2003, he did win the Norm Smith Medal in the former year. In a twist of fate, Worsfold led the Eagles to flags in 1992 and 1994 as captain, and in 2006 as coach.
  • Buckley is the first former Norm Smith Medallist since Gary Ayres in 1995 to coach a side into a Grand Final.
  • Collingwood is 0-2 against non-Victorian clubs in AFL Grand Finals; both of those losses were to the Brisbane Lions in 2002 and 2003.
  • West Coast has never lost a Grand Final in an even year.
  • Collingwood has not won a premiership in September since 1958 (their last two flags were won on the first Saturday of October, in 1990 and 2010).
  • West Coast has not won a finals match at the MCG since the 2006 Grand Final.
  • West Coast has not won a finals match against a Victorian club at the MCG since the 1999 qualifying final, when it defeated the Western Bulldogs by five points.
And something random….
  • Both clubs’ last flags were in years where a Winter Olympics, Commonwealth Games and FIFA World Cup were held (West Coast in 2006 and Collingwood in 2010). The Eagles’ last flag came in a year when Australia hosted the Commonwealth Games (Melbourne).
Predictions
  • Match: Collingwood by 18 points.
  • Most disposals: Steele Sidebottom (Collingwood), Elliot Yeo (West Coast Eagles)
  • Most goals: Jordan De Goey (Collingwood), Josh Kennedy (West Coast Eagles)
  • Norm Smith Medal: Steele Sidebottom (if the Pies win), Luke Shuey (if the Eagles win)

We Can All Be Magpies Fans Against A Common Foe: The Age

The AgeCarolyn Webb

All aboard! The Collingwood bandwagon is arriving at the station. Hop on, although it’s getting rather crowded. Yes, I know it’s the team you all love to hate. But we can all be Magpie fans this week. Until Saturday night. Then you can resume hating duties.
Peter Daicos in action. Photo: The Age 
Me? I’m the prodigal daughter. Returning sheepishly to the Collingwood fold. Oh, did I mention that a friend invited me to the grand final? And no, I most certainly don't feel worthy. I’ve been a bad fan. But two things redeem me somewhat.
  1. The last time I went to the grand final was 1990, when the Pies beat Essendon. So I’m a good omen.
  2. I did put in the hard yards as a supporter in the 1970s and 1980s. I actually grew up going to games. Had Peter Daicos’ number on my duffel coat. Would watch him twist and weave through the pack and snap goals, and was one of the supporters revering his genius, every week.

Collingwood storms into their first grand final in seven years with a 39-point win over Richmond in Friday night’s preliminary final at the MCG.

2018 AFL Grand Final

COLLINGWOOD v WEST COAST

Time & Place:
Saturday September 29, 2:30pm EST
MCG
TV: 7mate / Fox Footy
Weather:
Min 6 Max 14
Chance of rain 40%: < 1mm
Wind: SW 14kph
Betting:
Collingwood $1.68 West Coast $2.25
I watched the Pies lose grand finals, or lose a lot of games, for seasons on end. It was nothing for me, in the cold and rain, to take two trains and a bus to VFL Park to watch the Pies lose.
I got into the 1990 grand final on a ticket I bought (at face value) outside the MCG, from someone who couldn’t go. I watched, ecstatic, as the final siren went, and we won our first premiership in 32 years.
I was a loud, proud member of the out-of-control mob who gathered that night at Victoria Park, singing the club song about 500 times, alongside my equally fervent mother and sister.
Collingwood is in the family. My mum’s cousin played for Collingwood. She used to watch him play in the 1950s. Her own father, my late Pa, Wal, followed the Pies all his life, including the glory days of the 1920s and 1950s.
Well into his 70s, Pa would bring a little wooden stool and a flat cushion to watch home games from the concrete terrace at Victoria Park. He never barracked loudly. He would listen to his wireless and grumble darkly about the umpire. If Collingwood lost, the umpire was always blind. But Collingwood was part of his identity.
My mother still goes to games with my sister, even to the cold night games. But somewhere along the line, I lost the religion.
I no longer go to games. None of my friends were into football, so I let it go. I had no time for it. The politics of football made me dizzy. The marketing of football made me sick. As a supporter, I felt like a promotional object.
But at heart, I was never not a Magpie fan. That would be like renouncing my family. I’m stuck with them. Collingwood, I mean.
And now Collingwood are in the 2018 grand final. And I find that I still barrack for the Woods. Watching the preliminary final on TV was like the words to Mass coming back to me, having not gone to church for years.
I am admiring a new generation of players, from Brodie Grundy (born in 1994!) to Jordan De Goey, to Scott Pendlebury to Tyson Goldsack. And a very tall American called Mason Cox. I’d like to welcome Mason’s parents to Melbourne.
Things get a bit mad, at finals time. OK, OK, we’re mad at every match. I think they may have worked that out, by now. But if passion for our team could lift the Pies over the line to win, we’d win by a mile.
So who do people barrack for this weekend, if they’re a Hawthorn supporter, or a Bomber, or a Cat or .... you poor bastards, a Carlton supporter? I know there’s a bit of angst out there. But the answer is clear. Put aside that natural aversion to all things Collingwood. Jump on that bandwagon, even if it’s a steep leap to take. We’ll help you up (well maybe not the Carlton ones).
Remember you’re a Victorian. Your natural enemy is the West Coast Eagles. So join the Magpie Army. Raise your voice, and remember the premiership is a cakewalk. I’ll be fishing out my old black and white scarf from my wardrobe. And washing it - it will be dusty.
I will be there at the MCG, barracking my heart out on Saturday, back with my second family. And when we win, I’ll be singing the club song 500 times with the mad, merry legion of other Magpie maniacs. Go Pies.

The Collingwood Bugle is a wholly owned subsidiary of Madame Fifi's House of Earthly Pleasures, Smith Street, Collingwood