Sports

How Nas Wanganeen-Milera and Rowan Marshall executed perfect play

In the early seconds of the final quarter, St Kilda’s Jack Higgins got on the end of a pass from Max Hall. The small forward marked easily with no opponent really close to him; he shouldn’t have been given so much space. He went back and from an angle of about 35 degrees slotted a nice goal from the right forward pocket. That cut the margin to 40 points with plenty of time left. But no one would have predicted what was to come.

“Higgins has been a bit of a ray of sunshine on a dark day for the Saints,” reflected commentator Alister Nicholson on Channel Seven.

CLASSIC COOPER

6:16 elapsed (16.05 minutes left)

A very good goal from a quality and rapid-fire centre clearance. Less than a minute after Bradley Hill snatched a goal from a tight angle, the Saints got another one. Hall took possession from the bounce, gave a sharp handball to Wanganeen-Milera who, in turn, offloaded to Zak Jones. Jones booted into the forward line where Cooper Sharman showed great ground-level ability to spin onto his left boot and kick it through. The margin was cut to 28 points with more than 16 minutes of game time to come; the Saints were well and truly in the hunt.

A CONTENTIOUS PENALTY

22:57 elapsed (4.16 minutes left)

Wanganeen-Milera stormed out of the centre and pinpointed a pass to Higgins. But was the kick touched by Harvey Langford before landing in Higgins’ arms? The umpire didn’t think so, paying the mark, and Higgins got a 50-metre penalty after being slung to the ground by Judd McVee. The Melbourne players desperately pleaded with the umpires, allowing Higgins to play on and run into an open goal. The Saints again had scored two goals in about a minute of play, this time cutting the margin to five points.

“I reckon the ball was touched, guys,” Nick Riewoldt said in commentary on Seven. “I reckon it was touched coming in.” In any case, the umpires didn’t pay it. Game on.

DEES MISS A CHANCE TO SEAL IT

(1.58 minutes left)

Melbourne led by six points with little more than two minutes to play. All they needed was another score to virtually secure the win, and Clayton Oliver had the opportunity. A goal would force St Kilda to score twice to even level the scores; even a point would require two goals from the Saints to win. But the Demons midfielder couldn’t deliver and his dodgy kick went out on the full.

It was a horrible miss. To his credit, after Oliver handballed to Charlie Spargo (who dropped the ball), the Demon did do well to reclaim it, but he squandered his scoring chance. Where was his left foot? A free kick to St Kilda from deep in defence was the result. The moment symbolised a lack of composure for the dispirited Demons.

EPIC MARK AND GOAL

29:50 elapsed (55 seconds left)

It will be a mark that’s replayed for years to come. An excellent left-foot kick from Mason Wood running down the wing (after a handball from Marcus Windhager) set up the moment for Wanganeen-Milera, who took his chance like few others would have done. The hottest talent in the game, who’s weighing up whether to find a home away from Moorabbin next season, Wanganeen-Milera climbed over Bayley Fritsch (who crashed to the turf) and in front of McVee. The Saint took the mark with one grab, sending the crowd into raptures.

How about Ross Lyon’s reaction in the box! The veteran coach could barely contain his joy.

But the Saint still had to kick the goal. And he did. The out-and-out AFL star went back and showed brilliant composure to split the big sticks. Scores level. The clock ticked down as he approached his shot at goal, leaving eight seconds before the final siren – and with a final centre bounce to come.


THE DEMON NUMBER: A 6-6-6 HORROR SHOW

(Eight seconds left)

At the resumption, a nightmare for the Demons. With only Max Gawn, Christian Petracca and Kysaiah Pickett in the centre square, they had made the mistake of having seven forwards. Free kick St Kilda, for the 6-6-6 infringement. “We had seven forwards, and two wingers,” coach Simon Goodwin confirmed later. “It’s a pretty simple process to get right. We’ll have a look at why it happened, how it happened and make sure that never happens again.”

The last centre bounce killed the Demons when it should have been the set-up they wanted

The final seconds that killed Melbourne should have been the simplest part of what was to unfold.

They just had to have six players in each of the three segments of the ground.

Given the scores were level and so not a moment requiring all-or-nothing attack or defence, it should have not just been the rule requiring six players in each zone of the ground, it should have been the obvious plan for how they would want to be set up.

Melbourne couldn’t get that right.

The Demons had seven players inside their forward 50 arc and only three players – Gawn, Petracca and Pickett – in the centre square and two wingers.

They also had lots of finger-pointing and yelling.

While Melbourne were arguing over who was in the wrong spot and trying to hastily move players, St Kilda’s mids were huddled together contriving an NFL-style play for these vital eight seconds on the clock.

Having already been warned for 6-6-6 earlier in the game, now, at the most important moment of the match, it was an immediate penalty against the Demons.

Knowing it was a free kick, Melbourne players started streaming to the back line.

Confusion continued because the umpire calmly, and rightly by the rules, demanded the players return to an official, orthodox set-up before the free kick could be taken.

By the time the kick was taken by Rowan Marshall, the Saints had a plan, and Melbourne had panic.

St Kilda got all of their forwards to move to the right side of the ground and their wingman run wide to the left to drag Demons defenders with them and so open a corridor on the left-hand side (as you face the attacking goal). Wanganeen-Milera sprinted into this corridor and the kick, like a perfect five iron to the green, found him just inside 50.

Once he’d marked the ball, the game was effectively done.

-Michael Gleeson

Amid the confusion, wise heads and flustered minds could be seen. Having called the 6-6-6 breach, the field umpire asked for players to get to their positions before the Saints could be given the free kick. In this time St Kilda ruckman Rowan Marshall and Wanganeen-Milera hatched a perfect plan to find a score.

Gawn could be seen signalling to Jack Viney on the wing to come into the centre. But the damage had already been done. In complete contrast, the St Kilda unit showed composure as big man Marshall prepared to take the free kick.

Once the umpire signalled time on again, Wanganeen-Milera ran strongly out of the centre into space on the forward flank. Marshall found him with a beautifully weighted kick. The Saint had too much time as Viney desperately tried to get to him.

Wanganeen-Milera marked the ball comfortably with five seconds left, and took his set shot from about 40m out and after the siren. All he needed was a point to complete the heist; he kicked a goal anyway.

Delirium. Pandemonium. Saints win by six points.

Petracca looked stoney-faced. The Demons were left to ponder: what the hell just happened?

Melbourne coach Goodwin was left gobsmacked. “Late in the game we didn’t handle the pressure, we didn’t handle the moment, and we didn’t handle the tight game scenarios like we should have, and that’s on all of us,” he said.

“We’ll own that together.”

Lyon was delighted that his players prospered rather than panicked. “That’s why senior on-field leadership has never been more paramount,” he said later.

“‘Nas’ [Wanganeen-Milera] was instrumental – him and ‘Row’ [Marshall], they said ‘get the forwards to one side [for the free kick], I’m going to dart here’. That’s what they did.

“It was really, really pleasing. It was exciting.”

Keep up to date with the best AFL coverage in the country. Sign up for the Real Footy newsletter.

  • For more: Elrisala website and for social networking, you can follow us on Facebook
  • Source of information and images “brisbanetimes”

Related Articles

Leave a Reply

Back to top button

Discover more from Elrisala

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading