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As it happened: Freo fight back from seven goals down to beat Dogs, Cats pip Pies in nailbiting qualifying final

Ronny Lerner
Updated ,first published
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Good night

By Ronny Lerner

So there we have it. One of the greatest first weeks of finals football in VFL/AFL history comes to a close in sensational style.

Firstly, Geelong emerged victorious by six points in an epic, seesawing qualifying final against Collingwood at the MCG, and then tonight, Fremantle fought back from 41 points down to beat the Western Bulldogs in their elimination final by 13 points, completing one of the greatest finals comebacks of all time in the process.

Only Brisbane has been able to beat Collingwood in a game decided by 11 points or fewer this year, but the Cats were able to join that exclusive club today, and handed the Pies just their second loss in 13 such games this season.

Geelong will get another week off after progressing through to a preliminary final where they will meet the winner of the Melbourne-Brisbane semi-final next week.

Meanwhile, Collingwood will take on Fremantle next week in the other cut-throat semi-final at the MCG and the winner will meet Sydney in the other preliminary final at the SCG.

Thank you for following along with us as we brought you all the thrilling action from two more unforgettable finals.

Be sure to join us next weekend when we do it all again for the semis.

‘The players were overwhelmed’: Longmuir

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Fremantle coach Justin Longmuir spoke to the media after the game...

Q: Justin, describe the emotions in the rooms. How do you sum that up?
A: Oh it’s pretty special. Yeah. Yeah, the players were overwhelmed, really. Yeah, to do what we did tonight, it takes a lot of belief. It takes a lot of maturity, and, yeah, takes a fair bit of guts, really. So we’ve been working on our mental skills for three years since I’ve got here. And for moments like this, where you feel like you’re done but you stick to the task and you try and claw your way back into it. So I’m so proud of the players.

Q: What sort of belief can that buy a group with potentially three games left?
A: Oh hopefully a lot. And hopefully...it’s already there, because you don’t come back from 41 points down, I think it was, without belief already there. So they’ve got a lot of belief in our footy. Clearly we need to start better, but the belief’s there. Yep.

Q: What did you put the start down to?
A: We didn’t handle the contest well, and, you know, we fumbled. Their pressure was a lot better than ours, but I thought the way we used the ball invited their pressure. We tried to handball over and once we started trying to drive our legs and take the game on and force them to actually stick good tackles the game opened up for us. But we were way too safe in the contest. And they dined out on the turnover. And, yeah, like I said, we stuck to it. Fixed a few things up, and gound our way back into it.

Q: For Jye (Amiss) to miss that first one and then recover from that and nail a couple of really important ones, what does that show for his character?
A: It shows his method’s right, and I don’t know whether I have seen a young player work so hard on their goalkicking. Never wastes a shot on goalkicking. He wouldn’t have been dented by the first shot at all. Yeah.

Dockers launch magnificent fightback to end Bulldogs’ season

By Steve Barrett

Fremantle stared humiliation in the face in front of their biggest home crowd before conjuring a stunning fightback to steamroll the Western Bulldogs in an epic elimination final.

A weekend of finals classics looked like ending with a flat outlier when the highly-fancied Dockers found themselves down by 41 points midway through the second term and still searching for their first goal entering time-on in the quarter.

Fremantle were absolutely ambushed and their parochial 58,982-strong Optus Stadium crowd shocked into silence by the ferocity of the eighth-placed Bulldogs in a lopsided opening 50 minutes.

Click here to read more.

Jye Amiss celebrates a goal with David Mundy, Heath Chapman and Hayden Young.Paul Kane, Getty
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AFL Finals Week 2 schedule

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The AFL has announced next weekend’s schedule for the two elimination semi-finals.

Friday, 9 September
Second Semi Final: Melbourne v Brisbane Lions, MCG, 7.50pm AEST

Saturday, 10 September
First Semi Final: Collingwood v Fremantle, MCG, 7.25pm AEST

The league has yet to announce the dates for the two preliminary finals with Sydney expected to host its home game at the SCG and Geelong expected to play its game at the MCG.

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Beveridge laments ‘death by 1000 cuts’

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Western Bulldogs coach Luke Beveridge spoke to the media after the game...

Q: First of all, commiserations on the loss. How did you assess the game?
A: Oh, it’s important to start off and give credit to Fremantle, and congratulate them on an elimination final win. You know, in the end, after being up by so much, it was death by 1000 cuts, really. We went away from some things that had served us well in the early parts of the game and then Fremantle got a little bit better at some of the things they weren’t doing so well, and as much as our guys hung in there and, you know, sort of persevered through a period, Josh Dunkley lays those early tackles in the third quarter just to give us some momentum and the pressure was back up, but ultimately, you know, it’s...you know, significant disappointment. It’s an opportunity missed, and Fremantle have earned a look at another final.

Q: At what point did you sense that the momentum had shifted significantly and you guys were in a bit of trouble?
A: Oh, you know, to keep them to a very little score for most of the first half, and then we...you know, the first couple (goals), you know, sort of probably gifted to them by some things that we didn’t do well. We were taking territory well under pressure. We were making good decisions throughout the course of that early part of the first half, and then they kicked a forward-50 stoppage goal, where there was a significant breakdown, which we’d been pretty diligent with over the journey and obviously, then, you know, the gap is reduced by a significant amount and we’ve lost that edge on the scoreboard. So going into half-time, it was no secret that we needed to stabilise it, and yeah, they just chipped away and just, in the end, they were just the better side for the length of the game.

Q: How did you get around the fact that your last two finals now, you’ve been in a position where you’ve been in a winning position and then an avalanche of goals from the opposition has taken it away from you?
A: I think it’s dangerous comparing this one to last year’s grand final. I mean, that was...all the adjectives have been attached to it but tonight was different, and, you know, what was the scoreline in the end? How many points did they get, in the 70s, and for all the inside 50s, for a period, for a lengthy period of the game, we were defending OK but then it was the kicks across the face of our forward line, it was the breakdowns in that situation, and drop of ball in our open 50 which we opened the whole open side of the ground, which we planned not to do. It gave them that momentum. Look, we’re chipping away at consistency with decision making, and execution with the ball, and that’s been as much a problem as the defensive aspect. So we got a lot of that right early and then we got it incorrect for large periods of the second half, and that’s as blunt as I can be, and you can probably find some other things in there, but, yeah, what was it, we were up by 40, it’s a significant swing and it’s bloody disappointing.

Q: Did you think your blokes got rattled a bit like the fight on the boundary line, five of your guys versus two of them, they win a clearance, get the ball. Then you have the 50m penalty, bloke on the mark tries to replace him, Logue gets two goals which ended up being the margin in the end. Do you think they got rattled at different moments like that?
A: I don’t think our players got rattled at all but they were significant moments that helped Fremantle win the game. We’ve been a pretty disciplined side over the journey, but wanting to go and fly the flag over the boundary in that situation, you know, there was no doubt that the ball was going to be thrown in. So it was just a...it was a brain fade by all the guys that went in there. So, yeah, there was that, and obviously the one against Toby (McLean), the 50, I didn’t see the subtlety in it where he came from. If it was there, it was there, but you know, I think the more concerning things were the kicks across the face of our forward line, and our inability to keep the ball in there in those situations than those, but they’re still things that shouldn’t have happened.

Q: I imagine the mood in the rooms is pretty flat. What’s the message? What can you say to them after the game?
A: Yeah, well, it’s...it’s the million-dollar question, isn’t it, because it’s difficult to talk after such a disappointment. There’s a lot of work that goes in by all clubs to try and get an opportunity to play final, and then, you know, there’s an inner...a really strong inner belief that we can do better, you know. And the players are sitting there knowing that, you know, at the end of the day, we believe we’re more capable than dropping the game tonight. So there’s that disappointment. What do I do with it? You know, I’m a supportive shroud for the players more than anything, from a life and a professional sport point of view. So it’s important that we struck a balance in there. We talked about what we can control, you know, outside of or inside our four walls, inside our inner sanctum and there are things that we can’t, but ultimately, there’s a discussion around stimulus for next year, and what that means to propel us into a pre-season, which we like, you know. I like hearing that from the players, because it’s difficult to talk after, you know, such a disappointing experience like tonight. But we’ll collect ourselves and we’ll process it a little bit more on Wednesday.

Fremantle had ‘robust discussions’ at quarter-time

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Young Fremantle star Caleb Serong spoke to Channel Seven after the game...

Q: Just a thought on the superhero here (Mundy) that doesn’t often wear a cape?
A: It’s unbelievable. Everyone sees what he does game day and how elite he is, especially the last couple of years since I ’ve been here, seeing it game day. What people don’t see is away from I guess the field and what he does at the club and what he gives to this club is unmatched and we learn a lot from him every day still now. He’s still giving everything he’s got right until the last day.

Caleb Serong tackles Bailey Williams.Getty Images

Q: As a younger player, what are you thinking when you’re five or six goals down. First final is a nightmare. What are you thinking?
A: The first quarter was tough. I felt like we were in some really good spots but we were just a bit fumbly that was probably a big one. We just kind of let ourselves down with the basics. Quarter-time and my only message for anyone was communicate. Get out of yourself, connect with your teammates. That was my kind of focus and I felt like at quarter-time we had some not heated but robust discussions about what was going on, especially in the midfield and we felt like we were able to get on top in the contest. And it started from there.

Q: What about (coach) Justin (Longmuir) at quarter-time? We spoke to him, start of the third quarter, after you kicked the four goals and we asked him, what were you thinking when it was bad and what are you thinking now? He was so calm. He said, “I thought we were in trouble, now I think we can win this.“
A: He is very calm always. He is a level head. I guess at quarter-time his only message was next moment, that was the biggest one and we’re not going to chip it all away in this quarter, just chip it away bit by bit. We clawed back two or three goals in the second quarter, a bit more in the third and we took over in the last. That message stayed through all the way through.

Q: Do you allow yourself to dream?
A: Um...you always kind of think about what could, but I guess JL’s biggest message throughout the last two weeks especially has been: stick to the process that will hold us in really good stead. What we’ve been doing all year has allowed us to perform on the weekends and that won’t change.

Q: Collingwood next Saturday night. Before I let you go, what about Jye ‘Famous’ (Amiss). He’s made a name for himself. He suddenly willed himself into the game. Almost lost a kidney mid year.
A: He is a class act. He’s quite unassuming through the week. You don’t really hear from him, he just gets his work done. He is living with ‘Fyfey’, so he’s learning from one of the best. Captain’s run yesterday, probably couldn’t even tell you he was out there. He was just going about his business. To see him stand up, it was no surprise to us internally but it was really pleasing to see.

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Mundy thought his career was over in first half

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Fremantle veteran David Mundy spoke to Channel Seven after the game...

Q: 375 games in the Fremantle jumper. Not many more remarkable than that?
A: Pretty crazy. We would’ve liked to start the game a little bit better. Giving them a 41-point start and reeling them in the second half is testament to the work we’ve done.

Q: You took the momentum into half-time but you got off to a slow start. What were you doing in the change rooms? Talking to the players? Just let the coaches talk?
A: We typically have about five minutes by ourselves and try and figure it out. We were being outhunted around the football in the midfield. The pressure was disrupting the way we like to play. Some of our basic stuff were sustainable to turn around in the second half.

David Mundy.Getty Images

Q: Given that it’s a younger group and we spoke about all the talent you have coming through, I want to know what you’re thinking at quarter-time, and are you saying to yourself, “I’ve got to do a little bit more, I have to set the example”? What sort of things are going through your mind?
A: I take a little bit of ownership in terms of the leadership and talk amongst the midfield group and the team, I guess, but this year, we’ve got to where we are by each player playing their role no matter how the game it going. We just drill back down into that and that’s our main focus.

A first week for the ages

By Jake Niall

Can’t recall a week one AFL finals series like this. Not even 1994.

Roy Ward’s best players

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