Here’s some sharp analysis from our man at Marvel Stadium, Daniel Brettig, after the Lions thumped the Saints by 85 points.
Roaring Lions are breathing down Swans’ neck
In this most evenly fought of seasons, Brisbane mauled St Kilda by 85 points for a ninth consecutive victory that pushed them into rarefied air, as rivals stumble and struggle around them.
A loss to St Kilda would have seen the Lions slide from second to fifth, but there was little doubt of that from the opening minutes of a lopsided affair that served mainly to underline why the Lions have cut a swathe through the second half of the season after a slow start. They are now just two points back of Sydney following the faltering Swans’ obliteration by Port Adelaide.
Brisbane’s streak has generated plenty of swagger for the 2023 grand finalists. This was summed up by how Logan Morris snaffled a contested mark in front of Callum Wilkie for the second goal of the game then delivered the “too small” gesture borrowed from the NBA to literally belittle his opponent.
On another night, that sort of moment might have come back to haunt Morris, but here it was a fair indicator of the procession to follow. Resembling the Harlem Globetrotters versus the Washington Generals on the scoreboard, it was mirrored in the stands by the steady stream of Saints supporters making an early exit to finish the weekend.
Rayner’s reign
Cam Rayner is not a big disposal winner, but his impact is high.
This was Rayner’s sixth game in a row with multiple goals, but he was also responsible for several of the most striking moments of the Lions’ big win. By combining power, speed and skill with a good deal of experience, Rayner is a neat encapsulation of much of what the Lions do well. His bursts through the middle with clean skills (leading all comers for metres gained), plus the strength to shrug off a tackle and snap on his left in the second term, were pivotal contributions when the game was even slightly up for grabs.
Rayner had plenty of help, of course. Lachie Neale was the Lions’ engine room as ever, collecting another double figure haul of clearances and shrugging off a knock to the back of the head in the third term. Hugh McCluggage and Dane Zorko also had plenty of the ball, while Morris, Charlie Cameron (subbed off at three-quarter-time), Callum Ah Chee and Zac Bailey complemented Joe Daniher’s four goals.
Even Cameron’s early exit brought a further morale boost for the Lions, as the substitute Bruce Reville curled through a goal with his first possession. So relaxed was Chris Fagan that he even cracked a smile when Daniher shanked an attempted soccer goal in the closing minutes.
Saints left in the dust
Less than a couple of months ago St Kilda were similarly jumped by the Lions at the Gabba but gave as good as they got in the second half to fall 20 points short in a genuinely entertaining and high scoring affair. What will frustrate Saints coach Ross Lyon is how his charges gave barely a yelp after Brisbane’s fast start here. In statistical terms, St Kilda may even have been fortunate not to lose by more.
As it was, the Saints threatened to register the lowest score by any team this season for much of the last quarter, until Rowan Marshall’s set shot took the hosts past the 30-point mark set by West Coast against the Bulldogs in round four.