TALKING POINTS: Could young Giant find a regular home in defence?
1. The General may have a new end
GWS may have found an answer to how to accommodate their three young tall forwards - Jeremy Cameron, Tom Boyd and Jonathan Patton - in the one team. Patton, who started strongly with the first goal of the match, was sent to centre-half back after the Suns responded with six unanswered goals. The move paid dividends with the Giants coming back into the contest briefly. After a fruitless spell forward in the third quarter while the Suns ran away with the contest and Tom Lynch dominated, Patton was once again moved back to stop the bleeding and performed admirably.
Gary Ablett’s career highlights reel is already jam-packed, but they’ll have to make room for at least one more after his second-quarter goal against the Giants. Ablett had just one touch in the quarter at the 15-minute mark and the Giants were (not by pure coincidence) back within eight points. Then Ablett picked the ball up 20m from goal, ran right and faked to kick before spinning 180 degrees and running left. One fake later and he was back on his right foot, leaving two Giants grasping at air as he snapped a kick for goal that flew inches above Nick Haynes on the line.
3. Winning the battle, but losing the war
Giant Jonathan Giles won the hit-out battle with Rory Thompson throughout (51-27) but the Giants were dominated in the clearances with the Suns enjoying a 44-36 advantage. The Suns won the contested possession total 160-127 with Ablett (20), David Swallow (17) and Jaeger O’Meara (16) all excelling. Damningly for the Giants, the Suns also won the tackle count 69-53 with Ablett (11) and O’Meara (10) again leading the way.
4. A rivalry for the ages
Steven May and Jeremy Cameron is a match-up that will likely thrill footy fans for many years to come. May probably got the better of the big Giant who only touched the ball nine times. Yet even in a game where he was quiet, Cameron still booted four goals, showcasing his marking skills and pin-point goalkicking in his few opportunities.
5. Forwards pointing Suns towards finals contention
As good as the Suns midfield is, Guy McKenna's team is only going to be able to contend for finals football if the forwards develop the capacity to kick a bag in a game. Sam Day managed four in the QClash in round three and, though he has been quiet since, Tom Lynch picked up the slack against the Giants booting a career-high five. The challenge for these two talls now is to do this against fellow top-eight contenders.