Invigorated Bulldogs as good as end West Coast's finals hopes
THE WESTERN Bulldogs have feasted on a wounded West Coast team, all but ending the Eagles' slim finals hopes with a 22-point win at Etihad Stadium on Sunday.
Led by senior trio Adam Cooney, Ryan Griffen and Bob Murphy, the Bulldogs rediscovered their bite and won their fifth game for the season: 16.15 (111) to 13.11 (89).
The result left West Coast three games adrift of eighth placed Port Adelaide and all but out of the finals race having been touted as premiership fancies pre-season.
Compounding the pain was yet another injury, with in-form midfielder Chris Masten suffering an ankle injury and taking no part in the game after half-time.
The Bulldogs played some of the sharpest football of their season, running tirelessly and using the ball efficiently to outgun their more experienced opponents.
Cooney, who finished with 30 possessions, was at his electrifying best in a timely performance that could prove a circuit breaker in his ongoing contract negotiations.
Murphy (29 and one goal) was the architect with his precise ball use, floating between half-back and half-forward and barely wasting a possession, while Griffen (30) had the better of opponent Scott Selwood (23).
Luke Dahlhaus and Jarrad Grant kicked four and three goals respectively.
"It was just terrific today to see people running, confident with the ball, and wanting to take the game on. It was good," coach Brendan McCartney said post-match.
"We've probably been building for a few weeks. I think all of us have felt we hadn't got enough reward for the hard work we were putting in.
"There were times today where those young guys just got a hand in, or made a tackle, or slowed the opposition down or knocked the ball out.
"It was a good all-round effort today. It was a good win for our club."
The Bulldogs set their win up with hard work at the coalface, winning the clearances (37-34), contested possessions (143-127) and tackles (63-61).
Tom Liberatore finished with a career-high 12 tackles to go with his 29 possessions in another strong performance for the favourite son in his 50th game.
Mitch Wallis was also influential in the midfield battles, moving onto West Coast clearance specialist Matt Priddis in the third quarter and keeping him to two possessions for the term.
The Bulldogs subsequently won the clearances 12-6 in the third quarter as the momentum shifted.
The Eagles left star players Nic Naitanui (groin soreness), Darren Glass (soreness) and Mark LeCras (foot) at home.
Midfielders Luke Shuey (hamstring), Matt Rosa (back) and Daniel Kerr, who wasn't selected after two WAFL matches, were also missing.
"We just weren't skilful enough, so that'll be our focus for the reminder of the year," coach Jon Worsfold said.
"We let them score too easily I thought, and from some crucial errors that allowed them easy scores."
Andrew Gaff (31 possessions) and Dean Cox (21 and 26 hit-outs) fought hard for West Coast, while Mark Hutchings (26 and six tackles) continued to make the most of his second chance at AFL level.
Josh Kennedy (three goals) and Jack Darling (two) looked dangerous when the ball came their way, but it wasn't enough as the curtains closed on the Eagles' forgettable season.
An ankle injury to Chris Masten made the Eagles' job all the harder. Picture: AFL Media
WESTERN BULLDOGS 3.3 7.7 12.10 16.14 (111) WEST COAST 4.4 7.6 10.8 13.11 (89)
GOALS Western Bulldogs: Dahlhaus 4, Dickson 3, Grant 3, Addison 2, Boyd, Cooney, Giansiracusa, Murphy West Coast: Hill 3, Kennedy 3, Cripps 2, Darling 2, Wellingham 2, Dalziell
BEST Western Bulldogs: Murphy, Cooney, Liberatore, Griffen, Dahlhaus, Grant, Minson, Stevens
West Coast: Gaff, Hutchings, Wellingham, Cox, Selwood, Kennedy
INJURIES Western Bulldogs: Nil West Coast: Masten (ankle)
SUBSTITUTES Western Bulldogs: Daniel Giansiracusa replaced by Jackson Macrae in the fourth quarter West Coast: Chris Masten replaced by Cale Morton in the third quarter