Under-the-radar Papley moment grabs Longmire's attention

24 days ago
Sydney swans

John Longmire praises Tom Papley and laments his side's slow start in Sydney's win over Geelong

By Martin Pegan at the SCG

1 hr ago

Tom Papley celebrates a goal for Sydney against Geelong in R13, 2024. Picture: AFL Photos

SYDNEY coach John Longmire has fired a warning shot by declaring the red-hot Swans still have room for improvement after chasing down Geelong on Sunday to clinch an eighth-straight win.

The Swans trailed by as much as 35 points as the Cats booted the opening six goals, but then slammed on the next five majors in nine minutes to set up a 30-point victory at the SCG.

SWANS v CATS Full match coverage and stats

Longmire conceded he is concerned with his side's slow starts this year, after they also allowed Carlton to race away to an early lead with the opening four goals in their previous match at their home ground.

Overall, the Swans have trailed at quarter time in half of their 12 matches so far this year, despite losing just one game for the season.

"We've still got a bit of work to do on our starts," Longmire said.

"Probably for the last month, we've been aware of it a little bit and today we certainly got exposed.

"We got beaten in contested ball or around the footy, a fair bit in the air in that first quarter, and in the second quarter we turned that right around. (We were) really strong in all those areas as the game went on.

"That was really good to be able to turn that around but we can still get off to a better start."

The Swans got on top as Brodie Grundy asserted himself with 21 contested possessions among his 25 disposals, while Isaac Heeney, Chad Warner and Errol Gulden again ran rampant in the midfield.

Tom Papley booted four second-half goals including a long bomb from the edge of the centre square, while emerging key forward Joel Amartey was a threat throughout and added three majors.

Goalsneak Papley had an opportunity to repeat his long-range effort from a similar spot just minutes later but instead passed to Justin McInerney, who tugged his kick wide.

Papley had multiple goals in just three games this year before Sunday, well below his normally prolific goalscoring standard, but his selflessness has not gone unnoticed.

"If you look at some of the team-orientated focused acts he's done in the first half of the year, it has been really strong," Longmire said.

"At the time I thought he could have just taken a deep breath, taken another 30 (seconds), had a shot. But it's hard to knock someone who's having a go at trying to bring a teammate into the game."

The Cats stunned the Swans early with intense pressure around the contest but were unable to stay with the ladder-leaders once they lifted.

Max Holmes, Tom Atkins and Tanner Bruhn were among the Cats' midfielders to impress but they ultimately lacked the numbers to match the high-flying Swans.

"Their mids certainly got hot," Cats coach Chris Scott said. "Their good players are hard to keep down for the whole game.

"Two of our best mids over the last couple of years aren't in the team (Patrick Dangerfield and Cam Guthrie). We’ve got a bit of a developing midfield, and we knew what we were going in against. If they don't have three or four midfielders in the All-Australian team right at the moment, I'd be surprised.

"We've got some guys that weren't even on our list two seasons ago. We've really given them some responsibility and I thought they showed early on that they can more than match it with the best guys in the comp."

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