2014 AFL Grand Final
2014 AFL Grand Final | ||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
View of the Melbourne Cricket Ground, shortly after gates opened for the 2014 AFL Grand Final. | ||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||
Date | 27 September 2014, 2.30pm | |||||||||||||||
Stadium | Melbourne Cricket Ground | |||||||||||||||
Attendance | 99,460 | |||||||||||||||
Umpires | Simon Meredith, Mathew Nicholls, Matt Stevic | |||||||||||||||
Coin toss won by | Hawthorn | |||||||||||||||
Kicked toward | City End | |||||||||||||||
Ceremonies | ||||||||||||||||
Pre-match entertainment | Tom Jones, Ed Sheeran, Mike Brady | |||||||||||||||
National anthem | Olivia Newton-John | |||||||||||||||
Post-match entertainment | Tom Jones, Ed Sheeran | |||||||||||||||
Accolades | ||||||||||||||||
Norm Smith Medallist |
Luke Hodge (Hawthorn) | |||||||||||||||
Jock McHale Medallist |
Alastair Clarkson (Hawthorn) | |||||||||||||||
Broadcast in Australia | ||||||||||||||||
Network | Seven Network | |||||||||||||||
Commentators | Bruce McAvaney and Dennis Cometti | |||||||||||||||
|
The 2014 AFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between Sydney Swans and the Hawthorn Football Club at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 27 September 2014. It was the 118th annual Grand Final of the Australian Football League (formerly the Victorian Football League),[1] staged to determine the premiers for the 2014 AFL season. The match, attended by 99,460 spectators, was won by Hawthorn by a margin of 63 points, marking the club's second consecutive premiership and twelfth VFL/AFL premiership victory overall. Hawthorn's Luke Hodge was awarded the Norm Smith Medal as the best player on the ground.
Background
Having finished the home and away season as minor premiers, Sydney advanced to the Grand Final with a hard fought victory over Fremantle, followed by a 71-point victory over North Melbourne in their preliminary final. Defending premiers Hawthorn, which finished second behind Sydney on the ladder, advanced after defeating Geelong by 36 points in their qualifying final, after which followed a hard fought three-point victory over Port Adelaide in the second preliminary final.
The two teams met twice during the home-and-away season, with Sydney winning by 19 points at ANZ Stadium in Round 8 and Hawthorn winning by 10 points at the MCG in Round 18.
It was the second time that Sydney and Hawthorn had met in a grand final, having faced each other two years earlier in the 2012 AFL Grand Final when Sydney won by 10 points. The match was Hawthorn's third grand final appearance in a row, having also appeared in the 2013 AFL Grand Final when it defeated Fremantle by 15 points.
Media coverage
The match was televised by the Seven Network. The coverage commentators included Brian Taylor, Matthew Richardson, Cameron Ling, Tom Harley, Luke Darcy and Leigh Matthews.[2]
The match commentary was conducted by Bruce McAvaney and Dennis Cometti for the Seven Network, marking the duo's sixth grand final appearance together as commentators since 2008 and their tenth overall. Individually, it was Cometti's sixteenth grand final[3][4] and McAvaney's fourteenth.
A total of 2,813,000 people watched the Grand Final on television, making the Grand Final the most viewed television broadcast of the day.[5]
Pre-match entertainment
Welsh singer Sir Tom Jones and English singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran both performed as pre-match entertainment at the 2014 AFL Grand Final. The two were the first international acts to perform at a grand final since American singer Meat Loaf's performance at the 2011 AFL Grand Final[6] Both Sheeran and Jones were the first acts to be offered the sets by the AFL, with both acts accepting without hesitation. Jones said about the offer to perform at the game, "I understand there will be over 100,000 people in the stadium for the grand final which makes this spectacular sporting event something I'm really looking forward to. I also know that Australian football has really passionate fans so it'll be great to be a part of the atmosphere and excitement on the day." Sheeran said that the decision to play was not a hard decision to make, saying that "Having spent some time in Australia recently I know just how popular the game is and how big an event this will be."[7]
Sheeran performed "Sing" and "The A Team" and was then joined by Jones to sing "Kiss", followed by "Mama Told Me Not to Come", "Delilah" and "If I Only Knew".[8] Mike Brady performed "Up There Cazaly", a grand final tradition. Olivia Newton-John performed the Australian National Anthem, Advance Australia Fair.[9]
A post-match entertainment show featuring Sheeran and Jones was also held. There was no half-time musical entertainment.[10] The traditional Grand Final sprint held at half-time was won by Jordan Murdoch of Geelong, breaking Patrick Dangerfield's streak of three consecutive victories from 2011 to 2013.
Match summary
First quarter
The first quarter began with the teams going goal for goal in the initial 15 mins. Josh Kennedy drew first blood with a long bomb, before Paul Puopolo answered with his own long-range shot. Buddy Franklin then got onto the scoreboard but Luke Breust replied to make it 2 goals apiece. But from that moment onwards, it was all Hawthorn as Brad Hill, Jack Gunston and Will Langford piled on 3 goals to finish the quarter. Hawthorn by 20.
Second quarter
In the second quarter, Ben McGlynn goaled within the first minute in a bid to give Sydney some spark. However, it proved to be the start of a Hawthorn onslaught, in which the brown and gold piled on 5 unanswered goals and surged to a match-winning 47-pt lead. Breust and Hale added goals before Langford stormed through the centre and unleashed a bomb from 50. Luke Hodge, who literally smothered Port Adelaide out of the Preliminary Finals a week earlier, then added another two, including a simple intercept from a disastrous Gary Rohan kick-in. Adam Goodes and Franklin temporarily stemmed the tide with two successive Sydney goals, but when the dynamic Cyril Rioli intercepted another errant Sydney passage of play to gift Jarryd Roughead a goal, the Hawks led by a massive 42 points.
Third quarter
After the main break, Hawthorn continued where it left off, as Roughead and Gunston added more misery to the Swans. Kieren Jack and Franklin tried hard to put some respectability on the scoreboard with two goals but the Hawks surged again. Matt Suckling put last’s season disappointment behind him with a goal; Roughead then added his third, before Langford dribbled one through miraculously from the boundary. Kurt Tippett pegged one back for the Swans but it was too little too late. Hawks by 54, with Hodge sealing the kiss of death, literally, on ex-teammate Franklin.
Final quarter
When Hawthorn kicked away with the first two goals of the quarter, the only question is how much will they win by. Goodes snapped his second and Franklin added a fourth but these only made a dint into the margin. Shaun Burgoyne put the icing on the cake with a daring 50m goal but Jack cancelled that out with a brilliant snap. However, the finish belonged to Hawthorn once more as Roughead marked strongly for his fifth before Shaun Burgoyne extended the margin by over 10 goals again. In the end, Hawthorn by 63 points in a canter.
Overall report
Hawthorn dominated the match from start to finish, applying pressure on the Swans that at times was brutal. Jarryd Roughead was the top scorer for Hawthorn kicking 5.1 and Lance Franklin was the top goal kicker for Sydney, kicking 4.2.
Norm Smith Medal
Luke Hodge was named the Norm Smith medalist (best on ground) with 10 votes, for his 35 possessions and 2 goals. He edged fellow midfielders Jordan Lewis (37 possessions) and Sam Mitchell (33 possessions), both with 9 votes, for his second Norm Smith Medal, having also won it in 2008.[11]
Teams
Sydney did not change its team from the previous week's preliminary final, while Hawthorn omitted Jonathon Ceglar and Jonathan Simpkin in favour of Cyril Rioli and Ben McEvoy. Rioli was returning to the team after missing almost three months with a hamstring injury; he had appeared for Box Hill for limited playing time in the previous week's VFL Grand Final, which was his only match practice leading to his selection.[12]
|
|
- Umpires
The umpiring panel, comprising three field umpires, four boundary umpires, two goal umpires and an emergency in each position is given below. Most notable among the umpiring appointments was goal umpire Chris Appleton's selection for his first grand final, who had repaired his career after serving a suspension in 2010 for breaking the AFL's anti-gambling rules by placing bets on an AFL game in which he was not umpiring.[13]
Position | Umpire 1 | Umpire 2 | Umpire 3 | Umpire 4 | Emergency | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Field: | 21 Simon Meredith (3) | 15 Mathew Nicholls (2) | 9 Matt Stevic (2) | Troy Pannell | ||
Boundary: | Ian Burrows (5) | Nathan Doig (3) | Mark Thomson (5) | Matthew Tomkins (1) | Christopher Gordon | |
Goal: | Chris Appleton (1) | Luke Walker (6) | Chelsea Roffey |
Numbers in brackets represent the number of Grand Finals umpired, including 2014.[14]
Scorecard
Grand Final | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 27 September (2:30 pm) | Sydney | def. by | Hawthorn | MCG (Crowd: 99,460) | Report |
2.3 (15) 5.3 (33) 8.5 (53) 11.8 (74) |
Q1 Q2 Q3 Final |
5.5 (35) 11.9 (75) 16.11 (107) 21.11 (137) |
Umpires: Meredith, Nicholls, Sevic Norm Smith Medal: Luke Hodge Television broadcast: Seven Network National anthem: Olivia Newton-John | ||
Franklin: 4 Goodes, Jack: 2 Kennedy, Tippett, McGlynn: 1 |
Goals | 5: Roughead 3: Breust, Langford 2: Burgoyne, Gunston, Hodge 1: Hale, Hill, Puopolo, Suckling | |||
Franklin, Malceski, Kennedy, Shaw, Goodes | Best | Hodge, Lewis, Mitchell, Roughead, Hill, Lake, Langford, Burgoyne | |||
Jetta (concussion) | Injuries | ||||
|
See also
References
- ↑ In 1897 and 1924 there were no Grand Finals and instead the premier was decided by a finals play-off. In 1948, 1977 and 2010, there were Grand Final replays after initial draws.
- ↑ Yahoo7 Sport staff (18 September 2014). "AFL Grand Final week on Seven". Yahoo! 7. Yahoo! / Seven West Media. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
- ↑ Devlyn, Darren (10 September 2014). "Dennis Cometti is retiring at the end of his current Channel Seven contract". Herald Sun. News Corp Australia. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
- ↑ The Daily Mail staff (11 September 2014). "Dennis Cometti's days calling the AFL are numbered as the man with the soothing voice announces his retirement". Daily Mail Australia. DMG Media / ninemsn. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
- ↑ http://www.tvtonight.com.au/2014/09/saturday-27-september-2014.html
- ↑ The Music staff (1 September 2014). "Ed Sheeran, Tom Jones To Play AFL Grand Final". The Music. Street Press Australia. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
- ↑ Australian Associated Press (1 September 2014). "Tom Jones, Ed Sheeran and Olivia Newton-John to perform at AFL grand final". ABC News. Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
- ↑ Guthrie, Ben (25 September 2014). "Tom and Ed ready to rock". Australian Football League. Retrieved 27 September 2014.
- ↑ Nat Edwards, AFL (31 August 2014). Olivia's Grand Final anthem "http://www.afl.com.au/news/2014-08-31/olivias-grand-final-anthem" Retrieved 27 September 2014
- ↑ Rolfe, Peter (1 September 2014). "Tom Jones, Ed Sheeran and Olivia Newton John to perform at 2014 AFL Grand Final at MCG". Herald Sun. News Corp Australia. Retrieved 7 September 2014.
- ↑ AFL.com.au (27 September 2014). "Luke Hodge joins Hawthorn greats by winning second Norm Smith Medal". AFL. Australia. Retrieved 9 October 2014.
- ↑ Young Bulldogs over run Port Melbourne to make VFL grand final
- ↑ Daniel Cherny (23 September 2014). "AFL grand final: Goal umpire Chris Appleton goes from betting suspension to grand final". The Age. Melbourne, VIC. Retrieved 27 September 2014.
- ↑ "Umpires named for 2014 Toyota AFL Grand Final". Australian Football League. 23 September 2014. Retrieved 27 September 2014.