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2022 Toyota AFL Premiership
GWS GIANTS v Sydney Swans
Round 1 •
92 13.14
Full Time
112 17.10
Swans Won By 20
Accor Stadium,  Sydney 

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    Sydney Swans Round 1 history

    As we prepare to face the GWS Giants in our season opener, we take a look back at our Round 1 history looking at past games, highlights, stand our performances and much more

    Round 1 history in Sydney

    Round 1 matches count for four premiership points. Just like all the others. And by September the 2022 season-opener against GWS at Accor Stadium on Saturday afternoon will be just one of 22 home-and-away games. A win or loss. Or even a draw.

    But Round 1 is different. It is special. Undoubtedly so. Every player desperately wants to play Round 1 to get into the new campaign after a summer of hard physical work, skill improvement, game plan analysis and strategy.

    Hopes are high at every club as everyone starts with a clean slate. The spotlight turns to new faces and up-and-comers looking to elevate their performance. And the old-timers, who have been through it all before, step up into top gear.

    It’s not different in the event of a Round 1 bye - the same mentality flips to Round 2 as it did for the Swans in 1991, ’92 and ‘93.

    Forty years into life in the Harbour City, the Swans will take a 20-1-19 Round 1 win/loss record into Saturday’s Sydney Derby, including a 7-3 run over the past decade.

    It will be the fourth time Sydney and GWS have met in Round 1. They did so in 2012, ‘13 and ‘14, the Giants’ first three years in the competition. The Swans won by 63 points at the Olympic Stadium in 2012 and by 30 points at the Olympic Stadium in 2013, before the Giants won by 32 points at Sydney Showgrounds in 2014.

    01:21

    The 40-year history of the Swans’ Round 1 games as the AFL flagship in Sydney began on Sunday afternoon 28 March 1982, when, coached for the first time by Rick Quade, they hosted a Melbourne side under Ron Barassi.

    The home side won 20.17 (137) to 16.12 (108). John Roberts kicked four goals and Bernie Evans three, while Mark Browning had a career-best 35 possessions. Barry Round (23), Colin Hounsell (21), Paul Morwood (21) and Max Kruse (20) were next best.

    A 32-year-old Round was the veteran of the side in his 259th game, with Browning (123) and Rod Carter (117) the only other Swans beyond 100 games. Max James was the only other 30-year-old while 19-year-olds David Rhys Jones, Anthony Daniher, Brett Scott and 18-year-old Silvio Foschini were the ‘babes’ of the side.

    The Swans team in notional positions was:

    B: David Ackerly, Rod Carter, Max James
    HB: Paul Morwood, Max Kruse, Dennis Carroll
    C: David Rhys-Jones, Mark Browning, Colin Hounsell
    HF: Silvio Foschini, Barry Round, ,Tony Morwood
    F: Bernie Evans, John Roberts, Wayne Carroll
    R: Stephen Allender, Greg Smith, Stevie Wright
    INT: Brett Scott, Anthony Daniher

    Of this history-making group, Dennis Carroll, Carter and Wright went on to play nine Round 1 games  while based at the SCG, with Tony Morwood playing eight and Browning six.

    Over four decades only 15 Swans have played more Round 1 games than Carroll, Carter and Wright.

    Adam Goodes, the club games record-holder, also holds the record for most Round 1 games for a Sydney-based player at 16. He played 15 straight from his debut in 1999 and after missing the season-opener in 2014 added one more in 2015.

    Josh Kennedy appears set to play his 13th consecutive Round 1 game on Saturday to join Jarrad McVeigh and Jude Bolton equal second behind Goodes, ahead of Heath Grundy (12), Mark Bayes, Leo Barry, Ryan O’Keefe (11).

    Luke Parker will play his 11th Round 1 game on Saturday, going ahead of Daryn Creswell (10), Kieren Jack (10), Paul Kelly (10), Brett Kirk (10), Michael O’Loughlin (10) and Ted Richards (10). Dane Rampe and Harry Cunningham are set to play their 10th Round 1 game on Saturday.

    01:22

    Round 1 highlights

    As the build-up to the 2022 season intensifies hard-core Sydney Swans fans will recall fondly individual and team highlights in Round 1 of seasons past.

    All the way back in 1985 the Sydney Swans posted their biggest Round 1 win when they beat St Kilda 26.20 (176) to 8.18 (66) at Moorabbin. Bernie Evans kicked a career-best nine goals in his 130th game to be judged best afield in John Northey’s first game as coach, while John Ironmonger (12 possessions, 16 hit-outs) and Darren McAsey (10 possessions) were also in the Brownlow Medal votes. A 19-year-old Tony Lockett kicked two goals in his 33rd game for the Saints.

    In 1986 the great Tommy Hafey took charge of the Swans and began a three-year stint to close out a magnificent 522-game coaching career. Sharing his first outing with his fourth club with imports Greg Williams, Gerard Healy, Jim Edmond, Merv Neagle, Bernard Toohey and David Bolton, Hafey celebrated with a 25-point win over North Melbourne at the MCG thanks largely to a then career-best eight goals from a 22-year-old Warwick Capper in his 31st game.

    In 1987 they had another big and unforgettable Round 1 win on Collingwood turf at Victoria Park. Sydney prevailed 25.15 (165) to 11.8 (75) thanks again to nine goals from Warwick Capper and 30-plus possessions from Healy, Williams and Neagle. Capper, Williams and Healy took the votes.

    In 1990 Greg Williams masterminded the biggest second-half turnaround for a win in Swans history against Carlton at Princes Park. Down by 45 points at the long break and still 24 points behind at three-quarter time, they kicked the last five goals via Shane Fell, Barry Mitchell, and Mark Bayes, to win 15.14 (104) to 14.15 (99). Mitchell sealed it with a left-foot snap from 25m with 34 seconds on the clock to finish with 31 possessions and three goals. Fell bagged five goals in a debut he shared with Paul Kelly, wearing jumper #45. Williams was the first player in the Sydney era to have 40+ possessions in a Round 1 game for the Swans. In his 82nd game in red and white he collected 42 possessions and two goals for three Brownlow Medal votes in a five-point win over Carlton at Princes Park.

    Gary Buckenara coached the Swans for the first time in the first game of 1992, when Sydney, who finished 12th in 1991, won a thriller against 1991 grand finalists West Coast at the SCG in a pointer to the extraordinary rivalry that would follow in the 2000s. Down by 10 points inside the closing minutes in what was Round 2, they dragged themselves off the deck with goals by Warren McKenzie and David Strooper to win 14.14 (98) to 14.11 (95).

    Tony Lockett and Paul Roos played their first game for the Swans in Round 1, 1995, when they were beaten by 17 points by Footscray, as they were known at the time, despite six goals from Lockett.

    06:28

    In Round 1, 2000 Michael O’Loughlin had a day out against St Kilda at Docklands, picking up three Brownlow votes for a career-best 31 possessions and five goals – one short of his best – in his 102nd game. It was the same game in which full forward turned media star Ryan Fitzgerald kicked five goals on debut for the Swans.

    Still on a high after holding aloft the AFL Premiership Cup in 2005, Barry Hall opened the 2006 season with seven goals against Essendon at Docklands. It was his Swans-best and one short of his career best.

    Sydney’s only Round 1 draw of the past 40 years came in 2011 in John Longmire’s first game as coach. It was against Melbourne at the MCG, when Sydney led at every change but had to a rely on a Ryan O’Keefe behind in the last minute for a share of the points. O’Keefe, with 31 possessions, picked up three votes.

    In 2016, Luke Parker posted only the second 40-possession Round 1 game as the Swans belted Collingwood by 80 points at the SCG. In his 102nd game Parker posted an even 40 touches and a goal for three votes in the AFL debut of Callum Mills, Tom Papley and George Hewett.

    In 2018, Lance Franklin opened his 14th AFL season and his fifth in red and white with eight goals against West Coast in the first AFL game at the new Perth Stadium. It is the best Round 1 haul of Franklin’s career and is still the most goals kicked in a game at what was the host ground for the 2021 AFL Grand Final.

    00:00

    In the Brownlow

    Greg Williams has polled most Brownlow votes for the Swans in Round 1 games during the Sydney era, going 3-2-0-2-3 from 1986-90 for a total of 10. Second on the list with nine votes is Paul Williams, who opened his third, fourth and fifth season with the club in 2003, ’04 and ‘05 with a best afield hat-trick. Josh Kennedy, Luke Parker and Lance Franklin, each with seven Round 1 votes, are next on the list. Kieren Jack polled three times in Round 1 for five votes, Greg Stafford earned four votes via two, two-vote games.  

    Errol Gulden is the only Sydney Swans player to have polled in his Round 1 AFL debut, picking up two votes for 19 possessions and three goals against Brisbane at the Gabba last year, while Tom Hickey polled one vote in his Swans debut, having had 23 possessions, nine clearances and 24 hit-outs in the same game.   

    Among other current players, Callum Mills topped the voting in the 2021 season-opener against Brisbane, Isaac Heeney was best afield in the Round 1, 2020 win over Adelaide at Adelaide Oval, and Jake Lloyd earned one vote in Round 1, 2018.

    06:48

    30+ possessions

    Greg Williams has had most 30-possession Round 1 games for the club in this era with four, including his 40-possession haul in 1990, while Barry Mitchell had three. Luke Parker, Kieren Jack and Ryan O’Keefe, with two each, are the only other multiples.

    Others with one 30+ game in Round 1 have been Josh Kennedy, Paul Kelly, Michael O’Loughlin, Wayne Schwass, Jake Lloyd, Gerard Healy, Tom Mitchell and Mark Browning.

    Head-to-head Round 1 records

    The Swans have never played Fremantle, Geelong, Gold Coast or the now defunct Fitzroy in a Round 1 game during the Sydney era. They are 0-3 against the Western Bulldogs – the only side they are yet to beat in Round 1 – and are unbeaten against Carlton (2-0), Collingwood (2-0), Melbourne (1-1-0), North Melbourne (1-0) and Richmond (1-0). They have a positive record against Adelaide (2-1), Essendon (2-1) and GWS (2-1), are square against West Coast (2-2) and in the red against Brisbane (1-3), Hawthorn (1-3), Port (1-2) and St Kilda (2-3).

    Ground-by-ground

    The Swans have split the 40 Round 1 games of the Sydney era over 13 different venues – three in Sydney, seven in Melbourne, two each in Perth and Adelaide, and one in Brisbane.

    Without the burden of interstate travel, they are 7-4 in 11 games at the SCG, 4-2 at the Olympic Stadium and 0-1 at the Sydney Showgrounds.

    They are a combined 5-1-8 in 14 games in Melbourne – 1-1-0 at the MCG and 1-4 at Docklands, and 3-4 at venues no longer used in the AFL: Princes Park (1-2), Waverley (0-1), Victoria Park (1-0), Whitten Oval (0-1) and Moorabbin (1-0).

    They are 1-1 in Perth, having lost their only Round 1 game at Subiaco before winning at Perth Stadium, and 2-1 in Adelaide after a 1-1 split at the old Football Park before a 1-0 record at Adelaide Oval. They’ve gone 1-2 at the Gabba in Brisbane.

    04:00



    Round 1 Swans AFL debutants – 1982-2001

    1984: Paul Hawke, Arthur Chilcott
    1985: Darren McAsey, Mark Russell, Jamie Duursma
    1987: Wayne Henwood
    1988: John Brinkhotter
    1990: Paul Kelly, Brad Tunbridge, Shane Fell, Jim West
    1992: Andrew McGovern
    1993: Nathan Irvin
    1994: Brad Seymour, Damien Lang
    1995: Shannon Grant
    1997: Paul Licuria
    1998: Jason Saddington
    1999: Adam Goodes
    2000: Ryan Fitzgerald
    2002: Scott Stevens, Ricky Mott
    2004: Jarrad McVeigh, Paul Bevan
    2008: Craig Bird
    2010: Lewis Jetta
    2011: Bryon Sumner
    2013: Dane Rampe
    2015: Isaac Heeney
    2016: Tom Papley, Callum Mills, George Hewett
    2017: Ollie Florent
    2021: Braeden Campbell, Errol Gulden, Logan McDonald
    2022: Angus Sheldrick

    Round 1 Swans debutants – 1982-2021
    1983: Daryl Vernon
    1984: Bill Picken, Craig Holden
    1985: Andrew Smith
    1986: Greg Williams, Gerard Healy, Bernard Toohey, Jim Edmond, David Bolton, Merv Neagle
    1988: Craig Davis
    1991: Warren McKenzie, Mark Athorn
    1992: David Strooper, Darren Kappler, Simon Minton-Connell
    1993: Michael Werner, Paul Bryce, Tony Malakellis, Richard Osborne, Scott Watters, John Hutton, Jayson Daniels, Dean McRae, Ed Considine
    1994: Peter Caven, Peter Filandia, Matthew AhMat
    1995: Tony Lockett, Paul Roos
    1996: Craig O’Brien, Stuart Maxfield, Kevin Dyson
    1997: Ben Wilson, Mark Orchard, Shannon Corcoran
    1998: Robbie AhMat
    1999: Andrew Bomford, Ryan O’Connor, Scott Russell
    2000: Jason Ball, Andrew Schauble, Brett Allison
    2001: Paul Williams
    2002: Barry Hall
    2003: Craig Bolton, Nick Davis
    2005: Darren Jolly
    2006: Ted Richards, Paul Chambers
    2007: Peter Everitt
    2008: Martin Mattner
    2009: Rhyce Shaw
    2010: Josh Kennedy, Ben McGlynn, Daniel Bradshaw, Shane Mumford, Mark Seaby
    2011: Andrejs Everitt
    2014: Lance Franklin, Jeremy Laidler
    2016: Callum Sinclair, Michael Talia
    2019: Ryan Clarke
    2020: Kaiden Brand, Lewis Taylor, Sam Gray
    2021: Tom Hickey
    2022: Paddy McCartin

     

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    Swans start season with Derby victory

    The Sydney Swans have started the 2022 season in style with a 20-point victory over cross-town rivals, GWS Giants at Accor Stadium on Saturday evening.

    The Sydney Swans have started the 2022 season in style with a 20-point victory over cross-town rivals, GWS Giants at Accor Stadium on Saturday evening.

    Co-Captain Luke Parker led the way with a superb best-on-ground performance which saw him claim his fourth Brett Kirk medal. 

    With 'Buddy' mania at fever pitch ahead of Saturday night's season-opener against Greater Western Sydney as the champion forward entered the game five goals short of his 1000th, few would have predicted a five-goal performance from any other Swan.

    But Luke Parker went on a goalkicking blitz in the second half of the Accor Stadium derby to spearhead his side to a 20-point comeback win.

    If the Swans generally shake down the thunder from the sky, then Parker simply stole it off Franklin, who was well held by Giants defender Phil Davis and kicked one goal in a quiet night to edge within four majors of the magical milestone. Attention now turns to next Friday night's clash with Geelong at the SCG.

    Parker picked up where he left off after his best and fairest 2021 season, with his goals coming in the second half as the Swans stared down some battles in attack. At one stage, he had kicked five of the Swans' most recent goals before they ran away with the 17.10 (112) to 13.14 (92) victory.  He claimed his fourth Brett Kirk Medal as the best player in the derby.

    07:46

    In an entertaining, high-scoring clash, the New South Wales rivalry produced another exciting contest stacked of highlights and brilliance. The first-half goal fest saw the Swans and Giants one-up each other with end-to-end run, but Sydney had the stamina to keep it up by kicking eight goals to three after half-time.

    Isaac Heeney kicked three goals as did Ollie Florent, who was superb throughout including two terrific goals – one straight out of the centre bounce and another after spinning out of a tackle and breaking clear.

    Sydney kicked three of the first four goals of the game, but the Giants' response was swift. As Tom Green (31 disposals, two goals) controlled the midfield with his bullocking and contested strength, Harrison Himmelberg and Daniel Lloyd feasted in attack, both booting two goals for the term.

    Franklin didn't register a disposal in the opening quarter – his tackle on Xavier O'Halloran near the goal square was close to being awarded holding the ball – but it was the Giants' new-look forward set up that was having the bigger say to set up a 15-point lead at the first break.

    The superstar Swan got involved in the second term, kicking his first goal for the day and setting up another, as his side kicked six goals for the quarter. Sydney started to run the ball well out of defence and got into its groove, but the Giants' efficiency when they went forward – they kicked five goals from 10 inside-50 entries – kept them at a nine-point advantage at half-time.

    The clubs continued to trade goals – and good ones, too. Stephen Coniglio's quick feet saw him break open and slot an on-the-run special, while new teammate Jarrod Brander's off-the-ground soccer from long range hit the sweet spot.

    But the Swans were making their own highlight reel, with Braeden Campbell's left-foot bomb and Parker's snap matching their efforts.

    Parker's third for the term – and fourth for the game – saw the Swans take a six-point lead into the final quarter with momentum on their side. They didn't lose it from there.

    Buddy watch to go on for at least another week

    All eyes were on Franklin's every move from the first bounce. But it was a quiet start for the champion forward who didn't get a touch in the first term. He came into the game more in the second quarter with three disposals, including his first goal of the game and he had another shot at goal that didn't make the distance. In the third quarter he collected three more disposals, including a mark just outside his kicking range, leading him to pop up a pass closer to the Swans' goal line. His last-quarter shot also faded and he finished with eight disposals. Davis has a strong record against Franklin and added to that in their most anticipated match-up, with his focus and concentration at a high level in an excellent defensive performance.

    Paddy's back

    Somewhat overshadowed by Franklin's potential milestone this week was the news of Paddy McCartin's return to the top level for his first AFL game in four years. Presented his jumper before the game by his youngest brother Tom, the McCartin pair lined up alongside each other in defence and were important for the Swans. Paddy took a strong intercept mark in the first quarter to get settled in and was collected in a marking contest in the second term but shrugged off the impact. After a terrible run of concussion issues that ultimately ended his career at St Kilda, McCartin is already one of the best stories of 2022. However, judging by round one we might be talking about his football more than his back story soon.

    Giants missing Toby

    When the Swans needed a hero, Parker stepped up. When the Giants really needed that player in the second half, they might have thought about not having Toby Greene out there as he remains suspended for umpire contact in last year’s elimination final. Greene is fit, training hard and will be ready to go in round six, but the Giants will certainly be even more threatening when their talisman and Jesse Hogan, who missed after suffering some soreness in recent weeks, are back.

    08:08

    GREATER WESTERN SYDNEY            5.3       10.7       12.10       13.14 (92)
    SYDNEY                                          3.0       9.4       13.9     17.10 (112)

    GOALS  
    Greater Western Sydney: Himmelberg 3, Green 2, Hill 2, Lloyd 2, Brander, Coniglio, Taranto, Ward
    Sydney: Parker 5, Florent 3, Heeney 3, McLean 2, Campbell, Franklin, Gulden, Hayward

    BEST  
    Greater Western Sydney: Green, Davis, Taranto, Ward, Coniglio
    Sydney: Parker, Florent, Heeney, Mills, Blakey

    INJURIES  
    Greater Western Sydney: Nil
    Sydney: McInerney (leg)

    SUBSTITUTES  
    Greater Western Sydney: Tanner Bruhn (unused)
    Sydney: Colin O'Riordan (unused)

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