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2023 Toyota AFL Premiership
North Melbourne v Sydney Swans
Round 10 •
90 14.6
Full Time
93 14.9
Swans Won By 3
Marvel Stadium,  Melbourne  • Wurundjeri

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    By the numbers: Sydney v North Melbourne

    As we prepare to face North Melbourne in Round 10, Peter Blucher looks at some of the key details in the rivalry

    Ryan Clarke will stand alone as a solo beacon of interclub rivalry as the Swans chase a much-needed win over North Melbourne at Marvel Stadium on Saturday.

    After the much-celebrated transfers of Wayne Schwass and Shannon Grant in the 1990s, among others, Clarke is the only player to have played for both clubs this century.

    So, in modern times at least it is a rivalry built largely on the simple premise of one club against another.  As simple as black and white, except it’s blue and red. Or more specifically, North v South.

    And as the Swans look to end a four-game losing streak they can draw confidence from an overwhelmingly positive recent head-to-head against the former club of coach John Longmire.

    In 35 meetings since the turn of the century Sydney have enjoyed a 26-8 advantage, with one draw. And in 10 meetings at Marvel Stadium, it’s 8-1 to Sydney, with one draw.

    Not since Round 7, 2018, when a late goal from North’s Mason Wood gave them a two-point win at the SCG, have the Swans fallen to the Roos. By chance, the immediate score before the Wood winner was a behind to Clarke, who had 22 possessions to rank among his side’s best.

    Brownlow Medal votes in games between the clubs in this period favor Sydney 129-63. The Swans have polled twice as often and twice as many three-vote ratings.

    In key statistics, it’s similarly lopsided. In 30-possession games between the clubs Sydney have had 28 and North 18. In hauls of four goals or more, Sydney have had 20 and North 10.

    If it was as simple as numbers it would have been payback for the Swans loss to North in the 1996 grand final, but the reality for Swans fans is that nothing will wipe the memories of a game which Longmire, then in his prime as a player at North, missed through injury before winning a flag in 1999.

    Clarke, 45 games into his Swans career after 40 games with the Kangaroos, is 2-0 in games against his former club, having enjoyed a five-point win in Hobart in his first game against the Roos in 2019 and a 38-point win at Marvel Stadium in 2022.

    The entire 2023 Swans playing list have a combined 144-18 record against North wearing red and white. Seventeen players have never lost to North, headed by Tom McCartin’s 6-0 record, and six others have lost only once – Lance Franklin is 8-1, Callum Mills, Tom Papley and Will Hayward are 7-1, Ollie Florent 6-1 and Robbie Fox 5-1. Luke Parker is 14-2, Jake Lloyd 10-2, Isaac Heeney 9-2, Dane Rampe 10-3 and Harry Cunningham 9-3.

    08:12

    Swans v Kangaroos rivalry – in more detail

    Ground by ground

    The Swans are 11-4 against the Kangaroos at the SCG since 2000 and 2-1 at the Olympic Stadium. They are 8-1-1 at Marvel Stadium and in neutral venues it’s 2-2 in Canberra and 3-0 to the Swans in Hobart. 

    Brownlow Medal

    Adam Goodes has been the individual standout in games between the clubs since 2000, polling seven times for 17 votes, with three best afield ratings. Luke Parker (13), Dan Hannebery (11), Josh Kennedy (10) have been next best for the Swans, while Brent Harvey (9), Jack Ziebel (9) and Shannon Grant (7) have polled best for the Roos.

    Major possession-winners

    Tom Mitchell, now at Collingwood, holds the record for most possessions in a game between the clubs since 2000, having had 41 in a 26-point win at the SCG in 2016. Josh Kennedy (4), Luke Parker (3) and Dan Hannebery (3) head the 30-possession games count, while Jy Simpkin (2), Ben Cunnington (2) and Jamie Macmillian (2) are the only North players to have topped 30 possessions more than once against Sydney.

    Major goal-kickers

    Barry Hall’s six goals against North in Canberra in 2006, when the Swans kicked the last three goals to win by seven points, is the most in a Sydney-North game this century. Hall, Lance Franklin, Nick Davis and Ben Ronke also had kicked bags of five, while Jack Ziebell, Sav Rocca and Digby Morrell did likewise for the Roos. Hall has kicked five bags of four or more goals for the Swans against the Roos, while Shannon Grant’s three four-goals against the club where he started his career is the equivalent best for North.

    Highest scores, biggest wins

    The Swans’ highest score against the Kangaroos this century is 23.13 (151) at the SCG all the way back in 2001, when Rodney Eade was coach. And the biggest Swans win came 15 weeks later, again at the SCG, when they prevailed by 107 points – 22.11 (143) to 3.18 (36). In both games they had 13 different goal-kickers, but nobody kicked more than three. The 107-point win is the Swans biggest in 167 games against the Roos all-time.

    The Ratten factor

    Saturday’s game will see ex-Carlton and St Kilda coach Brett Ratten, a part-time assistant at North this year, play the role of caretaker coach after Alastair Clarkson stood aside for personal reasons.

    John Longmire has a 5-4 coaching record against Ratten – 1-2 against Carlton from 2011-12 and 4-2 against St Kilda from 2019-22.

    Oddly, Ratten’s last game as an AFL coach was also against Longmire at Marvel in Round 23 last year, when the Swans won by 14 points to end the Saints’ faint finals hopes. It was one of the rare games when the losing side picked up all the Brownlow Medal votes, with ex-Swan Dan Hannebery taking three votes for 30 possessions in what turned out to be his last game.

    Kangaroos form guide

    The Swans will have a Kangaroos side going through similarly tough times, having gone 2-7 through the first nine rounds of the season to sit 16th on the ladder. They beat West Coast at Marvel and Fremantle in Perth in Rounds 1-2, but have lost seven in a row since then, going down to Port Adelaide by 70 points in Hobart last week.

    First-year player Harry Sheezel has been their leading possession-winner, averaging 27.9 possessions per game. With No.2 ball-winner Luke Davies-Uniacke sidelined by injury, ex-captain Jack Ziebell (25.56) is next best with co-captain Jy Simpkin (22.14).

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    Swans edge Roos in bizarre finish to thriller

    The Swans overcame the Kangaroos in a thriller at Marvel Stadium

    Sydney has produced a dramatic late comeback to get past a spirited North Melbourne by three points in a thriller on Saturday.

    A costly North Melbourne interchange infringement in the final minute has gifted Sydney three-point victory, as Swans tall Hayden McLean was awarded a free kick for the Kangaroos' error and converted from point-blank range to seal the 14.9 (93) to 14.6 (90) win at Marvel Stadium.

    The penalty came when Liam Shiels and Will Phillips left the ground and were replaced by Will Powell and Hugh Greenwood.

    The two interchanges took North Melbourne over the maximum 75 for the game.

    Sydney's triumph snapped a four-match losing streak, improving its record to 4-6, but came at a cost with ruckman Peter Ladhams added to a long injury list.

    Ladhams sustained a suspected serious ankle injury when he landed awkwardly at a centre bounce ruck contest.

    Play was held up for several minutes before Ladhams, who had just returned from an arm injury, was driven off the field moments before three-quarter time.

    The Swans led by 15 points at that stage but coughed up the next five goals and looked gone before goals to Isaac Heeney and McLean put them back in front with less than a minute left on the clock.

    04:24

    Swans co-captain Luke Parker was huge for his side with 27 disposals, six clearances and a goal despite twice being forced off under the blood rule.

    Chad Warner tallied 31 disposals, seven clearances and a goal, and Franklin finished with three majors in a welcome return to form as he got the better of Kangaroos defenders Griffin Logue and Ben McKay in a fitting Sir Doug Nicholls Round contribution.

    McLean and Ladhams finished with two each for Sydney.

    Franklin took his career goal tally to 1057, lifting him level with former Geelong and North Melbourne champion Doug Wade into equal fourth spot on the competition's all-time goalkicking list.

    Buddy shows glimpses
    With his form questioned ahead of the round 10 clash, Lance Franklin showed glimpses of some of his best against the Kangaroos. The superstar looked dangerous from the outset and finished with 3.1, on the back of 13 disposals, nine marks and five tackles. Franklin also took a game-high four contested marks.

    ALL THE HIGHLIGHTS

    NORTH MELBOURNE          3.3     5.3     10.4     14.6 (90)
    SYDNEY                                3.6     7.7     11.7     14.9 (93)

    GOALS 
    North Melbourne: Simpkin 2, Sheezel 2, Larkey 2, Coleman-Jones 2, Stephenson, Scott, Powell, Goldstein, Ford, Curtis
    Sydney:
    Franklin 3, McLean 2, Ladhams 2, Warner, Parker, McInerney, Heeney, Hayward, Gulden, Campbell 

    BEST 
    North Melbourne: Simpkin, Sheezel, Scott, Wardlaw, Greenwood
    Sydney:
    Parker, Warner, Gulden, Fox, Franklin

    INJURIES 
    North Melbourne: Nil
    Sydney:
    Ladhams (ankle)

    SUBSTITUTES 
    North Melbourne: Daniel Howe (replaced Blake Drury in third quarter)
    Sydney:
    Angus Sheldrick (replaced Peter Ladhams in third quarter)

    Crowd: 21,003 at Marvel Stadium

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