Match Report

Party Time at Coopers Stadium as Redlegs smash Roosters

The scenes following Jack Heard's first SANFL goal after 72 SANFL games. Photo: Maya Thompson NFC

Norwood withstood an early challenge from North Adelaide to kick 12 of the next 14 goals and secure a 55-point win at Coopers Stadium on Friday night.

Both sides had it all to play for in Round 18, with Norwood gunning for the minor premiership, and North’s spot in the finals on the line. But it was the ladder leaders who reigned supreme in a 18.10-118 to 9.9-63 victory.

Norwood players ran through the annual FORTIS Army guard of honour pre-game, and the Redlegs went to work after quarter time, turning a level ball game at the first break into a 62-point three quarter time lead following a rampant second and third quarter.

The Redlegs kicked 12 goals to two in the middle two quarters to keep its minor premiership hopes in tact.

Norwood had +107 disposal,+39 marks, +11 contested marks, +35 hitouts, +11 clearances and +15 inside 50m entries, as the home side had the top seven leading disposal winners on the ground.

Harry Boyd had 25 disposals, 44 hitouts, 12 clearances and five marks in another monster game which equated to 137 ranking points, while Jackson Callow kicked four goals.

Mitch O’Neill was a welcome inclusion from an ankle injury that’s sidelined him since Round 7, and returned with 24 disposals, two goals and four clearances. Baynen Lowe had 23 disposals, Pierce Seymour 21 and Jack Heard 20.

Vice Captain Heard provided the highlight of the night as the centre half back kicked his first goal in 72 SANFL games.

It was a hot start to a game that meant so much to both sides and much of the first quarter went goal for goal in a free-flowing, quick game of footy.

Callow took a strong contested mark in the goalsquare for the first goal of the evening 90 seconds into the match. Declan Hamilton missed one he should have kicked at the five minute mark, but Norwood was once again off to a strong start.

From a free kick in the back pocket, Norwood went end to end with an outstanding running passage of play, to finish with another mark to Callow in the goalsquare.

It was a fast-paced first quarter, and the Roosters found some free space. They kicked the next two goals through Ewan Mackinlay and Frank Szekely to level the scores at 2.1-13 apiece 18 minutes into the contest.

Like Hamilton, Dyson Hilder missed a straight forward set shot and the Redlegs made the Roosters pay. Again going end to end from the kick out, with Jacob Kennerley finding Sam Morris 40m out. Morris nailed Norwood’s third goal to reclaim the lead.

It was an entertaining first term which was going goal for goal, with North’s Mackinlay nailing his second and Norwood’s O’Neill snapping truly in his return game from injury.

Ken Farmer Medal leader Mitch Harvey kicked a goal after the quarter time siren to level the scores at the first break, 4.2-26 apiece.

O’Neill hadn’t missed a trick with eight disposals in the first quarter, while Billy Cootee and Seymour had seven disposals each.

The goal for goal nature continued into the second term as Tristan Binder took a strong contested mark and went back to nail the goal, taking Norwood five points in front.

After six consecutive going back to back, Norwood managed two in a row when Binder pounced on an errant North kick coming out of defence, finding Callow in the pocket who turned and hit Izaak Twelftree in the goalsquare.

The Redlegs quickly turned two goals into five straight goals in a powerful display, booting 5.0 within a 12-minute window.

Twlftree kicked two, Callow found his third, while Cootee just snuck his goal through the big sticks to help the Redlegs out to a 31-point lead.

The Roosters responded, stringing together several inside 50m entries, but it equated in three consecutive behinds. Their first goal of the term came after the siren once again, through Blayne O’Loughlin who capitalised on a Redlegs turnover in defensive 50m.

At half time Norwood led 9.4-58 to 5.6-36, a 22-point advantage following a five-goal-to-one quarter.

O’Neill had 12 disposals and a goal, Seymour 12 disposals and four marks, and Cootee 10 disposals and a goal.

Boyd was dominating the ruck once again with Norwood registering 31-7 hitouts, but North was leading clearances +4.

Norwood led inside 50m entries +5, marks +22 and disposal +42. North was +17 in tackles.

Callow kicked his fourth goal early in the third term, which was reward for effort following several weeks of being double and triple teamed in the forward 50m.

Twelftree’s third goal helped Norwood to a 35-point lead, and almost broke the back of North.

Norwood survived a couple of challenges down the other end, but eventually broke through again, carving through the middle of Norwood Oval to finish in Morris’ second major.

A 41-point deficit was a mountain too high to climb for the visiting Roosters.

The Redlegs ball movement was too slick, and this time it was along the Eastern Wing and into the hands of the waiting Henry Nelligan, who went back and put Norwood 47 points up at the 15-minute mark of the third term.

Even Norwood’s defenders were getting in on the action, as Vice Captain Jack Heard somehow kicked it over everyone’s head and dribbled an obliging Sherrin through the big sticks from 50m.

It was the defender’s first goal in 72 League matches… something every Norwood player was aware of as they mobbed the centre half back in celebration.

Heard’s goal was one of seven Norwood goals to North’s one in an outstanding showing in the third term as Lowe and Mitch Carroll kicked late majors to swell the margin to 61 points at the final break.

The Redlegs brought up triple figures in the third term, and led 16.8-104 to 6.7-43, kicking 12 of the last 14 goals of the game to blow North apart.

The Roosters kicked the first goal of the final term, but it was Norwood’s day as Matthew Ling took a hanger in the centre of the ground, and Binder nailed his second goal a minute later to surge the margin back past 10 goals.

O’Neill kicked his second to put a full stop on a great return game from the tough midfielder, and more importantly Norwood’s 14th win of the 2024 season.

The Redlegs travel to Woodville to take on the Eagles in next Saturday’s final match of the home and away season.

 

Norwood 4.2, 9.4, 16.8, 18.10 – 118

North Adelaide 4.2, 5.6, 6.7, 9.9 – 63

Goals: Callow 4, Twelftree 3, Binder 2, S. Morris 2, O’Neill 2, M. Carroll, Cootee, J. Heard, Lowe, Nelligan

Best: O’Neill, Callow, Wright, Boyd, Twelftree

Norwood’s League side enters Coopers Stadium through the FORTIS Army guard of honour.

Norwood secured the Reserves League Minor Premiership on Friday night with a comprehensive 74-point win over North Adelaide at Coopers Stadium.

The Redlegs locked in the double chance a couple of weeks ago, and got full reward for effort by assuring its top spot and the first week of finals Bye with a clinical 15.15-105 to 4.7-31 win over the seventh placed Roosters.

Norwood has now won its last three matches, and travels to Woodville to take on the Eagles in the final round of the home and away season this Saturday.

Both the Redlegs and Eagles have locked in a finals berth, with Woodville-West Torrens guaranteed to take on South Adelaide in an Elimination Final regardless of Saturday’s result.

On Friday, rain threatened all day but stayed away for the majority of the game which allowed Norwood to run all over the Roosters in a dominant 10 goal to one second half.

Alex van Wyk was once again sensational in the ruck with a second consecutive best on ground performance.

The 20-year-old had 24 disposals, 26 hitouts, nine clearances and kicked a goal.

Luke Bogle put together his best performance of the year, gathering 42 disposals. eight tackles and five clearances.

Ruckman Marco D’Annunzio kicked his first goal for the club, and finished the game with three majors and 15 hitouts. Goy Lok also finished with three goals and eight marks.

The Roosters kicked the first goal of the game through Harrison Elbrow, before the Redlegs kicked back to back goals through Tyson Walls and D’Annunzio.

North kicked the last goal of the quarter through Will Francou to take a 2.5-17 to 2.2-14 lead at the first break.

Josh Gillow and Isaac Saywell each had seven disposals to quarter time.

Norwood took the ascendancy during the second quarter, trapping the ball in its forward half and finding the first two goals of the term.

Oliver Sanders kicked the first, and D’Annunzio converted another set shot to help the Redlegs to a 13-point lead.

North ruckman Apech Deng kicked the next goal from long range, before Connor Kent found the quick reply, again converting a set shot.

Xavier Tranfa’s forward pressure was outstanding and laid a strong tackle at half forward to send the Redlegs back inside 50m, and Harvey Pedler took a good intercept mark in the same spot, but North’s defence was standing tall.

At half time it was a low scoring affair as the Redlegs led 5.6-36 to 3.5-23.

It was only 13 points at half time, but from there Norwood kicked 10 goals to one in a dominant second half.

Six goals came in the third term as the dam wall broke at the 12-minute mark of the third term.

The Roosters had done well to keep the Redlegs goalless until Liam Robinson nailed a set shot to get Norwood going.

Lok kicked his first goal two minutes later to get Norwood out to a 25-point lead, and in the blink of an eye Norwood booted four more goals in six minutes to go into three quarter time with an unassailable 49-point lead.

Will Tasker kicked North’s only goal of the second half six minutes into the last quarter, before Norwood finished with four more through van Wyk, Max Hodges, Lok and Kent to turn a 13-point half time lead into a 74-point win.

Norwood is two wins clear on top of the Reserves Ladder, with Glenelg, Sturt, South Adelaide and the Eagles rounding out a settled top five.

 

Norwood 2.2, 5.6, 11.8, 15.15 – 105

North Adelaide 2.5, 3.5, 3.7, 4.7 – 31

Goals: D’Annunzio 3, Lok 3, Kent 2, Hodges, Robinson, Sanders, Saywell, Tranfa, van Wyk, Walls

Best: van Wyk, Lok, Bogle, Saywell, Gillow

Luke Bogle had 42 disposals for Norwood’s Reserves on Friday night.