2013 AFL Grand Final

2013 AFL Grand Final

View of the Melbourne Cricket Ground moments after gates opened on for the 2013 AFL Grand Final.

Hawthorn

Fremantle
11.11 (77) 8.14 (62)
1 2 3 4
HAW 2.3 (15) 5.5 (35) 8.8 (56) 11.11 (77)
FRE 0.3 (3) 1.6 (12) 6.10 (46) 8.14 (62)
Date 28 September 2013 (2013-09-28), 2:30pm
Stadium Melbourne Cricket Ground
Attendance 100,007
Umpires Brett Rosebury, Simon Meredith, Matthew Nicholls
Coin toss won by Fremantle
Kicked toward City End
Ceremonies
Pre-match entertainment Birds of Tokyo
National anthem Tina Arena
Halftime show Hunters and Collectors
Post-match entertainment Hunters and Collectors, Birds of Tokyo
Accolades
Norm Smith Medallist Brian Lake
Jock McHale Medallist Alastair Clarkson
Broadcast in Australia
Network Seven Network
Commentators Bruce McAvaney and Dennis Cometti
 2012 AFL Grand Final 2014 

The 2013 AFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between Hawthorn Football Club and Fremantle Football Club at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 28 September 2013. It was the 117th annual Grand Final of the Australian Football League (formerly the Victorian Football League),[1] staged to determine the premiers for the 2013 AFL season. The match, attended by 100,007 spectators, was won by Hawthorn by a margin of 15 points, marking the club's eleventh VFL/AFL premiership victory. Hawthorn's Brian Lake was awarded the Norm Smith Medal as the best player on the ground.

Background

Main article: 2013 AFL season

Hawthorn entered the 2013 season having lost the 2012 Grand Final to Sydney, and for most of the season was seen as the favourites for the premiership.[2] After losing to Geelong in Round 1, Hawthorn compiled a 12-match winning streak, until this streak was ended with another loss to Geelong in Round 15. The club's only other loss came against Richmond in Round 19, and it finished with a record of 193 to win the minor premiership for the second consecutive year. They defeated Sydney in the qualifying final by 54 points and earned a week off. They ended an 11-match losing streak against Geelong (dating back to 2008) to win by five points in the preliminary final. The match was Hawthorn's third Grand Final appearance in six years.

Fremantle entered the 2013 season having come off a semi-final loss to Adelaide in the previous year's finals series. After winning their first two matches of the season by 28 points, the Dockers lost back-to-back matches against Essendon and Hawthorn to be 22 after Round 4 this was the only time they lost consecutive matches during the season. Fremantle recorded its largest ever victory when they defeated Greater Western Sydney in Round 20, then, with a finals berth guaranteed, Ross Lyon rested half of his regular side ahead of its final regular season match against St Kilda; the result was a 71-point defeat, which marked the worst defeat in Lyon's coaching career. The team finished third at the end of the home-and-away season, and compiled a club-best record of 16–5–1. They defeated Geelong by 15 points in the first week of the finals, earning a week off and a home preliminary final. Fremantle defeated the reigning premiers, Sydney, by 25 points in the preliminary final. The match was Fremantle's first Grand Final in its history.

The two teams met once during the regular season, in Round 4 at Aurora Stadium; Hawthorn won by 42 points.

Media Coverage

The match was televised by the Seven Network. The primary match commentary was provided by Bruce McAvaney and Dennis Cometti.

Pre-match entertainment

Two Australian bands, Birds of Tokyo and Hunters & Collectors performed before the game and at half time, respectively. The Australian national anthem was sung by Tina Arena.[3]

Match summary

First quarter

Fremantle won the coin toss and chose to kick towards the City End of the MCG in the first quarter. However, it was Hawthorn who got off to a good start, with Jack Gunston kicking the first goal before Lance Franklin kicked the Hawks' second after Luke McPharlin gave away a 50-metre penalty. Meanwhile, Fremantle were held goalless in the opening quarter with Nathan Fyfe missing two set shots at goal.

Second quarter

Hawthorn kicked another two goals before Tendai Mzungu kicked the Dockers' first goal midway through the second quarter. Another goal to the Hawks saw them enter half-time 23 points ahead; Fremantle's first half score of 1.6 (12) was the lowest in a Grand Final since 1960.[4]

Third quarter

After failing to capitalise on their chances in the first half, Fremantle kicked five goals in the third quarter, to twice get to within three points of the Hawks. Jarryd Roughead kicked two goals for the quarter and Jack Gunston his fourth, as Hawthorn entered the three-quarter-time break ten points ahead.[5]

Final quarter

Hawthorn led by ten points at the start of the quarter and did most of the attacking. Isaac Smith, Luke Breust and Bradley Hill all kicked goals for Hawthorn as they stretched their lead to 31 points, before two late goals to Fremantle reduced the final margin to 15 points.[6]

Overall report

A panoramic view of the Melbourne Cricket Ground during the 2013 Grand Final.

Hawthorn led the match from start to finish, applying pressure on the Dockers when it mattered the most. Fremantle were unable to capitalise on any of the chances they had in the first half, especially with Nathan Fyfe putting two set shots out on the full, another certain goal being touched on the line and Matthew Pavlich spraying a shot at goal nearing half-time.[6]

Norm Smith Medal

Brian Lake took ten marks of which seven were intercept marks to repel the Dockers attack. He took two crucial marks in the final quarter which sealed his Norm Smith Medal win.[7]

Teams

Hawthorn
B: 24 Ben Stratton 17 Brian Lake 18 Brent Guerra
HB: 9 Shaun Burgoyne 6 Josh Gibson 14 Grant Birchall
C: 16 Isaac Smith 5 Sam Mitchell 3 Jordan Lewis
HF: 22 Luke Breust 23 Lance Franklin 33 Cyril Rioli
F: 28 Paul Puopolo 2 Jarryd Roughead 20 David Hale
Foll: 39 Max Bailey 12 Brad Sewell 15 Luke Hodge (c)
Int: 26 Liam Shiels 19 Jack Gunston 10 Bradley Hill
32 Jonathan Simpkin (sub)
Coach: Alastair Clarkson
Fremantle
B: 41 Paul Duffield 3 Zac Dawson 37 Michael Johnson
HB: 6 Danyle Pearce 18 Luke McPharlin 34 Lee Spurr
C: 13 Tendai Mzungu 15 Ryan Crowley 16 David Mundy
HF: 7 Nathan Fyfe 23 Chris Mayne 33 Cameron Sutcliffe
F: 10 Michael Walters 29 Matthew Pavlich (c) 30 Zac Clarke
Foll: 31 Aaron Sandilands 9 Matt de Boer 32 Stephen Hill
Int: 1 Hayden Ballantyne 8 Nick Suban 21 Michael Barlow
27 Lachie Neale (sub)
Coach: Ross Lyon
Umpires

The umpiring panel for the Grand Final comprised nine match day umpires and three emergencies. Among the umpires were four grand final debutants: field umpire Mathew Nicholls, boundary umpires Michael Marantelli and Michael Saunders, and goal umpire Adam Wojcik.[8]

2013 AFL Grand Final umpires
Position Umpire 1 Umpire 2 Umpire 3 Umpire 4 Emergency
Field: 8 Brett Rosebury (6) 15 Mathew Nicholls (1) 21 Simon Meredith (2) 9 Matt Stevic
Boundary: Nathan Doig (2) Robert Haala (2) Michael Marantelli (1) Michael Saunders (1) Matthew Tomkins
Goal: Luke Walker (5) Adam Wojcik (1) Chris Appleton

Numbers in brackets represent the number of Grand Finals umpired; this number includes 2013 and does not include times selected as an emergency umpire.

Scorecard

Grand Final
Saturday, 28 September (2:30 pm) Hawthorn def. Fremantle MCG (Crowd: 100,007) Report
2.3 (15)
5.5 (35)
8.8 (56)
11.11 (77)
Q1
Q2
Q3
Final
0.3 (3)
1.6 (12)
6.10 (46)
8.14 (62)
Umpires: Brett Rosebury, Mathew Nicholls, Simon Meredith
Norm Smith Medal: Brian Lake
Television broadcast: Seven Network
National anthem: Tina Arena
Gunston 4
Roughead 2
Franklin, Rioli, Smith, Breust, Hill 1
Goals 3 Pavlich
2 Walters
1 Mzungu, Mayne, Pearce
  Lake, Gunston, Lewis, Rioli, Hodge, Birchall Best   Mundy, Fyfe, Crowley, Johnson, Barlow
  Nil Injuries   Nil
Lake - Striking; Rioli - Rough conduct Reports Suban - Misconduct

Tribunal

The following Monday, the Match Review Panel adjudicated on two offences incurred by Hawthorn's Brian Lake and Cyril Rioli, both of which carried the double points loading of due to being incurred during a Grand Final. The third offence of misconduct against Fremantle's Nick Suban was referred directly to the Tribunal for assessment, which determined the incident was improper but not grievous. Suban pleaded guilty to the incident and apologized for what he felt to be an accident.

Player Charge Penalty
Nick Suban, Fremantle Unreasonable and unnecessary contact to the face of Sam Mitchell, Hawthorn, in the 1st Quarter.[9] Referred to the Tribunal. Suban pleaded guilty; suspended one match.[10]
Cyril Rioli, Hawthorn Rough conduct (chicken-wing tackle) against Michael Barlow, Fremantle, in the 3rd Quarter.[9] Pled guilty; suspended one match.[11]
Brian Lake, Hawthorn Striking Michael Walters, Fremantle, in the 3rd Quarter.[9] Pled guilty; suspended three matches.[11]

See also

References

  1. 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.
  2. Landsberger, Sam (2012-09-29). "Hawthorn opens the 2013 premiership market favourite". Herald Sun. Retrieved 2014-04-06.
  3. Bartley, Patrick (2 September 2013). "AFL grand final 2013 entertainment headlined by local acts". Sydney Morning Herald]].
  4. "AFL grand final 2013: Hawthorn v Fremantle as it happened". ABC.net. 28 September 2013. Retrieved 3 October 2013.
  5. "Hawthorn v Fremantle: AFL grand final – as it happened". The Guardian. 28 September 2013. Retrieved 30 September 2013.
  6. 1 2 What we learnt from the 2013 AFL Grand Final, The Roar, 29 September 2013
  7. "2013 Grand Final as it happened". AFL.com. 28 September 2013. Retrieved 3 October 2013.
  8. Julia Gauci (24 September 2013). "AFL announces Grand Final umpires". Australian Football League Umpires Association. Retrieved 26 September 2013.
  9. 1 2 3 David Schout (30 September 2013). "Hawk heroes handed bans". Australian Football League.
  10. "Fremantle's Nick Suban to miss one AFL game after grand final gouge on Hawthorn's Sam Mitchell". 1 October 2013.
  11. 1 2 Mark Macgugan (2 October 2013). "Lake, Rioli to miss start of next season". Australian Football League.
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