Cue a torrential downpour.
Still, it mattered not to the premiership favourites, as Jasmine Garner snapped the first goal of the second half in rain that was heavy enough to briefly interrupt the broadcast signal, returning just as Garner booted her second.
King added her second goal soon after, perhaps sensing she owed her teammates after her weather gaff.
“It’s like weather from up north – it was sunny and a balmy 20 degrees this morning and then poured down rain,” Roos defender Eliza Shannon, who played her first game of 2024, told Fox Footy after the thumping 8.11 (59) to 0.4 (4) victory.
“It feels like we’ve been in the pool; luckily it cleared and we got some good passages of play in.”
The Dogs were in the wars and deserved more for their energy and pressure but they were down two players early into the second half with Dee Berry (illness) and Lauren Ahrens (foot) out.
Ash Riddell led the Roos with 26 disposals and a goal on the siren while Garner had 19 and could have had three goals but for a set shot hitting the post.
Isabelle Pritchard had 18 disposals to lead the way for the Bulldogs, while Jessica Fitzpatrick had 15 disposals and nine tackles.
The Dogs made some forays into the forward line early, finding Sarah Hartwig in range of the goals but couldn’t make the most of their chances, and it proved the difference as the Roos were far more ruthless and efficient when their opportunities to score arose.
If anything, the ladder leaders were a touch wasteful in the first half with four behinds which could have been goals.
North’s Vikki Wall collected the Bulldogs’ Dominique Carruthers in a bone-shaking tackle late in the first half, with Carruthers bouncing back to battle on for her under-siege side.
Seven players fined after Bomber bump sparks brawl
Hannah Hammoud
Seven players have been fined for their involvement in one of the largest melees in AFLW history, sparked by a bump from Bombers midfield star Maddy Prespakis.
Players from both sides ran into the fray on the three-quarter-time siren of Essendon’s three-point win on Wednesday night.
With just four seconds remaining in the third quarter, Prespakis was immediately confronted by Sydney players Lexi Hamilton and Tanya Kennedy, drawing in teammates from both sides.
On Thursday night Essendon’s Prespakis, Paige Scott, Jacqui Vogt, and Brooke Walker each had their $200 sanction for engaging in the melee downgraded to $100. While Swans Hamilton, Kennedy, and Cynthia Hamilton were also hit with the same sanction.
Prespakis, who was tagged for all four quarters, spoke about the mental toll of having her impact on the game restricted after the thriller at Whitten Oval.
“Really proud of the girls,” Prespakis said.
“We fought really hard and Sydney came at us in the end.
“It [getting tagged] is really hard and does take a mental toll.
“Every single week I feel like I’ve got a thumb in my back everywhere I go.
“Woody [coach Natalie Woods] just says smile at them, take it as a compliment and do what you can.”
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The incident marks another chapter in an AFLW season that is witnessing heightened physicality as the game grows each year.
North Melbourne’s Libby Birch copped some attention when she came up against former side Melbourne this season, while there have been melee and wrestling charges in two other matches this year.
AFLW players have not shied away from scuffles on the field, and Wednesday night’s melee may be in contention to overtake last year’s Collingwood-Richmond clash, dubbed “the biggest brawl in AFLW history” by players Sarah Hosking and Sarah Rowe.
Speaking on the duo’s podcast Tagged, Hosking stated that melees were all part of the game.
“If my teammate needs help, I’m not just letting her sit on the ground while she gets pummelled by someone else,” she said.
“I love that stuff. I think it’s all part of the game and I think it’s great – obviously no one gets hurt. It gets fiery … I think it’s all part of it.
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“It really tests the character of your teammates, and we’ve literally taken the piss out of some of our teammates because you might see this little scuffle on the ground or something and someone’s close by — now you’ve got an option here, to either run and help … or you run in the opposite direction, and we’ve got a few teammates that do that here or there.”
The brawl broke out between the two sides at Victoria Park late in the fourth quarter when Magpie Sarah Sansonetti tackled Tiger Emelia Yassir over the boundary line. Teammates from both sides then rushed over to join in.
Rowe described it as one of the more notable melees in AFLW history.
“I’m the type that I’ll go in to bat for my teammates, I’ll go stick up for them for sure, but I’m also the one that I’ll probably do it with a smile on my face, and I’ll be like, ‘come on, we don’t actually want to hit each other’,” she said on the podcast.