
Coach accused of missing obvious trick with Nat Fyfe ‘craziness'
The Lions were all over the Dockers at Optus Stadium but the home team still had a faint pulse mid-way through the third quarter.
Although they had been badly beaten, only 25 points separated the teams when live images were shown of much-loved champion Nat Fyfe preparing himself to get into the game.
The dual Brownlow medallist — who announced his retirement during the week — started the match as the sub and Longmuir had decided to inject him into the action at three-quarter time.
Fyfe love was everywhere at the ground, too, who (barring a home final) was possibly playing his last game at Optus Stadium.
There was some excitement in the commentary, when they showed live images of 33-year-old stretching and warming up inside the clubrooms. The retiring champ warmed up in the rooms instead of on the sidelines. Credit: @FoxFooty
But for fans at the game, they missed all that build-up, totally unaware of what was happening within the bowels of Optus Stadium.
And star Seven commentator Jason Richardson felt so disappointed by the missed opportunity, he vented on social media.
'Fyfe warming up in change room …. craziness from a psych point of view,' Richardson said.
He also believed the trigger on Fyfe should have been pulled earlier, not at the final break when they were 31 points down.
'Warm him up in front of the crowd. Get the crowd up and into game and then inject him into the game in third quarter when the game was slipping away,' he said.
'Lift the team. Coach missed a trick, I think.
'All over now.'
Some fans suggested the game was already over, with or without the addition of Fyfe.
But Richardson was emphatic.
'Whole thing was bizarre and a missed opportunity,' he said. There was a whole lot Fyfe love at Optus Stadium on Friday night. Credit: The West Australian
Fremantle had the chance to lock away their finals spot and leave the door open to finish in the top four, but now they must beat the Western Bulldogs at Marvel Stadium to make the eight.
The situation is eerily similar to last year when they lost the last four games of the season to drop from third to 10th. When asked how the team would handle that pressure, Longmuir didn't mince his words.
'Win. We'll go over there and give it our best shot,' he said.
The retiring Fyfe did a lap of honour after the match to say farewell to fans in case the Dockers don't play another match in Perth.
But Longmuir insisted it wasn't the end of the club great.
'It didn't go our way tonight, but like I said to them after the game, we will review it the same way, get better, dust ourselves off, and we'll go again,' he said.
'I haven't said farewell to Fyfey yet. We've got plenty of footy left in us.'
- With The West Australian

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With Rhylee West (dad Scott, 324 games) also busy in attack, the Bulldogs thrashed wooden spooners West Coast by 94 points on Sunday at Marvel Stadium. The 19.12 (126) to 4.8 (32) win left the Bulldogs eighth on the ladder and sets up a massive clash next Sunday against Fremantle at the same venue. If Gold Coast win at least one of their two games in round 24 as expected, the loser of the Bulldogs-Dockers clash will miss the finals. So the Bulldogs and Fremantle effectively start their finals series next Sunday, with coach Luke Beveridge noting they had to beat GWS this time last year to make the eight. "It (the West Coast win) is a promising day on a number of fronts ... for both clubs, (next Sunday) is a big day," Beveridge said. "It was a mixture tonight - our stoppage strength wasn't really on show, but our offence and defensive elements were pretty good." There is plenty of ongoing commentary about the father-son rule, which the AFL has decided against changing. 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Lachie McNeil was hurt in a third-term collision and subbed out with a hip injury. Darcy, West, Naughton and Sam Davidson all kicked three goals, while captain Marcus Bontempelli added two among his 31 disposals and 10 clearances in another best-afield performance. The season cannot end quickly enough for the last-placed Eagles. Jamie Cripps' final-term goal meant they avoided their lowest score at Marvel Stadium, by just two points. But it was their lowest score and biggest losing margin this season. "We just couldn't quite stop any of their scoring and we clearly couldn't score - pretty big parts of footy," said Eagles coach Andrew McQualter. Eagles star Liam Baker worked his backside off in defence. Young key forward Jobe Shanahan looks likely, but his finishing let him down and he kicked three behinds.


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