AFL round 15: Cats vs Lions live updates — blog, scores and stats from Kardinia Park
Brisbane travels to Geelong, hoping to end a 22-year wait for a win at Kardinia Park against the Cats, with the Lions' top-four spot on the line.
The game is also a personal milestone for Geelong skipper Patrick Dangerfield, who plays his 350th AFL match tonight.
Follow the live blog below, keep up to date with all the latest stats in our ScoreCentre, and tune in to our live radio coverage.
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News.com.au
23 minutes ago
- News.com.au
‘Surrender?': AFL world roasts Geelong T-shirt stunt in Danger's 350th
Geelong's unique move to fill the stadium with white T-shirts for the club's big clash with the Brisbane Lions may not have drawn the response the Cats were seeking. Billed as 'a sight to behold' and a 'slice of history' on the Geelong website, the Cats covered every seat at GMHBA Stadium with what they described as 'a free collectable T-shirt' for the Friday night blockbuster. It's a move that is often used in American sports and can have a strong look when everyone in the crowd is kitted out in the same colour. Both the Indiana Pacers and OKC Thunder have adopted the move during their clash in the NBA Finals. On a night when the club was also celebrating captain Patrick Dangerfield's 350th AFL game, the commentators were certainly getting into the spirit. 'They have kitted out the Cattery with the white T-shirts on every seat, inspiration drawn from the NBA and college football in the US,' Gerard Whateley said on Fox Footy. 'It is quite the sight down the highway as the local heroes emerge. 'Patrick Dangerfield said one of his favourite parts of this would be (his children) Winnie, 'Flip' and George joining him to run through the banner. 'All the kids now fully aware of what they're part of, his place in Geelong lore, which grows tonight, game 350 … on a special night in the way that it shapes.' The fans appeared to be enjoying their moment, with many donning the shirts and a number of others waving them in the air on a cold night in Geelong. The Lions may not have got the memo, however, as the premiers made a hot start bidding for a first victory at Kardinia Park since they won five straight from 1998 to 2003. They have lost 13 consecutive games at the ground since then, yet they jumped out of the blocks with the game's first four goals. By halftime they held a 23-point edge and fans on social media were having a field day over the white T-shirt promotion, with many referencing the white flag of surrender. 'Lol white out is a roaring success so far,' was one comment on X. 'I don't think the white out worked,' said another. 'White out turning into a whitewash,' quipped another. 'I didn't have high expectations for the white T-shirt thing but it's looking pretty average,' declared another. 'Conceded the first 4 of the game, wave the white flag,' said a fifth. 'What's with the white, did Geelong decide to surrender?' asked another watching on. Others were left questioning the decision to use T-shirts as a gift on a Geelong night in late June. One said: 'Yes because people are gonna be in a T-shirt on a 3 degrees night in Geelong.' Another wrote: 'Yeah people are definitely gonna wear them on 5C winters night.' A wide number of fans used the word 'cringe' to describe the promotion, while another slammed 'the AFL's desperation to Americanise the game'. Some fans were getting on board, with a Hawthorn fan writing: 'Hate Geelong as much as the next Hawks fan but god damn those white shirts in the crowd look good.' A fan apparently in the crowd also gave an insight into perhaps why not everyone in the crowd was wearing the shirt. 'Late decision to make the trip down, might struggle to fit into my 2x small white out shirt,' they wrote. Dangerfield and the Cats need to lift in the second half or the crowd will indeed be waving the white flag.

Sydney Morning Herald
2 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Geelong vs Brisbane AFL LIVE: Lions stun Cats with dominant start in Dangerfield's 350th
Loading Key posts 7.27pm Cats follow Penn State's 'whiteout' 7.16pm Gardiner out sick but Andrews backs Lions to stand up 7.12pm AFL score involvement leaders 6.53pm Emotional Betts pays tribute to Stengle 6.46pm Lions lose defender in late change 6.37pm The Danger Man: Why Dangerfield is the most influential player of his generation 6.32pm Interactive: The road to the finals Hide key posts Go to latest The Danger Man: Why Dangerfield is the most influential player of his generation Chris Scott has never made any secret of his belief that recruiting Patrick Dangerfield in 2016 transformed the Cats. On the field, he helped restore a superb team into being a great team once again, leading a new generation into a new way. Off the field, he set a tone that allowed the people within the club to be themselves. Surfing could be part of a player's routine, or fishing, or herding cows. They could shrug after a loss, and laugh heading into a match. A competitive beast, Dangerfield recognises that winning all the time is impossible, while still chasing a premiership as hard as the most steely eyed AFL players. It opened the eyes of the skipper Joel Selwood – the then-Crow's arrival helping him loosen up. The captain's generosity was complemented by Dangerfield's sense of fun and perspective. 8.30pm Cameron strikes for Cats Jeremy Cameron has leapt across the pack and pulled in a mark before going back and kicking his first major of the night. The Cats need a big night from Jez and he's up and running now. That was his 100th goal at Geelong according to Fox Footy. Two Camerons, two Henrys, two Ashcrofts and two Neales playing tonight as Charlie Cameron concedes a 50-metre penalty and Jeremy Cameron kicked the goal. Lions 32, Cats 16 with 13 mins to go in Q2. 8.24pm Dangerfield misses chances It's Dangerfield's big night but he's missed his first two set shots at goal. He just won a free kick within reach of goal and decided to run around and snap the ball, but his kick was wayward. Lions 26, Cats 10 with 17 mins to go in Q2. 8.19pm The Cats must lift like Atkins, Henry did Brisbane have thrown the first punch, and it landed, with the Lions kicking the first four goals of the match. The Cats steadied late but they are lucky to only be 17 points behind at the first break. Jarrod Berry, Josh Dunkley, Cam Rayner and Will Ashcroft dominated out of the middle to have 18 inside 50s to Geelong's 10. The Cats were fortunate Jack Henry held up down back and Tom Atkins lifted in the second half. The Lions are chasing their first win at the venue since 2003 and have had exactly the start they hoped for with the crowd stunned. 8.16pm The quarter-time stats 8.14pm QT: Brisbane 4.2 (26) to Geelong 1.3 (9) The Lions kicked four goals without reply – only a 50-metre penalty has gifted the Cats a goal. They were slightly better in the final minutes, but Lions won that term in almost every way you could imagine. The Cats must lift. 8.10pm Cats gifted their first goal Dayne Zorko is both fuming and shocked. He thought he was outside the protected area. The umpire thought differently, but he was well clear of the kick. He's been called for encroachment and it gifted Shannon Neale a 50-metre penalty and he booted the goal. Lions 26, Cats 9 with two mins to go in Q1. 8.03pm Lions are dominating the clearances None of Brisbane's first three goalkickers were born when the Lions last won down here at GMHBA Stadium. Cam Rayner broke that sequence with the fourth goal. They are killing them at stoppages, have won centre clearances 4-0 and inside 50s 15-3 in a rapid start. So much for it being a fortress. Lions 26, Cats 2 with five mins to go in Q1. 8.01pm Lions go four goals ahead Darcy Wilmot has intercepted an errant Cats kick and goaled on the run. He was so excited he almost did a lap of the ground. Then from the centre bounce the Lions won the footy and Cam Rayner snapped their fourth goal. The Cats are stunned. The Lions are fired up. Will the Cats wake up? If they don't do so soon, the Lions will be gone far into the distance. Lions 26, Cats 1 with seven mins to go in Q1. 7.56pm 'Inexcusable': Smith's 50m penalty Fox Footy's Jason Dunstall said Bailey Smith's 50-metre penalty was 'inexcusable'. The Lions would have had a 30-metre shot for goal, one they could have missed by Smith's remonstrations after a free kick saw the ball advanced to the goal line. Kai Lohmann has followed up with a goal from the boundary, and now the Lions are firing. 7.54pm Lions miss early but are now on the board Goalkicking accuracy was the issue Chris Fagan identified as their biggest issue in the past two matches. The Lions did not start well with 0.2 to start the game, but now they are on the board through Levi Ashcroft. The Lions have kicked the first goal after a 50-metre penalty on Bailey Smith gave them a shot from the goal square. Lions 8, Cats 1 with 10 mins to go in Q1.
Herald Sun
2 hours ago
- Herald Sun
West Australia left seeing red in Perth State of Origin blunder, rugby league, AFL, NSW Blues, Queensland Maroons
Don't miss out on the headlines from NRL. Followed categories will be added to My News. Oh WA media, give it a rest will you? Like it or not, rugby league is here to stay. The state's paper The West Australian did its best this week to try to make citizens forget one of the country's biggest sporting spectacles was happening in the heart of their city, State of Origin. That didn't exactly work out how they'd hoped. FOX LEAGUE, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every game of every round in the 2025 NRL Telstra Premiership, LIVE with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited-time offer. The paper virtually refused to promote the game at all in the lead-up, with only a small story at the back-end of the sport section on Monday, and not a single mention of it at all one day out. The event was also missing from Channel 7's news bulletin. The 'State of Origin's back' header finally appeared on the front page on Wednesday, which at first glance was a nod to the game. But on closer look it appeared to poke fun at the event, promoting WA's Fremantle Dockers against Victoria's Essendon Bombers clash on Thursday night instead. Not to mention the strategic placement of their only game day story beside the ads for escort services. But not even The West Australian's blatant disregard and mockery of rugby league was enough to deter its state from churning out in numbers for Wednesday night's blockbuster. Of the 57,000 crowd in the downpour of rain at Optus stadium — which was almost a 62,000 sellout — around 47,000 were Perth locals. Ironically the next night, for The West's 'state of origin' battle between Fremantle and Essendon, the AFL could only manage 37,570 fans at the same venue. The best the paper could do? A salty response the next morning: 'One bunch of East Coasters beat another at rugby in Perth last night.' That's got to feel like a bit of egg on your face. But it seems not much will change as the state media continues to virtually deny the code exists despite growing admiration for it among fans and the announcement of new NRL franchise the Perth Bears coming in 2027. The angst is possibly the ugly ramification of a rift between Seven West media boss Kerry Stokes and the NRL's Peter V'landys, as well as the media organisation's bid to reduce any threats to stay atop the code war in an AFL dominated region. V'landys recently appointed former West editor Anthony De Ceglie as the inaugural Bears chief executive to overlook the new franchise's success in the state. That may not be as difficult a job as the newspaper wants the country to believe, with Wednesday's game bringing in almost 200,000 Perth TV viewers atop the crowd, proving broadcast interest is all on the rise. The paper's editor Chris Dore was adamant when he told The Sydney Morning Herald the appetite for rugby league was non-existent in WA. 'No one outside of rugby league writers in Sydney cares. The point is rugby league is simply not a mainstream sport in this town,' Dore said. 'Just the facts. Good on them for having a crack here. We have nothing against the game despite the carry-on from [Peter] V'landys' acolytes in the Sydney media about our coverage. 'It's just not remotely main game and never will be.' But the numbers say otherwise Chris. Don't fight it, this is happening It's time to accept WA craves rugby league. Originally published as West Australia left seeing red in State of Origin blunder