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Vixens ride wave of emotion into Super Netball decider

Vixens ride wave of emotion into Super Netball decider

The Advertiser4 days ago
Simone McKinnis stunned the netball world when she announced her 13th season at the Melbourne Vixens would be her last.
It proved the turning point that took the Vixens from strugglers to Super Netball grand finalists.
Now, they will hope to ride that wave of emotion to glory.
Melbourne will face the West Coast Fever in Saturday's decider at John Cain Arena after mounting an emotional comeback from 10 goals down at the final change to beat NSW by one goal last week.
It meant McKinnis's decorated career stretches into one more game - a tilt at a third national league title.
McKinnis announced after her 200th game in May - a defeat to Sunshine Coast Lightning - that she would be moving on, before later joking her "flat" charges, then sitting 2-4, needed to head to the pub.
Since then, Melbourne have won eight of 10 games to reach their second consecutive decider.
"The turning point was moving on, having that announcement," McKinnis said on Wednesday.
"It was just, 'alright, that's out there. Let's just go and have fun.'
"I think that was the turning point for us."
McKinnis admits a third triumph would be particularly special.
"It'd be enormous. It would be brilliant," she said.
"Because I'm just so super proud of how we've got here from where we started this season, and how we've got to this position, and I'm not sure that many people would have seen us in the grand final.
"So I'm just super proud of the girls."
Defender Kate Eddy started her career as a training partner at the Vixens and apart from two years at the Swifts, has only played under McKinnis.
She and her teammates, fuelled by the fire of losing last year's grand final to NSW, are trying not to think too much about their coach's last hurrah.
"After the siren goes, I think it'll be lots of emotions and everything as well next week," Eddy said.
"But trying to put out all of my energy and focus into this week, because obviously Simone means the world to all of us and to me as well.
"So it'll be really hard. But try not to think about that too much."
First, the Vixens need to get the better of the Fever, who have beaten them twice this season, with star goaler Jhaniele Fowler-Nembhard averaging 60 goals in those two games.
Eddy stressed the Vixens' full-court defence needed to stop the ball getting to Fowler-Nembhard, while McKinnis wants her charges switched on early.
"You're never out of the contest until the whistle is gone and final siren's gone. It's never over," McKinnis said.
"But ... you can't afford to be giving a team like Fever that sort of head start.
"The important part for us is being able to put that pressure on and show our intent and purpose right from the first whistle."
Simone McKinnis stunned the netball world when she announced her 13th season at the Melbourne Vixens would be her last.
It proved the turning point that took the Vixens from strugglers to Super Netball grand finalists.
Now, they will hope to ride that wave of emotion to glory.
Melbourne will face the West Coast Fever in Saturday's decider at John Cain Arena after mounting an emotional comeback from 10 goals down at the final change to beat NSW by one goal last week.
It meant McKinnis's decorated career stretches into one more game - a tilt at a third national league title.
McKinnis announced after her 200th game in May - a defeat to Sunshine Coast Lightning - that she would be moving on, before later joking her "flat" charges, then sitting 2-4, needed to head to the pub.
Since then, Melbourne have won eight of 10 games to reach their second consecutive decider.
"The turning point was moving on, having that announcement," McKinnis said on Wednesday.
"It was just, 'alright, that's out there. Let's just go and have fun.'
"I think that was the turning point for us."
McKinnis admits a third triumph would be particularly special.
"It'd be enormous. It would be brilliant," she said.
"Because I'm just so super proud of how we've got here from where we started this season, and how we've got to this position, and I'm not sure that many people would have seen us in the grand final.
"So I'm just super proud of the girls."
Defender Kate Eddy started her career as a training partner at the Vixens and apart from two years at the Swifts, has only played under McKinnis.
She and her teammates, fuelled by the fire of losing last year's grand final to NSW, are trying not to think too much about their coach's last hurrah.
"After the siren goes, I think it'll be lots of emotions and everything as well next week," Eddy said.
"But trying to put out all of my energy and focus into this week, because obviously Simone means the world to all of us and to me as well.
"So it'll be really hard. But try not to think about that too much."
First, the Vixens need to get the better of the Fever, who have beaten them twice this season, with star goaler Jhaniele Fowler-Nembhard averaging 60 goals in those two games.
Eddy stressed the Vixens' full-court defence needed to stop the ball getting to Fowler-Nembhard, while McKinnis wants her charges switched on early.
"You're never out of the contest until the whistle is gone and final siren's gone. It's never over," McKinnis said.
"But ... you can't afford to be giving a team like Fever that sort of head start.
"The important part for us is being able to put that pressure on and show our intent and purpose right from the first whistle."
Simone McKinnis stunned the netball world when she announced her 13th season at the Melbourne Vixens would be her last.
It proved the turning point that took the Vixens from strugglers to Super Netball grand finalists.
Now, they will hope to ride that wave of emotion to glory.
Melbourne will face the West Coast Fever in Saturday's decider at John Cain Arena after mounting an emotional comeback from 10 goals down at the final change to beat NSW by one goal last week.
It meant McKinnis's decorated career stretches into one more game - a tilt at a third national league title.
McKinnis announced after her 200th game in May - a defeat to Sunshine Coast Lightning - that she would be moving on, before later joking her "flat" charges, then sitting 2-4, needed to head to the pub.
Since then, Melbourne have won eight of 10 games to reach their second consecutive decider.
"The turning point was moving on, having that announcement," McKinnis said on Wednesday.
"It was just, 'alright, that's out there. Let's just go and have fun.'
"I think that was the turning point for us."
McKinnis admits a third triumph would be particularly special.
"It'd be enormous. It would be brilliant," she said.
"Because I'm just so super proud of how we've got here from where we started this season, and how we've got to this position, and I'm not sure that many people would have seen us in the grand final.
"So I'm just super proud of the girls."
Defender Kate Eddy started her career as a training partner at the Vixens and apart from two years at the Swifts, has only played under McKinnis.
She and her teammates, fuelled by the fire of losing last year's grand final to NSW, are trying not to think too much about their coach's last hurrah.
"After the siren goes, I think it'll be lots of emotions and everything as well next week," Eddy said.
"But trying to put out all of my energy and focus into this week, because obviously Simone means the world to all of us and to me as well.
"So it'll be really hard. But try not to think about that too much."
First, the Vixens need to get the better of the Fever, who have beaten them twice this season, with star goaler Jhaniele Fowler-Nembhard averaging 60 goals in those two games.
Eddy stressed the Vixens' full-court defence needed to stop the ball getting to Fowler-Nembhard, while McKinnis wants her charges switched on early.
"You're never out of the contest until the whistle is gone and final siren's gone. It's never over," McKinnis said.
"But ... you can't afford to be giving a team like Fever that sort of head start.
"The important part for us is being able to put that pressure on and show our intent and purpose right from the first whistle."
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While Simone McKinnis hasn't closed the book on her coaching career, her Melbourne Vixens captain Kate Moloney says she will leave an enduring legacy at the Super Netball club. The Vixens sent McKinnis out with a fairytale finish, coming from fourth on the ladder to upset the minor premiers West Coast Fever in the grand final 59-58. They led after every quarter to end the Fever's 13-game winning streak in front of a raucous record crowd of more than 15,000 at Rod Laver Arena. With her team struggling at 2-4 after six rounds the popular coach announced her 13th season would be her last and said that cleared the air, sparking a huge turnaround in form as they won their next five straight. Looking for a solution to their woes she famously joked at that time that, "Maybe we just need to go to the pub". They did, but not for a big booze-up, but as a team bonding session, which strengthened the connection between the teammates. Moloney, 32, has played all of her career under under McKinnis and said the coach deserved the highest praise. "She's given everything she possibly could to our club and to me and to every athlete that came through this door and to be able to send her off like this... "Our club will be different without her but she will leave a legacy that lives on forever and ever at our club. "From her very first day to her last she's driven standards - she demands a lot of her players but we have so much respect and love for her and she will absolutely back you to the end of the earth when you play underneath her. "She's taken us to five grand finals and now three premierships and that's a pretty amazing legacy to leave behind." McKinnis, 59, said she felt she still had more to give to the game but was looking forward to taking a rest. "I'll have a break and see what it looks like post (break), I don't know," she said. "I'm open to having a rest that's it, but it's not that I don't want to coach and I've had enough. "If opportunities are there, I am a coach, that's what I do, that's what I love - or maybe I won't miss it, maybe I'll enjoy having a life again." The Vixens only managed one training session after travelling back from Sydney, where they beat the NSW Swifts in their preliminary final. But McKinnis sensed something special was brewing after their final training run. "I knew that they knew what they were doing, that they felt prepared and they had clarity around it and I just I knew that they could do it, and ultimately they believed that they could do it as well," McKinnis said. "At different times in the game I was just watching and I was just like, 'Wow that's that's really good' because you could see the pressure and that was one of the objectives, just put them under pressure, put them under pressure."

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The Melbourne Vixens completed their fairytale finish for outgoing coach Simone McKinnis, defeating the powerhouse West Coast Fever by a single goal, 59-58, to win the Super Netball grand final on Saturday night in her final game after 13 years at the helm. Vixens captain Kate Moloney paid tribute to McKinnis and her enormous legacy in the post-match presentation. 'You've taken us to five grand finals, you've now won your third premiership – you are an incredible leader. This club would not be the same without you,' she said. 'When you walked in the doors 13 years ago, you taught us how hard we had to work, you showed us some tough love, but most importantly you cared for us, you believed in us, and you nurtured every single athlete that walked through those doors and you made them better.' It was the Vixens' first Super Netball title in five years. McKinnis announced mid-season she was departing, sparking a turnaround in form from the Vixens. 'It was just about going out there again as we have been – that they had to work hard for it ... I thought we were the one team that could beat them,' McKinnis said. Vixens star Jo Weston expressed the jubilation best soon after the final whistle. Almost overcome with a combination of joy and relief, she said to Fox Sports: 'I think we're going to head to the pub.' By contrast, a shattered Fever captain Jess Anstiss said: 'Pure devastation, to be honest.' And it's little wonder. The dominant Fever (12 wins and two losses) finished on top of the ladder, and were riding a 13-game winning streak into the season finale, while the Vixens (8-6) just scraped into fourth. Just last week, the Vixens only advanced to the decider after somehow overcoming a 10-goal three-quarter-time deficit in the preliminary final against a red-hot NSW Swifts. In front of a soldout crowd 15,013 at Rod Laver Arena, the Vixens took an early lead, with Moloney delivering a flawless centre pass, allowing star goal shooter Sophie Garbin to take the opening goal. The Fever countered quickly, delivering to Jhaniele Fowler-Nembhard, the competition's best shooter. Fever defender Kadie-Ann Dehaney was a formidable obstacle to Garbin, interrupting and intercepting her several times. At the end of the first quarter the Fever had a two-goal lead heading into the super shot period, however the Vixens managed to score with a brilliant long shot. The third quarter saw the Vixens pull in front, much to the delight of the roaring, parochial crowd. Play intensified in the fourth quarter, with the Vixens pulling ahead. Frustration in the Fever team saw them fumble some crucial passes as the clock ticked down and the pressure grew. But they continued to target Fowler-Nembhard, and she continued to loom as the potential heartbreaker for the Vixens until the home side regained their composure in the dying minutes and held on to possession for dear life. At the final whistle there were smiles, tears and cheers as the Vixens rushed from all corners to embrace each other. In their third grand final against the Fever since 2020 (with the two sides locked at a win apiece, in 2020 and 2022), the Vixens won by the slimmest of margins.

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That's precisely what the team did – heading to a local pub a few weeks later for a team bonding session. 'It's a comment that Simone said over the years plenty of times, and it's not necessarily about going to the pub,' Moloney explained in a post-match interview after the grand final. 'But we knew exactly what that meant, and we did go and do a team bonding session. We headed to the pub, we had our Coke zeros and watched the State of Origin. 'You know, it wasn't about the pub, but it was about spending some time together – remembering why we do this.' The Vixens' season then underwent an extraordinary metamorphosis, with the Melbourne side winning eight of their next 10 games to reach back-to-back grand finals. The Vixens opened Saturday's grand final on the front foot, with Moloney delivering a flawless centre pass, allowing star goal shooter Sophie Garbin to net the opening goal. The Fever countered quickly, recovering the ball in their front third and delivering quickly to Jhaniele Fowler-Nembhard, the competition's most dominant force and its best shooter. Both teams upped the tempo in the second quarter, with the Vixens calling a timeout and captain Kate Moloney calling on the team to put their opponents under pressure. The third quarter saw the Vixens pull in front, much to the delight of the roaring Rod Laver Arena crowd. Play intensified in the fourth, with the Vixens managing to pull ahead. Frustration in the Fever team saw them fumble some crucial passes as the clock ticked down and pressure intensified. Loading But they continued to target Fowler-Nembhard, and she continued to loom as the heartbreaker for the Vixens until the home side regained their composure in the dying minutes and held on to possession for dear life. At the final whistle there were smiles, tears and cheers as the Vixens rushed from all corners to embrace each other as I gotta Feeling by the Black Eyed Peas blared out across the stadium. It was redemption for the Vixens, who lost last year's decider to Adelaide by two goals and were beaten by the Fever twice during the 2025 season. It was also fairytale finish for McKinnis, who leaves behind a legacy of three premierships and three minor premierships. After the game, McKinnis said she couldn't quite believe the team had won. 'I still can't believe that we did it, but I'm just extremely proud of the team and the girls – the way they attacked the game and the way they played,' she explained. McKinnis never lost faith in her group. 'I thought we were the one team that could beat them,' she said of the Fever, who finished on top of the ladder with a 12-2 record and had a 13-game winning streak. The veteran coach said she was looking forward to having a break, but did not rule out a return to coaching. Loading During the awards presentation, Moloney thanked the fans 'for not giving up on us in round six' and expressed her gratitude to her McKinnis. 'You are an incredible leader. This club would not be the same without you,' Moloney said. 'When you walked in the doors 13 years ago, you taught us how hard we had to work, you showed us some tough love, but most importantly you cared for us, you believed in us, and you nurtured every single athlete that walked through those doors, and you made them better.' By contrast, Fever skipper Jess Anstiss was heartbroken after her side's loss. 'It's pure devastation to be honest,' she said. 'It's hard to get the words out. 'I don't think we brought our A-game and Vixens did.' It was Melbourne's first Super Netball title in five years – since they defeated the Fever in 2020. Just last week, the Vixens only advanced to this season's decider after overcoming a double-digit three-quarter-time deficit in the preliminary final against a red-hot NSW Swifts.

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