COURAGEOUS Greater Western Sydney has broken Geelong's unbeaten run and posted its first win at the Cattery, triumphing by four points in a nail-biter at GMHBA Stadium on Saturday.

The undermanned Giants strengthened their premiership claims with a brilliant come-from-behind win over Chris Scott's men, prevailing 11.13 (79) to 11.9 (75).

GIANTS EDGE CATS Full match coverage and stats

This was a victory full of character for Leon Cameron's team, who were reduced to 21 men in the opening minutes when co-captain Callan Ward, in his first outing for the season after returning from a right knee injury, suffered a suspected anterior cruciate ligament rupture in his left knee.

The result could get worse for Geelong, which will be sweating on an off-the-ball incident just before half-time in which superstar Patrick Dangerfield appeared to swing his left arm back and twice make contact with Giants tagger Matt de Boer.

The plucky visitors came from 22 points down early in the third term to control play for most of the second half, keeping their cool in the dying stages to hold out the Cats' last-ditch attempt for a match-winning goal after a Tom Stewart kickout up the corridor.

History was also against the Giants, given they had lost their past three games on the road and their previous four at Geelong, where the Cats had won 26 of their previous 29 games.

WATCH The thrilling last two minutes of Cats v Giants

GWS has now joined Geelong on a 3-1 record – a terrific result for a team that has been challenged by injuries to key personnel.

The Giants' tall forward trio Jeremy Cameron (three goals), Jeremy Finlayson (three) and Harry Himmelberg (two) again proved pivotal, and they were superbly served by the orange wave of runners led by Lachie Whitfield, Stephen Coniglio, Jacob Hopper, Josh Kelly and Tim Taranto.

Early on it seemed Geelong would cruise to 4-0. The Cats dominated proceedings, creating eight of the first nine forward 50 entries and firing the first five scoring shots for a return of 2.3 to nil after 15 minutes. They should have been further in front – Dangerfield also sent a set shot out on the full and Mitch Duncan hit the post with a regulation snap.

The Giants finally hit back at the 20-minute mark through Finlayson, via a gift from Himmelberg, but the Cats reasserted their ascendancy with quick goals to Gary Rohan and Tom Hawkins from long set shots.

ANALYSIS Can Giants win the flag without Callan Ward?

With key playmakers Dangerfield and Duncan and youngsters Brandan Parfitt and Gryan Miers busy, Geelong led by 21 points early in the second term, before the Giants finally found their mojo.

Despite being one man down, the visitors responded with three of the next four goals to get within eight points as Whitfield, Coniglio, Hopper and Kelly controlled the tempo of play and stopper Matt de Boer tightened his clamps on Tim Kelly (ultimately keeping him to just nine disposals, one clearance and one goal).

Once again, Geelong broke free late in the quarter, restoring order with two goals in the last minute before half-time.

The Cats extended their lead after the break to 22 points – which would have been 27 points had Sam Menegola nailed an elementary running shot from close range – and that was the cue for another rearguard action by the Giants.

Cameron proved too nimble for Cats veteran Harry Taylor to slot two goals in 90 seconds, sparking his ultra-efficient team to snare 6.4 for the term from just 11 inside 50s, to the Cats' 3.2, which included two long set-shot goals from Gary Ablett.

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Daniel Lloyd's second goal, at the 27-minute mark, gave the Giants the lead for the first time, before Hawkins soon regained the ascendancy.

Ward addressed his teammates at the final change, urging them to make a big last-quarter effort, and Cameron, now opposed to Mark Blicavs, hauled in a strong contested mark early in the final term only to miss badly and level the scores.

Hawkins set up Rohan for an easy goal before Himmelberg claimed a courageous mark and passed to Finalyson, who snapped a superb major from the boundary to tie it all up again.

The Giants, holding the ascendancy around the stoppages and maintaining composure, had the next four scoring shots, all behinds, before the final siren stunned the local crowd.

MEDICAL ROOM
Geelong: One of the few positives for the Cats was that they seemed to escape with a clean bill of health.
Greater Western Sydney:  The Giants lost inspirational joint skipper Callan Ward to a likely season-ending left knee injury.

NEXT UP
The Giants will look to continue to build momentum when they host Fremantle in Canberra on Saturday while the Cats' tough run doesn't abate, with an Easter Monday clash looming against bitter enemy Hawthorn.

GEELONG                                            4.3   7.6    10.8   11.9 (75)                  
GREATER WESTERN SYDNEY              1.1   4.3    10.7   11.13 (79)          

GOALS
Geelong: Hawkins 3, Ablett 2, Rohan 2, Kelly, Miers, Taylor, Dangerfield
Greater Western Sydney: Cameron 3, Finlayson 3, Lloyd 2, Himmelberg 2, Buntine

BEST 
Geelong: Parfitt, Duncan, Stewart, Hawkins, Selwood
Greater Western Sydney: Whitfield, Coniglio, Hopper, Cameron, de Boer, Kelly

INJURIES 
Geelong: Nil
Greater Western Sydney: Ward (knee)

Reports: Nil

Umpires: Donlon, Mollison, Power

Official crowd: 28,780 at GMHBA Stadium