Charlie West in action for the Magpies in the Smithy's VFL Round 8 match between Collingwood and GWS Giants. Picture: Rob Lawson/AFL Photos

A review of all the action from Round 8 of the 2025 Smithy’s VFL season.

SYDNEY SWANS     4.2   7.2   9.5      11.9 (75)
CARLTON                4.5    9.6   13.9   15.15 (105)

HARRY Lemmey’s previous best haul in 39 Smithy’s VFL matches was three goals.

But on Friday afternoon at the SCG, Lemmey announced himself as a genuine option for AFL coach Michael Voss with a seven-goal bag as Carlton overran a Callum Mills-inspired Sydney by 30 points to move to within a game of the top 10.

Lemmey was simply unstoppable against makeshift key defenders Tom Longmire and Patrick Snell, kicking three goals in the first quarter to set the tone before adding one in the second, two in the third and his seventh four minutes into the last quarter to ensure a comfortable Blues win.

Only two late misses blotted an otherwise perfect copybook as he finished with 7.2 from 12 disposals and eight marks.

The Swans were looking strong with Mills in dominant touch on his way to 20 disposals in his comeback from a foot injury before being rested shortly after half-time.

They led by eight points when the AFL captain sunk a 55m set shot nine minutes into the second quarter, but Blues skipper Liam McMahon exploded with three goals in three minutes to blow the game open.

Sam Docherty did as he pleased across half back for the Blues on his way to 39 disposals at 87.2 per cent, plus six marks and 10 rebounds with support from Billy Wilson (24 disposals, nine marks, five rebounds) and Ethan Phillips (20 disposals, 11 marks, six rebounds) to hold the Swans to 11 goals, while ball magnet Will Hayes had 31 touches and McMahon finished with four goals

Mills finished with 20 touches, six marks and a goal before heading up the race and Taylor Adams looked ready for an AFL recall with 30 touches, seven marks and seven clearances, with Lachie Hunter (33 disposals, 11 marks, seven rebounds), Ben Edwards (32 disposals, nine clearances, one goal) and Ben Paton (28 disposals, seven marks) winning plenty of the ball and Matty Lloyd (27 disposals, six marks, one goal) having his best game as a Swan.

BEST
Sydney Swans:
Callum Mills, Taylor Adams, Ned Bowman, James Tidemann, Matty Lloyd
Carlton: Harry Lemmey, Hudson O'Keeffe, Ethan Phillips, Sam Docherty, Liam McMahon, Harry O’Farrell

GOALS
Sydney Swans:
James Tidemann 2, Jack Buller, Ben Edwards, Jordan Endemann, Max Geddes, Tom Hitchens, Jack Kluske, Matty Lloyd, Cooper MacDonald, Callum Mills
Carlton: Harry Lemmey 7, Liam McMahon 4, Ben Camporeale, Alex Cincotta, Stirling Phipps-Parsons, Oliver Poole

DISPOSALS
Sydney Swans:
Lachie Hunter 33, Ben Edwards 32, Taylor Adams 30, Ben Paton 28, Matty Lloyd 27
Carlton: Sam Docherty 39, Will Hayes 31, Cooper Vickery 24, Billy Wilson 24, Ben Camporeale 20, Ethan Phillips 20

06:00

COLLINGWOOD     4.0   6.2   8.5     8.8 (56)
GWS GIANTS         2.3   4.8   5.12   5.15 (45)

GWS kicked itself to a first loss of the season as it failed to handle the wintry conditions and a committed Collingwood team led by the building Tom Mitchell to fall by 11 points at Victoria Park on Saturday.

Things looked like going to script when the Giants had 2.2 on the board after nine minutes and the Magpies not having had a look in, but Charlie West and Harry Mahoney took the home team’s first opportunities and the Magpies pushed on to make it five goals in a row when West kicked his second early in the second term.

Trailing by 15 points, GWS hit back to level the scores, but Harry Kennedy’s goal on the half time siren switched the momentum back again and Collingwood added 2.3 to 1.4 in the third to hold sway, before neither team was able to kick a goal in the final term.

The Magpies had 81 less disposals but Charlie Dean’s outstanding form down back (22 disposals, eight marks, 13 rebounds) steadied the ship and Mitchell looked ready to return to AFL action with 21 touches (12 contested) and 13 tackles.

Harry Demattia enjoyed more midfield time to have a career-best 28 possessions and eight entries, while Jakob Ryan and Oleg Markov used the ball better than anyone else and West finished with a match-defining three goals.

Marc Sheather and James Leake were everywhere for the Giants with 39 possessions each as Harry Rowston, Harry Oliver and Louie Montgomery gave the visitors the top five ball winners in the game. Nick Madden was terrific in the ruck for 25 disposals, seven marks, 33 hitouts and seven clearances and Wade Derksen took 11 marks and laid seven tackles.

BEST
Collingwood:
Charlie Dean, Tew Jiath, Harry Demattia, Tom Mitchell, Charlie West, Brady Grey
GWS Giants: James Leake, Marc Sheather, Harrison Oliver, Harry Rowston, Ryan Angwin, Wade Derksen

GOALS
Collingwood: Charlie West 3, Josh Bennetts, Josh Browne, Harry Kennedy, Harry Mahoney, Chad Mulvogue
GWS Giants: Josh Fahey, Phoenix Gothard, Ryan Hebron, Harry Rowston, Nathan Wardius

DISPOSALS
Collingwood:
Harry Demattia 28, Oleg Markov 24, Jakob Ryan 24, Josh Browne 22, Charlie Dean 22
GWS Giants: James Leake 39, Marc Sheather 39, Harry Rowston 30, Louie Montgomery 29, Harry Oliver 29

05:45

CASEY DEMONS              3.5   4.9   4.17   6.17 (53)
SOUTHPORT SHARKS     3.2   4.4   9.7     14.10 (94)

SOUTHPORT ran away from wayward Casey Demons in the second half to record a 41-point win at Casey Fields and consolidate its place in the top four.

The Melbourne-stacked Demons were the better team for large periods of the game, but if bad kicking is bad football then Casey was as bad as any team has been for a long time.

Despite most of their shots being extremely kickable, the Demons at one stage scored nine behinds between goals and their three quarter-time score of 4.17 did not include five shots that went out on the full.

And they were made to pay the ultimate price as the professional Sharks added 5.3 to 0.8 in the third quarter and another 5.3 to 2.0 in the last to record a win that looks a lot easier than it was.

Southport struggled with its forward entries in the first half, bombing the ball long towards Hugh Dixon and Wylie Buzza only to have Blake Howes (31 disposals, 13 marks, five rebounds), the returning Jake Lever (17 disposals, eight marks) and Jed Adams (13 disposals, five marks) pick them off with ease.

But the Sharks recalibrated at half-time and went for chaos balls inside 50, allowing their more mobile forwards to get to work.

Zac Foot was electric for Southport in the middle with 32 touches, 10 marks, eight tackles and a goal, Mike Manteit (30 disposals, 10 marks) and Brock Aston linked up well down the outer wing.

Jesse Joyce (30 disposals, eight marks, eight rebounds) was terrific down back, Max Pescud worked tirelessly off half-forward, Elijah Reardon was outstanding in his first VFL game for four years and Jack Sexton did some head-turning things, while Jacob Dawson and Boyd Woodcock kept working despite close attention and Brayden Crossley’s crucial two goals balanced out Tom Campbell’s work in the middle.

Campbell starred for Casey with 20 disposals, 26 hitouts and six clearances, giving opportunities to the excellent Demon midfield led by Mitch Hardie (29 disposals, nine entries, six tackles, one goal) and Taj Woewodin (23 disposals, seven entries), while Jai Culley and Kynan Brown made their presence felt and Jacob van Rooyen attacked the ball strongly and played better than his 11 disposals, six marks and one goal suggest.

BEST
Casey Demons:
Tom Campbell, Kynan Brown, Taj Woewodin, Oliver Sestan, Jack Billings, Mitch Hardie
Southport Sharks: Zac Foot, Jesse Joyce, Hugh Dixon, Jack Sexton, Jacob Dawson, Max Pescud

GOALS
Casey Demons:
Paddy Cross 2, Mitch Hardie, Matt Jefferson, Koltyn Tholstrup, Jacob van Rooyen
Southport Sharks: Hugh Dixon 3, Wylie Buzza, Brayden Crossley, Tai Hayes 2, Zac Foot, Finn Hay, Charlie Rowe, Jack Sexton, Boyd Woodcock

DISPOSALS
Casey Demons:
Blake Howes 31, Mitch Hardie 29, Riley Bonner 27, Taj Woewodin 23, Jack Billings 20, Tom Campbell 20
Southport Sharks: Zac Foot 32, Jesse Joyce 30, Mike Manteit 30, Jacob Dawson 29, Max Pescud 25, Boyd Woodcock 25

06:00

GOLD COAST SUNS     2.1   3.4   3.5     3.11 (29)
BOX HILL HAWKS       3.1   6.3   11.8   17.11 (113)

BOX HILL Hawks broke a four-match losing run against Gold Coast at People First Stadium on Saturday … and how!

The Hawks sent a statement to the rest of the competition that they are clearly the best team in Victoria at the moment, embarrassing the Suns by a record 84 points to join GWS on top of the ladder.

In nailing its highest score and biggest win over the Suns (who had their lowest tally against the Hawks), Box Hill had its easiest victory since 2022 and handed Gold Coast its biggest VFL thrashing, topping an 83-point hiding from Southport in 2021, and its biggest at State League level since a 107-point NEAFL hiding from Sydney in 2017.

Gold Coast led by a point at the 20-minute mark of the second quarter when Bodie Ryan spoiled Cooper Bell’s kick inside-50, with the ball pinging down the ground for Jake Arundell to eventually give the Hawks the lead.

It started a rout where Box Hill added 14.8 to 0.7 for the rest of the match to turn a tight contest into a walkover as the Hawks went +118 in disposals, +23 in clearances despite losing hitouts by 43-19, +38 in marks and even +13 in tackles.

Max Knobel beat Max Ramsden 37-17 in hitouts but the Hawk made the Sun look second rate around the ground to be best afield for the second week in a row with 26 disposals, seven marks, 17 hitouts, nine clearances and three goals.

Jai Serong was impassable at half back with 28 touches and 11 marks alongside Ryan (25 disposals, 11 marks, six rebounds), while Sam Butler (31 disposals, seven clearances) and Henry Hustwaite (28 disposals, nine tackles) dominated through the middle.

Connor Budarick (26 disposals, 11 marks, nine tackles) and Sean Lemmens (25 disposals, eight marks, nine rebounds) were lone hands for the Suns.

BEST
Gold Coast Suns:
Connor Budarick, Sean Lemmens, Caleb Graham, Zak Evans, Nick Francis, Alex Sexton
Box Hill Hawks: Max Ramsden, Jai Serong, Sam Butler, Seamus Mitchell, Jake Arundell, Kye Declase

GOALS
Gold Coast Suns: Nick Francis, Zai Millane, Oscar Wood
Box Hill Hawks: Max Ramsden 3, Jake Arundell, Kye Declase, Max Donohue, Sam Durdin, Matt Hill, Will McCabe 2, Jasper Scaife, Blake Simondson

DISPOSALS
Gold Coast Suns:
Connor Budarick 26, Sean Lemmens 25, Ben Jepson 19, Caleb Graham 18, Alex Sexton 18
Box Hill Hawks: Sam Butler 31, Henry Hustwaite 28, Jai Serong 28, Max Ramsden 26, Bodie Ryan 25

05:58

WILLIAMSTOWN                 3.3   6.5   11.9   12.12 (84)
FOOTSCRAY BULLDOGS     1.4   3.8   3.10   7.14 (56)

BRODIE McLaughlin produced a performance for the ages as Williamstown re-established its home ground fortress either side of its bye, thrashing a disappointing Footscray by 28 points to regain the Terry Wheeler Cup at DSV Stadium.

McLaughlin was the only multiple goal scorer in the game and he kicked 6.2 as the Seagulls continued their recovery from the home Coburg humbling a few weeks ago to have now sunk premiership contenders Southport and the Bulldogs in consecutive matches, with bayside venue remaining one of the difficult places to visit in the competition.

The match was tight early, with scores tied at 3.5 midway through the second quarter, but Williamstown got its radar right and Footscray became the third team of the weekend to waste a plethora of scoring opportunities.

The Seagulls kicked eight unanswered goals to blow the game wide open, and while the Bulldogs added four goals to one in the last quarter, it only served to add respectability to a scoreboard dominated by McLaughlin who outshone them in the air and on the ground.

Luke Parks was at his intercepting best with 10 marks and Joel Fitzgerald had seven rebounds in support, while Toby Triffett (27 disposals, 10 clearances, seven tackles), Jack Brown (22 disposals, 11 tackles, one goal) and the returning Mitch Cox (23 disposals, seven clearances) starred in the middle underneath Tom Downie, who bounced back to form with 19 touches, 49 hitouts and 11 clearances.

Oskar Baker roamed his wing with aplomb for Footscray for 30 possessions, seven rebounds and a goal, Cooper Craig-Peters (25 disposals, eight clearances, 11 tackles) and Harvey Gallagher (21 disposals, six clearances, eight tackles, nine inside 50s) worked hard and Nick Coffield (23 disposals, 11 rebounds, one goal) was terrific down back.

BEST
Williamstown:
Brodie McLaughlin, Luke Parks, Finn O’Dwyer, Mitch Cox, Heath Ollington, Nick Ebinger
Footscray Bulldogs: Ryan Gardner, Cooper Craig-Peters, Harvey Gallagher, Oskar Baker, Nick Coffield, Billy Crofts

GOALS
Williamstown:
Brodie McLaughlin 6, Jack Brown, Nathan Colenso, Noah Gadsby, Hugo Hall-Kahan, Heath Ollington, Jovan Petric
Footscray Bulldogs: Oskar Baker, Nick Coffield, Billy Crofts, Cooper Hynes, Will Lewis, Caleb Poulter, Connor Smith

DISPOSALS
Williamstown:
Toby Triffett 27, Jack Brown 22, Mitch Cox 22, Joel Fitzgerald 20, Tom Downie 19
Footscray Bulldogs: Oskar Baker 30, Cooper Craig-Peters 25, Nick Coffield 23, Harvey Gallagher 21

05:58

PORT MELBOURNE     2.2   2.5   4.11   6.15 (51)
GEELONG CATS          2.3   4.6    5.9     6.11 (47)

PORT Melbourne continued its resurgence into season 2025 after coming from behind to edge out Geelong by four points in a weather-affected Saturday night clash at ETU Stadium.

The Borough looked cooked at 0-4 but have since thrashed the Northern Bullants, drawn away to Southport in a game they should have won and now outslogged the Cats to find themselves back within six points of the top 10.

Down by 18 points midway through the third quarter having not scored a goal for almost an hour, Port had its back against the wall again but responded with the next four majors either side of the last break.

They held their nerve despite a seven-and-a-half minute delay early in the last term when Luca Alessio was knocked out and stretchered off in the next contest after kicking the go-ahead goal, keeping Geelong at bay for the last six minutes after Doyle Madigan had put the Cats back in range.

Fraser Rosman stepped up after loss of Tom Highmore to a dislocated shoulder to have 22 touches, nine marks, nine rebounds and seven tackles, with support from rookie Tom Graham (18 disposals, five rebounds), Tom Hird (29 disposals, six entries, five rebounds) and Harvey Hooper (23 disposals, 11 tackles, two goals).

Marcus Herbert (32 disposals, seven tackles, eight rebounds) raised his mid-season draft chances to be Geelong’s best, with George Stevens (31 disposals, eight clearances, 12 tackles, eight entries) screaming out for an AFL debut. Ted Clohesy and Jhye Clark put in bids for recalls and Keighton Matofai-Forbes continued the strong start to his career with 13 rebounds among 20 disposals.

BEST
Port Melbourne: Fraser Rosman, Harvey Hooper, Tom Graham, Tom Hird, Sam Philp, Dyson Heppell
Geelong Cats: Marcus Herbert, George Stevens, Patrick Kelly, Ted Clohesy, Jhye Clark

GOALS
Port Melbourne:
Harvey Hooper, Archi Manton 2, Luca Alessio, Sam Philp
Geelong Cats: Ted Clohesy, Xavier Ivisic, Patrick Kelly, Doyle Madigan, Jay Polkinghorne, Jay Rantall

DISPOSALS
Port Melbourne:
Tom Hird 29, Harvey Hooper 23, Fraser Rosman 22, Dom Bedendo 18, Tom Graham 18
Geelong Cats: Marcus Herbert 32, George Stevens 31, Ted Clohesy 27, Jhye Clark 22, Patrick Retschko 22

06:00

COBURG                             0.1   2.5   8.7   15.9 (99)
NORTHERN BULLANTS     4.4   6.4   8.6    10.9 (69)

COBURG shook off a first-half malaise and a serious threat from a more determined Northern Bullants to win its third straight Battle of Bell Street by 30 points at Barry Plant Park on Sunday.

The Lions were as bad in the first half as the Bullants were good, with the Preston boys kicking four unanswered goals in the first quarter as they outplayed their more fancied arch-rivals on effort, endeavour, hunger, commitment and skill level.

And it continued in the second term despite Coburg dominating possession as the Bullants’ pressure created countless mistakes and set up both their goals as they retained a 23-point lead at half-time.

But the Lions returned to the field for the third term with their ears ringing and paint peeling off the walls of the changeroom and they gradually straightened themselves up, kicking six goals and finally grabbing the lead in the shadows of three quarter-time through two brilliant goals from Kyle Weightman.

The writing was on the wall from there and despite the visitors’ best efforts, they just didn’t have the class to last the four quarters after losing Paddy Fairlie (illness) before the bounce and Will Elliott (hamstring) the previous week as Weightman and Mitch Podhajski each booted four goals for the half to escape with the win and move to 11th on the ladder.

Podhajski kept Coburg in the game in the first half despite not getting his reward until later on, finishing with 5.1 from 17 disposals, while Weightman was in the wars early but escaped to kick his four from 14 touches and Matt Allison kicked two crucial goals in the third quarter and finished with three.

Jack Bytel returned from a knee injury to finish with 38 disposals at 81.6 per cent, plus 11 clearances, seven tackles and eight inside-50s to win the Harold Martin Medal for best afield, while Joel Trudgeon (36 disposals, eight clearances, 10 tackles) and Donovan Toohey (34 disposals nine marks, seven rebounds, one goal) won plenty of the ball to cover Flynn Gentile, who was held to just 13 possessions by Chris Scerri, Maison Goodman and others.

Max Kennedy played well on his wing and Deacon Kalpakis (19 disposals 10 marks) and Rhys Galvin (18 disposals, seven marks) worked hard to keep their team in the game despite the brilliant display from John Jorgensen, who looked like getting the ball every time he got a one-on-one, booting 5.1 from 12 touches and seven marks.

Liam Coghlan played his best game in red and white to have 23 touches and eight rebounds, Jean-Luc Velissaris worked overtime for 21 disposals, nine clearances, 11 entries and a goal, Josh Hamilton (21 disposals, six rebounds) bounced well out of defence and Goodman (19 disposals, seven clearances) and Scerri (15 disposals, eight tackles) also stood out.

BEST
Coburg:
Jack Bytel, Mitch Podhajski, Hugo Bromell, Kyle Weightman, Braedyn Gillard, Matt Allison
Northern Bullants: Jean-Luc Velissaris, Kane Emery, John Jorgensen, Deng Andrew, Riley Greene

GOALS
Coburg:
Mitch Podhajski 5, Kyle Weightman 4, Matt Allison 3, Flynn Gentile, Max Thompson, Donovan Toohey
Northern Bullants: John Jorgensen 5, Caleb Franks 2, Giorgio Varagiannis, Jean-Luc Velissaris, Brody Glenn

DISPOSALS
Coburg:
Jack Bytel 38, Joel Trudgeon 36, Donovan Toohey 34, Max Kennedy 28, Hugo Bromell 26
Northern Bullants: Liam Coghlan 23, Josh Hamilton 21, Jean-Luc Velissaris 21, Maison Goodman 19

05:58

NORTH MELBOURNE     4.2   5.4   8.8   9.8 (62)
RICHMOND                    1.1   2.5   3.9   8.12 (60)

NORTH Melbourne held off a fast-finishing Richmond to win a low-scoring thriller by two points at Arden Street Oval to move into the top six.

The Kangaroos looked like they had the game well under control for most of the day after kicking the first three goals, eking out a 17-point lead at the main break and pushing out by 30 after Geordie Payne’s goal midway through the third term.

Cooper Harvey’s third goal kept them 29 in front turning for home and they still held that margin when Zac Fisher hit the target five minutes into the last, but they didn’t score again as the Tigers rattled home.

Quick goals to Jasper Alger, Mo Yassine and Jacob Bauer brought it the difference to single figures entering time-on and when Judson Clarke snapped his first goal post-ACL with a beauty from 45m at the 28-minute mark the grandstand finish was on.

But as with its AFL team earlier in the day, North Melbourne held firm to deny the Tigers for the last 110 seconds, with Will Phillips and Adam Tomlinson making crucial intercepts on the Macauley Rd wing to ensure the siren went before Tom McCarthy could pump the ball to the Tigers’ teeth of goal.

Tomlinson’s late involvement was fitting as he controlled the air in defence for North Melbourne for 14 marks and nine rebounds on his way to 27 disposals, with Eddie Ford joining him in a new role in defence and gathering 26 touches, 12 marks and 10 rebounds, while Fisher had 23 to go with his goal.

Tyler Sonsie had another day out for Richmond, roaming far and wide for 37 possessions, nine clearances, seven tackles, eight entries, seven rebounds and a goal.

He had support from McCarthy, James Trezise, Jacob Blight and Harry Scott, who all had 20+ disposals at 87 per cent efficiency or better and ruckman Oliver Hayes-Brown (18 disposals, 14 contested, 31 hitouts).

BEST
North Melbourne:
Adam Tomlinson, Eddie Ford, Robert Hansen, Cooper Harvey, Zac Fisher, Luke Urquhart
Richmond: Tyler Sonsie, Tom McCarthy, Harry Scott, Liam Fawcett, James Trezise, Oliver Hayes-Brown

GOALS
North Melbourne: Cooper Harvey 3, Zac Fisher, Taylor Goad, Oliver Lowe, Geordie Payne, Will Phillips, James Tarrant
Richmond: Mo Yassine 2, Jasper Alger, Jacob Bauer, Judson Clarke, Campbell Gray, Mykelti Lefau, Tyler Sonsie

DISPOSALS
North Melbourne:
Adam Tomlinson 27, Eddie Ford 26, Zac Fisher 23, Darcy Macpherson 22, Will Phillips 22, Luke Urquhart 22
Richmond: Tyler Sonsie 37, Tom McCarthy 24, Jacob Blight 23, James Trezise 23, Harry Scott 21

06:00

SANDRINGHAM     1.2   4.4      6.5     9.7 (61)
WERRIBEE             4.3   11.4    12.8   17.10 (112)

WERRIBEE showed a clear gap in class as it kicked seven goals in the second quarter to gain the separation to cruise to an easy 51-point win over Sandringham at Wilson Storage Trevor Barker Beach Oval.

Coming off a rare home loss to a powerhouse Box Hill team that was franked by the Hawks’ demolition of Gold Coast, the Tigers got back on the horse in style, kicking five goals in 12 minutes either side of the first break to racing to a seven-goal lead by half-time, before responding to a third-quarter rally from the Zebras.

Werribee was simply more even across the park, sharing the goals around behind spearhead Hudson Garoni’s four from 17 possessions and 10 marks and Flynn Young’s three from 20 disposals and nine marks, with Zac Banch also dangerous in attack to kick 2.3 and set up several others.

In the middle, Dom Brew showed he doesn’t need big numbers to impact, having 20 disposals but laying 12 tackles and kicking two goals, with Cooper Whyte (25 disposals, seven clearances, six tackles) and Angus Hicks showing their class, while the Louis Pinnuck-led backline did as they pleased.

For Sandringham, midfielders Zak Jones (39 disposals, nine clearances, seven tackles, seven inside 50s), Hugh Boxshall (30 disposals, nine clearances, seven tackles, one goal) and Hunter Clark (27 disposals, six clearances, 11 tackles, one goal) all had big numbers, with the former also keeping Brew’s numbers down.

Billy Richardson looked good in attack with six marks and two goals, while the returning Dan Butler (achilles) kicked two last-quarter goals but was otherwise unsighted as he works his way back to fitness.

BEST
Sandringham:
Zak Jones, Hunter Clark, Max Heath, Hugh Boxshall, Billy Richardson, Alex Dodson
Werribee: Flynn Young, Hudson Garoni, Louis Pinnuck, Zac Banch, Jesse Clark, Cooper Whyte

GOALS
Sandringham
: Dan Butler, Jonah Campigli, Billy Richardson 2, Hugh Boxshall, Hunter Clark, Max Heath
Werribee: Hudson Garoni 4, Flynn Young 3, Zac Banch, Dom Brew, Harry Maguire 2, Jay Dahlhaus, Anthony DePasquale, Harrison Miller, Jack Riding

DISPOSALS
Sandringham:
Zak Jones 38, Hugh Boxshall 30, Hunter Clark 27, Angus Hastie 23
Werribee: Cooper Whyte 25, Jesse Clark 21, Angus Hicks 21, Dom Brew 20, Flynn Young 20

06:00