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Geelong coach Chris Scott wants teammates to help Jeremy Cameron kick 100 goals

Geelong coach Chris Scott wants teammates to help Jeremy Cameron kick 100 goals

News.com.au6 hours ago
Geelong coach Chris Scott says he's 'enthused' about the idea of his players helping Jeremy Cameron get to 100 goals for the season, but there's 'a line' he won't let them cross with a top-four berth to play for.
Cameron jagged another six goals in his team's 88-point thumping of Port Adelaide that lifted him to 75 for the season with three regular season games, including two against battlers Essendon and Richmond, plus at least two finals at this stage, to come.
No AFL player has kicked a century of goals since Lance Franklin in 2008 and Cameron, 32, was the beneficiary of a few handball receives on Sunday in a sign his teammates are in on the quest.
The century was put on the radar after Cameron kicked 11 goals against North Melbourne and will continue to be a talking point in the run to the finals.
But the fourth-placed Cats are also within one win of ladder-leaders Adelaide and Collingwood and two points shy of the Brisbane Lions, with winnable matches against the Bombers, Sydney and Tigers in the next three weeks.
Winning those games in the best possible fashion is Scott's main agenda item to set up a premiership assault.
He said he was happy for the Cameron sideshow to continue, but not if it cames at the detriment of winning.
'Trying to put myself in that position, I'd be a bit enthused around the idea,' Scott said.
'My sense is that it's still so far off. Like, he's going to have to play a few finals, which is a long way from a guarantee for us.
'I think we're a better team when he has the ball, but there is a line there where if we're choosing him over better options then we'd need to address it.
'I'm not seeing it too much, but they're clearly looking for him.'
Scott said Cameron being the benefit of handballs from teammates with set shots was often a better outcome for the team.
'There are certain positions on the ground where him snapping the ball on his left (foot) is a higher percentage than one of the best kicks in our team on their right,' Scott said.
'I'm happy for him to get the ball in that situation.'
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