
Suns turn tables on premiers in crucial QClash romp
The Suns had lost 12 of the past 13 Queensland derbies to the defending premiers.
But on Saturday, with a maiden finals berth on the radar, the hosts called the shots in a 20.10 (130) to 9.10 (64) romp at a wet People First Stadium.
Victory, in front of 20,833 fans, was the Suns' biggest in a QClash, while their 12th win this season is a club-high.
Captain Noah Anderson (33 touches) did the early damage, while ruckman Jarrod Witts dominated, and coach Damien Hardwick's bold selection calls were vindicated.
Victory pushed the Suns (12-6), who have a game in hand, to seventh in a congested top eight, while the Lions (13-5-1) missed a chance to at least briefly occupy top spot.
Matt Rowell (37 touches, 14 clearances, 12 tackles) won the Marcus Ashcroft Medal, and the recalled Alex Davies (30 touches, 10 tackles) flipped the script on the usually dominant Lions midfield.
Jy Farrar (three goals) enjoyed his first AFL game since late 2023, Ben Long rediscovered his early-season form with four majors, and Bailey Humphrey (three goals, eight tackles) also shone.
The Lions' Ashcroft brothers Will and Levi were well held, while Lachie Neale, Josh Dunkley and Hugh McCluggage suffered a rare engine-room loss.
Victory gave the Suns a 2-1 record against the competition's top three sides in their past three games, Gold Coast now with just one top-eight opponent in their final five regular-season games.
Meanwhile, the premiers next travel to the MCG to face table-topping Collingwood as part of a tough run to September.
Brisbane started well with goals to Callum Ah Chee and Neale, before the Suns, fresh off an Adelaide battering a week earlier, responded.
Witts set the tone at the bounce, while Davies threw his 193cm frame around and fit-again Sam Collins imposed himself in defence.
The contest was drifting in the second quarter until skipper Anderson again took it by the scruff with a goal and assist inside a minute.
His first drifted over the pack and was toed on the line by Farrar, before he produced a repeat of his Collingwood match-winner a fortnight earlier, streaking from the centre square and nailing a major from 50 metres after a neat one-two.
The Suns' fine kicking continued when Long threaded the needle, creating a 33-point half-time buffer as heavy rain started to fall.
It didn't slow Farrar, who benefited from another clever Witts tap to squeeze through his third goal.
Rowell was running freely in a dominant third term, with Ben Ainsworth and Long's goals swelling the lead beyond 50 points to effectively kill the contest.
Neale still amassed 36 touches, while Cam Rayner kicked three late goals to go with 19 disposals for Brisbane.
Lions utility Conor McKenna (hamstring) was substituted at halftime.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Perth Now
24 minutes ago
- Perth Now
Finals beckon, but Suns keep their Witts about them
Jarrod Witts' rucking wares are being heralded as All-Australian worthy, while Gold Coast, in reach of a top-four finish, keep their feet in new AFL territory. The Suns' historic 66-point QClash victory on Saturday gave them, with five regular-season games to play, a club-best 12th win this season. Four of those games come against teams not in finals contention, leaving the Suns in the hunt for a top-four finish in what would be their maiden post-season foray. Witts, two games shy of his 200th AFL game, has been critical in that run. The 32-year-old helped turn the screws against the Brisbane Lions on Saturday as the Suns' midfield upstaged the Lions' for their biggest QClash win. Unprompted, Hardwick launched a campaign for the ruckman post-game. "Can I make a statement about Jarrod Witts? Can we start having a conversation?" he posed when asked about the performance of Witts' star on-ballers Matt Rowell and Noah Anderson. "I watched TV the other day, they had a list of ruckmen that are in the mix. Go and have a look at what our guy's done to all those guys." Before Saturday, Witts had collected the seventh-most coaches' votes of all ruckmen, his 26 dwarfed by leaders Brodie Grundy (65) and Max Gawn (59). "Have the conversation about how good this guy's become,": Hardwick said. "These guys (Suns midfielders) should be buying him coffee every day. Unbelievable. "I'd love to have him as All-Australian … I wouldn't pick another one." The Suns play Richmond, Carlton, GWS, Essendon and Port Adelaide in the run to a potential first finals campaign. Only the Giants are a shot of joining them, although emotion will be high when the Power play their final game under long-time mentor Ken Hinkley. "It is every side's challenge, isn't it," Hardwick said. "The sides we are talking about, they are going to have their moments and they are going to play well. "At various stages we haven't beaten those sides we should have beaten and that is going to be our next challenge. "If we concentrate firmly on the next shift, where our feet are right now, we are going to be OK."


Perth Now
24 minutes ago
- Perth Now
Lions still hungry after series win over Wallabies
The jubilant British and Irish Lions will only take one night to celebrate before setting their sights on their first 3-0 clean sweep in more than 100 years against the Wallabies. The Lions showed their courage to claw their way back from an 18-point deficit to deny the Wallabies at the MCG, with fullback Hugo Keenan scoring in the final minute to snatch a 29-26 victory. After winning the first match 27-19 in Brisbane, the men in red will be presented with the Tom Richards Cup in Sydney following the third Test. Coach Andy Farrell said it was a fairytale victory. "This is a dream for everyone in our dressing room," he said. "These lads have dreamed of being a British and Irish Lion all their lives and to get to the point where we come to the MCG, 90,000 people, with a dramatic finish like that to win the series, is what dreams are made of and no-one can deny that for us now,. "We are absolutely delighted that we showed the courage of what it takes to be a Lion." The last time the Lions won a series 3-0 was in 1904 and skipper Maro Itoje said that remained the target, with the side also unbeaten in tour games. "I think the first time we met, Big Faz (Farrell) made the call, he wants us to go out here and win everything," the lock said. "Don't get me wrong, absolutely delighted with the result tonight, but we want to go again next week. "This will live long in the memory - often in sport, you have to move on to the next thing, focus on the next challenge, and no doubt we will do that after tonight's celebration." Farrell said that despite already wrapping up the series he wouldn't change the squad's approach for the third and final match. "No, the plan will stay the same - win or lose we trust the plan ahead," the Ireland coach said. "We'll make sure that we enjoy tonight, that's for sure, because we've just made a bit of history, so we're delighted with that."


The Advertiser
2 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Reaction key after Lions' rare QClash fizzer
Brisbane Lions coach Chris Fagan has reason to believe the side's QClash fizzer against Gold Coast was an anomaly as focus quickly shifts on their tough run to September. The defending premiers are yet to officially book their finals ticket after falling to 13-5-1, thanks to a humbling 66-point loss to the Suns on the Gold Coast on Saturday. The 20.10 (130) to 9.10 (64) romp was the Suns' biggest derby win and gave them a club-best 12 wins this season as they seek a maiden finals foray. Usually dominant in the midfield, the Lions were outgunned as ruckman Jarrod Witts provided good service to Matt Rowell, Noah Anderson and Alex Davies. It was only the Suns' second win in the past 14 QClash contests. Fagan estimated fans "wouldn't have seen a performance like that too often in the past six years". "Our last eight games we've won six and lost two. We've been up for a fair while and tonight we were really poor in every facet of the game, to be honest," he said. The Lions face table-topping Collingwood at the MCG on Saturday, then host Sydney, travel to face Fremantle and finish the regular season at the Gabba against Hawthorn. "It is hard to stay up every week, there's no doubt about that," Fagan said. "That's part and parcel of the challenge. "How you reflect on it really is how you react next week and how you play next week. "We've got a pretty hard game ... I'm confident our group will respond, they normally do." Utility Conor McKenna, who had won his spot back in the side this week, will have scans after being substituted at halftime with a hamstring injury. Brisbane Lions coach Chris Fagan has reason to believe the side's QClash fizzer against Gold Coast was an anomaly as focus quickly shifts on their tough run to September. The defending premiers are yet to officially book their finals ticket after falling to 13-5-1, thanks to a humbling 66-point loss to the Suns on the Gold Coast on Saturday. The 20.10 (130) to 9.10 (64) romp was the Suns' biggest derby win and gave them a club-best 12 wins this season as they seek a maiden finals foray. Usually dominant in the midfield, the Lions were outgunned as ruckman Jarrod Witts provided good service to Matt Rowell, Noah Anderson and Alex Davies. It was only the Suns' second win in the past 14 QClash contests. Fagan estimated fans "wouldn't have seen a performance like that too often in the past six years". "Our last eight games we've won six and lost two. We've been up for a fair while and tonight we were really poor in every facet of the game, to be honest," he said. The Lions face table-topping Collingwood at the MCG on Saturday, then host Sydney, travel to face Fremantle and finish the regular season at the Gabba against Hawthorn. "It is hard to stay up every week, there's no doubt about that," Fagan said. "That's part and parcel of the challenge. "How you reflect on it really is how you react next week and how you play next week. "We've got a pretty hard game ... I'm confident our group will respond, they normally do." Utility Conor McKenna, who had won his spot back in the side this week, will have scans after being substituted at halftime with a hamstring injury. Brisbane Lions coach Chris Fagan has reason to believe the side's QClash fizzer against Gold Coast was an anomaly as focus quickly shifts on their tough run to September. The defending premiers are yet to officially book their finals ticket after falling to 13-5-1, thanks to a humbling 66-point loss to the Suns on the Gold Coast on Saturday. The 20.10 (130) to 9.10 (64) romp was the Suns' biggest derby win and gave them a club-best 12 wins this season as they seek a maiden finals foray. Usually dominant in the midfield, the Lions were outgunned as ruckman Jarrod Witts provided good service to Matt Rowell, Noah Anderson and Alex Davies. It was only the Suns' second win in the past 14 QClash contests. Fagan estimated fans "wouldn't have seen a performance like that too often in the past six years". "Our last eight games we've won six and lost two. We've been up for a fair while and tonight we were really poor in every facet of the game, to be honest," he said. The Lions face table-topping Collingwood at the MCG on Saturday, then host Sydney, travel to face Fremantle and finish the regular season at the Gabba against Hawthorn. "It is hard to stay up every week, there's no doubt about that," Fagan said. "That's part and parcel of the challenge. "How you reflect on it really is how you react next week and how you play next week. "We've got a pretty hard game ... I'm confident our group will respond, they normally do." Utility Conor McKenna, who had won his spot back in the side this week, will have scans after being substituted at halftime with a hamstring injury.