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Vixens complete the fairytale finish for their departing coach, winning by a single goal

Vixens complete the fairytale finish for their departing coach, winning by a single goal

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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Super Netball Grand Final 2025: Melbourne Vixens win, highlights
Super Netball Grand Final 2025: Melbourne Vixens win, highlights

The Australian

time13 hours ago

  • The Australian

Super Netball Grand Final 2025: Melbourne Vixens win, highlights

The Melbourne Vixens have handed coach Simone McKinnis the ultimate farewell gift, engineering a stunning form turnaround to beat raging favourites West Coast Fever 59-58 in a thrilling Super Netball grand final. If McKinnis celebrated the fairytale, Jhaniele Fowler-Nembhard was a close runner-up after her super shot — just her seventh of the season — clawed the Fever to within one goal and gave them the hint of a miraculous comeback after they started the final period five goals down. But it was not to be, the Vixens playing the ball around in the final minute and Kiera Austin sending up a shot — that toppled off the rim — but still sent a raucous crowd of 15,013 raucous fans at Rod Laver Arena into raptures. The Vixens attacked the game from the start, playing a fearless and physical brand of netball to beat the Fever at their own game. There were plenty of heroes for the Vixens but the efforts of Diamonds defender Jo Weston, who has played her entire national league career under McKinnis, were outstanding. The celebrations start for Rudi Ellis and Sophie Garbin. Weston was an everywhere woman in defence, seemingly unwilling to allow her side to lose. 'I just feel on top of the world, that was such an incredible team performance,' she said of a result that halted the Fever's 13-match winning streak. 'I can't believe we won.' Seemingly down and out halfway through the season, with just a 16 per cent statistical chance of making the top four, the Vixens have rallied, clawing their way into the playoffs and winning three knockout finals in a row to lift the premiership trophy. Di Honey, Assistant Coach of the Vixens. 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Netball Australia chair Liz Ellis presents the player of the match medal to Kiera Austin. FAIRYTALES AND NIGHTMARES It may have been a fairytale ending for McKinnis but it was far from that for the Fever. After back-to-back preliminary final losses by a single goal in 2023 and 2024, it was another single-goal defeat for the West Coast and one that will hurt deeply. 'This one hurts but I know that we'll come back better next year,' Fever captain Jess Anstiss said. There were two incredible narratives in this match - McKinnis's career ending and the inspirational comeback of Fowler-Nembhard, the Fever's talismanic goaler who missed the first two games of the season after the devastating loss of her pregnancy. Despite that, she ended the season as the league's leading goal scorer, averaging just over 52 goals per game. Kate Moloney and Kate Eddy chair off departing coach Simone McKinnis. She had 51 goals in the decider, including a super shot that almost inspired a win but couldn't quite get her side across the line. Fowler-Nembhard has shown with her outstanding performances again this season she's the shooting GOAT but she was certainly made to work for her chances. Rudi Ellis wore her like a glove at 'keeper and her physicality clearly frustrated the Jamaican great, finishing with three gains, including an intercept. Such is her dominance, Fowler-Nembhard always comes in for extra attention but her emotions rarely boil over. But with Ellis doing an outstanding job of maintaining front position and winning the odd ball, she was not getting things all her own way. There were plenty of Fever fans inside Rod Laver Arena but the Melbourne crowd was boisterous in its support of the Vixens, effectively becoming another player for the home side. Kate Eddy and Hannah Mundy of the Vixens. SUPER NETBALL'S SUPER FINAL The Vixens were always going to have to be brave to win the match and player of the match Kiera Austin led that journey in the opening term, converting her first super shot opportunity to level the scores up. All up, Austin finished with three two-point goals in nerveless shots that turned the match, as well as a stellar defensive effort. The Vixens took a single-point lead to the opening break and while the Fever got things back on level pegging early in the second when Jordan Cransberg won turnover ball, where they had been able to turn those moments into runs earlier in the season, the Vixens were able to stem the tide, keeping themselves in the game. They won three of the four quarters and while the Fever won the last, their fightback just wasn't enough.

GEORGIE PARKER: Melbourne Vixens' grand final win over West Coast Fever a terrific showcase event
GEORGIE PARKER: Melbourne Vixens' grand final win over West Coast Fever a terrific showcase event

West Australian

time21 hours ago

  • West Australian

GEORGIE PARKER: Melbourne Vixens' grand final win over West Coast Fever a terrific showcase event

'Can you get me tickets for the grand final?', is usually only a message I receive in the last weekend in September for the AFL. But, this year I was receiving them for a different sport, netball. It feels as though Super Netball is only getting better and has more interest year after year, and this year's grand final was no different. I couldn't get any, of course, because it was sold out. So, in front of a loud, sellout crowd of 15,013, the Melbourne Vixens pulled off a fairy tale one goal win over the West Coast Fever on Saturday night. A result that not only crowned a new champion, but in a match that, in my opinion, cemented Super Netball as the premier women's sporting league in Australia. The game had everything. The underdog Vixens, written off by many earlier in the season, clinched a win against a Fever side that had won 13 games straight. It marked the end of an era for Vixens coach Simone McKinnis, who bowed out after 13 years at the helm. And it showcased netball at its best – fast, skilful, insanely athletic, dramatic, and most of all, elite. But beyond the final, you can't help but remember just how far Super Netball has come, and how it's had to do it the hard way. My cousin played for the Thunderbirds in the early 2000s, so watching the differences in the league now compared to then, by how they train (no more after work training sessions) and how professional they are obviously backed by a real income, is huge. Unlike the AFLW, NRLW, or WBBL, all excellent leagues in their own right, and ones I support and love, Super Netball has built its empire without the safety net of a men's competition propping it up. While the others benefited from being extensions of established men's brands, they can expand, take risks, and grow with big financial losses in the hope it will pay dividends. Meanwhile, netball has done the hard yards solo. That's not a criticism of those leagues, far from it (with the female athletic talent in the country I believe they just jumped on too late), but when women's footy and cricket arrived, netball found itself fighting a battle on a few fronts. Firstly, it was losing not just some of its best junior athletes to rival sports but senior, established players who jumped codes. I played with former Australian netball captain, Sharni Norder (nee Layton) at Collingwood in the AFLW for example. Netball also saw corporate sponsorship dollars flow to women's arms of already well funded men's codes and female players, relatively new in the sporting world, rather than their league and their established players. How many netballers do you see on insurance, car or phone network ads? It's a scenario that could have buried the game, like it has with many other sports. Instead, Super Netball doubled down and knew it had a product worth fighting for. It developed world class pathways and a league that invited the best in the world to compete. It built a compelling product, that serviced its very loyal fans, but at the same time made it a game anyone would want to watch. It did this without being tied to a men's league, which meant it had to work harder, market smarter, and demand more from every part of the sport. Two years ago, players took a stand in a heated pay dispute with Netball Australia. At the time, some questioned the timing and ethics. Now, after a season like this, the fight from the players feels justified. The athletes knew their worth, and they've proved it every week since. This final was everything elite women's sport should be. It was fiercely contested, beautifully played, and impossible to look away from. It also caught the attention of Hollywood legend Whoopi Goldberg, a surprise entrant into the netball conversation, who announced this year she's backing the league and plans to bring it to a broader audience through her major network AWSN (All Women Sport Network). I can imagine her and her team would have watched the grand final and thought it had been money well spent. The Vixens' dramatic finish to the season has been the best possible advertisement for netball. Super Netball didn't just survive the storm of competing codes, it weathered it, evolved, and emerged stronger. Now it's not just competing, it's leading and is easily the best in the country. So while it does have a three decade head start on women playing footy and cricket at the same level, it's given us an idea on what standard we can expect with time, and doesn't it look great?

Olympic dreams, TV deals and a screen of one's own: Inside Netball's ultimate power play
Olympic dreams, TV deals and a screen of one's own: Inside Netball's ultimate power play

Sydney Morning Herald

timea day ago

  • Sydney Morning Herald

Olympic dreams, TV deals and a screen of one's own: Inside Netball's ultimate power play

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