Review Round 4 - Geelong Cats v GWS Giants, Saturday 13 April 2019 @ GMHBA Stadium at 1.45 pm

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Nov 23, 2015
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Where and when: GMHBA Stadium, Saturday April 13, 1.45pm AEST

Last time they met: Kardinia Park, round seven, 2018: Geelong 14.9 (93) defeated Greater Western Sydney 4.8 (32).

The Cats held the visitors to just two goals to the final break, en route to a comfortable victory. Tom Hawkins kicked four goals, while first-year midfielder Tim Kelly (30 touches) continued a brilliant start to his career. The wasteful Giants played into the Cats' hands as Tom Stewart and Mark Blicavs dominated in defence.

What it means for Geelong: Taking another contender's scalp. A 3-0 start to the season looks strong, but extending their unbeaten record ahead of games against Hawthorn and West Coast would provide a platform for a genuine flag tilt.

What it means for GWS: Proving themselves on the road. Despite varying away success last season, the Giants have now lost their last three on the road against contenders Melbourne, Collingwood and West Coast. Yet to win in Geelong from four attempts.

How Geelong wins: The Cats' blistering start to the season has come as the No.2 ranked contested ball side in the competition. If they continue that against the 14th-ranked Giants, it will go a long way towards moving to 4-0.

How GWS wins: By moving the ball quickly. Last week against Richmond, Jeremy Cameron and Jeremy Finlayson combined for 12 majors off the back of fluent ball movement. If the Giants get stuck going slow and long against the Cats' defence they'll be in for a tough night at the office.

The stat: The cohesion of the Giants' attack of Jeremy Cameron, Harry Himmelberg and Jeremy Finlayson has them ranked No.3 in the competition for marks inside 50.

The match-up: Mark Blicavs v Jeremy Cameron

Cameron's bag of seven last week saw him rocket up the Schick AFL Ratings board to now be the eighth-ranked key forward in the competition. Cameron, who has kicked just five goals in three matches in Geelong, comes up against the No.4-ranked key defender in the game in what shapes as a pivotal battle.

It's a big week for: Shane Mumford

Returns to his old stamping ground with the Giants' midfield under his control. In his first game since 2017 Mumford split the honours with Tiger Toby Nankervis last week – despite all of his 14 disposals coming as handballs. This week presents a different challenge against the more agile Rhys Stanley.

Despite the table-topping Cats being firm favourites for this game, hopefully the return of co-captain Callan Ward will spark our team . If we can do the things we did well against the Bombers and Tigers (on the road though) we could cause an upset; if we play in the manner we did against the Eagles then there's another spanking coming up.

Let's go Giants, let's play sparkling footy and cause an upset!
 
On talent alone GWS win this game. Yet they’ve had their troubles proving their legitimacy the last few years in big games. A win here could go a long way to finally giving them the belief to go all the way. Cats strong at home and good test for cats kids. Close game coming up!
 

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