The Western Bulldogs have gone down to Melbourne in their season opener on Saturday night at Mission Whitten Oval.
A stunning four-goal second quarter put the hosts away while helping the Dees claim a 48-point win to launch their 10th season in the AFLW.
After a nervous start from both teams, Melbourne put the foot down to post the 9.8 (62) to 1.8 (14) win, retaining the Hampson-Hardeman cup in the process.
Following a stagnant opening quarter where both sides struggled to establish any clean movement into space, the Demons came out in the second term with a really aggressive intent to run the ball out of the backline.
The Bulldogs worked hard early to try to use the width of the ground and execute the growth in their game style in their second season under Tam Hyett. Unfortunately, once Melbourne injected Kate Hore into the middle and got rolling out of the contest, the Dogs reverted to their get-out-of-jail kick down the line to ruck Alice Edmonds.
As part of this, they struggled to generate opportunity for their marking forwards in debutant Emma McDonald and Lou Stephenson. Instead, their delivery forward was pressured and rushed.
Once in this pattern, Melbourne established real control on the game, and got to work in front of the scoreboard.
Jasmyn Smith expertly ran the wing for the Western Bulldogs, racking up 11 disposals in the first quarter alone, but could only do so much in the barrage, while second-year forward Elaine Grigg (eight tackles) worked exceptionally hard in the front half.
In her return game from a nasty foot injury incurred in week three last year, vice-captain Ellie Blackburn had a quieter night playing largely as a forward, finishing with 17 disposals.
The Dogs do it well
Kicking off the 10th season for both the Bulldogs and Demons, it was only right they play off for the Hampson-Hardeman cup. And for the Dogs, as the home side, they paid tribute to those who have come before, with their 'Pioneer Party'. Before the teams took to the field, there was a neat light and pyrotechnic show to accompany a host of pioneers – including Hall of Famer Debbie Lee – inaugural players, and 2018 premiership players. It was an important moment to not only get excited about the future, but respect those who did the work in the past to get the AFLW to where it is now.
Up next
The Western Bulldogs will head to IKON Park to take on a similarly smarting Richmond outfit on Sunday afternoon, while Melbourne will host St Kilda at Casey Fields as it looks to make it two wins from two starts.
WESTERN BULLDOGS 0.2 1.4 1.4 1.8 (14)
MELBOURNE 1.3 3.4 7.7 9.8 (62)
GOALS
Western Bulldogs: Woodley
Melbourne: Hore 2, Zanker 2, Hanks 2, Heath, Bannan, Purcell
BEST
Western Bulldogs: Edmonds, Smith, Grigg, Fitzgerald
Melbourne: Hanks, Heath, Hore, Purcell, Chaplin
INJURIES
Western Bulldogs: Nil
Melbourne: Harris (eye)
Crowd: 3,278 at Mission Whitten Oval