We get up and win that
preliminary final, otherwise the following Saturday would be meaningless to me.
Six goals and copping a fearful hiding. The previous week in the second semi we
lose by a point. It’s as if the disappointment paralyses us and seven days
later we don’t turn up to play.
I remember only one thing of
that horrible first half at Tarrawingee. From a forward pocket where the
football never comes I watch our full-back Pat McKenzie repel attack after
attack, seemingly single-handed. Beechworth’s lead would be 12 goals, not six,
without Pat McKenzie. But the rest of us seem powerless to follow his example.
I’ve no recollection of a
stirring half-time speech, but after the break we start to play better. Then
Gunna breaks out of the centre square and puts a long bomb through, post-high
over my arching neck. Somewhere in the back of 17 minds comes a realisation
that we might make something of this.
Through that third quarter I’m
still camped in the forward pocket, but can’t get near the ball. I must kick a
goal in that third quarter but I don’t remember it. At three quarter-time we’re
a vague chance. I go into the shed to get something, don’t know what, never did
that before. As I shuffle back to the huddle an old Greta fan tells me he once
wore the number 12, my number.
I remember the last quarter.
You don’t forget booting four goals in a quarter. I remember each one, vividly.
As the ball eluded me for three quarters, now it chased me everywhere, taking
fickle bounces to my advantage. I kick a left-foot snap from distance, a
right-foot snap from the square, leap clean over a pack at half-forward for the
only specky I ever take, and that goal gives us the lead.
I judge the flight better than
two big blokes in front of me, the ball lobs in my arms. I punt it through the
hi-diddle-diddle: Beechworth are on their knees. I go into the centre bounce,
roost a long left-foot shot for a fifth goal. Kel marks it in the goal square,
blasts it three paddocks away. The game is ours.
Thirty years later at a reunion
Pat McKenzie tells me I won that game. No, Pat, you and Gunna won that game and
16 blokes you inspired to come along with you.
Whorouly never stand a chance
next week in the grand final at Moyhu, no chance at all.
Rock on.
1 comment:
Yeah,a painful but great day, in the end. You killed em. Like you I could not get near the ball in the first half. Strangest thing, felt like I was half frozen. Pat was unbelievable, the game of his life, and he was a wonderful footballer. So were you. Your last quarter was magic. You were like Superman. You know I still have footy dreams where I freeze up and can't get there or do it or kick it, bit like a nihtmare from that first half.
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