The difference this Day makes: How the Hawks have taken the next step

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“It’s been something I’ve been trying to work on,” said Day of his goalkicking.

Hawk folk may have inhaled sharply when Day went off in the third term, looking sore. Happily for the brown and golds, it was “just cramp”, as he later confirmed. “[I was] just getting back to match fitness, [and] hadn’t played obviously at the back end of last year, so hopefully that’s the end of that.”

He added of his absence from the finals: “To look on from the sidelines when I was having so much fun in the middle part of the year was a bit frustrating. But I was proud of the boys, and now to be back fully fit I’m so excited.”

Day agreed that his Hawks were chockers with confidence/belief. He didn’t see a problem with that, either.

“Yeah we do. I think internally, [we’ve got] so much confidence. Without the outside expectation raising, I don’t think it’s fazed us too much and we’ll just keep going forward.”

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The Hawks were more than a happy team in the rooms after their 20-point triumph over the 2024 grand finalist [14.12 (96) to 11.10 (76)], knowing that they’ve been handed a difficult early fixture, at least based on last year. They were rapt with Battle and especially Barrass, who conceded a few goals to Joel Amartey – one from a pretty soft free – but gained in surety and influence in the second half.

“Big TB has won a lot of key contests,” said coach Sam Mitchell of Barrass. “He just got better and better.” Battle, matched to Tom Papley for periods despite the former’s height, “looked comfortable” in Mitchell’s assessment.

It was apparent that the Hawks had picked a smaller team, with only one genuine tall forward, Mabior Chol (Calsher Dear and Mitch Lewis being injured), and the surprise choice of Sam Frost as substitute – hard rain was forecast and duly fell for a while – was based on their view that they needed an insurance tall.

In Sicily, though, the Hawks have perhaps the AFL’s best break-glass option for sending a “defender” to the forward 50-metre arc. Relocated to the goal square for the final term, he booted the sealer, gift-wrapped another goal, and made Sydney defenders uncomfortable whenever the footy was kicked near him.

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James Worpel was the only downbeat note, the midfielder subbed off after leaving the field in the second quarter with what Channel Seven speculated was syndesmosis – a Greek word meaning “bad high ankle sprain.” The Hawks did not provide specifics.

The Swans suffered for the loss of Errol Gulden’s pace, class and laser left boot. They can take comfort in their third term surge that reduced a 27-point deficit to under a kick, and in the explosive brilliance of Chad Warner and Nick Blakey’s run.

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