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Jai Newcombe and Jack Gunston shine, but Taylor Walker and Darcy Fogarty have nights at Adelaide Oval they’d rather forget

(10) Luke pads: Much quieter than the first final. He tried to work in the game, but he didn’t do enough. In the third time to score a goal, Changkuoth Jiath put a significant struggle and had a small elevator, but Hawthorn had to do more to create chaos for the rear line. 3/10

(12) Jordan Dawson: He looked dangerous by resting forward from the midfield. He was brave and strong around the ball, but he was quiet according to his standards. He tried everything to remove his team, but he carried the heavy loads of others who did not perform too many people. 5/10

Taylor Walker and Crows did not have the best nights.Credit: AFL Photos

(13) Taylor Walker: Early quiet and disappointing. Instead of hitting Darcy Fogarty on Adelaide’s night, the option to score a goal – escaped – kidnapped opportunities and weak skills. 2/10

(14) Jake Solligo: He worked with Berry to try and guide the damage at the stops. He worked hard to ride his legs with the competitions in the second half, but he had no ball -winning effect. Another midfielder withdrawn. 3/10

(16) Max Micalanney: He allowed Chol to fly standing, but he made a solid start. In the second, an expensive turnover provided some strong intersection moments, but Hawks led to the target. 4/10

(19) Zac Taylor: Application pressure was early early but very little further existence. In the second half, midfielder minutes were given to include it, but the effect was minimal with two disposal in the first half. 1/10

(20) Mitch hinge: He exhibited strong running patterns and made several early cross -keys, but he wounded his ankle in the second half, spent 11 minutes on the counter and was subordinate perfectly. 2/10

(24) Josh Worrell: He was still stopped and stopped early, produced a move that saved goals before half -time, and was stronger in the air when the back line of Adameide was under siege. Undoubtedly, the best players at night. 6/10

(25) James Peatling: In the first period, it started with a point and a target showing speed and intention. The effect fell especially after particular. 2/10

(28) Alex Neal-Fullen: He worked hard with a quiet but abundant surface according to his standards. Adelaide normally lacked creative and clean ball. 3/10

(29) Rory Laird: Jack matched with Ginnivan and held him well. He worked hard to be used in the back half and established aggressive chains with the use of the composed ball. It was thrown late in the midfield. 5/10

(30) Wayne Milera: He played in Nick Watson and gave a lot of space in 50, but he created intersections and rebounds. One of Adelaide’s best advocates in the first half is using the ball forward. 4/10

(32) Darcy Fogarty: Secondly, he kidnapped Adelaide’s chances of wasting in a very important snap. Thirdly, he scored a goal to keep them alive, but in general, the finals were not delivered throughout the series. 2/10

(33) Brodie Smith: He made a defensive voice, put some important struggles, and was not beaten in one -to -one. 3/10

(43) Reilly O’Brien: He showed a strong Early Ruck study against Lloyd Meek, but was taken back with skill errors. The game was beaten in the air while wearing. 4/10

(44) Isaac Cumming: He worked hard in both directions, but he was exposed to Hawthorn’s attack speed, Josh WedDle kicked him early. 3/10

(48) Mark Keane: Jack Gunston allowed the opening goal. He tried to peel to cut, but he didn’t get the balance right. Sometimes he was stranded with bad pressure to the field, but he still allowed Gunston to find a lot of place and was incredibly costly. 2/10

(8) Josh Rachele (backup): He returned to the injury (his first match since the 17th round) and took half. His first shot, the third founded Fogarty for a vital target. Finally, he added two consolation goals, but the game had already gone. A great effort to return without such an important injury. 3/10

Hawthorn

(2) Mitch Lewis: After four nights, he stayed 12 minutes in the third quarter. The goal went to his face, but in the third period, Gunston gave a nice pass in 50. 2/10

(3) Jai Newcombe: The best player is away. Hawks’ midfielder won three central gaps and gathered six of them from 28 and eight openings up to quarter hours. Newcombe determined the tone and made a perfect contribution. Watson said to him after the match, “Mr. September.” 9/10

(4) Jarman Impey: After a dynamic performance in the victory of last week on Giants, he played the role of the rear seat this time. 11 was disposed of and it was not as efficient as usual, but it still provided some line. 6.5/10

(5) James Worpel: He warmed up, and Hawthorn’s midfielder was part of why Crows beating his colleagues, including Gunston’s five goals, and the transition in the third period. 7.5/10

(6) James Sicily: When the former Sicily received an exception to Meek, he returned for a short time and tried to calm him down after he had a free kick. But it was still great with 21 -handed and nine signs, but also a bit defensive. 8/10

(10) Karl Amon: Ammon had much larger games, and in the opening quarter, he won only two of his 17 elements, but one of them was more than 50 meters to help Hawks to take the next break. 7/10

(11) Conor Nash: He played a support for midfielder players and continued to break down, but sometimes he was a bit irregular. 6/10

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(13) Dylan Moore: This was a classic Moore game. He didn’t dominate, but he was a great gear on the machine. He was disposed of 17, scored a particular goal in a part -time, and he had eight points participation, including a slippery handball that created Sam butler. 7.5/10

(14) Jack Scrimshaw: The old sun has become a trivial part of a bright defense. Kick skills and the ability to intersect are weapons for HAWKS and continue to develop as one -to -one defender. 8/10

(15) Blake Hardwick: Everyone other than Waverley Park finally realizes how good Hardwick is. He does all the small things that coaches love, rarely beaten and provide plenty of recoil. However, Hardwick’s decision not to hurry up in the third period cost Hawks a goal. 8/10

(16) Massimo d’Ambrosio: Another hawk with more support for tonight. 16 was disposed of and he did very little wrong. 6/10

(17) Lloyd Meek: Meek easily won the war with Reilly O’brien. He put the ball in his feet, he was strong in the competition and even began to try to cool James Sicily in one stage. 8/10

(18) Mabior Chol: He got a few impressive marks, but the set kick disappointed him, and he was wrong in a handball that could set the target of Impey. Uysal syllable in the Serbian and played his role. 6/10

Like a nice wine: Jack Gunston looks better with age

Like a nice wine: Jack Gunston looks better with ageCredit: AFL Photos

(19) Jack Gunston: Gazi, who was not aging, played a key role in Hawks, who kicked in the third quarter, booted three of his five goals and received five points in 50 times. Gunston had no problems against Mark Keane, a member of the All-Avustralian staff. 8.5/10

(23) Josh Weddle: Weddle is a wonderful athletic athletic with a tank that seems never ending. When the joker in the Hawks Pack was extinguished and Lewis was extinguished and finished with 1.3, it started on a wing before swinging again. 7.5/10

(24) Josh War: This man was an additional to Hawthorn’s defense. During the opening period, he raised 10 of his disposal, helping Fogarty and Walker to remain silent and made 10 intersections. 8/10

(25) Josh Ward: Even if Newcombe left him in the shadow, it was the undisputed Ward’s best game. Nobody won more than 17 disposal, and at the end of the night, at the end of the night, there were mostly 31 teams as well as on a screen composed in five openings and six in the 50s. 8/10

Jack Ginnivan is the best antagonistic.

Jack Ginnivan is the best antagonistic.Credit: FOX Footy

(30) Sam Butler: In the third quarter, he spent an unforgettable moment when he scored a kick in the defense 50, which finally led to a hawthorn goal, but scored two goals on his own and scored the nine highest struggles of the match. 7/10

(31) Connor Macdonald: This is the good final performances from MacDonald, who finished with 18 disposal and scored a goal to reduce Hawthorn’s margin to 33 points in the third quarter. In addition, in the first half, he showed a deep coolness in defense at the time of pressure. 7/10

(33) Jack Ginnivan: It was a quiet night for Ginnivan on the statistics page, but he barely stopped sticking to his rivals in his crows, including a turnover for a turnover in the second period because he lived in pests. 4/10

Nick Watson kicked the pear of an early goal and held a celebration to match.

Nick Watson kicked the pear of an early goal and held a celebration to match.Credit: Channel Seven

(34) Nick Watson: In the first quarter, he kicked both goals, but the second will be remembered the most: he sprayed Sherrin, gathered, and then scored a great goal from the depths of his pocket. The incorrect Goalkicing cost him a more productive night. 7.5/10

(37) Tom Barrass: It wasn’t the best night of the former Eagle-and Adelaide’s three goals could have been worse to do a better job through Thildhorpe, Thildhorpe. There were only seven touches. 6/10

(9) Changkuoth Jiath (Reserve): The match entered the middle of the third period and took time to continue. Five of the six -handed handballs were handball. Jiath probably didn’t do enough to win a full game next week. 3/10

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