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GWS Giants suffer another September failure against Hawthorn

When Jack Ginnivan kicked Hawthorn on Saturday, 42 points in the middle of the third quarter at the Engie Stadium on Saturday, the Great West Sydney looked at the barrel of another September failure.

He made it feel determined. Nothing was working for the giants. Darcy Jones, one of the best players up to this point, had not drowned in tears with a suspicious ACL tear before. Hawks, apparently, had all the answers, and fans were preparing for a Friday night in Adelaide. And Ginnivan was rubbing him on his faces.

What happened later was extraordinary.

They call it ‘orange tsunami’ and when it is full of power, it is really something that should be seen. The atmosphere has changed – first slow, then suddenly. The roles were reversed. Visitors began to panic, giants could feel it and realized themselves.

When any of the 20,634 fans in participation had a chance to breathe, the GWS had scored six goals in 15 minutes, some of them were ridiculous and open. The driver was the veteran Josh Kelly, who played his first match when the giants returned in a surprising manner in Son Sydney Derby, Son Sydney Derby.

Kelly, called a spare, came for Jones and took the game with the raven of his neck, 14 waste (nine people controversial), six openings and scored two goals in the third quarter.

Toby Greene and giants were inadequate against Hawthorn.Credit: Getty Images

Still, it’s funny about the momentum at Footy. You should take the best use of it because you understand it because you can lose as quickly as you find. Jesse Hogan started the first goal of the last quarter and made it a single -point ball game. However, hosts could not find another six signs.

And tense, after a 15 -minute arm wrestling, Hawks took off the rice joints and lowered the determining impact.

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