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Posted: 2019-04-13 14:19:00

FREMANTLE got a lot right for the Western Derby.

At the selection table, the match committee made risky but correct calls by going small.  

Leaving out fit-again ruckman Sean Darcy, coach Ross Lyon would have known the combination of Rory Lobb and pinch-hitter Matt Taberner would likely lose the hitouts. 

But without superstar Nat Fyfe, getting on top around clearances was always going to be an issue. 

FULL MATCH COVERAGE Eagles make it eight Derbies in a row

Fremantle was never going to rule the skies either against West Coast's outstanding bookends and an Eagles team that has revolutionised their game with clinical kick-mark footy.

By bringing in two speedy small forwards, Lachie Schultz and Sam Switkowski, the Dockers gave themselves a chance to test a lauded intercepting backline with pace and unpredictable ground-level football.  

Once the contest began, they sagged back and let West Coast share and spread the ball at will in the back half, in turn protecting their own defence with numbers set up behind the play.

And when the pill was in dispute, Fremantle scrapped like their lives depended on it.

Before the game, if you offered coach Ross Lyon one more scoring shot, a +14 lead in contested ball, almost parity with inside 50s (22-26) and told him the leading intercept marking player would be Adam Cerra (four) by half-time, he would have snapped your hand off. 

As Lyon is renowned for saying, the Dockers were "giving great effort" and pressured the Eagles into uncustomary errors.  

But, as is too often the case, missed opportunities forward of centre came back to haunt Freo.

Their Achilles heel, foot skills, cost them dearly.

They couldn't connect with their forwards inside 50 and shot themselves in the foot on the scoreboard, where they kicked 1.9 – two of those rushed – to the long break and went to the rooms down by four goals.  

It was enough for fans to tear their hair out.

Fremantle created more than enough opportunities, and finally started to take some in the third quarter.

It was no coincidence that one of the Dockers' best ball users, Bradley Hill, twice lowered his eyes and drilled passes onto Jesse Hogan and Cam McCarthy's chests for goals.  

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