SYDNEY star Luke Parker continued a strong return from off-season knee surgery as the Swans held off a late charge from St Kilda to win by three points at Lavington Sports Park on Sunday.

Parker collected 26 disposals on a wet night in Albury and his hardness inside the contest was often apparent.

Meanwhile, Tom Hickey put in an excellent display to likely shore up a spot in St Kilda's round one side. He had an equal team-high 29 disposals, along with 18 contested possessions, as the Swans won, 0.11.11 (77) to 0.10.14 (74).

Slippery conditions made it tough, with dropped marks and players falling over a common sight.

A heavy fall for experienced Sydney full-back Heath Grundy forced the defender off the ground in the last quarter with a suspected concussion after Josh Bruce flew for a mark and landed on the Swan.

Superstar forward Lance Franklin looked in fine form after a shoulder reconstruction limited his pre-season. He notched up 22 disposals and had the better of Jake Carlisle in their duel, with his delivery to his teammates a highlight, although he will want to convert better after booting 2.4.

A rare kick with his right foot came in the second term when he snapped at goal, although his attempt was off-line.

Dylan Roberton, who was named in the leadership group this year for the first time, spent time on Franklin when the Swan pushed up the ground and handled himself well, despite his size disadvantage.

A desperate lunging spoil from the former Docker in the second quarter when it looked as though Franklin would mark uncontested showed his desperation, while a big tackle in the last term on Dean Towers won St Kilda a free kick.

After a full pre-season, tough nut David Armitage looks likely to bounce back from an inconsistent 2016 after he won 27 disposals. His work in the contest, alongside Jack Steven (28 disposals) and Jack Steele (27) means Alan Richardson will have an imposing midfield unit.

Inaccuracy in front of goal plagued Bruce, who finished with 0.3 – the same haul as his teammate Jade Gresham.

St Kilda brought scores level in the third quarter after goals in quick succession to experienced pair Sam Gilbert and Nick Riewoldt. The former skipper's effort showed his class after he snapped it through with his non-preferred left foot.

Kurt Tippett played a large part of the game forward with Sam Naismith and Darcy Cameron taking the majority of rucking duties. A strong mark against Nathan Brown and Sam Gilbert showed Tippett's aerial prowess will be more than handy close to goal.

Paddy McCartin struggled on a night not suited to big men after rain began falling in the second quarter, with a sprayed set shot in the last term summing up his night. He copped a couple of knocks which saw the trainers come out to check on the forward, although he waved them off both times.

 

WHAT WE LEARNED

St Kilda: There are a couple of extra big bodies in defence with Jake Carlisle and Nathan Brown donning the red, white and black, but their additions to the side won't necessarily be seamless. Both were serviceable but Lance Franklin and Kurt Tippett were able to have an influence. Carlisle will take time to hit top form after missing all of last year with a doping ban and having to recover form hip surgery but the Saints will need both to play well if they are to make a serious push for finals.

 

Sydney: A forward line that has looked one-dimensional in the past should have more options this year. Kurt Tippett spent much of his time forward while Sam Reid is an excellent third option. Having that pair available to play in attack means Franklin can push up the ground and use his brilliant field kicking to deliver the ball to perfection, and having the superstar running into the forward line is probably the most difficult task a defender can face in the AFL.

 

NEW FACES

St Kilda: The job of minding Lance Franklin when he played deep in attack was handed to Jake Carlisle. Franklin won the duel but Carlisle showed enough to suggest he should seriously strengthen St Kilda's defence, with an intercept mark in the second quarter at the top of the goalsquare a highlight. Similarly, Kurt Tippett had the better of Nathan Brown for most of the night. Jack Steele made sure his tackles were felt and won plenty of the ball and Koby Stevens did not take to the field.

Sydney: Darcy Cameron didn't have much of a chance to push his claims for the second ruck spot after playing only 42 per cent of game time. He finished with five disposals and a goal after he nailed a difficult set shot. There were glimpses of class from Oliver Florent while his hardness was apparent after he picked up 10 contested possessions. Will Hayward got on the end of a goal after a handball from Franklin. A conceded 50m penalty after Hayward knocked the ball out of Jimmy Webster's hands after the Saint marked was disappointing, with a goal the result. Robbie Fox was relatively unsighted.

 

NEXT UP

St Kilda look to make it 15 wins in a row against Melbourne at Etihad Stadium on Saturday, March 25. Sydney begins its home and away campaign the same day versus Port Adelaide at the SCG.

 

ST KILDA 0.2.2 0.4.5 0.8.9 0.10.14 (74)                  

SYDNEY 0.3.4 0.6.7 0.9.9 0.11.11 (77)

 

SUPERGOALS

St Kilda: Nil

Sydney: Nil

 

GOALS

St Kilda: Weller 2, Armitage, Newnes, Lonie, Webster, Gilbert, Riewoldt, Wright, Membrey

Sydney: Franklin 2, Towers, Tippett, Parker, Cunningham, Hayward, Reid, Robinson, Cameron, Hewett

 

BEST 

St Kilda: Hickey, Armitage, Roberton, Steven, Steele, Savage

Sydney: Kennedy, Jones, Robinson, Parker, Franklin, Tippett

 

INJURIES

St Kilda: Nil

Sydney: Grundy (head)

 

Reports: Nil

Umpires: Chamberlain, Fleer, Ryan

Official crowd: 6893 at Lavington Sports Ground