LUKE Parker has stamped himself as one of the competition's elite midfielders after he inspiring the Sydney Swans to a 43-point win over Geelong at ANZ Stadium on Saturday night.
The Swans' reigning club champion kicked five goals and had 31 possessions for the winners in a standout best on ground performance.
Coach John Longmire was understandably glowing in his praise for the 22 year-old.
"It was a pretty good game. I know that might be a bit of an understatement, but it was one of the real quality games of football I've seen from a young kid," Longmire said post-match.
"His intensity and hit around the contest, his tackles, his fierceness at the ball just oozes out of him, and he was able to finish his work off as well by kicking goals.
"His will is enormous, he just makes himself become a good player, and wills himself in the contest."
Geelong led at half time but a dominant second half from the Swans, in which they kicked ten goals to two, saw the home side home 18.12 (120) to 11.11 (77).
Parker was able supported by Josh Kennedy, Dan Hannebery and Tom Mitchell through the middle of the ground, while 250-gamer Jarrad McVeigh marshalled the Swans' defence with his usual class.
Youngster Jackson Thurlow tried hard for the Cats, as did Mathew Stokes and big man Mark Blicavs, but the visitors had too many second half passengers.
Geelong coach Chris Scott refused to focus on the fadeout, and instead preferred to put a positive spin on the night.
"In some ways we've got a lot to look forward too given the way we played in the first half. The whole competition knows they're a pretty good team, and I thought it was a pretty good contest for most of the night," Scott said.
"The scoreboard blew out a little bit and we're clearly disappointed with that, and we need to play better to compete with the best sides, but it's not all doom and gloom."
Both teams managed four goals apiece in the opening term but none of them came easy, as a combination of poor skills and opposition pressure made scoring difficult.
Swans midfielder Ben McGlynn enjoyed a running battle with Cats' skipper Joel Selwood early in the match. The pair were involved in several incidents off the ball as McGlynn kept Selwood to just two possessions at quarter-time.
The Cats skipped to 14-point lead with three of the first four goals of the second quarter, two of those resulting from 50 metre penalties given away by the home side.
Lance Franklin was again wasteful with 2.4, but Parker kicked two goals for the term and had three by half time, but Geelong clung to a nine-point advantage at the main break.
A major in the first 20 seconds to Kieren Jack was one of three in a row for the Swans to start the third quarter, but another costly miss by Franklin, plus another by Kennedy, kept the Cats within reach.
When Steve Johnson punished the Swans in time on with his second for the night, the visitors trailed by one straight kick with a quarter to play.
The last quarter was all Swans and on the back of a dominant midfield, Franklin finally found his kicking boots to finish with 4.5 for the game.
McVeigh also found the scoreboard in the final term and was chaired off the ground by his teammates on his special night.
SYDNEY SWANS 4.3 8.4 11.9 18.12 (120)
GEELONG 4.4 9.7 10.10 11.11 (77)
GOALS
Sydney Swans: Parker 5, Franklin 4, Mitchell 3, Tippett, Kennedy, Goodes, Jack, Rohan, McVeigh
Geelong: Motlop, Johnson, Gregson 2, Lang, Thurlow, Blicavs, Guthrie, Selwood
BEST
Sydney Swans: Parker, McGlynn, Franklin, McVeigh, Kennedy, Hannebery
Geelong: Biclavs, Guthrie, Enright, Gregson, Thurlow, Stokes
INJURIES
Sydney Swans: Nil
Geelong: Duncan (foot), Tom Hawkins (glute) replaced in the selected side by Josh Walker
SUBSTITUTES
Sydney Swans: Dean Towers replaced Jake Lloyd in the quarter
Geelong: Sam Blease replaced Mitch Duncan in the third quarter
Reports: Nil
Umpires: Nicholls, Hay, Jeffery
Official crowd: 28,063 at ANZ Stadium