2025 Season Review, Part 2 (Winter and Spring): Fourteen Shows Down, Got 10 More to Go

By Tom Briglia

Wanganeen match-winning mark

WINTER

What did it mean to be a St Kilda supporter in the depths of winter in 2025?

I spent the spare time in my final weeks of pre-parenthood working on my sad, dour, uninspiring dream pop (very lol) and also more seriously exploring my long-held ambitions to produce a 2005 season highlights video (very, very lol). For some strange reason one was never made by Sports Delivered (they then went on to decide to not produce a full-length one for 2009, with the club scrambling to arrange a half-arsed, poorly produced version that does a half-arsed, poor job documenting for what was all intents and purposes the club’s best-ever season), which prompted me to buy every 2005 game on DVD at the Sports Delivered closing-down sale. I have this silly ambition to produce a season highlights video perhaps for the same reason I write this long-winded garbage – we see our lives through the prism of St Kilda. The 2005 season was arguably a more remarkable journey than 2004 and some of the club’s best days took place in 2005, taking it all the way up to leading in the final quarter of a Preliminary Final (for the second year in a row). It was a formative year for me personally, 16 going on 17. A lot of life was happening to me. This year was the 20-year anniversary and I had succumbed to nostalgia. There wasn’t much to hold onto in the St Kilda present.

See, the late May Sunday night dinner following the West Coast game may have been the saddest meal consumed since the Zack’s Pizza I shared with Richie and Evan at Glen Orme Avenue after the 2010 Grand Final Replay (that was a reflection on what had happened during the day, not on Zack’s delicious woodfired pizza). But in the winter of 2025 there were just the fucking days and the fucking weeks of being a St Kilda supporter, just existing in the bitter Melbourne cold at some dumb time of the week like 10am on a Tuesday or 2.30pm on a Wednesday, nothing to really revel in from the weekend (maybe some Nas chat), not much to anticipate the weekend coming (probably just Nas bits), confronting the fact that you are living a rebuild. This is where you are. This is your St Kilda reality.

Ross and Nick Riewoldt have talked over the years (including in the current Ross stint) about committing to a goal – “a cause to die for” – without guarantee of success. It’s one thing for a single season to spin off its axis, it’s another entirely to step into an entire rebuild not knowing if you and the whole thing might be flung into deep space without getting your hands anywhere near the cup. The last tilt barely registered as a tilt; it yielded an official fifth place in the more heavily impinged COVID year. That was what Billings over Bont and Paddy McCartin over Petracca and Hugh Goddard and James Frawley amounted to. There are kids growing up with this as their identity as St Kilda supporters. I have been relatively fortunate (or unfortunate, but you know what I mean) in my St Kilda-supporting life. I have 1997 (some of my St Kilda-supporting peers have 1991 and 1992, and some Moorabbin memories). I have the 10-year span of back-to-back GT and Ross eras that included 2004, 2005, 2008, 2009 and 2010. There were periods of optimism, from years to months to weeks to days to fleeting moments. I can still remember them (but they are long, long ago). What does the generation of Saints fans coming through now have? A couple of Jack Steven highlights and a weird Elimination Final win at the Gabba in front of 10,000 people?

Ultimately, I also have the weight of watching my Dad waiting to see his first St Kilda premiership (he was born in 1963 and thus has no recollection of 1966). That weight gets heavier by the year; it became heaviest in the icy Melbourne days in the middle of 2025. There is a critical mass of St Kilda fans who haven’t seen a premiership; there is a critical mass of St Kilda fans who have parents who haven’t seen a premiership. In the canyon of another rebuild, while we were questioning what this is all for and whether we’ll actually live to see It, my daughter Ivy was born on Sunday, June 15th at 9.52am, just a few days after the Saints copped another pantsing from her mother’s Bulldogs in the Round 14 opener. Ivy’s first game would be Collingwood vs St Kilda, the official ordering of the 1966 Grand Final. “Welcome to the Saints IVY” beamed her A4 membership card, purchased six weeks before her birth. What’s my legacy as a supporter to my newborn daughter? Maybe it’s not so much legacy as intergenerational footy trauma. My Mama – no follower of the game by any measure – had knitted her an all-time horizontal candy stripe outfit with a beanie. Ivy’s Mum may be a (very casual) Bulldogs supporter, and we have an intensely-loved Aussie bulldog Ralphies, which could sway her west, but I think St Kilda might be her footy fate if she follows the game. 

I think about the experiences my father wishes he would have with me. We never saw a premiership together whilst his father was still alive, and we’ve shared many a harsh footy experience. Of course, I would love for Ivy to follow the Saints; I would love to see a premiership with my father and I would love to see a premiership with my daughter. The St Kilda Football Club has been a constant in Dad and I’s, and Dad and Matt and I’s relationship. Gracie and I actually chose Carlton vs St Kilda at Princes Park in Round 10 of the AFLW for Ivy’s first game – we have had friends at Carlton’s AFLW team for some time (and Darcy designed this year’s Pride Round Sherrins) and the Briglia family, which settled in Carlton in the 1900s, has historical links with the Blues, so it seemed the most appropriate setting. Ivy saw a fantastic St Kilda win by the girls.

What might Ivy see in her St Kilda-supporting lifetime?

***

Winter began with a funny, fortunate win against Melbourne in Alice Springs. Ross had said during the week they want to be “the best Saints ever”. These would-be best Saints ever got out to a 38-7 lead. They took just 17 seconds to go end-to-end. Hill to Boxshall to Sharman to Mitchito to Max Hall. It was fast and it was daring and it was working. I actually missed most of the first quarter scrambling to get everything home from Gracie’s baby shower. Butler on return (four majors close to goal) hit 2020 areas. I managed to get home, get everything sorted, and get settled on the couch with a bag of Proper Crisps just in time for things to get tight. St Kilda should have gone end-to-end again but Mitchito ran in and missed. Isaac Keeler, for the first time, looked like he belonged, but then dropped an easy ball on the goal line. Jack Carroll bobbled the Sherrin 20 metres out in front and got snagged holding the ball. Nas was doing his best to pull apart the field and bend the game to his will, and Cal Wilkie was doing everything he could to get in the way of everything at the other end, but Melbourne went on a run of scoring 4.7 from 15 inside 50s. Inaccuracy was the only thing denting the Dees’ momentum, and therein was the kicker: by game’s end, St Kilda had weathered a remarkable peppering of the goals from Melbourne that yielded the Demons 7.21, including 0.8 in the last quarter (and 1.12 for the entire second half). Isaac Keeler kicked the sealer and finished with a fun novelty mini-bag of three (three qualifies as “fun novelty mini-bag” in 2025).

It was the bye week, into the Bulldogs on a Thursday night – just in time for possibly most valuable player in the game Sam Darcy to return to football against, of course, the St Kilda Football Club. Jack Sinclair was the highest-rated half-back in the game on some metrics, and was playing his 200th, but all the noise and Saintsational speculation was about Nas’s (non-)signature. Daisy Thomas floated on The Agenda Setters that he might be St Kilda’s best player since Nick Riewoldt. Roo awkwardly responded that Jack Steven had won four best and fairests.

But…you know. You know.

It was that kind of year in which every week is a last chance to keep the pulse of your season going, but the missed targets and shanked shots at goal are really all just part of an inevitable march towards somewhere between 12th to 15th (and deep down, you know that, too). On the Thursday night, the Bulldogs mauled us, again. It was just the whole 2021/2022/2024/eight weeks earlier regurgitated (the 2025 margins were 71 and 72 points respectively). Bevo had done us over again. Nas – trying to make something happen – pulled the trigger a few times, and a few times it just didn’t come off (specifically, was turned over). One of those games with not much to take out from. The faint silver lining was that at least we’d got the inevitable 12-goal loss over and done with so we could make the most of our precious weekend (i.e. become a parent).

There were just 20,508 there to see the game. Caro questioned why St Kilda crowd numbers were so terrible. Gerard asked if Saints fans had lost the faith. We were the club so small and so insignificant that we were the ones Collingwood was playing a home game at Marvel against. 

All told, by this time I’d felt disconnected from the club, the accumulation of now a 14th season post-Ross 1.0 wandering around on the Road to 2018 Nowhere Specific. Where was any of this going? The social media team are usually fantastic but have never really indulged my Fable Singers and jumper chat (Morrissey sigh). I felt bored with St Kilda. Like an important part of my life that had been there for a long time wasn’t really there anymore. Wheeling out a whole lot of senior guys to play uninspiring, slapstick footy when another season’s effectively over was wearing thin. Ball movement between the arcs was sometimes ok I guess? Find a forward at the end of it if you like.

Matt was so optimistic still that he texted Gerard on the Monday. Gerard read it out on air: “I do see the hope as a Saints fan. I’m hard-pressed to believe that Owens, Phillipou, Nasiah, King, Tauru, Travaglia, Wilson, Garcia, Keeler and Windhager don’t provide a nice base to launch off over the next few years. If Wilkie, Sinclair and Marshall can keep supporting them nicely they might even see some success before their time comes.” I thought Matt was being way too kind to this horrible, cursed timeline, but I did appreciate that he could see anything at all. Kane was still being rude about keeping receipts on St Kilda finishing bottom four.

***

It was time for the Flying Viking.

Collingwood vs St Kilda at Docklands did end up being a fight worthy of higher billing than 1st vs 14th. Alixzander Tauru on debut took one fun mark and gave away a fun 50 metre penalty when the game was done. Windhager doggedly tagged Nick Daicos but Daicos had his moment, kicking a class snap goal under heat in the last quarter that broke the game open. The Collingwood fans had just moments earlier begun the “CO-LLING-WOOD” chant: it was as if they had willed the goal into existence. St Kilda has rarely had a truly intimidating or at least raucous home crowd in the post-Moorabbin era: Aisle 29 is important. The eventual percentage hit saw St Kilda fall to 15th, below Melbourne in 14th, who weren’t even playing that weekend. Before the game, Pou was borderline in tears, head in hands, with a flare-up of his calf issue in the final moments of the warm-up. Why. Why was he out there in the first place.

We had the Freo game in Perth a week later looking how we wanted it at three-quarter time – 39-16 at clearances, doing another number on their highly-rated midfield. A 16-point lead early in the last when Snags saluted from the pocket, and the Saints players celebrated like we were the ones who had just broken the game open, but this would be one of those rebuild games that you let slip; a two-steps-back in developing the trust with the supporters. One of those rebuild games where you shit directly into your St Kilda away shorts as the home crowd bears down on you in the last. St Kilda made its own chances; it blew its own chances, from the leaders (Mason Wood hit the post twice from his two shots) down to the younger guys (hard to pot Garcia and Hall too hard for this – both played very promising games, and Hall kicked a great long goal on the run from outside 50, the most non in-a-St Kilda jumper thing since Paddy Ryder).

The takeaway, however, was that we finally got to see the Alix Tauru that some said in the lead-up to last year’s draft was being considered by North for the number two pick. He confirmed his place as the most exciting high-flying St Kilda blonde since the last one – an equal club record-high 14 spoils, flying locks and a catapulting, cartwheeling body that was the light you seek in dark days of rebuilds (Max Hall isn’t a high-flying blonde but over the past six weeks, he had moved to the ninth-highest rated player in the competition, according to Champion Data).

While Nas was starting to throw up some proper stats (and not sign a contract), it was Tauru Season. Someone at marketing worked hard and fast and RSEA Viking hats were everywhere in the crowd the following Saturday night for the Hawthorn game. The newfound Scandi enthusiasts saw Alix execute a huge holding-the-ball tackle early, as well as Windhager straight-lining everything and gaining territory the way he would have in juniors, as Matt said. They also sampled some of The Agenda Setters-christened “Bayside Butchers”’ finest cuts: efficiency going into forward of just 50.9%, and that’s before the inaccuracy at goal. In the best moment of the night (and really, one of the best moments of the year), Tauru channelled Michael Gardiner (same spot, different direction) with a flying mark across an unsuspecting pack in the forward pocket, before missing from close range. After getting within a point of the Hawks in time-on in the second, misses from Hall and Nas and Cooper, a dud kick from Wood, and a miskick from Marshall amounted to the ball going straight up the other end to Ramsden for a goal that took the score to 3.10 to 7.6. A pressure rating of 246 (I don’t know what that means exactly) for fuck all; Hawthorn shat out a couple of goals and comfortably held the Saints at arm’s length for the rest of the game. A Marshall set shot goal after the siren was a tease for what could have been.

Tauru’s single mark set off a small storm of goodwill.

“Lose the Battle, win the war”, trumpeted The Age. Michael Gleeson was sold after 12 quarters of football:
“St Kilda lost the Battle but might win the war. Losing Josh Battle to free agency they gained Alix Tauru with the pick. Alix Tauru gives every indication he will end up a better player than Battle, but that is only the icing on a list management cake. For where St Kilda were at losing a regular key back in the short term to bring in an elite tall for the long term was the crucial thing. For where Hawthorn were at, Battle was a good free pick up.”

Dan Gorringe would take a bullet for him. Garry Lyon said he’d never been as taken by a young player before (and made rippling positive sounds about St Kilda’s youth core). An “excitement machine”, Roo called him on The Agenda Setters. The Agenda Setters suggested he might be the next “NRoo” (but if we’re talking St Kilda blondes then Tauru flies more like Barker). (Meanwhile, quietly, Max Hall was the AFL Players Association’s Unsung Hero; and statistically, he was the highest-rated player over a four-week block.)

People were scratching together a week of living and trying, barely making it through Monday-to-Friday battling a cost-of-living crisis and trying to stay on top of their taxes, in a tinderbox of social tensions while multiple wars and the threat of the world falling into autocracy hovered above, just in the hope they would see an explosion of blonde locks from The Flying Viking (side quest: Max Hall CBAs). Alix won the mark of the year nomination for the round. He was already a Stock AFL Photo for a Broader Article Guy. “I can’t remember a player coming in and captivating the imagination of a fan base like this guy has done,” Roo said live on Channel 7 before the Sydney game wearing a viking hat.

***

We’d started compiling a small pile of games that we could have/should have won in 2025. A five-point loss to the in-form Swans, who were looking to swoop on a top eight spot, was a really good effort from a Saints team whose season was done in May. Some senior guys didn’t take their moments (again), while there were lessons for Tauru, Hastie, Boxshall, Moose – all the 23 and unders, really (except Nas and Hall, who were Already Good). In the space of three minutes in the first quarter, Tauru tried his chances going across goal and turned over the ball to Heeney, he had a goal kicked on him by Buller, and then he gave away a free kick and another shot on goal. It was those early GT-era vibes of trying to get attached to guys and a team that just don’t know how to win (circa 2002, i.e. giving up seven of the last eight goals in Perth against Freo; the Daniel Wulf game; an inability to kick a goal in the last quarter in the face of the Magpie Army). Learning to trust. Trying to trust, wanting to trust. We’ve been doing all that for 59 years. We’d bottled leads of 16 points in the last quarter and 19 points late in the third in the space of three weeks, while kicking ourselves out of the other. Ideally, we’re winning these games in September in a few years’ time, but to learn how to do that you need to execute your kicks on a cold July afternoon when you’ve been out of contention for eight weeks. I had flashbacks to Daniel Archer in 2011 as the ball headed towards Moose in the final seconds. If there was one player the game hinged on, though, it was Brodie Grundy. He taught Marshall a lesson or few; completely bossed him when it counted, including at the stoppage just inside their 50 where he created Gulden’s match-deciding goal. We weren’t offering a guy at Carlton one of the biggest contracts in AFL history based on the outcome of this game, but…we might have been. 

It was July and the season was done eight weeks ago. Were we past really caring – really past feeling it in our heart – that we’ve let another game slip? Yes, and a higher draft pick beckoned, but hell’s bells it would have been nice to see the young guys orchestrate a win like that. Alas. A long, quiet Sunday night Route 58 tram trip home. Sheeting rain began as I stepped off the tram, forcing me to dash down Hope Street in the dark towards home. I was drenched by the time I got to the front door.

One of those nights in one of those eras.

***

Any encouragement from the young guys coming through on the Sunday afternoon was dismissed by the breakfast shift on Monday morning. Kane was back on our case (“the lack of talent coming through is glaring”). Tuesday’s edition of The Agenda Setters took Ross to task, suggesting that the media was kinder to Ross but on their weird, demonstrably untrue proviso, as per Luke Hodge, that “Ratten had the same list”. Suey Tuey is the worst day of the week and Tuesdays are by far the weakest for footy media, but that was pretty weird. The AFL Daily round table pondered, “Is St Kilda getting too comfortable with losing?”

I decided to host friends and family the following Sunday, so I could share the experience of watching fourth-place Geelong brutalise us.

Down at the Cattery, Nas was our goddamn best player again and pulled off the best St Kilda centre clearance since the era of Hayes/Dal/Montagna(/maybe Harvey too). Nas became just the second St Kilda player to finish with at least 35 disposals, 10 clearances and two goals in a game in Champion Data’s time (pay him what he wants). Only Harvey could claim that before. St Kilda otherwise didn’t get anywhere close to breaking a Kardinia Park hoodoo extending back to last millennium. The Tackle asked when the pressure might begin to be put on Ross Lyon. Roo openly called this all a rebuild on The Agenda Setters after having no choice but to represent the club and its fans and dismiss as “complete rubbish” Hodge’s suggestion the previous week that Ratten and Ross had the same list. Jonathan Brown said the media was “shit scared” of critiquing Ross due to the “Ross Lyon aura”

I was learning (slowly) how to take care of a newborn baby. I wasn’t enjoying footy. It’s about this time you lose contact with the day-to-day rigmarole of the mid-2020s footy media crunch. Sam McClure saying the start time of the Grand Final was “embarrassing” might have done it for me in 2025. I’m out for a walk in the streets of Brunswick West with Ralphies on a modest mid-winter Melbourne lunchtime and I audibly exclaimed “FUCK OFF” when I received a push notification from the AFL app (“BLUES’ HUGE CONUNDRUM” on July 17 set me off). See, the thing is, I don’t. Care. That doesn’t make me insightful or special, it’s just that following St Kilda in the Boring ‘20s – and the game more broadly – had become a fucking grind and a nuisance. A fucking grind, and a nuisance. 

Ivy was born into a St Kilda recession. St Kilda had lost 12 out of 14.

The Miracle on the Roof of a Docklands Car Park

On a Sunday morning in July – July 27th – we found a lump on the roof of Ralphies’ mouth. We’d had a brief scare a few months earlier with other lumps, which turned out ok, but this lump was bigger. More sinister. And in a spot that doesn’t give you many options.

My best friend.

I work from home – I have essentially for all my professional life – and Ralpies is close to me nearly every minute of the day. I have walked nearly every street of Brunswick West with him several times over (and a fair lot of Brunswick too). He was approaching his eighth birthday. He’s an Australian Bulldog (essentially an English Bulldog, with minute tweaks to handle this country’s climate) so health and life expectancy, unfortunately, can be very fickle. That day, I had again been given the opportunity thanks to extended family and a (very) tolerating wife to go to the footy. Maybe it would shake things up in my mind? I’d hardly left the house over the past six weeks. In hindsight, I’m not sure what I was thinking – I don’t think I was thinking at all – but feeling a bit sick and a bit terrified, I left Ralphies and my new family and the house to go see a late-season dead rubber at the Concrete Dome.

***

“We want to excite our fans and let them see a way forward to get to where we want to be,” Ross said during the week.

At 46 points down at three-quarter time in perhaps our most unexciting, uninspiring performance of the year (in the candy stripe WITH BLACK SHORTS/Alix had kicked a goal), I entertained the idea of going home. I don’t need to be here! I don’t need this! I have a beautiful new child and a wonderful wife at home! I need to make dinner! I need to live my life!

Instead, Matt, Dad and Richie and I decided to watch the last quarter from the bar that looks out over the field from directly behind our level two seats (I can never remember the name, because really it’s three interconnected bars running along the wing; Richie has christened it as The Doorman). I bought a Coke Zero Sugar, not drinking alcohol for the time being. Matt decided to see out his Sunday with a Shiraz (his first ever red wine at the footy), Dad went the Shiraz as well (finest choice of one) and Richie had a Great Northern. The crowd had thinned and the atmosphere had dulled (half of the top level was closed off to begin with), enough that you could clearly hear the audio from the Channel 7 broadcast on the bar screens with a one-second lag from what we were seeing out on the ground in real time. Three quick goals to begin the last quarter to bring the margin to 28 felt a bit cute. At some point in there, the commentary team, led by Jason Bennett and Alistair Nicholson, with Roo and Joel Selwood in special comments, brought up the seemingly comical feat that the greatest three-quarter time comeback in history was 45 points – the Brisbane Bears overrunning Hawthorn at the Gabba in 1995 – and that it might be in danger.

I scoffed to Matt when we heard that. Nice try, Channel 7 producers in the ear of the commentators trying to get the few people at home whiling away what was left of their weekend watching a late-season dead rubber to stay stuck to their TV and generate ad revenue rather than do anything, simply anything, anything else.

Anything else.

Ring them out one-by-one. Snags with a drop punt (lol) from the pocket after good work from Sharman (overhead handball?) and Hall at a disputed ball at 50. Then Tauru got down lowest for a knock-on to Mason Wood, who gave quick hands to Brad Hill against the boundary line for a perfectly executed dribbling goal, which brought the first titillation from the crowd (and from Jason Bennett). Straight out of the centre bounce via Hall to Nas for Cooper Sharman’s first of two very underrated goals in the quarter: a deft pick up and turn and snap on his left from the other pocket. Oliver and Melksham missed shots at the other end (the latter just clipping the post), and Jack Steele stepped up with a strong contested mark with his left arm at near range and calmly slotted the captain’s goal. Mason Wood floated across bodies at near range (Max Hall inside 50) and went back for a sure finish. Sharman’s second for the quarter: a strong overhead mark on the arc, the wheel-around and blast from 50. Snags took a (what was most likely touched) mark from a sharp Nas entry and was dumped, got the 50-metre penalty, and motored all the way into goal.

Five points.

Melbourne forced the ball forward. A rushed behind put things in hard mode, then Oliver got the fortunate bounce but couldn’t score at all to put the margin beyond one goal.

Six points.

And then, one minute and three seconds of play that may have changed the course of the St Kilda Football Club.

A centre wing throw-in, Windhager got his hands on the ball and handed to Mason Wood, who took the space and launched long into the forward line, to an airborne Nas, rising between Fritsch and McVee, and reaching, reaching, reaching and taking the ball at full height in front of the members. He quickly rose to his feet and turned his back on everything (goddamn took his time about it btw), and on a near 45-degree angle, so, so calmly nailed the set shot (straight through). Alister Nicholson used up all his good lines because it was scores level – sort-of close enough to match-defining – and there was only eight seconds of play left, so not enough time left for anything else to happen. Either side of the kick he pulled out a stilted “he is utterly unbelievable” and then yelled “Nasiah, the Messiah”.

By this time we had come back out into the crowd proper and into the seats (but it was hard to sit down). The noises of celebration for Nas’s goal quickly turned to murmuring about how much time there was left, and then for the quirks and quarks whirring around in the middle of the ground: the comical, calamitous happenstance of Melbourne giving up a free kick for a second 6-6-6 infringement, and the entire ground running into St Kilda’s forward line only to be told to reset for play to proceed, and having to run all the way back.

Nas, at the centre circle, took control of the moment.

He quietly, quickly hatched a plan with Rowan Marshall and told one-third of the field to move over and get out of his way once play restarted. The free kick was formally given, Nas was off, and Marshall perfectly executed a pass just inside 50 to the space where Nas had sprinted – the space that had been left open as one-third of the field followed his orders and moved to the left.

The single frame of Nas taking what was a very, very, very good mark going back into the unknown perhaps encapsulates more about the game, about the moment and about Nas more so than the frame capturing his incredible leap just a few moments earlier.

Ross was laughing in the box. The siren sounded. Any score was needed to pull off the greatest three-quarter time comeback in the history of the VFL/AFL football.

From 48 metres Nas so, so calmly, calmly, calmly kicked the goal of his life.

An entire St Kilda team, in the candy stripe with black shorts, celebrating as one in front of the members, jumping up and down, to the sounds of The Fable Singers.

***

The football world celebrated St Kilda through the deeds of Nas.

“He established himself as a St Kilda legend today” said Roo, who had gone full nuffie in the Channel 7 commentary box in the final minute of the game. (Never mind the new rights agreement set-up allowing Fox to have their own coverage for Channel 7 games: the Channel 7 broadcast is the definitive historical document of what transpired. Jason Bennett signalling to the commentary box to remain silent after the siren, let The Fable Singers play and let the broadcast breathe was brilliant.)

The 7 account posted a large graphic that night simply declaring, “Him.”

The deeds dominated the front and back pages of the Herald Sun: “the 55 second fuck it plan now etched in footy folklore”. “What Nasiah did may be the greatest minute of football ever played in terms of clutch ability,” Kane said. The Age broke down the entire last quarter. “Let him write his own cheque,” Nick said. Nas got three votes in the GVP. AFL360 went all out with a fantastic montage and discussion leading the Monday night edition. Nas got the 10 Coaches votes. THE YOUNG MAN DID NOT GET THE THREE BROWNLOW VOTES. HE DID NOT GET THREE BROWNLOW VOTES. He won a Lexus from Footy Classified for individual performance of the year. Nas had told Seven after the game he just told the forwards to get out of his way. “He’s got that dog in him,” Joey said. “We knew he had the talent, but I think we’ve now seen the development that he wants to be ‘the man’ – that special X-factor and quality that all the champions have in them”. Nas was “surging” up the ranks of the Herald Sun’s Brownlow predictor. Nas was in Mick’s Multi. On the way in to the game, arriving at Southern Cross Matt’s train driver had fortuitously signed off with “Good luck to the Saints fans. Hope Nas re-signs cause we are effed without him”. Some – specifically, Dan – would fantastically tell you Nas was the chosen one; the chosen one to break the curse over this cursed club in this cursed timeline.

And all of this over a dead rubber.

This game was categorically a dead rubber, featuring one has-been and one might-not-ever-be-in-the-first-place. It was a glimpse of what the Saints could become, maybe. All the best of what we’d seen since Ross came back, all that had made us believe there was talent on this list and good foundations in place across the club that could make it successful, that could make it challenge for that second premiership, packaged and presented in 32 minutes and 41 seconds. The 2025 season didn’t need to have a moment like that. Footy doesn’t work that way. Sometimes a season is just generally fucking humdrum. Up until then, the season’s signature moment was set to be the loss to West Coast. Nas’s heroics – and the support in that last quarter from Hall (again, quietly: he’d had the most goal assists by a Saint in eight years), Hastie, Wood, Windhager and Sharman – made for a generational night in which you’re just scrolling your way through it all on Twitter and replying to messages from and sending messages to people across a bunch of different platforms and you’re still getting back to all the messages the next day and maybe the day after. It meant nothing, this game. Maybe a swap of who gets what pick in a heavily compromised and weak draft, and we were keen to give up whatever that was anyway for a certain Gold Coast midfielder anyway.

But this is now part of St Kilda folklore. As the Herald Sun said, this is now part of footy folklore. It belongs to the game as a whole.

St Kilda saw itself differently. We saw St Kilda differently. The football world saw St Kilda differently. St Kilda – in the candy stripe, with black shorts! – were winners. St Kilda was capable of doing something that had never happened before. St Kilda, once the owners of the very unwanted record for biggest lead ever given up, now claimed ownership of the greatest three-quarter time comeback. St Kilda had the most electric player in the game. Fuck it, in that minute of football, St Kilda maybe had the best player in the game. For a few days, Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera and this team did what hadn’t been done for 15 years – St Kilda was fashionable.

This was something real you can daydream about. Something that brings you into the now and makes you look forward, rather than lose more time to thinking about alternate endings to the 2009 and 2010 Grand Finals. Is it healing? Is it something to open the portal and take you into a better timeline?

I had the crowd noise of those final plays ringing in my ears all the way home on the 58. I got into the house and as I immediately tried to find the words to explain to Gracie what the hell had just happened, she told me Ralph was okay. He was absolutely fine – the lump on the roof of his mouth was just an incisive papilla, a very naturally occurring part of the canine anatomy (and yes, we’ve had it checked out since to be sure!). I had had the thought of losing my best friend whirring in my head all day. My entire head had been whirring all day. All day.

We watched the last quarter. I took in everything I could on the timeline, I sent messages and received messages and sent replies. I went to sleep with Folk Bitch Trio’s new album-closing lullaby “Mary’s Playing the Harp” in my ears. Ivy’s first win. Ralph was ok. And next time you go to the footy and watch St Kilda, something – something great – might happen.

***

Nas was dancing atop Ross’s shoulders at Hotel Brighton for fuck’s sake. He had become the player to build a generation around, in a game to build a generation from. “This is now his team,” Hutchy said. “Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera is the hottest name in football right now” said Tom Morris. Nas was being talked about in the same air as fellow 2021 super draft draftees Nick Daicos and Sam Darcy, and then just generally as a top-five player in the game. “Inside 2025’s hottest trade race” Fox Footy beckoned readers. He was “King Nasiah”, he was the Messiah. Who’s Messiah was he, exactly? “I wonder if he sees the legend he could be at this club and think ‘I can’t leave now’,” Kane surmised. “How beloved he is, could he leave now? Why would he go to Port? I hope he stays.” Emlyn Breese, in their eulogy for the tenure of Simon Goodwin, wrote, “Nick Riewoldt provides commentary as Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera annoints himself as the heir to St Nick in the St Kilda mythos with two last quarter goals”. He was, in that moment, the next in line at Moorabbin.

But we needed him to, you know, actually sign a contract with the St Kilda Football Club.

***

St Kilda has had some great wins in games when finals were out of reach, or simply not realistic. Plugger’s 11 goals in the 1994 comeback game against the Swans at the SCG perhaps had sat atop that pantheon; with bottom-of-the-ladder St Kilda’s 56-point demolition of top-of-the-ladder Carlton in Round 9 of 1995 – keeping the Blues goalless until well into the third quarter, and to the lowest score of the entire season – probably next (knocking off both second-place Geelong and then second-place Richmond two weeks later in Rounds 15 and 17 respectively weren’t bad). There is also the Barry Hall after-the-siren win in the last game of 2001 over the Hawks (a very underrated comeback in its own right), which formalised the union of GT and the Riewoldt generation. A stirring win in Robert Harvey’s 350th against the high-flying Eagles at Subiaco in 2007, on the back of a four-game losing streak was a remarkable way to pay tribute to one of the club’s greatest. Honourable mentions go to the final round of 2013, when Grand Final-bound Freo Ross rested everyone the Saints farewelled Kosi, Milne and Blake with a 71-point win, the 18th-topping-second trouncing of Freo a year later, the 2016 three-point win over ladder leaders Geelong, last year’s wins over the ladder-leading Swans and the parting gift of 2024, Snags’ hooking, hooking winner (also in the candy stripe) in the final seconds of the season.

We won’t know until we know, but this might be the best – and most consequential – of the lot.

***

St Kilda reverted to being a frowned-upon club by…winning four games in a row.

For three quarters against Melbourne, and for most of all of the quarters against North Melbourne, Richmond and Essendon, the Saints Footy of the Boring ‘20s was back. 

Only the clock running out saved our blushes in the spluttering win against North (in front of just short of 32,000 people – Nas was worth 10,000 on the week before). Max Hall’s goal after the final siren from a 50-metre penalty was our only goal of the last quarter. Another (very) dead rubber, but a percentage of the football world’s attention was on St Kilda. And we needed to prove to ourselves that what happened the week before wasn’t a total one-off, an incredible sequence of freak occurrences contained entirely to that quarter of footy. That what happened the week before meant something. That it did mean a shift. It was important we won all of those four games. It minted a vibe shift on the field, it minted a vibe shift off the field as noise about TDK and Liam Ryan and Leek Aleer wanting to come to the Saints became louder.

“The Saints won the match but football lost a bit of its soul,” said a dismayed Gerard Healy after the win the following week over the Tigers. Not one team had challenged the opposition less with direct footy in a game as the Saints had in the MCG Saturday afternoon scrap, Hoyney said. Short, non-threatening kicks to the left, short, non-threatening kicks to the right, anywhere and everywhere but somewhere dangerous. Just eight goals to seven for the entire game. A Ross 1.0-type slog. On the day that Jack Steele played his 200th game, Cal Wilkie shored up his numbers to be the next captain.

And then shit kind of hit the fan?

Originally, it was via Michelangelo Rucci doing Port Adelaide’s bidding for Nas, saying on SEN SA that Cal Wilkie wanted out of the Saints, TDK’s mega-offer was shunting out Rowan Marshall, and Windhager and Steele were looking elsewhere. Then Sam Edmund took over The Agenda Setters set and declared Wilkie “disillusioned” with the list management of the football club. “The easiest way to get Nas out of that football club is [playing] football like that,” Luke Hodge offered. People were back on Ross’s case: “How he has gotten away with this, and how all the Saints fans and the mafia are buying into this and drinking the Kool Aid is like nothing I’ve ever seen,” Kane said. “I thought he let his club and his fans down today,” he said after Ross cracked the shits with journos who had in the mid-week presser asked about player movement rather than anything to do with the on-field business.

We sought reassurance and the inside running from our St Kilda fanbase general The Saint. When your on-field season’s done by the end of May, apparently the fate of an entire rebuild could be played out through misinformation carefully placed by SEN SA and the cursed everything app timeline as much as on the field. Stavr04 could also reliably provide some lucidity.

St Kilda was out of fashion again. St Kilda was on the nose. Andy and JJ asked Saints fans what they wanted to see from the comedically scheduled Friday night game against the Bombers. JJ suggested it shouldn’t be bothered being played. “they should just cancel it tbh” Matt texted me. GA tickets were $7 under dynamic pricing. Gerard opened his show with a monologue about the precariousness of St Kilda’s list position. Hodgey then ran the ruler over the list. Nas still hadn’t signed. The Midday Madness chat on the Friday turned to Brownlow medallists who had left their club immediately after (Graeme Moss left Essendon for Claremont at the end of 1976, but no one had leapt to a rival club in the VFL/AFL in the same year). Gerard Healy said he’d gone from 98% sure Nas was staying to 60% in the space of an hour. “The pressure is clearly mounting,” Damo said. Mark Bickley wondered if the week would have a galvanising effect. 

Not quite. On the Friday night, St Kilda stumbled to a two-point win over a lowly, wounded Essendon, in a game that came all the way down to Mason Redman’s long drive just fading to the left. Ross had been feeling good enough about things before the game to post on Twitter for the second time in 10 years. St Kilda had now won four in a row, by six, nine, four and two points. But everyone was fretting over Nas’s choice of words – specifically referring to St Kilda as “this club” – on 7 in the post-match. Bad vibes or maybe he’s just not that polished a media performer? He’d provided what was probably the sole highlight of the match – a centre bounce takeaway that turned into two bounces over a sprint and a goal from 50 – and there was now simply nothing else to talk about. Mitch Cleary was barracking for the story. The Espy was barracking for Nas to stay. From fifth in the Trevor Barker to top five in the competition, Joey reckoned. Tony Shaw suggested, “If they lose him now, it will go down in history as one of the worst things to have ever happened in the history of that club.”

***

For St Kilda supporters, Mondays in mid-August have become something of a day of reflection. The final round of the season beckons, and it’s time to think about the year that was. Barring just two years since 2011 (the end of Ross 1.0), St Kilda’s season has been done by that final round.

On an early afternoon in mid-August, it happened.

Just after 1pm. Perhaps the most important off-field moment of this generation of Saints happened at just after 1pm on a Monday in mid-August. One of those dry, matter-of-fact AFL app push notifications simply stating that Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera had made a decision on his contract. Cal Twomey was the journo who broke it, a day after Will Poulter suggested Adelaide was the front-runner, six days after SEN suggested a significant fallout was threatening a mass St Kilda exodus.

Two years.

Nas had signed for two years.

A reprieve. 

See you all soon for another dance, really.

The St Kilda membership site crashed after the club made available a special Nas-themed membership for 2026. The Espy hosted a party – 6pm at the public bar for anyone who really wanted to make something of their Monday night.

By Ross’s own effective admission, this was the most important day of St Kilda’s year. “Catastrophic”, he told The Agenda Setters, would have been the result of Nas leaving, and the rebuild would need to have been recalibrated around his departure.

Fuckin’ hell.

There was another vibe shift for the Saints in 2025. Another day of something going our way. And not just that – not just some fluke. The club had drafted and developed this player and built an environment in which he wanted to stay (however briefly). Ross told The Agenda Setters, “We’re not a club that’s going to be walked over.“Nas deal proves the gloves are off for unapologetic Saints,” the Herald Sun trumpeted. Andrew Bassat told News: “There is no risk-free way to win a flag and there is no way to win a flag without offending people.”

“If we are going to die, we are going to die with our boots on and not be scared to have a go. That is what we are about as a football club.” 

It was a day for Nas, the quietly-spoken smooth mover, to be narrating pump-up videos (unconvincingly and awkwardly and modestly). “I felt like I had unfinished business at the Saints,” he said on accepting an All-Australian blazer a month later. The club itself called him the Messiah. Eddie said his signature saved the season. No journos bothered turning up to Ross’s Friday press conference (literally).

People were happy for St Kilda again.

But it’s only two years. All the while, St Kilda was coaxing chronically injured Jack Silvagnis and possibly-past-their-best Liam Ryans to Moorabbin in the hope of going up the ladder ASAP to entice Nas for a longer stay, perhaps at the expense of putting in the sturdier building blocks for sustained success. This is the stuff that got me worried. Are we fast-tracking a rebuild after one freak quarter of footy and three tepid wins against bottom-four teams? We need, like, four or five guys that are Nas-tier. Not just one. Do we have those guys on our list? We have one (Nas, obviously). Do we have the guys who will become that tier of player on our list right now? Right now, we’re building an accelerated tilt around one person who can quite easily, quite soon create a “catastrophic” – Ross’s term – outcome purely for the very possible and very understandable wish of wanting to be closer to family, friends and home.

Then the fuck what?

***

All that was left of the season proper was for Darcy Wilson to kick five goals and have 23 disposals in a gutsy 11-point loss to GWS. It wasn’t quite the jubilant trip down Champs-Élysées on the final day of the Tour, but Darcy made a welcome jump back onto the world line we thought he’d be on through 2025, which had turned out to be a real second-year blues escapade. Nas cramped in the last quarter and it looked like he’d done his knee and my god, the beer garden at the Victoria Hotel was a tense, bordering-on-sad place to be for a few moments. I’d even worn my HoMie jumper and dressed up Ivy in Mama’s outfit to celebrate the end of the season.

SPRING / SUN / WINTER / DREAD

“St Kilda fallout explodes,” boomed Channel 7.

Rowan Marshall had spoken with the Cats, it was reported in early September. Maybe this exodus from Moorabbin could materialise, maybe clickbait rules the world.

A whole year’s worth of scuttlebutt and rumour and daily episodes of Gettable and breathless non-stories on the Tuesday night editions of The Agenda Setters and voyeuristic tweets and BigFooty posts and the Magpies cheer squad singing the Saints song at a Collingwood-Carlton game converged on the Friday following the Grand Final.

All on the same day, our list manager’s son joined the club; so did Ross’s Dan Does Footy couch buddy TDK; Ro formally requested a trade to the Cats and our captain was told to welcome opportunities elsewhere. St Kilda had brought “absolute spice” to the trade period, supposedly. Gubby Allan touted that the club had “plenty of money” and “we’ll go hunting again next year”. Kane said we were relevant again, Scott Lucas compared us to the famous North Melbourne raids of the 1970s when the 10-year rule was briefly in play. There was no short supply of media coverage and analysis of what the club was doing, or trying to do, or might be at risk of doing (there still isn’t). Gubby said it again: this all wouldn’t have been happening without Nas re-signing.

Sam Flanders, who can only be associated with one cultural reference forever, joined the midfield after being wined and dined at Scopri, with Marcus Windhager elevated to Pitch Dinner Attendee Guy as he himself signed a four-year deal. The club is confident enough to back its coaches and its systems to be able to pry out the best of a player’s previous form and more, and Flanders had an excellent 2024. Injuries kept him behind an A-list midfield in 2025, and he gets the chance to become an A-lister himself. Now, Kane liked the look of our midfield. Josh Jenkins said the Saints should get more prime-time slots. Ed Bourke suggested that if Max King was in 2022 shape we could give the top four a crack. News of a backflip on Leek Aleer did momentarily bring back scorn for St Kilda; it was briefly on-trend to dunk on the Saints again and Josh Jenkins was again having a great time.

“Recruiting aggressively as we have, no doubt involves a degree of risk … (but) there is no risk-free way to a flag and indeed, doing nothing is the greatest risk of all,” Bassat said at the Trevor Barker.

Ro’s talks with the Cats gradually broke down. Wilkie went as far as meeting with St Kilda’s former momentary director of coaching Luke Beveridge, but he stayed, too, and for all intents and purposes is the next captain of the St Kilda Football Club.

Because Jack Steele, firstly, relinquished the captaincy, and then was traded.

I’ll just put here what I tweeted on the day of his 200th (lol, definitive):

For some people of a certain generation, like Scar, he was their captain, their peer on the ground in red, white and black. He is who they saw carry the team when they were old enough to properly appreciate them, but still young enough to be looking up to them. He is who they saw carry the team at the peak of a failed rebuild (perhaps the darkest of all times). Mildly mannered (except when it came to tackling opposition players) and good for the occasional strong mark inside 50 and captain’s goal (see the Miracle at Concrete Dome), he was once the subject of a rumour that Ross Lyon told him on his return to the club he was an “8 out of 10 captain”. I believe that all St Kilda players have been playing in a space that is in the shadow of those who made up the Riewoldt generation, and none more so than the captain. Jarryn Geary was given an impossible task of taking the reins from Nick, and Jack Steele was handed the culmination of the Road to 2018 (derogatory) and was perhaps a little reluctant to take this whole business on in the first place, but he gave it a 10 out of 10 shot.

***

Author of The Bubble David Misson left the club and Ross basically took over the whole thing, as he unofficially may well have months (years?) ago. Hugo Garcia was used as a “plays like” reference on draft night(s), which came and went with Kye Fincher levels of fanfare after the first round pick was traded for Sam Flanders. St Kilda has its own VFL team now. Meanwhile, the candy stripe was promoted to being the clash jumper for 2026. In the club’s stated supposed attempt to honour the 1966 jumper in the 60th anniversary year of the premiership, the club introduced black cuffs to go with a white collar on the home jumper, but by taking out the traditional black box (the most distinctive part of the ‘66 jumper) they’ve literally just made the jumper worn for a small part of 1995.

***

At the end of the trade period, Kane stated: “If I am a Saints fan I have got hope.” 

Expectations for 2026 are high, from some anyway. The club went from 12 losses in 14 games to aiming for 85,000-plus for a home game in Opening Round and a non-zero number of pundits have floated the possibility of top four. (The fixture in its entirety wasn’t quite box office, but it included one more home game with hopes for 85,000-plus than it usually does. A crowd of that size would smash St Kilda’s own record for a home crowd in a home-and-away game in its by-then 153-year history.)

I have to ask again: Was this all based around one lightning strike in July? It couldn’t have been based on the three meandering wins in the following three weeks, right? I don’t know if now is the time to go full top-up. There are some echoes of the 2000 recruitment spree that netted Gehrig and Hamill (as well as Capuano and Callaghan and Stephen Lawrence), which brought a great mix of experience and youth, but that was really built around the picks 1 and 2 national draft punch of Roo and Kosi. And there is no dual Coleman-medal winner in this lot of recruits. Perhaps because maybe he’s already on the list. He’s just kinda injured forever, though.

SUMMER

Summer is for pre-season training shots of the fellas looking fit. Summer is for The Age leading the entire online publication with Jake Niall’s look at St Kilda’s finances. “Saints said they wanted to get off ‘welfare’ but accepted extra AFL cash,” the headline thundered. The story went up quite some time after the annual report had actually been released, and The Saint was there to straighten some things out.

Summer is for the consitutional path to be cleared for Andrew Bassat to have his tenure as President extended. Summer, like all seasons, is for Max King to have more knee surgery. “Expected to be back in full training in January,” oh yeah sure. Summer is also for the nation this is all taking place in to feel like it’s coming apart at the seams.

***

“We’re 14 shows down
Got 10 more to go.
Ten more to go.”
– Folk Bitch Trio, “Mary’s Playing the Harp”

Fourteen years since Ross left, and we’re still waiting for our next great period. St Kilda fans use the words “great” relatively; only the Jeans era delivered a premiership. Fourteen years since that first Ross era came to an unceremonious and infamous close. A watch of the 2010 Season Highlights DVD with Matt on the eve of the Miracle at Marvel over a few drinks brought back peak Ross memories and feels, not that they’re ever far away: how often do you replay the final moments of the 2010 Grand Final, but with small changes that make it go our way? Small changes that mean an entire different existence as a St Kilda supporter; that mean the entire world?

We all need to “take the emotional risk to give everything without any guarantee”. We all need “a cause to die for”. It’s well past time for this club to step out of the shadows of the Riewoldt generation. It’s time for the supporters of this club to have something to move on to. Something else to believe in. The club is unapologetically making a move. The club is telling us that the somnambulistic winters of 2024 and 2025 were the darkest moments to be endured before the dawn. Is this actually the dawn, or have Ross and SOS and Gubby and Bassat just stormed into this padded cell and slammed the surgical lighting on?

We’re learning, trying, wanting to trust a new team. Commitment to St Kilda can be scary! There’s a King who can’t get on the park and there’s a baby GOAT who can’t get on the park and there’s some new guy coming off a sub-standard year who we’re paying nearly more than anyone in the history of Australian rules football, and another guy who’s really awesome but might not be here for that long (and who we’re paying more than anyone in the history of Australian rules football). The Nas deal was “the most significant signing since Baldock” in 1962, but let’s face it – he’s signed for two years. We’ll be doing the dance all over again before we know it, all the clickbait and the speculation-as-fact and maybe just outright lies-as-fact in articles and tweets and SEN SA dross, and this club had better sort its shit out in the meantime if it wants to get through the audition.

Again, the specific term Ross used was “catastrophic”. If the club savages this attempt to challenge, that 60-year premiership drought could easily become 70.

***

Melbourne ran a festival of unseasonable late-autumn sunshine. I was sitting in the car on Toorak Road in South Yarra with Mum on the way to Mother’s Day lunch at Mama’s. A quite pregnant Gracie had run in to Mecca to grab some Le Labo Rose 31 Eau de Parfum courtesy of a voucher. St Kilda had played Carlton at the MCG on the Friday night. Mum is always across the Saints and watches them most weeks, but that was the first game Mum had actually been to since we’d sat next to each other in Round 2 of 2016 watching Nick Riewoldt run out for his 300th.

The St Kilda world had been up and about following the stunning takedown of Freo the previous week. “What will my Mum think of Saints Footy in 2025?!” I wondered. I’d excitedly told her to look out for Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera and Mattaes Phillipou. But it ended up being a dirty night on the big stage. Simple mistakes – balls slipping through fingers and into faces, balls kicked weirdly into open spaces, balls kicked directly into nearby opponents – let to an ugly loss to an unfancied opposition. Losing in front of your home crowd. Another Saints season was on the brink of failure. 

While Gracie was in Mecca on that Sunday, I was getting Mum’s take on all things St Kilda. Friday hadn’t been a good showcase of anything, really. She wasn’t overly thrilled.

I, a grown man about to turn 37, childishly asked her, “What’s it like watching the Saints without Nick Riewoldt?”

“It’s not the same, darling,” she said.

“It never will be.”

2025 Season Review, Part 1 (Summer and Autumn): Love Takes Miles

By Tom Briglia

“Love takes miles,
Love takes years.
You’d better start a-walkin’, babe.
Love takes miles.”
– Cameron Winter, “Love Takes Miles”

Getting truly attached to this club again has been dreary fuckin’ going.

Fourteen years long, three failed coaches wide (including one who at the time had coached the second-most games in the club’s history) – now onto a fourth – and just two very also-ran finals series to show for it. After “A Year of Exploration” in 2023, and an unofficial year of exploration in 2024, in 2025 we were set for…another year of exploration. (“And his…chamber pot.”). 

“Rebuild”. It’s called a “rebuild”. After all of that.

Expectations for St Kilda in 2025 were – how to put this? – low. Everyone talked about Richmond, North Melbourne and West Coast as the clear bottom three. And according to everyone’s ladder predictors, going into 2025, we were the next thing. Richmond, North Melbourne and West Coast – and then us. The next thing was us.

Pre-season wasn’t kind. Max, Sincs, and Mason all went down in the same early February training session, but scans came back clear enough to have them each in the frame for round one and our 2025 outlook was upgraded from “bottom four” to “bottom six”. I’ve been paranoid about Max doing his knee since he did it after kicking 8.5 in the first game of his Under 18 year, and in the time since there’s been a whole lot of other body parts (and, uh, knee parts) to have worried about. And he ended up missing the whole god damn thing in 2025. God damn it, man. God damn it.

No sooner had SEN published its absurd off-season power rankings (St Kilda 12th because why the fuck not/they fucking nailed it), more training reports emerged that Pou was on crutches, Dougal’s shoulder had exploded and Caminiti and Nas had left the track, which led to an injury list the next day featuring a Pou stress fracture (12 to 14 weeks), Dougal (longish-term, probably) and a Marshall pelvis (what?). Hunter Clark appeared on the injury list because that’s his address. So we were set to start the season without arguably our best (or perhaps most important) player and then arguably our…next best player? Pou was for all intents and purposes meant to be Guy of the Year in 2025 but he was now set to spend the rest of his life battling shin splints or something. It was around this time that I accidentally posted a work social media post to the RWBFooty account. There were…things on my mind (i.e. Pou missing from the team photo). 

The one thing going for us in the pre-season was the confirmation of a big, beautiful set of jumpers which, really, you could potentially never change (this probably won’t happen for retail dollars reasons) and it would always functionally work. There is a red-based one, there is a white-based one, and there is a black-based one, which means all potential clashes against every team are covered at least once over, and each of them have strong historical ties. (Save some room for more glorious 1915-1918-inspired red/yellow/black jumpers for Sir Doug Nicholls Round and the set is complete/St Kilda wear a replica of the 1919-1922 red/yellow/black jumper challenge: Impossible.) Since I stopped doing the weekly match reports on this blog (for the time being I will only be doing finals and these too-long season reviews), the RWBFooty Twitter account has descended into mostly a footy jumpers and The Fable Singers account and I was ready for another massive year of the club not engaging with me on either. “Is it because I don’t do enough memes? Not enough pieces to camera?” I have asked previously and am once again asking. Maybe the club’s Twitter account just doesn’t function that way anymore. The next time the 2018 horror cover version of the club song is used I’ll just email the club directly again (Editor: This, in fact, ended up happening in November.). I will one day post my 2019 dissertation that I sent through to Matt Finnis (who indeed responded, and took action) for public consumption on this blog: my legacy, if there is anything at all in this, lol (Editor: The club actually sent me back a really positive response to my November correspondence. I can’t believe it.).

***

Pre-season came and went way too fast. It all goes too fast, always. I completely forgot about Jack Macrae. The Saints played the Blues in the unsponsored practice match at Princes Park, just a convenient short drive from RWB’s Brunswick West headquarters. There was that panicky mid-February feeling: I just can’t be fucked with another season, but possibly I was just too hot and I couldn’t fucking see anything from where Matt and I were sitting. I looked around at the players and thought, “Who the fuck are these guys?” but after an 11-point win I left the ground feeling way too optimistic after what was really just some February Saturday morning runaround in 36-degree heat and training jumpers. Hugh Boxshall, Max Hall, Hugo Garcia, Harry Boyd, Travaglia’s last quarter running goal from 50, Liam O’Connell’s proof of existence. “Maybe we have…something?” my February mind pondered. Lol.

That lasted all of a week. There’s something egregious about allowing Port Adelaide to come play at Moorabbin. Or maybe we just needed something ceremonial to cast rid of the weird demons when it comes to all things Port Adelaide and St Kilda (and all things St Kilda, really). The whole exercise could only be described as “not good” – smacked 6.3 to 0.1 in the first, one solitary goal in the first half, Mitchito hurt his shoulder. There were no Red Rooster red shorts this year, consigning them to the novelty bin alongside the Pura Lightstart yellow clash (I was fond of the 2003 version with the red piping; the rumour of the BigFooty Footy Jumpers and Graphic Design board is that we’ll be wearing a version of it in Gather Round next year). Kane Cornes effectively suggested we were just prepping everyone for a horrow show and tipped us for bottom four (he decided to shirk taking on SaintsTV face-to-face on this). Tobie’s goal a week earlier in front of 50 people was going to be the highlight of the year.

***

Sometimes, your worst fears come true. You’re running late for the for the first game of the season, racing across town from Brunswick West to Elsternwick in sheeting rain and wind on a hot and steamy day and by the time you find a park in Ripon Grove Matt’s texted you “We are toast.”, and a few moments later you walk through his front door and it’s 12 minutes into the first quarter and you’re four goals down and the game, and the season, are gone. We should have worn the candy stripe (but no, seriously, we should have worn the candy stripe instead of the red hot cross bun for a more effective clash). Adelaide Oval is the best place to begin a St Kilda season if you’re a fan of slow starts and soul-sapping losses.

Jack Macrae instantly became our best player, Nas picked up from his 2024 form, Max Hall kicked 2.2 on debut and gave one away, but otherwise, who were our…players? A step-slower-than-everyone Harry Boyd played a one-and-only game for St Kilda, joining a modern-day pantheon that includes Will Johnson, Jackson Ferguson, Daniel Archer, Fergus Watts, Colm Begley, and Jack Peris. Evidently, we also should have avoided all contact drills during the pre-season so we could field a forward line that wasn’t just Anthony Caminiti and a 25% fit Rowan Marshall. Jack Steele looked fucked, emerging briefly out of the shadow of his best-on-ground opposite number Jordan Dawson to engage in some ho-hum push and shove with Tex. The showing from the team, on the whole, was meek; players swept aside by an opposition starting out on a journey to bigger things. After the 63-point loss I got back to my car on Ripon Grove and was greeted with a $109 parking ticket (I didn’t see the 2P sign). This had all happened on the back of an exhaustive and very kind feature piece about the Saints by Josh Gabelich on the eve of the season, but we instantly became so irrelevant that the 63-point loss didn’t even qualify for AFL360’s Round 1 Horrors segment. I spent more than four-and-a-half hours on the Monday night on the toilet in my dim lamp-lit bathroom (both our downlights were blown) prepping for a colonoscopy and a gastroscopy the next morning, watching that night’s editions of 360, On the Couch, new hour-filler The Agenda Setters and Footy Classified back-to-back-to-back-to-back on my phone. The future was here, it was dark, it was shit.

We could surely not pull off four years in a row of defeating Geelong on a Saturday at the Concrete Dome. The Cats had spent their previous weekend demolishing Fremantle and we’d spent ours apparently grounded at Tullamarine. We would have needed a combined 141-point swing to break even with them.

Anyway, St Kilda won.

St Kilda hung on more than St Kilda won, but St Kilda won. St Kilda’s primary activity in the final quarter was hanging on, by the class of Jack Macrae and the guts of Liam O’Connell and the lunging fluoro orange boot of Nas. A 41-point lead first-half had been created from the most scintillating Saints footy since the early running of Ross 2.0, attacking the footy at the source with manic Ross-esque pressure and feeding the ball forwards – and good finishing in front of goal, something never associated with the Saints, and certainly not against the Cats. Zak Jones and Darcy Wilson on the wings, Windhager scragging and tagging and kicking goals, Caminiti taking 13 marks in defence, and doing those confident short field kicks usually only really self-assured defensive generals do. It didn’t look anything like what was attempted in the pre-season matches but something had clicked.

But just before half-time we gave up two goals. Over a drink at the main break in the ground’s New Hospitality Experience behind level two (which was much better than the cold winds and portaloos and smell of faecal matter of the previous year) I said to Dad that I didn’t trust this team to hold on. Not yet. I hadn’t seen enough from this group. This young team would surely tire, while perhaps not knowing how to defend against the bigger bodies and class of Dangerfield, Atkins, Holmes, Cameron, et al. Two early third-quarter St Kilda goals pushed the margin back out to 41 again but there was the inevitable run-on, a gauntlet thrown down from the Cats. The wall of Geelong supporters at the Coventry end reached what for all intents and purposes was a penultimate crescendo with Brad Close’s goal out of mid air to bring the margin within a kick with just a few minutes left – only for the ball to be taken from the centre bounce set-up back to the goal square as the replay on the screen showed Nas’s boot had got there first and last. (It wasn’t the last time in 2025 that Nas was the protagonist of a dramatic late-game centre bounce happenstance.) St Kilda had just enough resolve to hold out from there.

During the final quarter, in our new Row C seats on level two just in front of Rory, I thought about how chained we were to Geelong fucking us over. Sort of. There is something about the Cats and the Saints in the 21st century. Yes, I understand we won the 2004 NAB Cup (hehe) and Round 14 of 2009 and the 2010 Qualifying Final and had a fun win in 2016 and now four entertaining wins in a row at Marvel, but they have the 2009 Grand Final, for good measure, Round 1 of 2011 (the beginning of a nightmare comedown), and a win streak at their own home ground that now extends to 26 years. But ultimately, they have the 2009 Grand Final. That’s where it starts and ends. You’d trade it all. (RWB piece not mentioning 2009 or 2010 Grand Finals challenge: Also impossible.) As Ollie Dempsey and Max Holmes got to work in that final quarter I genuinely had the thought: will we literally just never have another day or night where you can excitedly catch the Route 58 tram home taking in everything on Twitter, and the Ross press conference and the highlights, and then get home, and you simply can’t wait to put on the Kayo Mini, or maybe you start with the whole second half, or go straight through the whole game, depending on the time? Do we just never have that again? Are we condemned to the peak of our St Kilda supporting lives being the period from February 2004 to early on the Saturday of October 2nd, 2010, and then just nothing really ever happens again?

What did that win do for your expectations for 2025? Last year we lost Round 1 and then defeated the reigning premier at the MCG by 15 points on a Thursday night in Round 2 – also featuring a Marcus Windhager PB – which had David King saying our premiership window wasn’t far off. He was much more measured in his short-term outlook for the Saints following this year’s edition, although went as far to saw it was “one of the great coaching performances for a long time” from Ross, who had just extended to 2027. Before the game, over schnitzels and dunkels at The Hof, we’d caught up with long-time-sufferers Jim and Sonia. As if the season were starting this night proper, Sonia said she had “so much hope” but didn’t know where it was all going to go. Dad reminded Sonia that she’d said the exact same thing to us all just a few hours before the 2010 Grand Final. I admired her optimism as we were about to face a team that promised to pants us. A hell of win it was. The standard had been set.

***

Early-season media is particularly fickle. It was one of those weeks where everyone was on the Saints. Macrae, Snags, and Sinclair were all in the SEN team of the week, and Ross was the coach. Kane loved it. So did Nathan Buckley, who even mentioned Ryan Byrnes and his role as a defensive winger, of all the things Bucks could have said directly into the SEN studio microphone and broadcast across Melbourne. Josh Gabelich talked about Jack Macrae being the bargain recruit of the year. Caminiti was in the Unheralded column. Zak Jones got a vote in 360’s GVP, putting him closer to a $93,000 Ford Mustang GTV than everyone on the St Kilda list and 99% of the competition. Corn suggested St Kilda would be the ideal environment for Jamarra. (However, we still couldn’t win without giving away a record-extending Rising Star nomination.)

Conversely, everything else wasn’t in top shape, and footy season again gave us something else – whatever that might be or might look like for you – while the world burned. We were living in the time of Nero, some were saying, or possibly Romulus Augustus. Does a 2029 premiership still mean as much if the world has descended into a hellfire of autocracies? I will raise this question every year until 2029, or whenever the second St Kilda premiership arrives, if ever. However, watching Mason Wood announce that Tobie would be debuting during the next week, I felt just the faintest nanosecond, maybe millisecond of…optimism? (March indeed.) Nothing puts a big, dumb, goofy smile on my face like feel-good Saints videos. So much of clubs’ identities are wrapped up in their social media content (or am I just stuck in a bubble?) and those kinds of moments are necessary, all told. It was a big few weeks for haters of social media generally: the new TV rights deal kicked off a somehow circle-jerkier coverage of the game, Harry McKay being out for personal reasons dredged up some dog shit from way too many accounts, and there was the general elevation in nastiness that comes with a federal election being called. 

If Round 14 of 1998 against the Bulldogs was dubbed the Grand Final in June then the (sadly) last-ever Maddie’s Match against the Tigers was supposed to be at least a Preliminary Final for the number one draft pick, Seth Campbell’s somersault-backflip and the Saints clinging on against the Cats be damned. As far as the jumpers go, Maddie’s Match would have peaked in 2020 with the purple hot cross bun, if not for COVID shipping delays. We never did get that purple hot cross bun in the end, nor a purple candy stripe. Sigh.

So, just like in 2024, a more winnable game to follow Round 2 heroics and get a 2-1 start on the season. Richmond presented as the perfect St Kilda Football Club Banana Peel Game. An eight-point lead at half-time wasn’t convincing but a 14-goal second half was. Mitchito kicked four, picked off a couple of fun snaps close to the boundary line forward pockets on both his right and left and bowed to the crowd, and could have had a fifth in the final moments but gave off to a lively Collard instead. Steele was a late out with a mystery knee but Jack Macrae took himself to the top of the competition for disposals, Hugo Garcia was busy in the middle in his just two-thirds of game time and Tobie looked physically ready. Sinclair and Nas had 19 score involvements. No team had scored more from turnover in the previous 10 games. Changing the angles going forward (basic footy stuff!). Great movement from those ahead of the ball. Everyone was dangerous. That old kickers and catchers connection was being made. The average age and games-played difference between the sides wasn’t actually too far apart, but St Kilda carved up the very green Tigers. Collard nearly brought the house down with a winding solo effort through 50. Sharman and his low, piercing set shots were back, Mason Wood kicked three. Max Hall was busy again and kicked a nice set shot from outside 50. When was the last time a Saint did that? (It was actually Mason Wood earlier in the game. Before then? Probably Mason Wood some time also recently, but you get the idea.) The biggest St Kilda winning margin in 10 years. “Eh, dunno,” Ross said afterwards. The win against Geelong was “one of those games”, and this was also “one of those games”, but a different type of “one of those games”. Fun to have the margin is at its highest at the end of the match, too.

Dad and Matt and I sat at Platform 28 afterwards taking in the song again, and again (and again), with a “Mason Wood” chant thrown in. We giddily talked about Max to come back. Butler. Pou. Liam Henry. Tauru was set to play VFL the following week. The kind of optimistic chat you can only get between father and sons when it’s this early in the season and maybe anything could happen. “I’ve never seen a premiership won in March,” Matt then exclaimed as we watched over the Hawthorn-GWS and Brisbane-Geelong games. We caught ourselves rewinding the conversation. There was a silence between us amid the Platform 28 buzz. 

“It’s still March,” I said, as if the point needed driving home. 

Footy’s a pretty tough caper, though, and sometimes you just have to give yourself moments to believe in something.

The light won’t shine forever, but it is now

The club and its supporter base felt like it was having a good moment. Gerard acknowledged as much to Andrew Bassat on the club’s SEN supporter day on the following Tuesday.

“We’re moving forward as a football club,” Bassat said.

“Enjoy the journey. And I promise you it will be an enjoyable journey.” It wasn’t quite Malcolm Blight’s “get set for the ride of your life” but it was an encouraging vibe all the same.

Ross was at The Agenda Setters’ desk. Kane said the next night he was “compelling”. Ross was pressed on culture. “It’s just a common set of observable behaviours you see on a daily basis.” Done. Next. Cheers Ross. The Richmond performance earned the attention of One Percenters and an in-depth piece about our ball movement (it sits among the absolute best analysis of how St Kilda actually plays Australian rules football).

And so we ran into Port Adelaide. In Adelaide.

We had a comical history to confront. These moments of rebuilds are about meeting those challenges and changing the narrative. Creating new stories. St Kilda had beaten the Power once in 14 years, and had a 6-26 record since 2001, alternating between close losses and rightful smashings (even when we were good, in the GT and Ross years, they gave us grief). From the 2004 Preliminary Final epic, through to that horrific night in 2017 – which may be the club’s high-water mark of everything awful about the post-Grand Final Draw era – through to giving Ken and Port their signature moment in 2024. The last five losses to the Power had been by 13, one, seven, 10 and two points.

This time, we were coming off two great wins and they were coming off a dirty night (albeit with a 10-day break) against the Bombers. Who better to inject some life back into their season than the St Kilda Football Club? But Dwayne decided to just jump to it on the Monday and declare that he thought the Saints would win. We were Gerard’s D-Day on Wednesday’s 360. “They come up against Port who have frankly terrorised them.”

St Kilda had had two weeks that suggest they are more than what they hinted at coming into the season, he said.

“There is no reason why St Kilda shouldn’t march into a ground where they have no happy memories at all and really put it to Port Adelaide.”

“And should they win, they will flip their narrative entirely”

Joey said on First Crack it was time for the team to flip the script. Scar was confident. Call it a vibe shift. In this cursed timeline, it was time for this team, in this rebuild, to take a step forward. Perhaps ahead of its time: a read of Jake Niall’s stocktake of the entire competition’s lists in The Age on match day morning was sobering reading. St Kilda were in “rebuilding” mode, it declared. Not yet even in “building” mode. We were coming up against “no man’s land” Port. By game day, Richie expected a five-goal loss. Rory said a belting or a small margin loss, in keeping with head-to-head form. I felt it was going to be the latter. We just needed to see how it would happen so we could have the footage archived and have the stats and numbers all recorded on AFL Tables.

What we got instead was a 6.4 first quarter – a club record for the ground – which built the foundation for a 31-point lead nearing half-time. Mitchito started hot with a couple. An unlikely midfield led by a Bulldogs discard was outworking and outmuscling its much higher-fancied opposite line. Liam Stocker wasn’t afraid to polaxe another opponent at the risk of concussing himself for the second time in three weeks, and his commitment ultimately ended up with Nasiah’s glorious give, get and goal from 45 metres out on an angle. Pay him what he wants.

Port inevitably pushed and pushed, carried upon the shoulders of an irrepressible Jason Horne-Francis, while Mitch Gieorgiades went about compiling the early parts of a season in which he’d finish in the top five in the Coleman Medal. Windhager had the tag on Rozee and did a decent job, although was a “clown show” with ball-in-hand, as Matt described it. Couldn’t Ross just fucking tell Windy to make sure JHF doesn’t do anything, and not worry about doing literally anything else?

But every time Port pushed, we shoved back. Hastie’s desperate smother late in the third turned into Higgins darting through defenders and curling through his third off his left. The Power rallied again in the last and Lord and Giorgiades sickeningly got them within five points with eight minutes left. They’d kicked five of the last six. They were kicking to the Robbie Gray end. We were about to create a new method of losing a close game to Port Adelaide. I was just scared. Usually I’m just resigned to a dumb close loss to Port, but I was just scrunched up in the corner of my couch being scared.

It actually didn’t feel like they’d had excellent days (the final numbers suggested otherwise/what would I know) but it was Nas and Sinclair who combined for the first of two game-winning moments. With the stadium and the weight of history bearing down, Nas from the boundary at high half-forward directed a slightly-too-cute kick inboard to Sinclair, just outside 50, who took it in his stride and blasted from just inside the arc.

“SIN-CLAIR,” James Brayshaw boomed from the 7 box.

“A FLYING HIT.”

Never mind an Isaac Heeney swing to the right – the ball sailed through for a goal. A celebration to the stunned Port Adelaide crowd. Macrae stood up in the last 10 minutes. He was leading the midfield anyway, but stood up like someone who had been there, done that. He forced the ball forward and Collard – who had had a few really good deft-touch assists – then took his own big moment, plucking an overhead mark close to goal, and, after some wise words from Hill, Wood and Garcia, converted from around the corner. Ross was smiling in the box in the last minute of the game, and he clapped the players as they came off the ground.

It was a good night to be a St Kilda supporter. A win you’re proud of. The homemade burritos were just that much more delicious (the El Pato jalapeño sauce really popped.). Shae said it felt like “the rollercoaster is heading in the right direction”. Ross was coach of SEN’s Team of the Week again. Snags was in the forward pocket, Sincs was on the back flank, and he’d moved to the top of the Coaches Votes. Gerard opened with St Kilda on the Monday show. Nathan Buckley ran the ruler over the whole thing with Gerard. “The breaking of these jinxes is the surest sign of growth and progression.” We were Dwayne’s best win of the weekend. Lance got his face on the front of the Herald Sun.

Caroline Wilson then broke the story on The Agenda Setters that the club had agreed to pay out the players – namely Barry Breen, Alex Jesaulenko and Bruce Duperouzel – and the families of coach Allan Jeans and Trevor Barker, who had accepted payment of 22c in the dollar in the early 1980s to help a club in crippling debt and on the brink of collapse. It was a painfully long time coming – both financially and as a gesture to those that went a way to saving the club. Ultimately pushed over the line by Bassat and Carl Dilena, it produced a rare moment in which St Kilda felt like it was in good shape on and off the field.

The Saints were 9-3 from its past 12 games, losing only to Adelaide and Brisbane since July 2024, and had beaten two of the previous year’s Preliminary Finalists in three matches. At this point of 2025 St Kilda was third in the competition for points for, first for scores per inside 50, fifth for points for turnover, third for points from stoppages, and sixth for marks inside 50. Ross was proving he indeed could coach an attacking, free-flowing, fast-paced team, and a young one at that. For three weeks, anyway. Ahead of Gather Round, Ross gave an upbeat and entertaining interview on Fireball Friday. Tom Morris said the Saints were “sexy”. News filtered out of Carlton that Tom De Koning had paused contract talks and was looking towards Moorabbin.

But Kane wasn’t swayed. He was a “hold” on his own pre-season prediction that St Kilda would be bottom four. He maintained on the Monday, simply, “They’re not good”.

***

The rollercoaster was about to take a devilish turn. Platform 28 was in for some quieter nights. 

On the Sunday of Gather Round, at Australia’s skinniest oval, St Kilda ran into a hardened, big-bodied, premiership-tilting GWS. We kicked the last four of the game to tease a funny hint of a comeback but the lead had blown out to an impossible 50 points early in the last. The Saints were made to look silly. Darcy Wilson and Mitchito kicks were turned over and punished hard on the transition. Jake Riccardi took a barely-contested mark close to goal from a floating Jake Stringer ball that had gone high enough to give everyone on the field time to make the fall. Toby Greene walked around opponents on multiple occasions. Jesse Hogan casually took a towering mark. There were some OK signs – Cooper Sharman kicked three, and Nas boosted his new contract by $250,000, hitting targets and creating movement ahead of the ball (classic Australian rules football!), kicking three goals, adding “guy who kicks goals on the run from outside 50” and “lead-up forward” to his repertoire. He would have had an all-timer fourth from a dashing solo run, but the kick just faded to the left. We threatened to threaten in the last, and then faded out all over again. It wasn’t going to be four in a row, and we went 0-2 for Sunday games viewed from Matt’s place. (However, we were going to go down looking arguably the hottest a St Kilda team as ever looked – wearing the 1873-1876 jumper with a 20th century white collar in place of the handkerchief donned by the first-ever St Kilda teams, with a vibrant pairing with white shorts.)

Another step on the journey and another lesson (or few) learned. That was the level. We weren’t at that level. That was what we needed to evolve to and evolve beyond over the next few years. For the moment, we had to show what we’d learned on Easter Sunday night against the Bulldogs.

We got fucking pantsed.

We ended up copping (or, you could also say, “allowing”) the two highest-rated individual quarters of the season in back-to-back games, from Toby Greene and the returning Bont. It was the way Gerard said “You need your stars when Pendlebury, N. Daicos and De Goey combined to steal back the lead late in the 2023 Grand Final. We just didn’t have any of that. Our star power had banged up shoulders, or had a dodgy knee, or had a stress fracture in their femur. Our leaders – never mind “stars” – were anonymous. On the rare occasion Jack Steele was sighted he was labouring like an injured captain past his peak, a man who’s premiership window has closed. Since 2021 the Dogs had been consistently making a mess of us. Jon Pierik in The Age went as far as to say that we’d blown another marquee time slot, this time the Easter Sunday night (I’m still surprised that 35,000 turned out). He was right; the release of the 2026 fixture showed we’d been replaced by Essendon (who had also replaced us in the Pride Game this year). We were now zero from three for Sunday games watched at Matt’s place (fortunately, the food he’d put on had been sensational).

We gifted the Bulldogs moments and storylines. Liberatore’s rundown chase of Brad Hill (“That’s one of the highlights of the year” according to Garry). Bont’s return on Easter Sunday. A heroic win after Sam Darcy went off early with what looked like a serious knee injury. The Port Adelaide game had felt like a portal to a different world line; this felt like the portal back. We lost by 71 points and the Dogs had hit the post six times. Thirty-five to 11 inside-50s at half-time, 69 to 31 inside 50s at game’s end. The Concrete Dome didn’t play The Fable Singers version of the song when the Saints ran out. Just as quickly as St Kilda had become chic, red, white and black was out. Kane had kept his receipts, and pointed us out as a reason for the Blues having a soft opening draw for the first 15 games. Max King now had the worst contract in football.

***

Max was headed for more surgery. Another six weeks, we were told. The Sandringham alignment, on the record, was cooked. Ross was “practical” about things, and potential next coach Corey Enright espoused the virtues of the club having its own VFL side. And you realise that this is all part a very long-term play. This, 2025, is absolutely not our time. No massive let down there, no massive secret busted open, but it’s still something heavy to tread through day-to-day as a supporter. To prep us for (i.e. soften the blow of) the mighty Lions up next, Ross talked about Max being here for six years and about Pou’s fitness and availability being about the next six to 10. We fell heavily from 3-1 to 3-4, closer to our natural habitat of irrelevance in the post-GT and Ross eras world. Melbourne’s weather began to turn.

Under the heat of the Lions, Nas was missing kicks and dropping marks and went on with it in the second quarter to give up an easy 50 to Neale. Mason dropped a mark standing by himself in the forward 50. Three goals were met with three immediate replies from the visitors, and then some more coming back. Caminiti in defence was looking like a floundering experiment (Hipwood had three early in the second). We’d given up 13 scoring shots in 40 minutes. Inside 50s was running at 29 to seven. Wood missed an easy shot from close range. Logan Morris slotted one from a tough angle 40 out. What were our leaders doing? What was our $1.2 million man (at the time, lol) doing? (Note: he actually had a good second half, kicked a nice goal on the run and added spark when moved into the midfield. Interesting stuff.) There was a shift in momentum back our way, but, suffering the second-year blues, new whipping boy Darcy Wilson missed a shot on the run to make it three in three minutes and bring it back to 16 points. Umpires might have had a hand in a few for the visitors but let’s get real – Brisbane were bigger, harder, faster and just fucking better. They were Kane’s “good”. Pushing our kids around (Hugo – publicly sprayed and subbed off in the second), slicing and dicing their way through the Concrete Dome. No silly skill errors, as opposed to the Saints. This was the St Kilda that everyone assumed at the start of the year would be rolled out week-to-week, the one that had us next in line to the unholy trinity of Richmond, North Melbourne and West Coast. In each of the four losses, at some point during the match we had let the margin get out to 73, 50, 75 and 57 points respectively. Ross Lyon gave “an all-time Ross Lyon spray”. We were now fodder for banter around AFL fixturing mis-steps. Three weeks in a row of scores of 110-plus against. Dwayne’s World asked who of us, Essendon, North Melbourne, West Coast and Richmond would win a final first. How does the team react to that with back-to-back Friday night games coming up?

We had just a couple of things to cling on to, to give us something to look towards. Alixzander Tauru was about to make his debut and Mattaes Phillipou was set to return. But The Flying Viking knocked out a VFL Lion on the Sunday and was whacked with a four-week suspension by the state league’s tribunal – to be served over six weeks to include Sandringham’s byes. Ross went close to his Uber Eats ad performance for the second time in a week and whacked the VFL and the AFL, and in the same press conference said Mattaes only needed to get through training to play and went on praising him for nearly two minutes. Mattaes did not get through training. Going by TheJackal’s BigFooty training report the players were angry and frustrated. The vibes were off. The Bizarro Rivalry would see the Saints elevate Freo on the Friday night stage, all in front of Gerard in the Fox Footy suite. Who was going to come in now and give us something new? Hunter Clark?

It was the week I signed up my yet-to-born daughter up to be a Saints member. I was born in a wooden spoon year, and my girl would also be born into hard times. 

***

On federal election eve, The Age led with an inside look into St Kilda’s millionaire and billionaire backers and powerbrokers, for whatever that’s all amounted to over the past 59 years. That night, we got a response from the players – a Ross Lyon masterclass, consensus would tell you. A masterclass in coaching and planning, which really began with Hugo being subbed off and berated in the second quarter six days earlier. A final score of 94 to 33 – a masterclass in manic pressure, a masterclass in unwavering effort. It was on from the start, from Macrae’s opening bounce clearance. Mitchito went back with the flight at centre half forward and Brad Hill wheeled past and slotted the first. That set the tone. The visiting A-grade midfield was harassed and harrassed and harrassed out of the game. Brayshaw only found the ball 18 times, Serong just 15. Every time a white Freo clash jumper got near it there was someone bearing down. It was Garcia, who pulled off an excellent chasedown of Shai Bolton streaming towards goal. It was Jack Macrae setting a St Kilda record for contested possessions with 25. It was first-gamer Hugh Boxshall lunging that extra inch when the ball was on the ground. It was Jack Steele regaining his presence as captain of an AFL football club. St Kilda won the clearance count 50-22, and contested possessions 151-103. (Jeff White’s First Use did an excellent breakdown of the one-on-one set-up Ross went with on the night).

It was a time warp back to Ross v1.0. A score of 4.3 to 1.1 at half-time, although I was still scarred from the Daniel Wulf night against the Swans in 2002 (which actually happened under GT), and while the Dockers were anchored to all of a total score of 7 at the major break, the 20-point lead wasn’t enough. Remember holding a team to 2.6 at three-quarter time and not winning? This felt more like it would have to be more of an Ross special under the roof like Round 1 of 2008 against the Swans, or maybe we’d need to pull out a Round 6 of 2010 against the Dogs. Nothing of the sort. “St Kilda strangled Fremantle into submission with a performance which had primetime viewers reaching for the remote,” the Herald Sun said (which could have been written about a St Kilda-Fremantle game in early 2009 that finished 116-28. I was barracking just as hard as I was that night for a novelty score.). Like an old-fashioned Ross Lyon rope-a-dope, the game was blown out in the second half. Cooper Sharman had one of his Riewoldt games, echoing the second Essendon game of 2024. He covered the ground and launched high, taking nine marks, and kicked 4.2, including a snap with one duke from the boundary with Josh Draper hanging off him, and he was feeling good enough about himself to pull out the Akermanis celebration. Mitchito in the last quarter flew back and reeled in a mark with one hand, slotted the shot from the pocket and brought out again the bow to the crowd. Caminiti in the final seconds wheeled around on the 50-metre arc and barrelled it through to a celebratory Lockett End. It was one of Those Nights. A good night for trade at Platform 28.

Maybe we could start to see guys who were worthy of Ross. Worthy of the candy stripe. Macrae. Nas. Higgins. Mitchito. Boxshall earning it early. Cooper Sharman maybe? He needs to be that player every week, not just once or twice every 12 months. In the afterglow, Cooper was a guest on Crunch Time. He was at centre half-forward in the SEN Team of the Week (plus seven coaches votes), alongside Macrae (who got the 10 coaches votes) and Callum Wilkie. Players on each line. After being baked by Ross on the bench the weekend prior, Hugo Garcia, a St Kilda player, won the Rising Star nomination.

At a time of tension and division across Australia, there was one thing everyone could agree upon – Ross Lyon was the coach of the St Kilda Football Club. This was Ross. This was the DNA of a Ross Lyon team doing exactly what it intended to do. Gerard and Bucks ran the ruler across Ross’s entire week on The Art of Coaching on Whateley the following Wednesday. The opposition was strangled. We could have been watching a game from the late 2000s. A portal to another time, a better time, a good time. I so desperately hoped that this was the new standard. The Geelong game was one bar; Ross had elevated the team again, in his image. This was the new reference point.

***

It’s about this time of year that the burden of the new footy media landscape and social media and Grandmother Ham ads and SEN talkback callers begins to take its toll. I’m trying to keep up with everything on X but El*n was trying to get the r-word to make a comeback and his algorithm was making it more difficult to prise out nuggets from The Saint and TheSadSainter amongst bot posts of clearly set-up “humorous” happenstances between couples or cars and/or lives getting totalled, and racist accounts that keep asking me “What do you notice?” about selective and borderline pervy street footage from Russia, or trying to generate a conspiracy theory around anything at all because participants in the Creator Revenue Sharing program benefit from the conditions conducive to civil war. I’m trying to keep up with the legends at Chadstone Kia and Dwayne’s pals at Werribee Mazda (or, alternatively, visit your participating Hyundai dealer today), but the soundtrack to my morning walks with my Ralphies gradually went from Breakfast with Garry and Tim and Whateley to Floodlights and Panda Bear and Maria Somerville. I’m tired. I’m about to welcome a newborn into the world (exciting!) and fretting about losing access to functioning human levels of sleep (scary!) and I’m already fucking tired. It’s Round 8. There’s 21 weeks of this shit left.

***

Our third year in a row lining up against a big four club at a home game at the MCG. Carlton’s loss to Adelaide probably shaved a few thousand off the game, which was our latest best chance to break the club’s home game attendance record of 72,669. Our fifth Spud’s Game. Tom Boyd, the man who made us choose Paddy McCartin over Christian Petracca, did the pre-match speech in the middle.

Caro’s piece about Carlton’s 2022 attempt at getting Ross was published on the Friday morning. The Age editors tempted fate and on the main page titled it, “The inside story of Carlton’s failed bid for Ross Lyon, and why St Kilda couldn’t be happier”. I guess TDK would have the final say on that. The build-up felt…big. I was terrified of a very close finish. We were due one.  Shae was more nervy than usual. Squiggle had a four-point win to the Blues. On the tram there I had visions of 40,000 Carlton fans bearing down on us at the 29-minute mark of the last: Harry McKay’s on the lead, Charlie’s got a one-on-one, Jesse Motlop has a break on Jimmy Webster. It did fall that way a little bit in the end.

A packed MCG on a Friday night for a St Kilda home game, hey? And what a come down from the week before. We pissed it away. This was our prime-time, big-stage game and we blew it. If everything had gone our way the previous week against the Dockers, then on this night we let it all literally slip through our fingers. Every extra, more desperate hand that was around the contested footy the week before now belonged to a navy and white jumper. Or, when we did actually get the ball, we were stilted, hesitant, anxious. Brad Hill kicked the ball to weird spaces, both deliberately and accidentally. Cooper Sharman launched for mark of the night on the wing and then booted it directly into his opponent as we made something of a late charge. Anthony Caminiti missed a mark at a critical moment in the last quarter in the forward pocket and the ball hit him directly in the face. Or maybe we just didn’t go at all; Jack Steele, the captain of the football club, got the ball in his hands with four and a half minutes left and a nine-point deficit and just…didn’t do anything“Is it part of the [Saints’] team mantra that there are a couple of players who can use the ball, and everyone else can’t?” Footy Classified asked. Pou on return, though. He wanted it. He wanted to stand up and take the responsibility and win it himself, and he celebrated like he fucking cared. When was the last St Kilda player to celebrate a goal like that (twice)? Nas was everywhere until he wasn’t. It felt embarrassing to lose to a team like that. Maybe humbling is a better word. Couldn’t handle the pressure of a Friday night game on the MCG, hey?

After a Ross Lyon masterclass we were outcoached by Michael Voss. Curnow and McKay kicked three each. Either of them on their own were the difference. Marshall (possibly injured) was battered by TDK but St Kilda Get a Genuine Elite Midfielder Challenge: Also Impossible. Jack Macrae had become the barometer and he and his teammates were borderline bullied at the contest. After shutting down an A-grade midfield last week, talk was of the match-ups coming down to Boxshall and Garcia against Cerra and Hewett. But this is the thing – for a period of time we’re going to have to just sit there and watch the senior guys have off days, and Boxshall and Garcia go up against Cripps and Walsh and Hewett and Cerra and get pushed around. They have to learn. It’s going to look different from week to week. It’s a tough part the of journey that we’re on. It just has to happen and be endured. Nights like these need to be endured. Nights on which you don’t play well and it’s a grind in front of 65,000 (still felt a little light) but you’re still in the game in the final minutes but you fumble and erratically kick and drop and Max-Hall-just-misses-to-the-right your way out of it. Things quickly felt a little desperate. Derm said Max King (still unsighted) should be a backman. Bicks said bring in TDK and explore Marshall’s worth on the market. Losses feel bigger at the MCG. The roar on the final siren and the Carlton song are louder from your St Kilda membership equivalent seats. The trip back to Brunswick West is longer, and you have more time to think about it all; more time to doomscroll St Kilda Twitter your way through it. 

“Every time they lose, the Saints, you can just see the lack of quality,” Kane surmised on the Monday. It felt like the weekend deserved more, that it deserved to be a weekend on which your team won on the Friday night. The weather in Melbourne was on an extended golden run. A friend’s kid’s birthday in the park in beautiful autumn sunlight the following day, Mother’s Day festivities on the Sunday for those fortunate enough. After the weekend-long glow following the Docker demolition, St Kilda had fallen off the radar. The football world had moved onto other things (Dave Matthews wanted shorter quarters to attract new fans in Sydney). By the time the AFL released the fixture for Rounds 16 to 23 we were a footnote, getting a charity Friday night game against the Bombers that would go mostly head-to-head with the more highly fancied Freo-Lions game out west. St Kilda wasn’t sexy anymore. St Kilda was losing followers.

***

“We swim in deep water every week. And there are big sharks every week.”

If you’re St Kilda, a West Coast team that simply can not win a game is a big shark.

This was probably St Kilda’s worst day of the year (or until we saw a Tom Morris Tweet saying that Cal Wilkie actually did want to leave). This disaster should well have been the legacy game of 2025, if other certain things didn’t happen later on in the season. West Coast had won five quarters for the year. This was supposed to be stats and percentage padding, a walk-up start to get back to square on the ledger. Marshall was fumbling everything in the middle. The ball went through Cooper Sharman’s fingers, Mitchito took four bites of the cherry and didn’t complete it. Darcy Wilson got nervous sitting under a high kick. Nas was turning the footy over. There were broken tackles everywhere. Waterman and Flynn stretched the shortened defence. Jack Higgins should have been pushing his case for All-Australian but was down in the rooms possibly with diarrhea. 

Mitchito persisted with his weird ball drop. Three misses. Missed shots from in front, while Waterman saluted from range, and Reid was flushing them from 50. Liam Baker dived across Darcy Wilson’s boot. Caminiti dropped an uncontested 20-metre pass. Hoff (???) kicked a goal. It was party time for the…West Coast Eagles? Higgins returned from the porcelain throne in the last to keep us emotionally invested, to set up the emotionally abusive punchline. 

Of course, Leo’s call that West Coast would win would prove to be his non-kibosh one. As you settled into your Sunday night dinner you could reasonably make the case it was the darkest day in the club’s modern history. This felt like that the rebuild – now into effectively its what, 14th year? – had been set back a few years. That things just might not be working out, between the St Kilda Football Club and itself, between yourself and the St Kilda Football Club. Irrelevant, incapable, incurable. Kane, who had a few weeks earlier said we were “not good”, said we were “sad”. It was a sad fucking state all round. Fundamental Australian rules football skill errors from senior players, supposed star players, all the way down the list. A lack of quality in the line-up. No dog in anyone, except maybe Pou. As a supporter base we were really just surviving on the fumes of his centreing kick to Higgins in the last quarter. We were never, ever playing finals in 2025. Sinclair and Macrae doesn’t hurt you, Cooper doesn’t hold them, Mitchito doesn’t kick straight, Howard, our height down back, isn’t playing. We were ranked “mega infinity ass” by Dan Gorringe. Macrae had a back injury and all of a sudden we might just have the worst midfield in the league, to go with the worst forward line, and possibly the worst defence. The bye a) couldn’t come quick enough and b) presented an excellent chance for a “message from the president”. 

Getting shoved around by a winless team, losing to a winless team. St Kilda would prove to be only side that this winless team would, could beat in 2025.

Snags was second in the Coleman by just one goal for some reason – he was also number one in the competition for overall scoreboard impact, taking in goals, behinds and assists – and earned himself a small Josh Gabelich feature. “Is Jack Higgins the modern day Stephen Milne?” the AFL’s account asked, as Damo, Sarah, Josh and Nat Edwards discussed his “sizzling” form on Round Table. It was remarkable anything generous followed the loss, and what did just felt so incredibly, incredibly hollow. Everything else was a swipe. The Agenda Setters poked fun at the “Bayside Butchers”, pointing out that the Saints were ranked second in the competition for no-pressure errors, fifth for dropped marks, first for getting smothered and first for giveaway turnovers. We were now “easy run home” fodder for teams with their eyes on achieving something special in 2025. The club started posting its Red Rooster Date series with Ollie Geale for some feel-good content for the fans but our season was done and we hadn’t even reached winter.

***

We were the banana peel game, according to Josh Jenkins on the Sunday morning. Gold Coast owed us a few, and a few close ones at that. Dimma couldn’t have come up with a better opposition to face to improve his quaintly dismal Concrete Dome record of recent years. In the other box, Ross broke the phone as the Suns started hot. Going our way were a great running goal from Nas and then a crumbing goal from Sharman (we didn’t have any actual talls or actual smalls, it seemed?) but these were followed by Hunter Clark not taking a clean first possession of a relatively easy ball and the Suns getting the repeat forward entry and a goal. Despite playing a heavily congested game (not quite 2002 Daniel Wulf game levels) Gold Coast was finding openings and pressing ahead into space. A Travaglia 50-against at one end, a Travaglia miskick coming off turnover at the other, and ex-St Kilda pick 25 Ben Long kicked his third from range. Caminiti came up with the most obvious possible insufficient intent known to science. At one point in the second quarter there was 42 to 13 disposals inside 50. “Games of football just exist in our back half,” Matt said. Higgins was unsighted. Windy was on Anderson, who was cheerfully collecting easy centre bounce clearances. The game turned in the third, but the ghosts of kickers and catchers in Richo eras past were raised and the Saints couldn’t execute their simple kicking (and handballing) and catching. A great tackle from Travaglia had Darcy Wilson out and then he completely missed the handball to Hill. Cooper Sharman hit the post twice. Brad Hill ran into goal and shanked it. Nas missed, too. Phillipou hit the post also. Mitchito missed to the left from a free kick 20 out from goal. 1.6 to 0.2 in the quarter. Byrnes botched a handball in space on the break early in the last and then Ben King, who had done fuck-all all day, popped up and took his moment. (Come home, Ben.) We had gone from our worst loss of the year straight to threatening our lowest score of the year.

Before the game, Ross had called the Suns the “AFL’s nepo baby”. The blowback to Ross’s comments showed in part how easily hate for St Kilda could be stirred up. The reaction generally wasn’t very friendly: former St Kilda goal kicking coach Ben Dixon told the club not to “bitch and moan”; “Everyone is whingeing about everything”, Shannon Gill wrote about in The Roar, saying “it plays well for the St Kilda gallery yet trivialises one successful area of growth for the code”. Damian Hardwick, coach of the Gold Coast Suns who are based in Queensland, who had just had a crack at Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan, said St Kilda should “make sure they focus on their own backyard instead of trying to bring everyone else down”, and then pointed out the crowd.

The crowd.

The crowd, of just 13,486, was St Kilda’s lowest-ever non-COVID Docklands home crowd. A team described as “sexy” in April and which should have been 6-4 now had its season over by May, and was playing to a ground with half of the top level closed off (we were one of those clubs now), to its lowest-ever home crowd at its home ground of a quarter of a century. That would probably tell you how St Kilda supporters were feeling about the club after fumbling the Carlton game and then losing the unloseable to West Coast. That would probably tell you how St Kilda supporters were feeling about this latest rebuild. About where this club had been and where this club was heading.

An entire winter stretched out ahead.