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Shepparton roars to life in fantastic four-quarter showing against Benalla

Instrumental: Shepparton’s Nick Allan. Photo by Megan Fisher

There was a lot to like about Shepparton’s 16.11 (107) to 8.4 (52) deliverance over Benalla at Deakin Reserve on Saturday.

The Bears were razor-sharp on the move, producing drive after drive which even Damien Martyn would salivate over as the Deakin Reserve co-tenants shone to post three figures on the scoreboard.

It marked the maiden occasion the side had done so in 2023, and boy was it needed.

Saturday’s triumph lifted Shepparton from the doldrums to sidle alongside Tatura in the middle of the Goulburn Valley League pack, bringing smiles to faces of the many maroon-clad figures in the dressing room.

One such member was co-coach Ted Lindon, who lauded his troops’ consistency to turn a battle of attrition into a near-blowout.

“I thought we were impressive today, we had an off day last week, but the way we put in a good shift was really admirable,” he said.

“I thought our front half connection was really good, probably the best it’s been all year, and our ability to hit the scoreboard through inside 50s was great.

“I also thought our forward pressure really resembled that as well.

“Our overall ball movement and defensive 50 exits was good, and our mids were pretty dominant as well, so all in all it was a really good effort.

“One thing that we’ve been struggling to do as a young side was put together four quarters, and the ability to do that was another pleasing aspect.”

Gloomy skies hung over Deakin at the opening hooter, but it wasn’t long until the spotlight turned on Bears forward Trent Herbert as he dove to mark two minutes in, kicking true from straight on for the first major of the match.

Lewis McShane then chimed in with an eye-watering goal from 50 as Shepparton’s breakout speed on the flanks began to expose Benalla.

However, the Saints had some tricks of their own up the sleeve.

Rapid midfielder Wade King made a bursting run through middle to pick out Blake Uebergang for Benalla’s first, King himself then going round the houses to slot off the right boot from the pocket to level things up.

Chris Welsh’s arrow from 45 then gave Benalla a five-point lead in what was a first quarter tug of war, Shepparton with the final pull as a goal after the siren had the home side take a one point buffer into the break.

The cagey trend continued in the second as neither side scored for eight minutes until McShane fired from straight down the middle.

Bear Adam De Cicco later plucked an intercept mark from a Welsh kick, middled it to Herbert who was cash from the set shot as Shepparton began to assert itself with a 25-point lead midway through the second term.

Welsh finally snapped the Saints’ cold streak, and later goals to Sam Harris and Toby Feehan had the travellers in good spirits until Shepparton bit back with another two before the half for the scoreboard read 64-38.

After Shepparton’s 7.2 effort the previous quarter, the third was tame in comparison as the Bears kicked 2.3 to Benalla’s 2.2 while also losing Tanner Madigan to injury as he went off clutching his shoulder.

The Saints had much ground to make up in the final stanza, but when Jordan Wolff sprayed an early attempt far left it allowed Shepparton to break away and gift Lachlan Rumbiolo a reward for his hard yards all afternoon.

He slotted low off the left boot at the other end to push the Bears further ahead, and as the wheels fell off Benalla’s kicking game, Tyron Baden epitomised his side’s performance with an elegant scoop off a bouncing ball and dagger home to hit the 100 points.

Even a late injury to Jayden Dhosi couldn’t sour the day for the Bears, with Herbert and McShane’s combined 10-goal show underlining what was a complete pour-in from all of Shepparton’s servants.

In the rooms following the win, Lindon singled out team first acts and inside 50 entries as a crystal-clear improvement on games gone by.

“Clearly Trent and Lewy hit the scoreboard, but I thought the likes of Lachlan Rumbiolo and Jayden Dhosi did a fantastic job for how the game looked as well as a collective from our mids,” he said.

“Rather than singling out individuals, it was a by-product of our back half ball movement and overall effort areas throughout the day.

“It was a character building win, we’ve had myself, Mitch Brett and Connor Fleming all go down throughout the week.

“That’s three of our starting six defenders, and the ability to be resilient and soldier out soldier in was great.”

For Benalla, Tom Bennett and James Martiniello were hard at the coalface, while Welsh was excellent for his two goals.