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AFL Finals: Collingwood forward Dan McStay out for Grand Final as Taylor Adams races the clock

Ed BourkeNCA NewsWire
Collingwood coach Craig McRae has conceded Dan McStay is unlikely to join his teammates in the grand final after suffering a knee injury in the stunning one-point preliminary final win.
Camera IconCollingwood coach Craig McRae has conceded Dan McStay is unlikely to join his teammates in the grand final after suffering a knee injury in the stunning one-point preliminary final win. Credit: Dylan Burns/AFL Photos

Collingwood coach Craig McRae wants his team to “celebrate hard” before entering its Grand Final preparations.

But spare a thought for forward Daniel McStay after his worst fears were confirmed on Saturday with the Pies forward to miss next week’s grand final after straining his MCL.

McStay, who was consoled by teammates and staff post-game after he limped off the ground in the third term and was subbed out following an important two-goal performance, witch scans on Saturday confirming a medial ligament injury.

It’s heartbreaking for the first-year Magpie as McRae said vice-captain Taylor Adams would need “every second” of the week to recover from a hamstring strain in time for the Grand Final.

“(McStay) is going to get scans … I’m not sure if it’s an MCL, I don’t want to put a definite decision on it, but I think he might be unlucky to miss out,” McRae said.

Dan McStay hurt his knee in the preliminary final.
Camera IconDan McStay hurt his knee in the preliminary final. Credit: Michael Willson/AFL Photos

“At the moment, until you really know, you just put your arms around him and show love and support as best you can … that will play out pretty quickly, I would’ve thought.

“Early he was significant, jumping and marking the ball. You can see why we got him, why he’s important to us … if he doesn’t quite get up, he will be missed.”

McStay had joined the Pies from Brisbane at the start of this year after losing two prelims with the Lions.

The coach said he was thrilled with how his team responded to the Giants’ five-goal surge, which gave them the biggest lead of the match at 17 points early in the third term.

“I thought we hung in there when we needed to, and as good as they were I think our ability just to hang tough without the scoreboard (being affected) too much more,” he said.

“The message at halftime was I thought we were a bit too slow and stodgy. We didn’t move the ball quick enough, not brave enough, not enough overlap run and get some chaos in the game.

“That was the message, and then we had to put Nick (Daicos) back to halfback to get some run and carry, and try and get the game going a bit more.”

Peter Daicos poses with his son’ Josh and Nick.
Camera IconPeter Daicos poses with his son’ Josh and Nick. Credit: Dylan Burns/AFL Photos

McRae said the younger Daicos would only get better after he worked his way into the game with 16 second-half disposals after a shift into defence.

He said it would be a fitting reward for the 20-year-old’s season if he could hang onto the lead in Monday night’s Brownlow Medal count.

“It would be pretty special, wouldn’t it? It’s a reflection of his year, it’s a reflection of us as a team,” he said.

“Five weeks to go, it will be interesting where he sits.”

McRae said Jordan De Goey’s dominant midfield performance again showed how much he had matured in the past two years.

The 27-year-old had 34 disposals and 13 clearances, six more than any other player, as he continually thrust the Magpies forward.

“What a great game from him, I thought he set himself up for the last final unbelievably well, he trained at a level that I thought, ‘he’s going to tear the game apart against Melbourne’, but it didn’t quite come through to that,” McRae said.

“What you’ve seen definitely is a guy who has grown up.”

Jordan De Goey.
Camera IconJordan De Goey. Credit: Quinn Rooney/Getty Images

The coach said the tireless rehearsing of late game scenarios in his two-year tenure had again helped his team hold firm in the tense closing stages.

“We’re really proud of our journey, we mentioned during the week that it takes two years to get to these moments … two years of doing one-on-one fight drills – you saw some of those contests in the last quarter, how much we rehearsed those moments,” McRae said.

“All those lessons are why we’re here now and we’re still breathing, because we practice it … two minutes to go, kill the game, two minutes to go, we need to win.

“It’s over and over, it’s rehearsed for these moments … but we’ve got work to do, there’s a couple of scenarios in particular in that last quarter I thought we could have executed better.”

He told his players to embrace the hype which will follow them this week.

“The message after the game was ‘smell it all, take it all in, embrace every single bit of it’. The parades, the training, the crowds – there will be a hurricane going on around you and we’ve just got to sit in the middle of it and do the job that we need to do.”

Originally published as AFL Finals: Dan McStay unlikely for Grand Final as Taylor Adams races the clock

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