By Zac Sharpe
Josh Jenkins has highlighted multiple concerns he has with Sydney after the reining minor premiers fell to 0-2 with yesterday’s defeat to Brisbane.
In the Grand Final rematch, the Swans begun the contest positively, getting out to a commanding 15-point lead at the first break and holding the Lions to a dismal one goal.
However, from then on, the Lions slowly but surely got themselves back in the game and ultimately, edged out Dean Cox’s men by four points at the SCG.
This loss, plus their opening round defeat to Hawthorn a week earlier, has highlighted to Jenkins the issues he had with the Swans coming into the season.
Which in his eyes, haven’t been fixed and are evidently hurting them already to begin their 2025 campaign.
“For me, Sydney are a genuine worry. I said so before the season off the back off how do you psychologically get over two terrible defeats in Grand Finals,” Jenkins said on SEN’s Crunch Time.
“I’ve watched them closely in both their games so far and heard what Dean Cox has said all summer. Improvement in loose ball gets, contested possessions, team defence. And I haven’t seen it to be honest.
“Around the contest? No, they’ve been beaten both weeks around the footy.
“Team defence? Look, they took some marks away from Brisbane so they conceded 158 in the Grand Final, Brisbane only took about 66 yesterday. But they still weren’t able to get the game on their terms at all.”
Jenkins also highlighted the tough circumstance the Lions were facing coming into this all important contest, which only further highlighted why his concerns with the Swans have since grown since the off season.
“And look, they were beaten yesterday by a team who I think almost had no right to win the game,” Jenkins said.
“They hadn’t trained for a week. You cannot overstate what that means to a football club at the start of a football season.
“So they’re still wanting to get maybe one to two really heavy training sessions in from Brisbane’s perspective. Unable to do so, plus what they’re dealing with at home with their families and what’s gone on up there.
“They lose their gun All-Australian small forward before the game, they lose their Grand Final hero in Kai Lohmann in the first quarter, they lose (Brandon) Starcevich and sure the Sydney Swans kept it close, but I had my concerns coming in and my concerns are only heightened now.”
The Grand Final rematch delivered!
— AFL (@AFL) March 15, 2025
Watch the Last Two Minutes of #AFLSwansLions, thanks to OMO Australia. pic.twitter.com/Q8MgvclEXs
Sydney will look to capture their first win of the season when they travel to Perth to take on Fremantle on Sunday night.
After their bye the following week, the Swans won’t return home till April 20 where they face Port Adelaide, with North Melbourne and Collingwood the two sides they’ll face in between then.
Crafted by Project Diamond