THE Brisbane Lions have taken a stride towards dispelling the notion they will be the pushovers of 2014, recording a comfortable 47-point NAB Challenge win over Gold Coast at Townsville on Sunday.
 
Beaten by a whopping 131 points by Hawthorn just 10 days ago, the Lions kicked the first five goals at Tony Ireland Stadium and never looked back, winning 1.14.13 (106) to 0.8.11 (59).
In blustery conditions that made goalkicking difficult, Lions recruit Luke McGuane kicked three first-quarter majors to shoot his new side clear.
 
The win will do wonders for new coach Justin Leppitsch, who was on the end of some criticism following the loss against Hawthorn.
 
After the Lions fielded a virtual reserves team against the Hawks, , Essendon great Matthew Lloyd declared the Lions were in for a "world of pain this year", before saying he believed some players at the club were unhappy.
 
But with 10 senior names returning on Sunday, they made light work of an undermanned Gold Coast, which travelled to North Queensland without skipper Gary Ablett among others.

"We jumped out of the blocks really well and got our game up and going which was fantastic. We got what we wanted out of it," Leppitsch said after the match.
 
"(Our) ball movement (was) pretty good, our defensive stuff was good, to pressure up the opposition and get in their face, which is what we've been working on, we did that pretty well."
 
McGuane's performance means he is now an almost certain round one selection, with the former Tiger's combination of opportunism and relentless forward pressure a highlight.
 
Leppitsch has indicated he will play Trent West as a forward/ruck alongside spearhead Jonathan Brown in round one, leaving McGuane a likely candidate to fill the vacant tall role.

"It's hard to say. With Jackson Paine coming back and Brent Staker, Browny, we've got a fair bit of competition in that part of the ground," he said.
 
"There's going to be a lot of pressure on for spots in the forward 50 ... so it's hard to give a definitive answer now."
 
Brent Moloney (24 disposals in three quarters) was superb in his first outing for the season, while vice-captain Tom Rockliff (32) was again an ideal link man.
 
The Suns were sloppy in the first quarter and were overpowered in the middle of the ground without Ablett, vice-captain Michael Rischitelli and young stars Jaeger O'Meara and David Swallow, who were all rested after Monday night's one-point win over Essendon.
 
The quartet will all return to play Collingwood at Metricon Stadium in the Suns' final practise match next Sunday, along with Dion Prestia (calf), Trent McKenzie (calf) and Rory Thompson (hip).
 
Teenage duo Jack Martin and Jesse Lonergan – who did a fine job tagging Daniel Rich for much of the first half – were among the Suns' best.
 
The teams played with no interchange cap, with the AFL partially applying its heat policy.
 
With temperatures exceeding 30 degrees before bounce down, there were eight players on each interchange bench, no substitutions, and no cap on the number of interchanges made.






WHAT WE LEARNED
Brisbane Lions: The Lions started to show little glimpses of a more frantic defensive pressure. New coach Justin Leppitsch has preached it all summer, and with his full complement of players on show, they were able to give hints of his new game-plan. Once the ball was in the forward 50, it often stayed locked in there with Luke McGuane, Dayne Zorko and Josh Green applying particularly good pressure. The Lions noticeably moved forward together when they had the ball to lock it into one zone on the ground.

Gold Coast: Jesse Lonergan might not have got many stats, but the second-year Tasmanian midfielder might have played his way into the round one team. Lonergan was given run-with assignments for much of the day and shone in his first-half role on Daniel Rich. He was then shifted to a rampant Brent Moloney in the third quarter and came away with his head high. The nuggety midfielder was a bit fumbly with the ball, but his work-rate was first class and would have impressed the Suns coaching staff.

NEW FACES
Brisbane Lions: Richmond recruit McGuane was one of the best stories of the day for the Lions. He kicked goals with his first two kicks, finished with three for the day, and added a stack of forward pressure that Leppitsch asked for. Draftees James Aish, Tom Cutler and Nick Robertson were all relatively quiet, although Aish showed some nice touches in close quarters. Rookie defender Jordon Bourke had his hands full with assignments that included Suns captain Tom Lynch, but showed the Lions have something to work with, with his tenacity and diligent style.

Gold Coast: Once again Jack Martin showed he is ready for the big time. Playing primarily on-ball in the absence of his bigger name teammates, the outsized Martin competed hard, particularly in the first half. He finished with 11 disposals, nine of them contested and never once shirked his task. Defender Clay Cameron was outstanding on young Lion Michael Close, nullifying the key target in a number of one-on-one duels, while running half-back Sean Lemmens was kept quiet during his second senior match in seven days.

BRISBANE LIONS            0.6.4    1.10.8     1.11.12      1.14.13 (106)
GOLD COAST                    0.1.1      0.5.2        0.7.8            0.8.11 (53)
 
SUPERGOALS
Brisbane Lions: Zorko
Gold Coast: Nil
 
GOALS
Brisbane Lions: McGuane 3, Close 3, Redden 2, Green, Lisle, Moloney, Rich, Robertson, Zorko
Gold Coast: Bennell 4, Sexton, Dixon, Russell, Lynch
 
BEST 
Brisbane Lions: Moloney, Rockliff, Zorko, Redden, Leuenberger, McGuane
Gold Coast: Bennell, Lonergan, Allen, Martin, Lynch
 
INJURIES
Brisbane Lions: Nil
Gold Coast: Nil
 
SUBSTITUTES
Nil. AFL heat policy applied.
  
Reports: TBA
 
Umpires: Donlan, Nichols, Foot, Stephens
 
Official crowd: 6426 at Tony Ireland Stadium