Cats hold off Swans to keep AFLW finals hopes alive

Jacqueline Parry was a key contributor in Geelong's three-point win over Sydney. (James Ross/AAP PHOTOS)

Geelong have held off a surging Sydney to keep their AFLW season alive with a three-point victory.

The Cats led at every change on Sunday before the Swans mounted a serious fourth-quarter challenge to reduce a game-high 21-point lead.

Lexi Hamilton brought Sydney within four points late in the last term, but the Cats held on to win 5.14 (44) to 6.5 (41) in front of 3127 fans at Sydney's Henson Park.

Their second victory of the year comes past the halfway mark of the 11-round season, having started their campaign with one win, four losses and a draw.

Starting the round in 16th, Dan Lowther's charges have risen to 11th and are six points out of the top eight.

Georgie Prespakis (19 disposals, 13 contested possessions) starred in the absence of injured ball winner Amy McDonald, alongside Julia Crocket-Grills (one goal) and Jacqueline Parry (one).

Georgie Prespakis.
Georgie Prespakis (R) had a big afternoon in Sydney against the Swans.

"It was hard to watch, but really exciting footy to watch," Lowther said.

"We've been in games up to our necks but we just haven't got across the line so the aim for today was to win.

"We move on to Richmond next week and (the aim) is the same. Whatever happens off the back of that (in terms of finals) is out of our control."

Sydney's season (2-5) hangs by a thread after their third consecutive loss.

Their path towards a second straight finals appearance won't grow any easier, with matches against competition heavyweights the Brisbane Lions and North Melbourne ahead.

Coach Scott Gowans lamented Sydney's inability to convert late after his side lost to Essendon earlier this week by the same margin.

They also went down to the Western Bulldogs by seven points in round five after staging another second-half challenge.

"It seems to be the story, doesn't it?" Gowans said.

"It's frustrating at the same time, but also you've got to be proud of effort and intensity, and if you bring that each week, you just never know.

"We won't look too much at where we sit on the ladder or anything like that."

Geelong brought the heat early against the Swans, kicking the opening three goals to build a 3.2 to 0.2 lead at the first change.

With the breeze behind them in the second term, Sydney finally found reward on the scoreboard when Irish import Paris McCarthy kicked three goals in seven minutes.

McCarthy stunned the Cats' defenders when she snapped overhead after teammate Bec Privitelli's shot at goal fell short to reduce the margin to two points.

The former Gaelic footballer, playing her first match of the season, had never kicked an AFLW goal before Sunday.

Ahead by just seven points, Geelong kicked the only goal in the third term before the Swans came alive in the last quarter.

Laura Gardiner (30 disposals, five clearances) was the star in a Sydney engine room missing Ally Morphett and Chloe Molloy, alongside Sofia Hurley (20, two).

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