Swans stay unbeaten, win fiery clash against Bombers

Sydney have maintained their unbeaten start to the AFL season with a spiteful 30-point win over Essendon.

But the ladder-leading Swans' 19.17 (131) to 15.11 (101) victory at the SCG on Saturday night was overshadowed by a huge bump from big Bomber Peter Wright that left Sydney midfielder Harry Cunningham concussed.

The match was barely four minutes old when the 203cm-tall Wright leapt in the air, turned sideways and knocked out the 181cm Cunningham.

The Swans man was taken off the ground on a stretcher and substituted out with concussion, while Wright copped a chorus of boos every time he subsequently touched the ball.

Set upon by a throng of irate Sydney players, the big forward faces a lengthy suspension.

Peter Wright of Essendon (centre).
Essendon's Peter Wright (c) became public enemy No.1 at the SCG after knocking out Harry Cunningham.

Tom Papley (four goals, 24 disposals) was dynamic, while Isaac Heeney (32 touches, one goal) and Errol Gulden (24, two) continued their blistering start to 2024.

"We weren't getting enough numbers to the contest in the first half," Swans coach John Longmire said.

"Our pressure needed to ramp up a bit and in the second half we did it really well."

Captain Zach Merrett (two goals, 32 disposals), Nic Martin (31 touches) and Will Setterfield (29) led the charge for valiant Essendon.

The visitors dominated the clearances early and drew 17 points clear before Sydney began to click, producing trademark slick chains from half-back to move ahead by three points at quarter-time.

Heeney continued to have a heavy influence in the second period, while Papley got going with a couple of goals.

His first came on the back of a 50m penalty awarded to Jake Lloyd, who was cannoned into by Essendon ruckman Sam Draper.

Draper's ill-discipline triggered further spotfires, with Essendon runner Travis Cloke finding himself in the middle of one scuffle.

Sydney's Isaac Heeney
Sydney's Isaac Heeney contests the ball with Xavier Duursma of the Bombers.

"They're trying to get after us, it's all off the ball," Papley told Seven Network boundary rider Cameron Ling at the end of a fiery second quarter that included six lead changes.

"We're just worried about the ball. We'll keep being hard in the contest and get the job done."

The Swans did exactly that, stemming their first-half bleeding at clearance and turning a slender four-point halftime buffer into a 23-point cushion when Hayden McLean kicked a goal after the three-quarter-time siren.

Merrett's two fourth-term majors gave Essendon a heartbeat and the gap closed to 11 points before Sydney put their foot down again late.

"I thought our contest work was very good," Bombers coach Brad Scott said.

"Sydney are very slick at the moment - they're 3-0 for a reason," Bombers coach Brad Scott said.

"But I thought we competed really well and gave ourselves multiple chances.

"That's a good foundation level of effort for us."

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