Essendon defender Jake Kelly could come under scrutiny from the match review officer after kicking out at Brisbane forward Eric Hipwood in Saturday night’s clash.
Early in the third quarter, Hipwood flew high for a mark over Kelly, but couldn’t quite hold on for what would have been a genuine mark of the year contender.
WATCH THE VIDEO ABOVE: Jake Kelly kicks out at Eric Hipwood.
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As Hipwood went to get up off the ground, Kelly turned around and gave him a little kick to the back.
The impact was definitely on the lower end, but it didn’t go unnoticed by the commentary team.
“The reaction from Jake Kelly … he’s turned around and kicked him,” Luke Hodge said with a laugh.
“Mate, you’ve almost been postered, and then you turn around and do that.”
Hipwood briefly remonstrated with Kelly in the aftermath, but things quickly diffused.
The Lions looked on track for a big win before the Bombers finished well to reduce the final margin to 20.
Brisbane led by 46 points at the final break but conceded five straight goals to create some anxious moments in an eventually relieving 11.21 (87) to 10.7 (67) victory.
The Lions had given away big leads to lose their past two games and the wounds suddenly opened when the Bombers got within 19 points with eight minutes still to play.
But they held on this time, last year’s defeated grand finalists to play eighth – any of Carlton, Fremantle or the Western Bulldogs – at the Gabba in week one of the finals after being 13th after 12 rounds.
Charlie Cameron showed glimpses of his best in a three-goal haul, his biggest since he kicked five in a round-11 mauling of Richmond and just the third time he’s kicked three or more majors all season.
The livewire had kicked at least 54 goals in the past four seasons of regular length and game time, but boasts just 37 this year.
Cameron’s dare and confidence were back in the first half, backing himself with a long-range snap and also setting up Logan Morris with an lasered cross in the second quarter and providing several clever handballs.
Inaccuracy and wastefulness in front of goal almost cost them again, but the Bombers were their own worst enemies, battling to exit their back half as opportunities fell into the laps of waiting Lions forwards.
The retiring Dyson Heppell (34 disposals) was immense in his farewell game, Jake Stringer (two goals) kissing the logo on his chest devoted to the former captain when he launched a trademark goal from deep on the boundary line.
Kyle Langford kicked three goals for the Bombers, while Zach Merrett (37 touches, one goal) and Andrew McGrath (34 disposals) did the heavy lifting for Brad Scott’s side.
But there was little else to celebrate as the Bombers finished the season with six losses from their last seven games to slide out of the top four and miss finals.
Joe Daniher had his moments in game 200, bombing a goal from 60m on the run shortly after missing a closer set shot.
A brilliant effort produced a wry smile from the former Bomber, only for it to be denied after a lengthy review deemed his shot had shaved the post.
The key forward, much to the full Gabba house’s dismay, also had two clear marks in the goal square not paid by officials.
Kai Lohmann (three goals) was electric early, while Dayne Zorko and Josh Dunkley got plenty of ball and Lachie Neale (40 touches, one goal) was his usually prolific self.
– With AAP