The people of Canberra came to see another Gary Ablett masterclass, but it was Charlie Dixon who came of age and stole the show as Gold Coast eclipsed Greater Western Sydney by 44 points at Manuka Oval.
Dixon, spending time both in the ruck and up forward, booted 6.2 on Saturday as the Suns won a shootout between the AFL’s expansion sides, 21.22 (148) to 16.8 (104).
The 22-year-old’s haul was the greatest individual effort by a Gold Coast player, bettering Nathan Krakouer’s 5.1 in their inaugural clash with Brisbane.
More importantly, the Queensland product popped through his sixth goal halfway through the final quarter from a difficult position to extend the visitors’ lead to 25 points and finally snuff out GWS’s resistance.
Dixon’s haul was one of four records to fall for the Suns, who recorded their second win of the year.
The visitors booted their highest score and posted their greatest winning margin, while the 7.8 (second quarter) and 8.4 (fourth quarter) represented their two best terms ever.
Ablett was no slouch and finished with 32 possessions and three goals, despite tallying just two disposals in the third quarter when he spent most of the time in the forward line.
Jaeger O’Meara (14 contested possessions and a game-high 11 clearances) was also outstanding for Gold Coast, while Dylan Shiel, Devon Smith and Callan Ward worked tirelessly in the middle for the Giants.
The match was locked up at 21 points apiece at quarter-time, but Gold Coast took control after the first break.
The Suns led by 37 points midway through the second term, only for the Giants to fight back and reduce their buffer to 25 points at halftime.
GWS trailed by only seven points early in the third quarter, but couldn’t continue their resurgence in the decisive final quarter.
GWS embarrassed the Suns in the corresponding fixture last year, the first AFL clash between the expansion sides resulting in the Giants’ maiden AFL win after a terrible final-quarter fadeout from Gold Coast.
This time around, fast-finishing Gold Coast looked too strong up forward and too smart with the ball in hand and it was only inaccurate kicking that prevented a genuine thumping.