The grand final was a one-sided affair from start to finish. outscored 5.7 (37) to 2.2 (14) in the opening quarter, with only inaccurate goalkicking preventing a greater advantage. They then kicked five goals in the first 12 minutes of the second quarter to extend the margin to 52 points, all but ending any chances Port Adelaide had. Seven goals to one in the third quarter extended the lead to 90 points, and another six goals to one in the final quarter saw the lead reach a game-high 128 points, before eventually finishing at 119 points. Geelong excelled in its defence—which had been the best in the competition all season—keeping the Power to their lowest score of the year. The backlines, led by
Matthew Scarlett at full-back, repeatedly turned defence into attack, rushing the ball forward to support the forward line, as evidenced by Scarlett's tally of 29 disposals (tied with
Corey Enright for Geelong's most disposals), rare for a team, especially a team who had won by a 100-point-plus margin. Half-forwards
Paul Chapman and
Steve Johnson kicked four goals each and set up numerous others. Johnson was awarded the
Norm Smith Medal for his best-on-ground performance in the grand final after the Cats’ triumph. Chapman's day included a high mark over
Port Adelaide captain
Warren Tredrea during the third quarter. Key forwards
Cameron Mooney (five goals) and
Nathan Ablett (three) also performed strongly. Power player
Domenic Cassisi performed reasonably well against Geelong star
Gary Ablett, Jr.; however, Geelong were still able to dominate the midfield, with
Joel Corey,
James Kelly, and
Cameron Ling all making solid contributions, while
Brad Ottens and
Steven King both performing strongly in the ruck. The match ended with
Geelong winning by the score of 24.19 (163) to 6.8 (44), recording the greatest winning margin in AFL grand final history, 119 points. This broke the previous record of 96 points set by
Hawthorn against
Melbourne in the
1988 VFL Grand Final; it was also, at the time, Port Adelaide's heaviest defeat in an AFL match (this record was surpassed in 2011). Geelong's 417 disposals was a new grand final record, while Port Adelaide became the first finals side in history to have more handballs than kicks. == Aftermath ==