An injury blow for recruit Scott Gumbleton dampened Fremantle's impressive 28-point victory over an enthusiastic Western Bulldogs on Wednesday night at Etihad Stadium.

Watch Scott Gumbleton injury video

The Dockers won 0.15.7 (97) to 0.9.15 (69), restricting the Bulldogs to just two goals after half-time.

A frustrated Gumbleton left the ground in the first quarter with a suspected hamstring injury and went to the rooms at quarter-time.

It continues a frustrating run for the former Bomber, who has battled numerous injuries since being selected at pick No.2 in the 2006 NAB AFL Draft.

It took the Dockers until midway through the third quarter to kick into gear, bringing their trademark pressure to bear and chipping away at the scoreboard. Freo closed down the Bulldogs' space and smothered their ball movement.

Freo eventually overhauled the Western Bulldogs – who led by 14 points at half-time – and Ross Lyon's side should take confidence from the win.

However, the Bulldogs were also impressive, particularly in the second quarter when Brownlow medallist Adam Cooney - who was skipper for the night – turned in a vintage performance to ensure Fremantle had to work hard for its win.

Cooney kicked one goal and had 17 disposals and put the ball inside 50 six times in the first half as the young Bulldogs dominated the stoppages.

It was no mean feat as the Dockers had 20 members from last year's Grand Final side playing. Only Nathan Fyfe and Zac Clarke were absent.

In the first 20 minutes of the second quarter the Bulldogs kicked four unanswered goals and kept the Dockers scoreless. Cooney capped off the dominant period of play with a long goal that put his team 13 points up.

Michael Walters and David Mundy were impressive for the Dockers but the hard-working Bulldogs midfield found a way to penetrate the Fremantle defence, using handball and short kicks to free players to break them down.

Watch Michael Walters' impressive goal

However once Fremantle gained the ascendancy it dominated the tiring Bulldogs. Suddenly its opponents were unable to score and Freo controlled the game.
Walters continued to dominate in an excellent four quarter performances and its talls at either end of the ground – Luke McPharlin, Michael Johnson and Matthew Pavlich found form.

WHAT WE LEARNED

Fremantle: The Dockers can take time to tune-up as their success depends on synchronised movements and hardened defensive efforts. Walters is an exciting player who could take another step this season. He works hard both ways and is skilful with the ball. The Dockers need Aaron Sandilands to stay fit early as they have some injury issues among their ruck division. They moved the ball well at times and their forward line remains exciting. Once they brought pressure to bear they never looked like losing.

NEW FACES

Fremantle: Chris Mayne has struggled with back issues this pre-season but he showed intent and his usual class in front of goal when he came on at half-time. He took a diving mark and converted from the boundary late in the third term to show he had lost none of his trademarks in the off-season.

Watch Mayne's first set shot attempt of 2014

WESTERN BULLDOGS     0.2.3     0.7.6     0.8.10   0.9.15 (69)
FREMANTLE                      0.4.4      0.5.4   0.9.5      0.15.7 (97)


SUPERGOALS
Western Bulldogs: Nil
Fremantle: Nil  

GOALS
Western Bulldogs: Giansiracusa 2, Stevens, Cooney, Dahlhaus, Hunter, Wood, Honeychurch, Crameri
Fremantle: Walters 4, Ballantyne 2, Pavlich 2, Mzungu 2, Barlow, Mayne, Sandilands, Mundy, Suban

BEST
Western Bulldogs: Cooney, Stevens, Macrae, Dahlhaus, Wallis
Fremantle: Mundy, Walters, Sandilands, Johnson, Mzungu, Duffield, Pavlich

INJURIES
Western Bulldogs: Nil
Fremantle: Scott Gumbleton (hamstring)
 
SUBSTITUTES
Western Bulldogs: Williams replaced Campbell in the second quarter; Higgins replaced Johannisen in the third quarter;
Fremantle: Hannath replaced Gumbleton in the first quarter, Mayne replaced Tanner Smith at half time

Reports: Nil

Official crowd: 4914 at Etihad Stadium