Geelong senior coach Chris Scott will lead his troops for the 350th time this Saturday afternoon against Richmond, becoming just the 12th coach in V/AFL history to achieve the milestone.

Scott becomes the quickest coach to reach this milestone, reaching the feat in 14 years and 104 days. Among the 12 others to make the mark, Scott's 67.6% winning rate is by far the best, trailed by legendary Richmond coach Tom Hafey at 63.9%.

Out of those 236 wins, which stand out as his most impressive? We take a look at the top five...

5Round 19, 2011

A game that will live long in the memory of Geelong fans - and haunt Melbourne's supporters for eternity - is Chris Scott's 16th win as Geelong coach.

The Demons drove down the highway to Kardinia Park sitting 11th on the ladder and one win outside of the top eight with hopes of an unlikely but not impossible upset. Instead, they got handed arguably the most embarrassing defeat in football history.

Geelong exploded out of the gates with an eight-goal first term to lead by 51 at quarter time, following it up with a 12-goal second quarter to lead by triple digits at the main break. The 114-point margin ranked as the second-largest half-time lead in the league's history, and it would only improve from there for Scott's men.

Geelong ruthlessly applied pressure for the remainder of the contest, refusing to let up as they won every ground ball and clearance opportunity. The final scoreline of 233-48 was the greatest win in AFL history and demonstrated the heights of what the football club was capable of, something that was ultimately achieved on the final day of the season.

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Behind the margin is an array of statistical dominance. Geelong won the disposal count by 228, the fourth-largest difference in history. They also won the uncontested possession count 343-162, the fifth largest difference in V/AFL history. Geelong's 37 goals tie the league record for most kicked in a game, a feat also achieved by the Cats in 1992.

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