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...

32011 Grand Final

A look at the AFL's highest and lowest rated attacks in history
MELBOURNE, AUSTRALIA - OCTOBER 01: Mitch Duncan and James Podsiadly of the Cats celebrate with the Premiership Cup after winning the 2011 AFL Grand Final match between the Collingwood Magpies and the Geelong Cats at Melbourne Cricket Ground on October 1, 2011 in Melbourne, Australia. (Photo by Mark Dadswell/Getty Images)

Scott's first year at the Cats proved to be legendary. Geelong won 19 of their 22 games and stormed into a grand final by comfortably dispatching Hawthorn and West Coast in the respective qualifying and preliminary finals, where they would face minor premiers Collingwood.

However, many argued the new Cats coach had been gifted a spot in the grand final, taking the helm of a club already in the midst of its greatest era. It was on that first day of October when that narrative was quickly dispatched.

After Travis Cloke kicked his third goal of the day seven minutes into the second quarter, extending Collingwood's lead to 18 points, Scott opted to move Tom Lonergan onto the key forward and gave Cameron Ling the task of slowing down Brownlow medallist Dane Swan in the middle with a more aggressive defensive role. These key matchup adjustments saw Geelong swing momentum to not just close the three-goal deficit, but blow the game out of the water in the fourth quarter.

Cloke would have just one more scoring shot for the rest of the game, a behind during the fourth quarter, while Swan recorded 20 disposals, his second-fewest count of the season. It was Scott's masterful decision-making in the coaches box at a pivotal moment that turned the game in Geelong's favour.

The Magpies lost just two games throughout the 2011 home and away season, both of them to the Cats. Scott's tactical masterclass in the grand final ensured the third time would not be the charm for the black and white, providing Geelong its third premiership in five years in the process.

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