Sydney Swans spearhead Kurt Tippett gave Collingwood a headache last week and the Magpies will be hoping Hawthorn's twin talls Jarryd Roughead and Lance Franklin don't cause a migraine in Friday night's blockbuster at the MCG.

Fifth-placed Collingwood will review the win over the Swans and look ahead to the match against ladder-leaders Hawthorn on Tuesday, and defender Tyson Goldsack says how to stop Roughead and Franklin will be a particular focus.

"It's going to be a challenge no doubt," Goldsack said after the win over the Swans.

"We have got our work cut out for us."

The need to find a way to curb the influence of Roughead and Franklin takes on greater significance after Tippett booted six goals, all from set shots, in a losing side.

Given Roughead sits second on the Coleman Medal leaderboard with 59 goals - including five last week - how the 26-year-old forward performs could have a big bearing on the result.

Goldsack, who celebrated his 100th AFL game against the Swans, said Tippett was left isolated one-on-one deep in the forward line.

"We can work on that, whether it is blokes rolling back or putting more pressure on the source," he said.

"We will have to look at that during the week."

Collingwood coach Nathan Buckley was forced to move Nathan Brown off Tippett early in the third term, with Lachlan Keefee given the task of minding him for the rest of the match.

"In the raft of things that come out of the game clearly it is an issue," Buckley said.

"You don't want an opposition forward dominating in the manner that he did in the air."

While conceding six goals to the opposition's number one forward is hardly ideal, Goldsack said the Hawks represented a different challenge to the Swans.

"They play a very different type of football, a different brand," Goldsack said.

"They move the ball differently and they are more kind of hit-up, where Sydney just gets the ball in."

Franklin, who missed last week with hamstring soreness, has 47 goals for the year, the seventh most in the league.