Effes wrote:
Thanks for your thoughts BV - one more question; why are our mids always caught out on the transition?
Obviously not BV, but I'd like to add my thoughts on this one.
For years we have had the issue of over-committing to forward thrusts and early on the season we seemed to have it under control save for the Essendon* game where we collapsed into a heap almost identical to that of last year.
By pushing up from defence and even midfield too quickly with numbers or too slowly by ball movement, the opposition zone or wall becomes compressed and each zone assignment is quite easily handled by the up to 14 players involved. This also allows the opposition to place a man on any key threats like Betts, Waite, Judd, etc, while maintaining a tight zone.
The other effect this has is those transitioning it forward find it difficult to get it past CHF, and often resort to running from CHB almost right up to CHF when numbers have overcommitted, or running it sideways when things are too slow. While attacking runs are great to initially wrong foot those set up in the zone, if you're taking 2 or 3 bounces, you've generally eaten up about 7 to 15 seconds, plus the journey of your kick, and the ball will have only travelled up to 150 metres lengthwise. A reasonably structured side will be completely in place and ready to shut down your 50 if you're going to try and kick into it.
By going for the mark when the opposition are happy to crowd the aerial contest, the inevitable happens and the ball is turned over, at which point a quick kick to about 60 m out puts it over the top of about 12 of the 14 guys sitting up there. If they have 6 blokes in what is known in other sports as the underneath zone - in this case around the 50 arc - these guys can quickly push off and create options on the flanks and through the corridor to take advantage of the 1-on-1 contests available forward of the ball.
Even when we do make it down in time, we either seem to be too exhausted, too stupid or too soft to make a play on the incoming ball. The net result is wasted energy trying to push forward and back all the time for little gain, while opening up huge counter-attack opportunities for the opposition. North are rubbish and they made us look second rate because we weren't prepared to be smart with our running and ball movement. Whether this is a relic of the Pagan era or a limitation of Ratten's abilities is debatable.