aboynamedsue wrote:
seanpb wrote:
If you can't feel comfortable putting your hands out in front in heavy traffic during a match consisting of only your teammates then I don't know when you will be.
I think a player's mindset in an intra club match is more likely to be "I want to impress the MC but I don't want to do anything that will put myself or a teammate at unnecessary risk".
That's why someone like Judd didn't necessarily put himself in some of the spots yesterday that he might do in a 'normal' match (and before anyone jumps down my throat, I am not questioning the great man's courage - quite the opposite in fact - and I am not saying he didn't play well yesterday). So Yarran may or may not need to develop into a more courageous player, but don't crucify the guy for squibbing one contest in an intra club game.
But it's not just about the squib incident. Maybe you don't read too well, or you read selectivly. It's also about not attacking the ball. Numerous times the ball was kicked to him, and he had first dibbs on winning the ball, but he chose to go slow, and hope the ball came to him, instead of attacking the ball. It's a crucial error and he seriously needs to sort it out. Call is laziness or complacency or whatever, but it was clear as day and I am not the only one who saw it.
Look, it's about hunger, wanting the ball, attacking the ball, not waiting for it to come to you on a silver platter.
I'm more frustrated about this than the squib to be honest. Maybe he didn't want to get hurt bec it was after all a intra club game. I can understand that rationale. It's just that the squib incident and the refusal to go and attack the contest and win the ball with hunger, happened in the one afternoon, so it didn't look good at all.
All he has to do is show a hungre and zest, a determination to win the ball when it is near him, and he will be OK. He'd better change that mindset in his next outing.