Blue Vain wrote:
I'll have a go, starting with yesterdays opponent.
Sydney.
The Swans play the most disciplined, accountable football in the AFL IMO. Their strength is forcing their opponent to play the game on Sydneys terms eg. stop, start, confined football with maximum stoppages. They put their experienced, strong bodied players around the ball and back those players in to win the ball in contested situations. They quite often release to the back of the stoppage and move the ball forward where they're happy to create a stop play again. They re-set, get their strong bodies around the ball and start again. They wont play offensive midfielders and it's no problem for them to run 3 stoppers in the middle. They'll happily close down the opposition and just hack the ball forward.
Their defence is one of the best at getting numbers to the contest. Very rarely will you see a Sydney player one out with his opponent. Their talls (Robert-Thomson and Ted Richards) are mobile but lack strength in the contest. Bolton is strong but very undersized. Put them together however and they operate very effectively. Their experience allows them to zone off at the right time and they will quite often have 3 players flying to spoil. They always use a wing/sweeper and the overwhelming majority of their offensive forays are a result of defensive rebounds.
Overall, their stats will make you assume they're efficient with their ball use but they aren't. It's the fact that there are so many scrimmages that ensures possession tallies are low.
They often have less disposals than anyone in the AFL but they usually ensure their opponents have less.
Like Collingwood, they often play wide and rarely will go to a contest unless it's inside 30. They avoid CHF (mainly due to it's redundancy at the SCG) and play through leading flankers into the forward line. Once inside 60, they're content to go long and central and back their talls in to take a contested grab.
Teams that do well against them are the ones that get on top of their ruckmen. Their big men are rarely beaten and at worse they negate the opposition. If you can win the ball, get it out to your runners and break up the play, you can have them on toast.
St Kilda play a contested, high pressure game but that actually suits the Swans however teams like Essendon*, Carlton, Freo at Subi and the Bulldogs can cause them problems if they can get the ball out to their front runners. Leg speed is their achilles heel around the ball but the recruitment of players like Jetta, Rhys Shaw and Rohan indicates a willingness to get more pace within their squad.
Essendon* / Sydney games show football as diametrically opposed as it can be.
Knights instructs his players to avoid shepherding/blocking for team mates and to run forward to create options. sydney are drilled to hold up the ball, sacrifice for the team and dont release the ball until the calvary arrives.
Top stuff BV

The only thing I would add is that they have given Goodes a bit more leeway within the team structure. A bit like a playmaker/freerole bloke in the World game. Which is why he was forever being criticised for not being defensive enough. I'm not sure they could have been as successful without that flair role that he played IMO