Tommy Alvin wrote:
In terms of 1%ers - team highest was 8 (Jamo), next highest was 3 (five players), 4 players had 2, 7 had 1, 5 had 0. Hads in the bottom half but by no means alone. Also, he's not a spoiler so doesn't tend to get the more obvious 1%ers.
My point was that this was down when it should have been up at about 2 or 3 at least, and the same can be said for 4 or 5 more midfielders. Work for each other and you win the game, no matter the opposition.
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In terms of clearances - Gibbs 9, Hadley 6, Judd and Simmo 5, Scotland and Murph 4
I have a creditable stat sheet that lists Gibbs with 10, Judd with 8, Simmo with 7, Hadley 6. Scotland had 3 and Murphy 2 according to the same sheet.
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In terms of efficiency - Hadley at 80% puts him in the top half, plenty of guys in the 60s - Simmo at 61, Army 69 - Waite the worst with 56.
I referred to his handball efficiency only. I have him at 85% efficiency overall, which means he sunk all of his kicks, unsure on the long kick data for him, but I don't remember seeing one all night (and given he didn't have a single I50 or D50 to his name, I'd say he probably didn't). Forwards are always going to have the worst kicking efficiency; chopped off leads, and behinds count as ineffective kicks.
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In terms of tackles - Hads and Jacobs top the count with 7 each - I'd point out Gibbs and Judd with 1 each as notable point of comparison - Murph had 4. Simmo and Kreuzer 6.
Yep that sounds about right.
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So I'd say he's performed very well in terms of two KPIs for his position (tackles, clearances), his disposal was fine and he was below par in terms of 1%ers. I don't see the reason for the attack.
On your stats, not really no.
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To me, picking out a midfielder in a game where we actually beat them in the clearances 47-27 and shut down their no.1 midfielder is just plain strange. It was a defensive nightmare and an attacking horror show.
The efficiency data lies in this instance and this stat perhaps needs an overhaul in definition. Our midfield had a case of the fumbles and never addressed it with knock-ons, or releasing each other in space to deliver the ball better. With a tighter definition of an effective disposal, you'd see that and the 1%er data lining up nicely.
Perhaps our midfielders need to learn more about work rate without the ball, how to pressure, how to make the spoil and how to put in for a shepherd or alternatively present a visible and clear option to the guy in possession. They are all so convinced of their abilities in possession that they look to secure the ball no matter the situation before making their next move. Lesser players know they should look to knock the ball on when they have an opponent baring down; our blokes don't.
This is moving away from my point on Hadley anyway: he gets the opportunity to win a lot of inside ball, and in my opinion doesn't do enough with and without it in these situations. That's shown in the first possession stats:
Hadley - 9
Gibbs - 7
Judd - 5
Murphy - 5
Simpson - 5
Scotland - 4
Carrazzo - 3
Jacobs - 3
Robinson - 3
Houlihan - 2
Kreuzer - 1
That's not all of the first possessions in our team, but that's what I would call our midfield unit.
Let's take him out of the mix, bring in another bloke and keep working at it until we see more runs from stoppages outside of the forward line. Gibbs did it for us first attempt after finally getting released to midfield with the return of Armfield, which speaks volumes of the output we've seen from Hadley & Brock of late.