Blue Vain wrote:
If you disregard structures for a moment and focus on contested footy, the minimum expectation from a one on one contest should be an approximate 50% positive outcome. In other words, if I man up the opposition backmen one on one, I'd expect a minimum 50% contest wins (Considering our team have control of the ball when going forward)
Yet if you look at our statistical outcomes in our past 2 games, we've had 18 scoring shots from 52 and 53 inside 50s respectively.
In simple terms, the ball has been in the control of a Carlton player gouing forward 52 times per game for approximately 1 scoring shot per 3 entries! That tells me the opposing players are rebounding 2 out of every 3 entries.
What is the answer? For starters, be quicker when our forward entries and stop looking for the perfect option. Secondly, tell our forwards to forget the lazy option of leading to the boundary line.
I'd rather a predictable option of going long to a 3 on 3. Then the onus is on our forwards to work hard enough to get 1 scoring shot from every 2 opportunities. If they cant get close to that on a consistent basis, they'll struggle to make AFL football anyway so It's better that we find out asap. If the opposition start dropping backs off to the hotspot, we need to hit up the forward who has been freed up. At the moment, we are playing a game we're not capable of.
Lastly, I'd play a one on one forward line. If they want to play with 8 backs, we need to play 8 forwards. As long as we play smart footy and lead up into the midfield, there will be space. The most important aspect is to gain a contest at every forward entry. If our mids keep working hard and getting us 50-55 forward 50 entries, we should end up with 25-30 scoring shots which will win more games than you lose.
I agree that our forwards lead to the boundary line too often. Has been going on for more than a year. Whether it is player laziness or poor coaching, opinions will differ.
Where I disagree with you is that our midfielders look for the perfect option and don’t get it inside 50 quick enough.
The biggest problem with our forward line in my opinion has been the ‘roll up’ strategy that leaves our forward line empty of Carlton players, with only opposition backmen zoning off. It’s probably hard to see on TV, but at the games, it’s obvious when a Carlton midfielder is streaming through the middle, they often have nobody leading at them demanding the ball. Instead, they have forwards who have ‘rolled up’ retreating back to goal asking for the ball over their heads. It looks terrible and the result is terrible.
Your ‘50% of contests’ theory is sound as long as the coaches park a Navy Blue footballer inside 50 to be at the bloody contest! At the moment, that is not happening on too many occasions which is why the zoning off defenders have killed us.