Blue Vain wrote:
Sadly I suspect a lot of our issues revolve around on field/playing group leadership and everyone else will once again carry the can. Crippa is as dedicated as anyone but what sort of leaders do we have? Everything I hear revolves around conciliation, connection and "sticking fat". But is there accountability and challenge when required? You can't just wrap your arms around people when they continually make the same errors. The players are not there as a support group. They are playing elite sport that comes with responsibility.
The list? Yes our list has holes and the game has evolved significantly this season, but we've dominated games this year for quarters or halves, just rarely 4 quarters. When momentum goes against our players, they don't appear to have the resilience to stop it. Is it preparation by the coaches tactically and psychologically? Winning 11 of 15 first quarters suggests not to me. Outscoring the opposition 52.46 to 37.33 in first quarters suggests not.
So our game style can dominate games but not for 4 quarters. It would suggest the answer lies somewhere between concentration, fitness, resilience or leadership.
If it's coaching or strategy. You'd suggest teams would know our weaknesses and have our measure from the start of games. Everyone would know our tactical inability, train it during the week and take advantage. But that rarely happens. We're the team that dominates early in games.
Others say our players don't have the skill to connect with our forward 50 or to convert on the scoreboard. Yet last year, this playing group (with minimal changes) was the 4th highest scoring team of the year. If we'd scored 1 more point per game, we'd have been number 2 scoring team in the AFL!
How does the team that is largely the same drop off so much? You don't lose your skill overnight.
The calls for board change are also nonsense IMHO. The board is there to appoint quality people, stay out of their way and to provide quality governance. Financially the club is the healthiest it has been for 30 years. The board employed a man recognised as one of the greatest CEO's in the history of our game. (Cook). He rubber stamped the appointment of Voss and the board ratified the decision. Thats the way it should be. Stay out of it and let your people do their job.
Tactically I believe the coaches have done a reasonable job. We were being flogged with ball movement in 2023 so we adapted and became one of the best in the AFL. We were a high scoring team in 2024 but we leaked goals so we adapted. Our defending, defensive transition etc have improved markedly.
So is the answer the inability of the coaches to find a balance between strengths and weaknesses or the players inability to adapt?
It has to be one or the other. Statistics suggest the coaches know the mechanisms and strategies to change game styles as required. It's a matter of whether we are chasing the pack retrospectively or perhaps the players can't reconcile it themselves during games.
IMHO, the answer lies majorly with the playing group. The coaches are not there to hold their hands during games and provide them with answers mid quarter. They are full time athletes. They would attend more meetings and lectures than they care for. Training is designed to build instinct through repetition. They know what to do strategically.
But do the players truly demand a response from themselves and each other when required?
When Cripps is being flogged in the centre square or refusing to run defensively, do any of his team mates say "that's no where near good enough, get out of the middle and give someone else a go"?
Does anyone tell Weitering that when he drops off Taylor Walker at defensive 50 and watches Walker put it over his head for a goal that he's not doing his job properly?
It's interesting that people are talking about players who give 100% no matter the state of the game. Ot those who give a shit, demand better and show leadership and resilience when it counts. Defenders who defend like their life depends on it. (Haynes, Newman, Silvagni).
Forwards who sacrifice for others. Block opposition defenders so their team mates can win the contest instead of them (Fogarty, Williams)
Midfielders who work hard both ways and will sacrifice their own game to stop an opposition player at the expense of their own game (Hewett). Is it coincidence that apart from Silvagni, they all learnt what it takes to be a team player, at other clubs?
IMHO, we have the majority of the talent required. We have mostly good coaches. We need better standards, expectations and resilience from those who lead the playing group on field. I think it was Bondiblue who recently said something along the lines of, "if you can't change the people, change the people".
Amen.
The one skill I do question, and it should have been fixed 5 years ago was kicking set shots for goal. In particular, our prefessional KPF's, Charlie and Harry have let us down badly this year, but its not new. They have yet to develop a set routine that you could back like we could with Lockett and Dunstall as the benchmarks, but also like all good forwards do today. I've been a bit hard on those two, but I'm just a reflection of the broader base on this point. The fact of the matter it can be fixed. Not by them on their own. They need a bonafide kicking coach. Then who? Get the best FFS. Why haven't we? We lost 6 games this year because we missed set shots at goal. They call that a lack of nourishment. We should have had 10 wins on the board, but lets hope this time to reflect with Graham Wight taking the helm and TDK most likely leaving the group.
I'm sure skills drop off for VFL standard players at the next level. The pressure at AFL level is ferocious and it seems they are rushed because they haven't adapted to the level, or developed enough in the VFL. I still think we gift too many games. That looks to be because we dont have the depth to cover the injured. We can see we need to add a few more skilled players who can help improve our connection.
Great you mentioned Fogarty. He's another I pigeon hole with the rest of the "ordinary" small forwards, unfairly, to make the point about an excess of smalls on the list. He plays an amazing role, and its the other zippy small who should be ripping it up.
Concentration, fitness, resilience or leadership are all player qualities we require from our players to execute the game plan. Our best 23 has proven to be a formidable group since 2023, but the gaps need to be filled where age is natural attrition, and depth capable of putting 4 quarters together.
We have enough kids. Too many imo. I don't mind turning them over if its an improvement. But we definitely need to add better players to the list, who can make this group click again.
Leadership (or a lack of) is something you pointed out last year. It continues to be an issue. Who will hold them accountable?
I agree the coaches have the levers, and they at times have adjusted them a bit too much, but they have them. The players get it, and believe in the game plan, and they've seen it work, when we have a competitive outfit on the field (less than 8 out injured) but some players have given up on themselves, they stopped giving effort, probably because they know they haven't got the resilience to give it for 4 quarters, and others, more experienced have given up maximum fight (other than the ones you mentioned) because the weaker have given up the fight.
I don't think we are far off. This year we were derailed early by Sayers and injury, and lost confidence after a string of defeats, and recently players have just stopped in their shoes. Its a Football Dept issue. Its one of those 4 reasons: Concentration, fitness, resilience or leadership.
Good onya.