Gee, it seems that requiring a player to earn promotion is now a cause for anger. Livo, Wiggins, Sporn, Teague, Prenda, TLo (before his injury) and Bannister have all put in 100% on the track and in the VFL to earn a recall to the senior side. Bryan's attitude has been questionable on the track, in the VFL and away from the club. You might not want to see the above players in the 1sts, but you can only admire them for the way in which they conducted themselves. But certainly it is quite appropriate for the match committee to send a message to the squad as to what they expect from the players, and anyone who can't meet those requirements just can't expect to get games. Kenny Sheldon on radio thought so. How a player of Bryan's age hasn't learned from the example of the other senior players in the VFL or from Carlton's delisting of Karl and LA is beyond me.
Everyone acts as if Bryan is a wunderkind like Akermanis/Ablett/Angwin who has to be played because he has more talent in his little finger than most other AFL players have in their entire bodies. If he is, then I must have missed the proof. He hasn't set the world on fire in the VFL. You would have thought that he'd be able to do so at will, because he doesn't have much to compete against. He would be opposed by 3rd, 4th or 5th string ruckmen, or the 3rd to 6th best defenders at most AFL clubs. If he had the ability to play as a tall forward in the AFL, he would be able to comprehensively beat those defenders given his height. But he hasn't been doing this. A while back in the televised VFL game, he was whipped when he played as a tall defender. The last 2 weeks have been a welcome change in his form. The bag of 4 in the wet probably was worth over 5 in the dry. Finally, his on-field performances are acceptable. Hopefully, he is now showing a renewed commitment towards the club.
Unfortunately, Barney is the type of player that thrives on rucking for the whole day. His performance deteriorates if he is spelled for anything more than the last few minutes of a quarter. Having a 2nd ruck on the bench for all but 10 to 15 minutes of the game is a luxury we can't afford. This is particularly so when French doesn't have the flexibility to play forward or back, and has to go to the bench when he isn't rucking.
The next question is whether Bryan can prosper with limited game-time as a back-up ruckman. Unfortunately, McLaren doesn't as he also benefits from rucking for most of the day. Good form in the VFL in the ruck doesn't really shed much light on this issue, and in Bryan's case he hasn't shown much form in the ruck anyway.
So, can Bryan display some versatility to prevent him sitting on the bench for most of the day. McLaren has the ability to play as a tall defender on super-tall forwards. Bryan allegedly has the ability to play forward.
But would he be of much use in the forward line? This notion of the resting ruckman being a target in the forward line died some time ago. Very few ruckmen have the ability to do this at AFL level now. Lade is excellent, and Simmonds can do it. JLo is probably a better forward than ruckman. Ottens can't do both now. Darcy when fit would be capable. Spida a few years back had the capacity. Gardiner hasn't set the world on fire. Maybe White would be worthwhile.
The reason why the resting ruckman is dead as a dodo is that they aren't great on the lead. This is exacerbated by fatigue when they are also rucking (see Ottens). Few of them can hang on to marks from long bombs given the way that most teams flood the last line with defenders. They have negligible capacity to keep the ball in when the ball hits the ground. Their defenders run off them and run freely to provide targets in the forward line.
I haven't seen any particular evidence of Bryan having the pace or acceleration to be a good lead at AFL level. He certainly has not shown much intensity in his leads in training or VFL games.
Is he able to play as a static marking target? The problem is he hasn't established much of a reputation for being a great mark either (and our footskills are not so well developed that we could reliably kick to his advantage in any event).
He would likely be a real liability if he played forward against the Doggies. If he had been kicking bags for the last few weeks, we might have had more confidence in him.
It is absurd for us to try to "exploit" their lack of height any more than we already have. After all, we have French, Deluca, Kennedy, Fisher, Fev, Santy and Lance. If we were competitive as a team and in the midfield, maybe. But we have tried the tall forward line for all of this season without much success. Why would it work against the Doggies? Their likely domination of the midfield will give us few opportunities to feed tall forwards, and we would need to be confident that we would take marks on most of the occasions we go inside 50 for the strategy to work. This is the sort of risk that only long-shot gamblers would take. For every one occasion when it might work, there will be well over 10 times that it blows up in our face.
I can't see how anyone could complain about us trying to ensure we have flexibility on the bench to try to match their midfield reserves. At the end of the game, I suspect we will be wishing we had another 3 midfielders to call on.
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