Conundrum wrote:
BV Would be interested to know your thoughts on Geelong's game day tactics. From my point of view the game was won and lost in the contests. We were comprehensively beated by a superior and much more phydical side. Only only have to compare our respecive body sizes to realise we are no match ans why they have such a competitive advantage over us.
As much as Geelong dictated the hitouts Conundrum, Carlton actually won the clearances on the day.
They had only 12 more contested possessions but their uncontested possessions did the damage. 86 more uncontested possessions to Geelong allowed them to carry the ball and use it without pressure.
IMO, our inability to adapt and improvise is and has been a major issue. Anyone who watched our previous games knew that our forwardline was a huge asset. We gave our forwards space, they converted quite well and most importantly, they applied enormous pressure when the ball was exiting our forwardline.
Look at our NAB Cup games and Eddie, Fish, Fev and co were chasing hard and causing numerous turnover. If they did'nt cause a turnover, they applied so much pressure that the opposition kicked under pressure
I posted my thoughts on this a month ago
http://www.talkingcarlton.com/phpBB2/vi ... c&start=20
Any reasonable coach was going to try to limit our strengths. As soon as Geelong got numbers back into our forward line, we needed to make changes. Their players are experienced at carrying the ball and using the spare man. Thompson was bright enough to put good decision makers and ball users in our back half and in doing so, blocked up any space we had.
After they placed spare players back there, they just waited for us to kick it to them. They then utilised the spare men and ran the ball out without pressure.
Some posters are saying that the forwards didnt chase hard enough but 6 players should never get the ball off 7 the way the game is played these days. Teams train continually to choose and use the spare man.
To compound the problem, Thompson got the the players he wanted in the contest.
Jordan Russell was assigned to Corey Enright from the first bounce. As soon as Thompson noticed that, he dragged Enright back into our forwardline which further congested the area. JR rightly followed his opponent which put an extra player in the space.
Other posters are blaming the midfield yet the attacks were starting mainly off half back through Wojcinsky, Bartel and co.
Obviously Stevens has been in red hot form so Thompson attempted to expose him and make him accountable. Quite often at contests, Ling ran forward of the stoppage and the Geelong players were looking to give it to him as often as possible.
This made Stevens either exposed when we lost the clearance or dragged him away from the play when he manned up. With Geelong winning the ruck, they had the ascendancy.
As for our backline, well any backline will struggle when the opposition are running the ball in numbers.
What are our options? IMHO, we need to increase our flexibility.
On the weekend, Denis changed personnel on several occasions but mostly left the same structure in place. Instead of hoping Fish could do Fevs job and trying Waite to do Josh's role, we needed to retake the initiative.
Why not move everyone up to the half forward line and leave the space behind them? Why not back our players to beat the Cats to the ball with pace instead of letting them control the contests with "smarts"
It places more players around the middle of the ground which stops them running it out unimpeded.
If they dont want to try that, why not push everyone up the ground and leave Eddie and Fish one out with their opponents? It takes Scarlett and Egan out of their comfort zone and creates space for the ball to be kicked to.
Why not instruct the players to chip the ball and try to pick holes in the flood?
Varying options and setups should be part of our training schedule. Good clubs anticipate different scenarios and practice different options.
Not unlike 2005, we've gone into a season with a method that the coach thinks is a winner. Just like 2005, our opposition picked holes in it in the first game or so and we had no answer.
As for the comment about young bodies, like was posted elsewhere Geerlong had an average age of 23.4 compared to our 23.1.
The average games was 77.3 compared to 75.2.
Interestingly I'd say 3 of our best 4 players were actually 3 of our youngest.
As for sticking tackles, I'd suggest our youngest player stuck stronger tackles than anyone.
As much as Denis peddles it, our youth and inexperienced players obviously are'nt the issue.
IMO, we have the talent. We just need someone who knows how to utilise it.