Indie wrote:
Isn't it amazing that you haven't given any specifics BV? You haven't described the drills other than to say 7 on 6. You haven't identified who gave the presentation on it or from which side he or they play. You just came up with the usual generalities, drivel, and personal swipes.
Seems to be that you've either taken it on yourself to try to stick your nose into any thread to trot out the same "I know better than real AFL coaches" routine. Whose bidding are you doing? I can tell you that I have no associations with the Carlton coaches. I don't pretend to be a supercoach like you, and I'm not a hanger-on who thinks they absorb ability by hanging around real coaches. I'm just a Carlton member (having been so for a long time). Am I still allowed to express my opinion?
Indie, the problem is that pretty much all sides drop a man back. I don't know how much footy you watch apart from Carlton - but there is always a defensive midfielder being placed a kick behind play by pretty much all teams in the comp. When or if the ball is turned over by the team in possession, that extra man provides a link option out of defence. If the ball is bombed into a contest like we do, that extra man stays down knowing that the ball is not going to be marked (or won't be 9 times out of 10) and tries to get to the drop of the ball or at least be in a position where he can run it out of defence as the link option.
Against teams we've played:
Enright of Geelong does it, as does Corey - even Scarlett was doing it against us. McPhee does it for Essendon*, Welsh when fit. Howat, Deledio for the Tigers.
Teams we haven't played:
The Dogs do it all the time to teams who try to exploit their short defence by bombing it in long - all the spoiler needs to do is create a contest and their loose man, or a man who leaves his opponent to create an immediate and local overlap and they're away. McMahon, Gilbee, Griffen are those players. Teams that have beaten the Dogs have not fallen into the trap of bombing it in - because the Dogs have gotten used to the fact that teams will bomb it in and have developed a plan against it.
Team isolate the Dogs one-out now and don't let the Dogs zone off and run and get the local loose man. The Dogs short-comings down back are now being exploited because of this.
Thompson is a crap coach - he didn't realise this against the Dogs and he tried to exploit the Roos defence on the weekend by being arrogant and letting the Roos just zone back - Wells, Simpson - all doing the same thing.
It happens all over the AFL Indie - wake up and smell the roses. 7 on 6 is a staple diet against good forward lines. There are ways around it - like isolating and getting good mis-matches up and running and rotating mis-matches so that when a counter is found, another takes its place.
Good coaches find plans to beat the opposition - rather than just hoping our gameplan is good enough on the day. Concentrating on our gameplan and ignoring the opposition's is like only doing half the job. What if our gameplan (which might be fine in principle) fails because the opposition coach is good and found a way to counter our good gameplan? Well, our team rules and plan must change accordingly otherwise we will keep getting beaten and beaten...
A new plan forces the opposition coach to find a new way to counter us. We can then go back to the original plan once in a while in order for us to keep the opposition coach guessing.
It's about flexibility. Pagan doesn't give us that. He hasn't countered the opposition game plan except against Essendon*. When our game plan hasn't worked (like against Geelong), did he try anything different? No - we did the same thing all game - bomb it long to the 7 on 6 which we had no defence against. We didn't even try holding it up until we had even numbers in the contest before we bombed it. We didn't even try to make it 7 on 7 - we didn't try to create space for the other forwards - we just bombed it long and all the forwards were drawn to the contest leaving space wide open to the sides and to the back of the contest. No wonder the ball came in so thick and fast.
Opposition sides have worked out how to play Hawkins - he took us apart in his first game, then the 2nd game, he was good - but coaches have started planning for him and his last 2 games have been very very quiet. They've worked out a plan for the opponent he gets and in the last 2 weeks, it's worked. Now Thompson has to find a way to beat the opposition's plan on Hawkins. He can try moving him up the ground or planting him in the goal square - but obviously what worked for him in the first 2 games doens't work now because sides are ready for him.
Even Laidley, a coach we all think is inadequate worked out a plan to beat Geelong (with a bit of help from Geelong and Thompson).
Everyone says that Denis is a meticulously prepared coach. I've yet to see it. If you're meticulous you analyse the opposition as well and try to come up with a plan to counter them once you see they're trying the tactic you know will frustrate your own game plan.
A meticulously prepared coach will have:
1) his own game plan,
2) worked out what the opposition will do to stop it,
3) found weaknesses in it
4) and finds changes that should be made if the opposition coach finds the way to stop the pre-prepared gameplan.
5) They will also see what kind of game plan the opposition has been employing in the previous games
6) and find a way to stop it -
7) If the opposition coach changes his game plan because we've found the solution, then:

the coach (and his assistants) have to be able to see how he can counter it.
Denis does 1, 3 and 5 in my opinion. Our poor starts in games in my opinion stem from the fact that his preparation on how to stop the opposition is poor and we get jumped.
Sorry about the rant but I don't buy your opinion Indie that Denis is doing his job correctly and that it should be about concentrating on your own game plan.