CarltonClem wrote:
In terms of risk of injury, 7-6 and 6-6 is about the same...to think otherwise is fanciful.
The point is there needs to be 7 bodies playing on 6 otherwise it's not realistic enough to what the boys face in the match situation.
I don't think anyone's contending that the players don't need time to practise kicking into a f50 where there is at least a single defender zoning off. The 6-on-6 drill does achieve that.
The point being made is that running the same drill - but stacking more defenders on the forwards - adds nothing to the development of the midfielder disposing. I think that's a fair point.
I'm with Indie on this, mainly because I brought these very points up in a previous thread. In that instance I was about to bring BV into line with my simple - yet somehow perplexing (for him at least) - argument that if you look across the globe at high-level team sports, for all the drills they do the best practise for match day comes from full match sim.
NFL, soccer, volleyball, basketball, whatever the hell else you want to think of (with maybe the exception of cricket due to feasibility) they all do it.
But tiny lists and affiliate teams, along with the fierce nature of our game prevent us from doing the best we can do.
That's the real difference; everything else is window dressing so BV can be smug.
If you don't believe me, look no further than Adelaide; the pre-eminent sports science team of the league. They've got radio headsets so the coach can continually run match sims and watch from a vantage point.