- Aug 16, 2006
- 5,094
- 6,695
- AFL Club
- Geelong
You did not see much of Richmond 2010-2014?
They were young and in rebuild mode for quite some time. Hardwick always had them playing a very attractive brand of football.
To even lump Chris Scott in the same class as him is somewhat perplexing. He also evolves his list. He played 6 new players this year when they were very much in it to win it.
Unlike Scott heading into season 2022, I have a feeling he will be refreshing their list by playing a lot of the next generation.
On the issue of new players, you are factually mistaken.
From 2011 to 2021, Geelong debuted 54 players, and Richmond debuted 49 players. So more players have debuted under Scott than under Hardwick. I am referring here to actual debuts—first AFL game, not first game for a club.
You make a song and dance about Hardwick debuting six players last year while still in contention. Yet in 2012, while in contention, Scott debuted ten players, a record for a premiership team. Geelong also debuted eight players in 2017 and seven in 2018 while still in contention.
So to be very clear, more 'new players' have been introduced during Scott's time at Geelong than at Richmond. There is no basis to your claim that Hardwick 'evolves his list' while Scott doesn't.
Another thing, while I am at it. Scott likes to recruit players, whereas Hardwick's all about developing players and youth, right? No, not really.
Since 2011, Geelong has given games to twenty recruits from other clubs, while Richmond has played twenty-four. So, since 2011, Geelong have played fewer trade recruits than Richmond.
Of course, the list isn't Hardwick's or Scott's to 'evolve'. The idea that list management is the head coach's responsibility or that team selection is his sole responsibility is a quaint idea some posters refuse to give up.
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