I will never understand the underrating of Luke Ryan on this board
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Apart from his predictable kick outs from the square, which have become very rare since Jordy has been taking a lot of them, I'm with you.I will never understand the underrating of Luke Ryan on this board
I remember Hawks trading Mark Williams and pick 13 for Shaun Burgoyne.
That is the kind of trade I would be very happy to do with Luke Ryan.
Luke Ryan and Pick 14 for Pickett.
If Draper wasn't emerging probably wouldn't even be a discussion point. We are quickly going to be in a situation where Erasmus, Draper, Murphy etc are blocked if they are not managed well.
He is actually so valuable that we need to start planning for his replacement. I feel like Daniel Curtin could be a good replacement for him.His positioning to take marks is elite, he is tough as they come and is a cool head when the heat is on.
Pace has never been a strength, it’s all about his actual football ability, which is undoubtably elite.
Not everyone here likes his ball movement, but the people whose opinions matter, the coaches, use him from kick outs. So they clearly rate it.
He also has the ability to play as a kpd, so offers excellent cover for the tall defenders in game.
I think you might have accute offseasonitis on this one mate!
He's excellent in everything he does, except for when he regularly gives it back to the other team from a kick-in so that's probably where it comes from. I'm still a big fan however!I will never understand the underrating of Luke Ryan on this board
That might be an indicator it's game plan or personnel related.Saying it’s kick outs that are predictable is far too kind on Luke Ryan tbh. Has a tendency to take far too long following a mark as well - not all the time but a lot of the time.
If I’m completely honest the issue wasn’t as prominent in 2024 as it was in 2023.
For sure. If it isn't what the coach wants, kick ins must be the easiest aspect of a game plan to fix.That might be an indicator it's game plan or personnel related.
Not sure you're asking the right questions because these two have straight forward answers.How frequently do we launch attacks from kick ins?
After we have a kick in which team is most likely to score next?
Great explanation. To add stats, last year Port Adelaide scored the most from kick-ins, which makes sense coz Houston is really good and Port let him be very aggressive in his kick-ins. We were 16th, which about matches the eye test. They scored 5.9 points per game, we scored 3.0 points per game. Funnily enough, North were 18th at 1.7 points per game, which is crazy coz they probably had the most kick-ins in the comp.Not sure you're asking the right questions because these two have straight forward answers.
1. Everytime
2. The opponent.
Scoring from a kick in is low probability as a team must transition the entire ground through all 18 opponents, so it is the lowest probable avenue to goal, and this is backed up by empirical evidence.
It's actually not important at all to score from kick ins. It's just nice when it happens. Kick ins should be judged in the opposite way, which teams concede the most goals from their own kick ins.
Most scores come from turnover and stoppages. Turnover is the most reliable way to score because the opponent is caught out of position, they're running forward and suddenly have to double back to defend. This is why where a team turns the ball over is crucial. Turn it over in the front half and you have few players to get through to score, in the back half there are many opponents to go through still.
There's a reason coaches bang on about the contest, it's really what matters above all.
Not sure why I typed out all this lol, getting carried away, but just highlighting that scores from kick ins are borderline irrelevant and people shouldn't be concerned about it.
Incredibly strongly disagree.Pearce and Cox are injury prone enough that Draper is likely to play, especially because he can cover 3rd/4th talls.
Ras is ultimately unproven but he will see a spot where Fyfe plays, and Murphy is 2 years+ from earning his own spot (despite the wishful thinking of many here) by which time a lot will change.
Incredibly strongly disagree.
Are we talking about Murphy Reid or Ollie Murphy?That’s ok, we will get to see.
Are we talking about Murphy Reid or Ollie Murphy?
Not sure how Ollie gets a game while Pearce is still playing.Murphy Reid, completely forgot about Ollie Murphy!
Not sure how Ollie gets a game while Pearce is still playing.
Yeah, I'm not pumping up his tyres or anything. Low expectations until he starts to show something.That’s true, but it’s not like he was a top ten draft pick, he was always going to take 4-5 years to build his body.
Even if Pearce retired tomorrow, not clear whether Ollie will make it as an afl player.
Yes it is only height which they match on. The big difference is that Alex Pearce is fast and can go with fast breaking tall forwards, whilst O. Murphy is one of the slowest players we have on the list. If anything Murphy is a replacement type for Luke Ryan; player that can play on a tall / Resting ruckman or medium and/or just as an intercept back pocket with good rebound skills. I reckon Murphy will end up strong and be able to take people in gorilla wrestling matches as well.Will be surprised if any of them have pearces physical attributes. Ollie Murphy certainly not as quick as AP on a sprint from what I’ve seen of him so far.
The problem with Pearce is that he can’t stay on the park for a full season.
I think this guy could yet be Alex's replacement.Will be surprised if any of them have pearces physical attributes. Ollie Murphy certainly not as quick as AP on a sprint from what I’ve seen of him so far.
The problem with Pearce is that he can’t stay on the park for a full season.
I think this guy could yet be Alex's replacement.
So Im talking 4 years time. Charlie has a ton in common with Alex Pearce in terms of where he's at in development when drafted. Both had late growth spurts, both drafted around the same position, both athletic but super skinny, both not great kicks but probably effected by late growth spurts and obviously both played mostly forward in their last year as a junior.
Compare the pair. I can see Charlie playing forward developing at Peel for two years then playing a few games as a forward at AFL before becoming a forward/back player and then being groomed as Alex's long term replacement.
Freo's Pick 37: Alex Pearce
With our second pick (#37) in the NAB AFL Draft we’ve chosen 18-year-old Alex Pearce from the Devonport Magpieswww.fremantlefc.com.au
I havent been down yet this preseason. Ill get down next week. Ive been quoting some of the training reports but I havent done one yet.How did he look at training?