Media Carlton in the Media (articles, podcasts etc) - Part IV

Our club in the Media

Remove this Banner Ad

To be fair, he shouldn't have to do anything to address the basics. Players should already have them when they're drafted. Part of the responsibility of being a professional footballer and drafting due diligence.

How many putts do you think golfers do per week? It’s a basic, shouldn’t a pro golfer already have this skill before they turn pro? Of course they should, but being exceptional at a certain skill means constant training.
 
It's pretty simple: expertise is correct technique plus repetition. Flair is idiosyncracy - minute-major deviation from the ideal - plus expertise.

You get players like Gryan Miers, and Lance Franklin - and to an extent, Charlie Curnow; Matthew Suckling is another example - becoming highly reliable to mindblowing field kicks because their individual idiosyncracies weren't coached out of them but were practiced so many times that they became beneficial. Franklin's, Suckling's and Charlie's swing out onto the dominant side before kicking lends them at least 20m more range on their kicks than they'd get otherwise; Mier's ability to control his balldrop onto any part of his boot means he can put the ball on a pin anywhere within 30m but can absolutely shank the thing.

You'd see it a lot more if footy wasn't intent on determining any technique a long way from the norm undesirable. Luke Ball's career almost went down the gurgler because Ross Lyon needed all kickers to be able to kick over a zone defense; because after injury his range decreased whilst already lacking penetration, there just wasn't a place for him in a side that needed legspeed and kicking range. He goes to Collingwood and joins Jolly, used in his ideal role and given rests inside 50, his kicking was more than capable of hitting between the sticks from 25m; lo and behold, he's got a premiership medal to show off at the 10 year anniversary of The Winning Streak.

Richmond have since 2017 talked about how they reversed the onus from a deficit mindset to a strength mindset; 'what weaknesses do you need to fix' compared to 'can we get you to do what you're already doing well better?' I cannot help but feel that within AFL circles there's too much focus on limitations when drafting, and it's a lesser sport for it.

... which is a tangent from the fact that you need to spend substantial time every training session on the basics.
 
Last edited:
How many putts do you think golfers do per week? It’s a basic, shouldn’t a pro golfer already have this skill before they turn pro? Of course they should, but being exceptional at a certain skill means constant training.
what is it, 10,000 hours of training before you can become an expert at something?

As you say, basics should be there at drafting but to become elite means constant training
 

Log in to remove this ad.

It's pretty simple: expertise is correct technique plus repetition. Flair is idiosyncracy - minute-major deviation from the ideal - plus expertise.

You get players like Gryan Miers, and Lance Franklin - and to an extent, Charlie Curnow; Matthew Suckling is another example - becoming highly reliable to mindblowing field kicks because their individual idiosyncracies weren't coached out of them but were practiced so many times that they became beneficial. Franklin's, Suckling's and Charlie's swing out onto the dominant side before kicking lends them at least 20m more range on their kicks than they'd get otherwise; Mier's ability to control his balldrop onto any part of his boot means he can put the ball on a pin anywhere within 30m but can absolutely shank the thing.

You'd see it a lot more if footy wasn't intent on determining any technique a long way from the norm undesirable. Luke Ball's career almost went down the gurgler because Ross Lyon needed all kickers to be able to kick over a zone defense; because after injury his range decreased whilst already lacking penetration, there just wasn't a place for him in a side that needed legspeed and kicking range. He goes to Collingwood and joins Jolly, used in his ideal role and given rests inside 50, his kicking was more than capable of hitting between the sticks from 25m; lo and behold, he's got a premiership medal to show off at the 10 year anniversary of The Winning Streak.

Richmond have since 2017 talked about how they reversed the onus from a deficit mindset to a strength mindset; 'what weaknesses do you need to fix' compared to 'can we get you to do what you're already doing well better?' I cannot help but feel that within AFL circles there's too much focus on limitations when drafting, and it's a lesser sport for it.

... which is a tangent from the fact that you need to spend substantial time every training session on the basics.
You could make the case that it's similar to batsmen in cricket.

Imagine how many coaches would have tried to "fix" Steven Smith or Marnus Labuschagne along the way, but the more they started to bat like themselves and let their personalities out (however weird they may be...) the better they got.

To a degree there's a happy medium, tweaking the technical while not completely changing the method. Harry has traditionally been a pretty sound kick but it clearly fell right away last yr, he put in work and got it back. Tightening loose ends up is still important even in unique techniques.
 
Great prize, but genuine question, do our players HAVE to drive around in Hyundais most of the time?
Wouldn't have thought they could enforce that. They do it because they'll be leased to them and it saves them outlaying money on a car.
 

(Log in to remove this ad.)

I remember one of their cheerleaders. Still posts. Hails from up Qld way.
I hail from up QLD way and I was of that opinion at the time but wasn’t on big footy back then.

I like to think I get a lot right in my footy assessment but I was 100% WRONG.

I think I know the other poster you’re talking about too.
 

Remove this Banner Ad

Media Carlton in the Media (articles, podcasts etc) - Part IV

Remove this Banner Ad

Back
Top