Hawk fo sho
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Ablett had more highlights in those 6 games for the Hawks than most players would for their whole careersIt's similar to Ablett Snr, do you remember him as a Hawk or a Cat?
It's a line call really.
I meant Lockett v Buddy sorry didnt make that clearDisagree. He's goal average for each club would tell you he was slightly better for us.
Sorry don’t know why that first post was quoted.
I meant Franklin.
Lockett came in and dominated for four and a bit years (will pretend 2002 didn’t happen)
Franklin was our spearhead for a decade. Same number of Colemans as Lockett in his time at the club, 1 more All Australian, 2 more time leading our goal kicking. Took us to three grand finals. 4x 50+ goal seasons after turning 30.
Lockett kicked 100 goals 3 times at the Swans.
Like I said: he came in and played 4 dominant seasons.
Not sure what your issue is here.
Poll results indicate Franklin is remembered more as a Hawk.Sorry don’t know why that first post was quoted.
I meant Franklin.
Lockett came in and dominated for four and a bit years (will pretend 2002 didn’t happen)
Franklin was our spearhead for a decade. Same number of Colemans as Lockett in his time at the club, 1 more All Australian, 2 more time leading our goal kicking. Took us to three grand finals. 4x 50+ goal seasons after turning 30.
He did more at the Swans than Buddy did, but would still be remembered for his time at St Kilda.
Poll results indicate Franklin is remembered more as a Hawk.
Do you think Lockett is remembered more as a Saint or Swan?
If only buddy Franklin kicked 14 more goals for the Swans. That would mean 500 goals for the swans too.Now that Buddy has retired it's a good time to reflect back on what was an amazing career.
Here's a graph of his stats at the Hawks and Swans.
View attachment 1762110
If you split his tenures as two separate careers you get two players who had very good careers.
It'll be interesting to see if he's remembered more as a Hawk or as a Swan.
Do you remember him more as a Hawk or as a Swan?
Because it feels as though Lockett is remembered more as a Saint and Franklin is remembered more as a Hawk.
I did make a thread asking about Lockett but for some reason it's gone.
It's similar to Ablett Snr, do you remember him as a Hawk or a Cat?
It's a line call really.
It's similar to Ablett Snr, do you remember him as a Hawk or a Cat?
It's a line call really.
Love this post.Nobody said Chris Judd was a "failure" at Carlton. The question was whether the Judd trade was a failure. The Blues got themselves a sublime clearance machine who dominated for 4 or 5 seasons and dragged his team up the ladder. But they were unable to make much of an impression in the finals. They never finished in Top 4. They played in 4 Elimination Finals: for 2 losses, 2 wins (both times eliminated 1 week later in the Semi Final.)
Not his fault, of course... He did everything within his superhuman powers... but it made people question if the trade was ultimately a win for Carlton, or a win for West Coast. The jury is still out. Fans of both teams claim it was a win for them.
The thing was, the Blues gave up a lot to get Judd... They traded picks 3 and 20 in the 2007 Draft, plus a 20 year old CHF named Josh Kennedy who was pick 4 in the 2005 Draft. He went on to have a Hall of Fame career with the Eagles, kicking 700+ goals, 3 times All Australian, captained their club and led them to a premiership in 2018.
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Buddy was a massive success for Sydney. No two ways about it. Only a fool would say otherwise. He kicked arse. They might not have won a flag with him, but he was a HUGE drawcard. He packed out the SCG for close to a decade and was the face of AFL footy.
The Swans didn't give up anything to get him. He was a free agent.. Albeit an expensive free agent whose monster wage didn't leave the Swans a lot of wiggle room for re-signing their other stars. His controversial signing also led to the COLA being scrapped by angry AFL executives who had earmarked him to be the poster boy of their fledgling Giants.
Franklin was awesome for Sydney in 2014 and 2016 when he carried them to the Grand Final in both those seasons. The Swans had other good players, but they were midfielders and defenders. Their forwards were nothing special. Check out their goal kickers in those 2 seasons and look how Franklin carried their forward division.
2014 goals
79 Franklin
34 Tippett
30 Goodes (34yo)
25 Parker
24 McGlynn
18 Jack
17 Reid
15 McVeigh, Cunningham
14 Jetta
13 Kennedy
11 Hannebery
2016 goals
81 Franklin
29 Papley (20yo)
28 Heeney (20yo)
25 Parker
25 Rohan
24 McGlynn
20 Kennedy
18 Hewett
17 Tippett
15 Mitchell
13 Hannebery, Jack, X.Richards
10 Towers, Sinclair
Franklin kicked 160 of their 713 goals in these 2 seasons. (22.5%)
That's pretty insane for a Grand Final team in the modern era where the scoring is shared around.
The difference between Buddy at Hawthorn and Lance in Sydney was: at Hawthorn, he was a part of the greatest forward line in history. At Sydney, he was the forward line.
HF.... Gunston.... Franklin......... Rioli
F...... Puopolo.... Roughead..... Breust
Three superstars of the comp (Buddy, Roughie, Cyril), two All-Australian guns who kicked 50+ goals (Breust, Gunston), and Poppy, a livewire tackling machine who played like the Energiser Bunny. He was no slouch around goals either... very dangerous.
They weren't just supremely talented as individuals though... The way they worked together was sublime. They were so good together that when Buddy went to Sydney after the 2013 season, Hawthorn's forward line functioned even BETTER with the inside fifties distributed more evenly. Buddy had a way of always attracting the ball. Put yourselves in the shoes of any Hawks or Swans midfielder... Who wouldn't kick it to Buddy when he led out from goal?
That was always Buddy's strength. He had enormous self belief and a huge engine. He kept presenting. He was THE MAN. He wanted to win the game off his own boot. He never shied away from the responsibility of kicking the big goal. The bigger occasion, the more he wanted the ball, the more he wanted to be the hero. He never eased up. Never went into his shell when it wasn't his day. Didn't matter if he'd kicked 2.6, he would keep putting himself in position to get the next one.
Look at his highlights... All those trademark goals of this.. the famous running goals where he'd take 2,3,4 bounces.... Or those massive 65m-70m bombs he kicked... Or the crazy set shots from the left hand boundary line (again and again and again...) Or the 40m banana/checkside punts.... Or the audacious dribble kicks with his opponents hanging off him... Or when he'd crash through tackles and do a U-turn and dob it from 55m....
Other players in these situations would be looking to give the ball off to a teammate.. But not Buddy.. His only thought was "I must kick the GOAL!" .... and he did... He not only had incredible hunger for goals and supreme confidence, but he also had the supreme ability to back it up.
He had the greatest left boot of anyone in history. His field kicking or shooting for goal. The power and distance he'd get was incredible: scything laser-like 60m passes across the ground & onto a teammate's chest. Or 70m bombs for goal from inside the centre square. Drop punts, not torps.
There has never been anyone who kicked as many goals as Buddy did from outside 50m.
The same as lockett, vest was at his first club, but probably remembered for his work at his secondFranklin at the MCG today for Hawks vs Swans.
Takes me back to this thread.
Is he remembered more as a Hawk or Swan?