- May 23, 2016
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I had several thoughts after the Lions ran down the Giants on Saturday night. The first thing that jumped out at me was, as many others have observed and dissected, the Giants have struggled to arrest opposition momentum this season. When the oppo get on a run, they leak runs of goals. Sometimes it happens early, like the first quarter against the Lions at the GABBA, and sometimes late, like on Saturday. I guess in this case it says about how the Lions can score quickly, but I think Kingsley and the Giants aren't the best at arresting that momentum when things get chaotic, they're not on their terms etc. But they're far from alone, and imo that was the main chink in their armour. It's interesting to note that overall, however, the Giants are the only team to have no really been thrashed all year, their biggest loss if I recall being 30-40 points. Likewise they're not a team that tends to thrash teams much either. With all these rule changes the AFL is about momentum - which makes it interesting, but it means coaching, tactics, strategies etc all have to adapt and evolve accordingly. I think the Giants have most of the ingredients to excel at the game style, but this is something they need to and will doubltess address.
Which also brings me to another thought: there's a lot of talk about peaking at the wrong time during the season, that indeed it's better for teams to have down periods. If we assume there's something to this, I think it also applies to games. When the Pies kept coming back last year in the last quarter, I always felt it was partly on purpose. It was a strategy to take the foot off the pedal/ease off a little bit during periods and save up your energy for a final burst. I wonder if Sydney have also been trying this approach, despite lamenting their poor starts. Like sure they've had poor starts, but they've come back a lot like Collingwood. On the flipside they had quite a few close losses. Anyway, do you think this is an often ignored/underappreciated aspect of the game? I think managing momentum, and knowing when to push and when to hold back is increasingly important in today's game. Of course, if you can go full pelt for the entire game great (unless you want to save some energy for the week after), but my observation of footy as it stands in 2024 is it's more of a factor than ever.
Which also brings me to another thought: there's a lot of talk about peaking at the wrong time during the season, that indeed it's better for teams to have down periods. If we assume there's something to this, I think it also applies to games. When the Pies kept coming back last year in the last quarter, I always felt it was partly on purpose. It was a strategy to take the foot off the pedal/ease off a little bit during periods and save up your energy for a final burst. I wonder if Sydney have also been trying this approach, despite lamenting their poor starts. Like sure they've had poor starts, but they've come back a lot like Collingwood. On the flipside they had quite a few close losses. Anyway, do you think this is an often ignored/underappreciated aspect of the game? I think managing momentum, and knowing when to push and when to hold back is increasingly important in today's game. Of course, if you can go full pelt for the entire game great (unless you want to save some energy for the week after), but my observation of footy as it stands in 2024 is it's more of a factor than ever.