- Mar 12, 2003
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Our game plan sucks BIG TIME.
It genuinely inhibits players natural football instincts.
It doesn’t allow for taking the game on.
It doesn’t allow for any run and carry, unless we’re completely out in open space.
And we commit way to many players goal side in our forward 50. Which is why teams transition out of our D50 so easily.
This is really interesting, and I agree with it in part.
Very early on it, being at the ground it became evident we were just going to go long inside 50 to Fort or whoever else was there. Yes, it's predictable, yes the opposition know exactly what we're gonna do... But you still have to be able to stop it.
Darcy Fort took 1 mark for the night, which came in the third quarter, but got first (and only hands basically) to about 5 or 6 in the first half. If he marks even half of those, Sydney maybe are forced to take Blakey off him, and suddenly Fort is not nearly as exposed defensively by Blakey's run (not that he was terrible in that regard - better than Gunston anyway).
Anyway I thought we were just starting to get on top and figure out where and how to move to accommodate Fort rather than Gunston in our forward line... Then the last quarter starts, and Rayner goes to the goal square!
Now, don't get me wrong... I've been a big advocate for Rayner playing that tall forward role, but if you're gonna play it, then actually PLAY IT! He spent the whole last quarter getting sucked right up the ground, such that in the last quarter our attacking forays consisted of either: Charlie (and only Charlie) running back with the flight of a ball opposed to a bloke who had beaten him pretty comprehensively all night. OR we got repeat entries but our forward line was so crowded that we were forced to take pot shots from long range under pressure, all of which missed.
So having seen it all in action, I think Fort is absolutely worth persisting with as our tall focal point, at least for the next couple of weeks. And I wouldn't be subbing him out either. I felt like he was becoming more threatening the longer the game went (the big men don't get any shorter). I could be swayed if we're playing a game where we simply can't get out of our back half, and clearly need more run. Then Rayner needs to actually play the role, and not end up in the midfield. Hopefully it's something he is still working on learning.
However I think the way we use our smalls inside 50 needs a fair bit of work, which I guess you are alluding to with your last comment. Fully ready for the stats to prove me fully wrong on this, but I'd be betting that almost all our goals came from repeat 50 entries. Whenever the first one came in we'd often have a pretty open forward line, but usually the end result was a forward 50 stoppage at best. Cue congestion.
Possibly we need to be a little bit courageous, and not blindly follow our opponent inside 50. For a start, I think if we do that against St Kilda it will end in disaster, because they will beat us back the other way. By courage, I mean, be willing to be outnumbered inside forward 50, and trust the pressure from the blokes we DO have in there, to force either turnovers or hacked misdirected kicks to our spare players.
I guess this already happens to an extent, but what if we take the nuclear option, and see what happens if we only commit 5 or 6 blokes to an inside 50 stoppage. Everyone else, on or outside 50, or guarding the corridor. Maybe St Kilda has 12 inside 50 at the same stoppage. Why not see how we go? Can we put enough pressure to stop them chaining out by hand? Surely it won't be any less successful than the congestion we had on Friday night.
In general play I'd also like to see us more clearly define the role our smalls play. I think at times it's all a bit generic. What if we said to Charlie and Linc, "Forty is your man. Wherever he is, your job is to get front and centre to his marking contests." We might say the same thing to Cam and one winger for Joe. Zac and the other winger for Eric. Obviously interchanges and other in-game positional swaps come into this, but really specialise the roles, because I feel like at times some of our guys are a bit unsure of what to do and where to be. It's a bloody hard sport to play at times... Let's make things a bit easier and give these guys one less thing to worry about.
Then, once play has passed your tall player, don't blindly rush forward... Form part of that defensive wall/zone to inhibit any opposition rebound. I do agree with you in that we allowed too much transition from one end of the ground to the other, and it was as much Sydney's poor decision making and skill level going inside 50 as our great defence that prevented them from taking full advantage.
Only other thing I'd say with regards to your post is that I noticed probably as much if not more run from behind and handball receives after marks on Friday night, than in basically all our other games combined this year. To me it was a clear shift and I really liked it. The more we can bring McKenna, Wilmot, Coleman, even Zorko and McCluggage, into this phase of play, the more dangerous we will be. It will give us the opportunity to bypass our tall forwards going forward, opening up other avenues to goal.