Toast Welcome to the club, Rory Lobb

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Really needs to start converting his set shots. He is a low possession player so needs to maximise his chances. Can give him a pass due to nerves v Freo, but unfortunately it wasn’t a one off.
Lobb's conversion was good on the weekend - 2 goals from outside 50m. But sometimes he doesn't attack the ball in the air and gets spoilt, annoying because he's nearly always the tallest player on the field. That comes across as lazy.
 
I have a gut feeling that he is going to play a big part in our Finals run. Or maybe it's just the pizza I had.

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RORY Lobb thought he was getting replaced. Instead, he was getting remade.

When the whiteboard came out midway through last Wednesday's main training to spell out the teams for that day's match simulation session, there was Lobb's name camped at full-forward in the reserves side. It was a deflating feeling.
The game before, he'd played arguably his best match in Bulldogs colours. He'd won 19 disposals, kicked three goals and taken six marks playing as a ruck-forward against his former side Fremantle. But that was a fortnight ago. Aaron Naughton was back from a knee injury. Sam Darcy was back from suspension. Had the bye in between stunted his momentum? Lobb was sure he was returning to the VFL.

But towards the end of training, when the onlooking media had been asked to pack up their cameras and leave, Dogs coach Luke Beveridge walked over to Lobb and his opponent James O'Donnell with a message: "Swap bibs." Suddenly, the roles had been flipped and he was acting as a key defender against the equally as versatile O'Donnell.
Lobb's first instinct might have been to question the call. After all, he couldn't quite remember the last time he'd been asked to play as a defender throughout his 11-year career at AFL level – even at training. But if this was the way Lobb would keep his spot in the side, then he set about grasping it.

"When you see your name on the twos whiteboard, it's a bit flattening," Lobb told AFL.com.au from the Whitten Oval this week.
"Usually, it does mean you're getting dropped and I hadn't spoken to 'Bevo' for those two weeks (over the bye) coming into training. But he spoke to me straight after and said he wanted to try me as a back. He said I'd played too well the previous game to be dropped, so I was very grateful."

What resulted was somewhat of a revelation. Lobb had 16 disposals, eight marks, five intercept marks and 12 intercept possessions in a win over North Melbourne. It culminated in the 206cm tall being the Dogs' third highest-rated player on the ground, behind only Marcus Bontempelli and Ed Richards.


Having spent the 24 hours before the match cramming in as much backline study as he could with teammate Liam Jones – himself a natural forward, converted mid-career into being a defender – Lobb can now see a life in the backline as his future. He feels at home in defence, is again expected to line up there against Port Adelaide on Saturday, and is even learning to dish it back to his former friends in attack.

"I have full confidence," Lobb said of being a defender.

"Obviously, 'Jonesy' has got a lot more speed than I do, but I've got the length. I've got a little bit of the length to help me out with that. He really gets into my head around playing very assertively.
"I had a bit of a crash course on how to play back, but 'Jonesy' essentially told me to play like I was a forward and I'd know when to defend. That was also what 'Bevo' said to me. I basically just tried to read it like I was playing forward. Obviously, I feel really good in the contest and being a back, you're initiating the contest a little bit more and the bodywork. As much as I can pick 'Jonesy's' brain on the way he goes about it, I've just tried to emulate as much as I can from what he does.

"But Jamarra (Ugle-Hagan) is already giving it to me, saying I'm a failed forward gone back. I used to say the exact same stuff to the backs, so now I'm trying to give it back to the forwards as much as I can."


Lobb's campaign to that point had been a frustrating one. Having started the season out of the senior side, he'd featured just three times in 13 weeks before earning a reprieve when Naughton hurt his knee against Sydney and Darcy was suspended for a late bump against Collingwood the following week.

Despite some solid VFL form – he'd kicked 17 goals from seven matches with Footscray this year – he knew that opportunities were proving hard to come by. At 31 years of age, and with two seasons remaining on his contract, it wasn't a position he wanted to find himself in.

"It was obviously challenging," Lobb said.
"Everyone wants to be playing AFL, but there's only 23 that can go out there every week. When I went back to the VFL, I just tried to get around those boys and tried to keep a positive mindset and go out there and play footy as best as I could.

"Obviously, I wanted to be playing AFL. But, at the time, it wasn't best for the team. Hopefully I can find my spot as a back for now and if I have to go forward, I have to go forward. It'll depend on what we need.

"There are boys that miss out every week. If I was to go down to the VFL and sook it up, it's not a good example. Especially being such a senior player. I just tried to keep that positive mindset. We all want to be playing AFL, but the reality is we can't every week. Obviously, now I've got that spot as a back I'll be doing everything I can to stay in the team."

Speculation swirled around Lobb's future during his extended stints in the VFL, with the prospect of a move to a fourth club – having already represented Greater Western Sydney and the Dockers – suddenly becoming a real possibility, despite a contract at the Whitten Oval that lasts through until 2026.
But it might become a moot topic, should Lobb stay in the Bulldogs' plans during the latter stages of the season. Whether he cements his place in Beveridge's setup as a defender, forward, ruck – or even as a wing – is irrelevant in his mind, as long as he's playing regularly at AFL level.

"Yeah, of course (I see my future at the Bulldogs)," Lobb said.

"I'm just happy and I want to play AFL. If it's down back, up forward, in the ruck ... it honestly doesn't worry me. People have always said that I hate the ruck, but I've never said that. Ever. Not once in my career. I may have mentioned that in the early days it took me away from the long down the line stuff that I was good at. But I've always been happy. If I have to play ruck, I'll do it as hard as I can.
"It's the same forward, it's the same back. If I find my spot as a back, I'm happy to play there for the rest of my career. I honestly don't mind.

"Funnily enough, the wing is probably my favourite position because I can just run up and down and I'm not getting smacked by anyone. You can just run. You're that link between the forwards and the backs. I really like that position."
Lobb was brought to the Western Bulldogs at the end of the 2022 season in a mentoring role for the club's talented crop of key forwards. At the time, Naughton was about to turn 23 years of age, Ugle-Hagan was only 20, while Darcy was just 19.

But their growth has been rapid. Naughton has since signed through until 2032, Ugle-Hagan is widely recognised among the most gifted youngsters in the competition, while Darcy was one of the Telstra AFL Rising Star favourites before suspension ruined his chances. Their improvement left Lobb feeling somewhat in the wilderness when he was dropped to the VFL to start the year.

"I saw the list and I saw the midfield," Lobb said of his move from Fremantle.
"Those boys are obviously really young, but they've developed really quickly. It was more about coming here and helping them develop as forwards, but then they've just developed so quickly that now there's too many of us.

"They've been unbelievable. Jamarra had a career-best year last year and I've played alongside him a lot and 'Naughty' is the beast that he is. He's got a good head on him for the age that he is. He's obviously a leader at the footy club.

"Then I see a lot of myself in Sam. He just flies for his marks and he's that long down the line player, which is what I was at the start of my career and then I turned myself into a bit of a lead-up player. He's just got so much working for him and I'm really looking forward to seeing how he can develop."
It's made for another season in the headlines for Lobb, with VFL stints, potential trade requests and even TikToks landing the athletic big man in the news. But he's hoping his move into the backline can ensure a few positive stories throughout the second half of the club's campaign.

"I guess I've been in a lot of headlines over my career," Lobb said.

"Whether it's from me or just things that come up, I find that I don't really look at the media too much. The stuff that I actually do see is when family and friends ask me if I'm OK. I actually don't read most of the stuff that comes through, which is the balance you want.

"You don't want to be on social media reading that stuff because you're never as bad as they reckon and you're never as good as they reckon, that's the way I've gone about it. The highs that I have, I've had a couple of good weeks, but I'm still the same person that I want to be at the footy club. The lows, I'm still trying to keep that same attitude throughout.
"I've found a way to just go about my weeks the way I want to go about my weeks. Whatever happens on the weekend, I try and keep it separate. I think that's helped me over my whole journey. It's not reading into too much and just trying to stay as balanced as I can throughout the weeks."

That mindset change – and his ability to succeed as a key defender – could prove crucial in Lobb achieving his ultimate goal throughout the second half of the season: playing consistently at senior level.

"I want to be playing AFL," Lobb said.

"If I go down to the twos, I try to play the footy I want to play to get back in the team. Obviously, I want to string games together. It's been a bit of an in and out year, but hopefully I've found my spot down back and I can play the rest of the year in the AFL."
 
Responded really well. McKay was on in the first quarter and a half, looked like he was going to take over. Wasn't convinced Lobb had any answers for him but he kept competing and took some really important intercepts in the last.

Think he is probably more suited playing on the resting ruck/least important forward like the North game where he was free to roam and intercept but not a bad effort yesterday when he was forced to play on a big name
 
It really is very interesting, nobody could have expected him to transition to defence like he did. Even if he decides that he'd rather move on and be a forward, he's really cracking in and showing that he's not a sook about not being in his preferred position.
 
This might be a Bevo masterstroke. Remember the outcry when he tried it last year?

He’s now firmly out CHB alongside Jones for the rest of the season. JOD or Buku can still play alongside those two.
 
It really is very interesting, nobody could have expected him to transition to defence like he did. Even if he decides that he'd rather move on and be a forward, he's really cracking in and showing that he's not a sook about not being in his preferred position.

If he does ask for a trade at least it’s driving his price up even further. Should get something really decent back for a guy who can play all three lines and is contracted.


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This might be a Bevo masterstroke. Remember the outcry when he tried it last year?

He’s now firmly out CHB alongside Jones for the rest of the season. JOD or Buku can still play alongside those two.
What is remarkable is that Lobb said Jones gave him a crash course in defensive craft/our systems prior to being swung back.

With more training and a preseason to better understand the nuances, he could have plenty of growth left in his capacity as a kpd.
 
He really impressed me on Saturday. There was a passage of play in the first quarter when he was out marked by his opponent I think, and then he ran down field to one of the very next contests and spoiled the ball over the line to stop their forward momentum. Really enjoyed that second effort from him and he seemed to just pop up everywhere when we needed him.

He’s responded really well to that poor game he had a few weeks ago, he clearly knew he could do better than what he showed that day and he’s come out and done incredibly well. Thats the type of quality you’re looking for in a player.
 
He’s been legit as our main key defender the last two weeks. If he can hold it down until Jones gets back we’ll have a solid pairing back there if we make finals (yeah, big if) and for next year.

If this form holds I’m not sure how we can let him go, he’d be worth more to us as a KPD than we could get for him.
 
Yeah at worst Rory is solid depth down back, ruck and forward and at a reasonable $ amount if his contract was front loaded. Not a guy I want to trade for peanuts, especially with him showing a good attitude being happy to play down back or wherever Bevo has asked.

Just wants to play footy which is fair enough to be honest.
 
Seems to have found his place in the backline, he plays like the past month every week he’s best 22 and will be staying at the club
I would say now we must keep him as a KPD. If jones goes down we will need to rely on Buss which may be a bit much at this time. I’d like Buss to come in and get exposed when Jones or Lobb is around to play that second KPD. He needs at least a season playing alongside Jones/Lobb. JOD can play third tall. Khamis would be fighting JOD for a spot. I assume Keath hangs them up at end of season.
 
Floating into a pack last minute and marking the ball because he is bigger than almost anyone on the ground is so valuable. Jones relies on reading the play to run off and take a risk to intercept, Lobby can just float in and go yoink!
I wonder if Champion Data keeps stats on yoinks? :think:
 

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Toast Welcome to the club, Rory Lobb

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