Jump to content
View in the app

A better way to browse. Learn more.

Demonland

A full-screen app on your home screen with push notifications, badges and more.

To install this app on iOS and iPadOS
  1. Tap the Share icon in Safari
  2. Scroll the menu and tap Add to Home Screen.
  3. Tap Add in the top-right corner.
To install this app on Android
  1. Tap the 3-dot menu (⋮) in the top-right corner of the browser.
  2. Tap Add to Home screen or Install app.
  3. Confirm by tapping Install.

Featured Replies

1 hour ago, Swooper1987 said:

Absolutely. Petracca had (and has had all year) a great impact on Saturday night but he was the third best player in the Melbourne side against GC. NicNat at best drew level with O'Brien yet picked up 5 votes for 7 disposals and one goal.  Go figure!  As I said previously, it's all in the eye of the beholder.

Nic Nat dominated O'Brien in the hitouts and the clearance stats in the first half show the result of that and set up the Eagles win. 

Clearances alone aren't worth  much but clean centre clearances in particular are incredibly valuable and that's where Nic Nat remains the dominant tap ruckman in the comp. O'Brien could've had 8 marks and 20 touches and probably still have been beaten by Nic Nat given the value the Eagles receive from his ruck dominance.

I thought Viney played a slightly better game than Petracca with better decision making and ball use but even if he's using the ball well Viney won't hurt you all that much, you can still keep your structure. 

Petracca repeatedly broke down the integrity of the Suns stoppage game or gathered the ball at half forward which then makes a mess of their backline structure. This is overly simplistic but Viney gets it and hopefully hits a target or puts it to a good spot in a contest, the game carries on. Petracca gets it and comes bursting out of a pack or takes a grab across half forward and suddenly there's a lot of open team mates. Even if he misses most of his kicks the opposition are scrambling.

 
On 7/11/2020 at 8:55 PM, Earl Hood said:

But gee they played well and will be a force to be reckoned with in the next few years. 

Gold Coast $uns indeed. With high compensatory and priority picks. The 'Franchise' has loaded up with draft talent from the 2018 and 2019 drafts. With 25% of the available top ten of those drafts going their way,  the ☀️ is shining out of a very dark place.

Edited by Tarax Club
clarity

2 hours ago, Go the Biff said:

Yes, you do have a rampant Omac confirmation bias but I think your observations are spot on. Also liked his repeat efforts

Oscar played well. Lets hope he has turned the corner.

 
6 hours ago, dieter said:

I also loved the fact that whenever Bennell had or went near the ball the 'Class' barometer went through the roof. He is a very, very gifted footballer.

 

yes and it stands out. we haven't recrutied for 'class' but now I think the penny has dropped. the last two kicks of the match but be snippet of whats tocome who knows.. Let hope he even just continues as is, as he is smooth as silk with beautiful skills. As they said on the replay at one stage on the gold coast he was also racking up the numbers averaging 25 possessions and a goal per game. which is elite. not hard to believe considering he gets a fair bit of it in a new team after 4 years of injury.


2 hours ago, DeeSpencer said:

 

Some of that is on the talls. Lever is dropping marks (or getting spoiled or spoiling his own team mates) and May just doesn't take enough marks, he loves to body spoil his opponent under the ball and his marking technique is poor. The best way to take out the smalls is to mark it to begin with.

 

That's a really good point. And you can include omac in that mix as well as a justifiable criticism is that he doesnt take enough marks. 

2 hours ago, DeeSpencer said:

Nic Nat dominated O'Brien in the hitouts and the clearance stats in the first half show the result of that and set up the Eagles win. 

Clearances alone aren't worth  much but clean centre clearances in particular are incredibly valuable and that's where Nic Nat remains the dominant tap ruckman in the comp. O'Brien could've had 8 marks and 20 touches and probably still have been beaten by Nic Nat given the value the Eagles receive from his ruck dominance.

I thought Viney played a slightly better game than Petracca with better decision making and ball use but even if he's using the ball well Viney won't hurt you all that much, you can still keep your structure. 

Petracca repeatedly broke down the integrity of the Suns stoppage game or gathered the ball at half forward which then makes a mess of their backline structure. This is overly simplistic but Viney gets it and hopefully hits a target or puts it to a good spot in a contest, the game carries on. Petracca gets it and comes bursting out of a pack or takes a grab across half forward and suddenly there's a lot of open team mates. Even if he misses most of his kicks the opposition are scrambling.

Had Petracca not had a bad dose of the kicking yips we would have won by a much greater margin. Like I've said, I like the boy, he is an ace.

I love the behind the scenes stuff the Dees post.  Goody telling the boys to enjoy with win but include their families, players at home abc supporters is absolutely brilliant.  A great insight into him I think.  

 
27 minutes ago, Demons11 said:

I love the behind the scenes stuff the Dees post.  Goody telling the boys to enjoy with win but include their families, players at home abc supporters is absolutely brilliant.  A great insight into him I think.  

can't coach though.


6 hours ago, DeeSpencer said:

Nic Nat dominated O'Brien in the hitouts and the clearance stats in the first half show the result of that and set up the Eagles win. 

Clearances alone aren't worth  much but clean centre clearances in particular are incredibly valuable and that's where Nic Nat remains the dominant tap ruckman in the comp. O'Brien could've had 8 marks and 20 touches and probably still have been beaten by Nic Nat given the value the Eagles receive from his ruck dominance.

I thought Viney played a slightly better game than Petracca with better decision making and ball use but even if he's using the ball well Viney won't hurt you all that much, you can still keep your structure. 

Petracca repeatedly broke down the integrity of the Suns stoppage game or gathered the ball at half forward which then makes a mess of their backline structure. This is overly simplistic but Viney gets it and hopefully hits a target or puts it to a good spot in a contest, the game carries on. Petracca gets it and comes bursting out of a pack or takes a grab across half forward and suddenly there's a lot of open team mates. Even if he misses most of his kicks the opposition are scrambling.

He had 19 possies, 9 marks (4 contested) and 7 tackles. That's a very decent game for a ruckman.  12 hitouts but as you say Nic is one of the top 2 tap ruckmen in the game (our bloke is as good as him). It's an interesting observation and obviously the coaches view is the one that counts. Still it must have been one hell of a 7 possession game.  I watched it and other than his goal and his post match handing over of the phone there weren't too many other highlights that I picked up.  It was a good duel and O'Brien can hold his head high.

And agree with everything you say about Petracca.  A credit to his improved professionalism this season.

14 hours ago, dieter said:

Had Petracca not had a bad dose of the kicking yips we would have won by a much greater margin.

That is like saying we would have won by a greater margin if:

  • Lever and May hadn't spoilt each for the mark GCS wouldn't have got the goal out the back (2nd qtr I think).
  • Max hadn't tapped the ball into Rankine's lap in the last he wouldn't have got his third goal.
  • Max didn't turn the ball over with a OOB around their 50m arc King wouldn't have received the kick-in to run into an easy goal.

So Max's mishaps directly cost us two goals.  Not criticising him; he was mighty.  Just saying lots of players make mistakes; some directly cost us goals and some don't.

I could pull various other examples that cost us a 'much greater margin'.  Every week there are moments that cost us a game or the margin.

 

Not yourself, but others on here have questioned Petracca's coaches votes on the basis of his mishaps.  If coaches used that in their assessment then Max would not have got 5/4 as he directly cost us two goals and had a few other clangers. 

Edited by Lucifer's Hero

17 minutes ago, Lucifer's Hero said:

That is like saying we would have won by a greater margin if:

  • Lever and May hadn't spoilt each for the mark GCS wouldn't have got the goal out the back (2nd qtr I think).
  • Max hadn't tapped the ball into Rankine's lap in the last he wouldn't have got his third goal.
  • Max didn't turn the ball over with a OOB around their 50m arc King wouldn't have received the kick-in to run into an easy goal.

So Max's mishaps directly cost us two goals.

I could pull various other examples that cost us a 'much greater margin'.  Every week there are moments that cost us a game or the margin.

 

Not yourself, but others on here have questioned Petracca's coaches votes on the basis of his mishaps.  If coaches used that in their assessment then Max would not have got 5/4 as he directly cost us two goals. 

Agree LH. We could have won by 100 points had we only kicked about 15 more goals. 

You can't make a sliding doors projection based on what-ifs. If the first behind of the game had been a goal, everything that happened after that will be different to what happened in the real game, because the ball will be back in the middle rather than being kicked out. The outcome becomes undefined and unknown. The only valid scenario to ponder is the one that actually happened.

1 hour ago, Lucifer's Hero said:

That is like saying we would have won by a greater margin if:

  • Lever and May hadn't spoilt each for the mark GCS wouldn't have got the goal out the back (2nd qtr I think).
  • Max hadn't tapped the ball into Rankine's lap in the last he wouldn't have got his third goal.
  • Max didn't turn the ball over with a OOB around their 50m arc King wouldn't have received the kick-in to run into an easy goal.

So Max's mishaps directly cost us two goals.  Not criticising him; he was mighty.  Just saying lots of players make mistakes; some directly cost us goals and some don't.

I could pull various other examples that cost us a 'much greater margin'.  Every week there are moments that cost us a game or the margin.

 

Not yourself, but others on here have questioned Petracca's coaches votes on the basis of his mishaps.  If coaches used that in their assessment then Max would not have got 5/4 as he directly cost us two goals and had a few other clangers. 

I may have not made myself clear. I wasn't 'deducting' points for his mistakes, nor was I blaming him for a smaller winning margin. It came from a sense of amazement that someone who is usually so clear and clean with his disposal could do clanger after clanger, repeatedly. That most players fumble, drop marks, kick to an opponent, get out marked, outsmarted at some time is a given. Petracca, for instance, made three blues in about the first five minutes, including the fresh air miskick in the goal square. I didn't watch the game, only the replay, but I recall the comment 'Petracca having a shocker' early in the Game Day Thread. 


I wonder why the club thinks the words written on the whiteboard behind Goodwin's head around 2:15 are so top secret they need to be smeared in the video below.   The pause button reveals all.  If that is our top secret plan, then we are in trouble.

https://www.melbournefc.com.au/video/743075/rd-6-game-film?videoId=743075&modal=true&type=video&publishFrom=1594711800001

2 hours ago, sue said:

I wonder why the club thinks the words written on the whiteboard behind Goodwin's head around 2:15 are so top secret they need to be smeared in the video below.   The pause button reveals all.  If that is our top secret plan, then we are in trouble.

https://www.melbournefc.com.au/video/743075/rd-6-game-film?videoId=743075&modal=true&type=video&publishFrom=1594711800001

I particularly like the coach pre game: 

"we haven't listened to anyone outside our 4 walls this week" "we don't listen to noise"

 

And post match:

'we knew what everyone was saying and we've shut them up for at least a week' 'the heat was really on this week and we responded'

LOL

 

2 minutes ago, jnrmac said:

I particularly like the coach pre game: 

"we haven't listened to anyone outside our 4 walls this week" "we don't listen to noise"

 

And post match:

'we knew what everyone was saying and we've shut them up for at least a week' 'the heat was really on this week and we responded'

LOL

 

There is a large difference between knowing what people are saying and actually listening to it.

On 7/14/2020 at 12:31 PM, Nasher said:

This type of discrepancy would be because the opposing coach will be assessing on different criteria to the coach assessing his own players. The player's coach knows the role the player was supposed to play, how well the player performed it vs prescribed, and how that exact role impacted on the result of the game. The opposition coach doesn't know any of that and will just be determining how much hurt factor the player delivered. Of course, we still don't know which coach is which.

Well said.  IMO I suspect that Goodwin may well have given Jack 4 votes for his game winning inside efforts this week. And rated Christian but just not as much as the often unnoticed Viney never say die approach

22 hours ago, dieter said:

Had Petracca not had a bad dose of the kicking yips we would have won by a much greater margin. Like I've said, I like the boy, he is an ace.

If Ellis didnt kick 2 goals out of his [censored] that he will never kick again we would have won easier and by a greater margin


3 hours ago, Wiseblood said:

There is a large difference between knowing what people are saying and actually listening to it.

It's clear he listened

16 minutes ago, jnrmac said:

It's clear he listened

You can hear what's being said, but it's clear that the message he was sending to the players was that they didn't listen to it - that being, they didn't make changes based on what was being said or allowed it to affect them or their preparation.  

Thus they heard it, but didn't listen and allow it to change anything.  Big difference.

Just watching the final quarter, in the lead up to Rankine's goal where he sharks Gawns tap (great goal, absolutely give him that) all of the commentators choose to completely ignore the fact that he should've been pinged for a stone cold push in the back from his leap taking May completely out of the contest. Now if the player nabs the mark he is given it, but if he doesn't it is a free kick to the other player. EVERY. DAY. OF. THE. WEEK.

The commentators have every reason to get excited about him but their blind bias around him is infuriating to listen to.

 

I know we’re almost onto the Hawks, but I think one of the key factors to this win, was the return of some manic tackling pressure. This has coincided with AVB and also Hannan returning into form. I think the key to our game plan working properly (as we often saw in 2018) is manic pressure on the opposition when they are in possession, but then clean and quick ball movement after effecting the turn over. I think a major problem for us has been a manic pressure, followed by manic, chaotic ball movement, which results in us giving the ball back again (or just lumping it into 50). If we can keep applying the tackling pressure and then get the ball out with clean disposals, we should be heading on the right track.

5 hours ago, Pates said:

Just watching the final quarter, in the lead up to Rankine's goal where he sharks Gawns tap (great goal, absolutely give him that) all of the commentators choose to completely ignore the fact that he should've been pinged for a stone cold push in the back from his leap taking May completely out of the contest. Now if the player nabs the mark he is given it, but if he doesn't it is a free kick to the other player. EVERY. DAY. OF. THE. WEEK.

The commentators have every reason to get excited about him but their blind bias around him is infuriating to listen to.

this isn't true. it would be only true if he didn't make contact with the ball. which in this case he did 


Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

Featured Content

  • AFLW PREVIEW: Richmond

    Round four kicks off early Saturday afternoon at Casey Fields, as the mighty Narrm host the winless Richmond Tigers in the second week of Indigenous Round celebrations. With ideal footy conditions forecast—20 degrees, overcast skies, and a gentle breeze — expect a fast-paced contest. Narrm enters with momentum and a dangerous forward line, while Richmond is still searching for its first win. With key injuries on both sides and pride on the line, this clash promises plenty.

      • Thanks
      • Like
    • 2 replies
  • AFLW REPORT: Collingwood

    Expectations of a comfortable win for Narrm at Victoria Park quickly evaporated as the match turned into a tense nail-biter. After a confident start by the Demons, the Pies piled on pressure and forced red and blue supporters to hold their collective breath until after the final siren. In a frenetic, physical contest, it was Captain Kate’s clutch last quarter goal and a missed shot from Collingwood’s Grace Campbell after the siren which sealed a thrilling 4-point win. Finally, Narrm supporters could breathe easy.

      • Thanks
      • Like
    • 2 replies
  • CASEY: Williamstown

    The Casey Demons issued a strong statement to the remaining teams in the VFL race with a thumping 76-point victory in their Elimination Final against Williamstown. This was the sixth consecutive win for the Demons, who stormed into the finals from a long way back with scalps including two of the teams still in flag contention. Senior Coach Taylor Whitford would have been delighted with the manner in which his team opened its finals campaign with high impact after securing the lead early in the game when Jai Culley delivered a precise pass to a lead from Noah Yze, who scored his first of seven straight goals for the day. Yze kicked his second on the quarter time siren, by which time the Demons were already in control. The youngster repeated the dose in the second term as the Seagulls were reduced to mere

      • Thanks
    • 0 replies
  • AFLW PREVIEW: Collingwood

    Narrm time isn’t a standard concept—it’s the time within the traditional lands of Narrm, the Woiwurrung name for Melbourne. Indigenous Round runs for rounds 3 and 4 and is a powerful platform to recognise the contributions of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in sport, community, and Australian culture. This week, suburban footy returns to the infamous Victoria Park as the mighty Narrm take on the Collingwood Magpies at 1:05pm Narrm time, Sunday 31 August. Come along if you can.

      • Thumb Down
      • Thanks
      • Like
    • 9 replies
  • AFLW REPORT: St. Kilda

    The Dees demolished the Saints in a comprehensive 74-pointshellacking.  We filled our boots with percentage — now a whopping 520.7% — and sit atop the AFLW ladder. Melbourne’s game plan is on fire, and the competition is officially on notice.

      • Clap
      • Thanks
      • Like
    • 4 replies
  • REPORT: Collingwood

    It was yet another disappointing outcome in a disappointing year, with Melbourne missing the finals for the second consecutive season. Indeed, it wasn’t even close, as the Demons' tally of seven wins was less than half the number required to rank among the top eight teams in the competition. When the dust of the game settled and supporters reflected on Melbourne's  six-point defeat at the hands of close game specialists Collingwood, Max Gawn's words about his team’s unfulfilled potential rang true … well, almost. 

      • Thanks
    • 1 reply

Configure browser push notifications

Chrome (Android)
  1. Tap the lock icon next to the address bar.
  2. Tap Permissions → Notifications.
  3. Adjust your preference.
Chrome (Desktop)
  1. Click the padlock icon in the address bar.
  2. Select Site settings.
  3. Find Notifications and adjust your preference.