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

Posted

As the Bulldogs showed last week, the Dees are vulnerable to pace and quick ball movement.  The run of Johannisen, Smith, Hunter and evening Crozier out of defence.  There was no plan to stop it or defend with an extra.  Or indeed a tag on the ball magnets like Bont and Macrae.

It was actually surprising to see guys like Harmes and Lockhart dropped this week as we go in against the Saints.  We bring in oscar and JWagner to the defence.  
 

The Saints have usually beaten us up by having midfield pace and run to create open forward line chances and last year was no difference. 
They have a lot of small forwards and midfield pace. Hill, Zac Jones, Long, Butler, Billings, Hind , Sinclair, Kent, Phillips. Our midfield run is Langdon and that’s it.  Our outside mids are Vandenburg and Jones and Brayshaw.  
 

We need outside mids desperately and another fast forward to go alongside Kozzzzzy.  Melksham and Bennell and Hannan and Fritsch and even Vandenburg are ok for two spots across half forward but not quick and don’t push up and back. 
 

Speed.  Our Achilles heal. 

 

Whilst speed is helpful against us, it's stoppage set ups and pressure around the ball that really counts. We get done on the spread, which is a work rate thing more than pace. We also fail to pressure outside runners adequately around contested situations. 

IMO the speed is handy, but it's overplayed in the case of discussing our game. Our biggest hurdle is consistency. We're horribly inconsistent. If we bring the required work rate today we'll win, if we don't, we'll lose. As simple as that. 

5 minutes ago, A F said:

Whilst speed is helpful against us, it's stoppage set ups and pressure around the ball that really counts. We get done on the spread, which is a work rate thing more than pace. We also fail to pressure outside runners adequately around contested situations. 

IMO the speed is handy, but it's overplayed in the case of discussing our game. Our biggest hurdle is consistency. We're horribly inconsistent. If we bring the required work rate today we'll win, if we don't, we'll lose. As simple as that. 

I agree - the speed usually happens with the 3rd or 4th chain of a movement. If we stifle and pressure the ball in our forward line, it reduces the chance of the quicker players getting their hands on it. Our game plan relies on intense forward pressure - when it’s on, we are very good but when it’s not, we are done.

 
7 hours ago, spirit of norm smith said:

As the Bulldogs showed last week, the Dees are vulnerable to pace and quick ball movement.  The run of Johannisen, Smith, Hunter and evening Crozier out of defence.  There was no plan to stop it or defend with an extra.  Or indeed a tag on the ball magnets like Bont and Macrae.

It was actually surprising to see guys like Harmes and Lockhart dropped this week as we go in against the Saints.  We bring in oscar and JWagner to the defence.  
 

The Saints have usually beaten us up by having midfield pace and run to create open forward line chances and last year was no difference. 
They have a lot of small forwards and midfield pace. Hill, Zac Jones, Long, Butler, Billings, Hind , Sinclair, Kent, Phillips. Our midfield run is Langdon and that’s it.  Our outside mids are Vandenburg and Jones and Brayshaw.  
 

We need outside mids desperately and another fast forward to go alongside Kozzzzzy.  Melksham and Bennell and Hannan and Fritsch and even Vandenburg are ok for two spots across half forward but not quick and don’t push up and back. 
 

Speed.  Our Achilles heal. 

Please refer to my need for outside midfielders thread. I have been saying this since early 2018, not sure why this is all being said now when it has been a glaring issue for years

Edited by Elegt
error

11 minutes ago, 3183 Dee said:

I agree - the speed usually happens with the 3rd or 4th chain of a movement. If we stifle and pressure the ball in our forward line, it reduces the chance of the quicker players getting their hands on it. Our game plan relies on intense forward pressure - when it’s on, we are very good but when it’s not, we are done.

I'd go one step further and say it relies on pressure across the ground. If our mids are off, it doesn't matter how much our forwards are bringing and the opposite is probably true as well.


36 minutes ago, A F said:

I'd go one step further and say it relies on pressure across the ground. If our mids are off, it doesn't matter how much our forwards are bringing and the opposite is probably true as well.

Yes - I probably should have said pressure in our forward half.

We have one wing covered with Ed.

Still waiting with crickets nip nipping on the other.

Was hoping it might end up being Bennell in 2021 but who knows.  Unlikely but hopeful.

Rivers will be critical on one HBF and we might get another year or so from Hibb on the other.  That's reasonable speed off HB.

We need a class running winger on the opposite Ed wing who can impact forward and hit the scoreboard from 50ish a la Burgoyne.  Ok so that sort of quality / class doesn't grow on trees.  Find someone who goes close pls.

Need a big KF to clunk marks and kick the odd goal at CHF.  Weid the 2nd go to looks ok from here.  That big KF may well be LJ next season or two.  Fingers crossed.

Two of Kozzy, Bedford and / or Spargo need to start hitting the scoreboard regular or we go find the other two.  Very confident Kozzy will get there given a season or two.

We still have too many contested inside ball winners in Viney, Clarry & Sparrow (ok so he is now injured but when he's in) or ex/part time ones in Jones & AVB.

We have three potential break away inside / outside mids in Clarry, Gus & Tracc and there is another under those that can also chip in in Harmes but he's not in Goody's black book.  All three of those should be rotating through the middle and part time up forward.  Harmes also but just less time unless needed to play a tagging role where he replaces Viney.  Viney plays forward for Spargo.

We are badly overweight contested mid types when all three or even two of Jones, Sparrow & AVB are playing together. The first two are handy and AVB is a great competitor but they aren't what we need.  Neither is sparrow imv.

Replace those three with a class winger and two speedy  inside / outside mids who can run both ways, push forward and kick goals.  Add Viney to that significant time forward mix or trade for the two classy outsiders, both of whom should be capable of also playing on the wing a little.

Gus, Tracc, Clarry (the latter two pushing forward at times) & Big M as the starting four.

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

  • Welcome to Demonland: Steven King

    The Melbourne Football Club has selected a new coach for the 2026 season appointing Geelong Football Club assistant coach Steven King to the head role.

      • Haha
      • Thanks
      • Like
    • 385 replies
  • AFLW PREVIEW: Port Adelaide

    The undefeated Demons venture across the continent to the spiritual home of the Port Adelaide Football Club on Saturday afternoon for the inaugural match for premiership points between these long-historied clubs. Alberton Oval will however, be a ground familiar to our players following a practice match there last year. We lost both the game and Liv Purcell, who missed 7 home and away matches after suffering facial fractures in the dying moments of the game.

    • 0 replies
  • AFLW REPORT: Richmond

    A glorious sunny afternoon with a typically strong Casey Fields breeze favouring the city end greeted this round four clash of the undefeated Narrm against the winless Tigers. Pre-match, the teams entered the ground through the Deearmy’s inclusive banner—"Narrm Football Weaving Communities Together and then Warumungu/Yawuru woman and Fox Boundary Rider, Megan Waters, gave the official acknowledgement of country. Any concerns that Collingwood’s strategy of last week to discombobulate the Dees would be replicated by Ryan Ferguson and his Tigers evaporated in the second quarter when Richmond failed to use the wind advantage and Narrm scored three unanswered goals. 

    • 4 replies
  • CASEY: Frankston

    The late-season run of Casey wins was broken in their first semifinal against Frankston in a heartbreaking end at Kinetic Stadium on Saturday night that in many respects reflected their entire season. When they were bad, they committed all of the football transgressions, including poor disposal, indiscipline, an inability to exert pressure, and some terrible decision-making, as exemplified by the period in the game when they conceded nine unanswered goals from early in the second quarter until halfway through the third term. You rarely win when you do this.

    • 0 replies
  • 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.

    • 3 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.

    • 2 replies

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.