Jump to content

Featured Replies

Just secured a ticket on level 2 of the MCC reserve 

Can’t bloody wait

 
  On 14/03/2021 at 19:42, Clint Bizkit said:

Anyone think we will win?

2019 Clint we came up against a young Port Adelaide side and were favourites to win. We were underdone and they ran us off our legs. Sound familiar? No I'm not confident.

 

In 2020 we were 6th in clearance differential. 3rd in 2019 and 4th in 2018. We have been comfortably better than our opponents for the past 3 years.

So we have been consistently good at clearances. The total clearance statistics only reflect that our games have involved fewer stoppages in the past two seasons, not that we have been poor at them.

  On 14/03/2021 at 22:33, Axis of Bob said:

In 2020 we were 6th in clearance differential. 3rd in 2019 and 4th in 2018. We have been comfortably better than our opponents for the past 3 years.

So we have been consistently good at clearances. The total clearance statistics only reflect that our games have involved fewer stoppages in the past two seasons, not that we have been poor at them.

But we have been poorer at them..  

Well coached and drilled opposition sides figured out how to combat our clearance dominance pretty early on in 2018 and have adapted since. Not only that, the better mids in the comp have also learnt to rove to Max, sometimes better than our own players. Take Bont and Macrae from last weekend as the first good example of the 2021 season. It's happened plenty last year and the year before. 

Other teams have adapted, we haven't. Goodwin continues to want to play his rigid and one-dimensional game style which has ultimately seen the decline of our performance year upon year since 2018.

 

 

 

 

Edited by JimmyGadson


  On 14/03/2021 at 22:11, Drunkn167 said:

Just secured a ticket on level 2 of the MCC reserve 

Can’t bloody wait

Got level 3 in front of Grey Smith Bar, very handy if needed! So if we win I’ll need to use it and if we don’t I’ll definitely need to use it?!

I think we’ll win. It won’t be pretty though and it will be close

 
  On 14/03/2021 at 22:33, Axis of Bob said:

In 2020 we were 6th in clearance differential. 3rd in 2019 and 4th in 2018. We have been comfortably better than our opponents for the past 3 years.

So we have been consistently good at clearances. The total clearance statistics only reflect that our games have involved fewer stoppages in the past two seasons, not that we have been poor at them.

The point I was making using teams ranked by averages was the differential in hitouts and clearances. To me those stats say we are nowhere near as efficient as we should be in that area.

Also, in 2020 we were ranked 12th for centre clearance differential. In 2019 we were 3rd.

Also in 2020 we were ranked 3rd for hitout differential.

So whichever way you look at it, there's a disconnect there between hitouts and clearances.

 

  On 14/03/2021 at 22:44, JimmyGadson said:

But we have been poorer at them..  

Well coached and drilled opposition sides figured out how to combat our clearance dominance pretty early on in 2018 and have adapted since. Not only that, the better mids in the comp have also learnt to rove to Max, sometimes better than our own players. Take Bont and Macrae from last weekend as the first good example of the 2021 season. It's happened plenty last year and the year before. 

Other teams have adapted, we haven't. Goodwin continues to want to play his rigid and one-dimensional game style which has ultimately seen the decline of our performance year upon year since 2018.

 

Goodwin made a successful change of defensive system last year. Defending deeper and being more comfortable conceded inside 50’s.

We have a new midfield coach, a clear sign the club are aware of issues.

I would’ve made list changes - out Brayshaw and/or Viney, in flanker, Rivers/Salem on ball. But we never get the inside word on what deals were available or even know who makes those calls.

It’s largely semantics but I don’t think Goodwin isn’t aware of problems, he just can’t fix them. It’s still his responsibility- the list and skills aren’t where they should be. It’s just there’s no easy fixes.

Our best fixes last year were Melksham on ball for more kicking. Melksham was the answer! And pissing Oliver off so much by coaching him to do better, which by reports had him thinking of leaving. 


  On 14/03/2021 at 23:10, Lord Nev said:

The point I was making using teams ranked by averages was the differential in hitouts and clearances. To me those stats say we are nowhere near as efficient as we should be in that area.

Also, in 2020 we were ranked 12th for centre clearance differential. In 2019 we were 3rd.

Also in 2020 we were ranked 3rd for hitout differential.

So whichever way you look at it, there's a disconnect there between hitouts and clearances.

 

And the point I'm making is that there has been very little difference between our strong clearance numbers in 2018 and our strong clearance numbers in 2020, just the number of stoppages that we have been involved in when compared with the rest of the competition. Slipping for 4th overall to 6th overall is barely significant (especially since we were 3rd in between), as it still says we are a top level clearance team. 

Of the top 7 clearance teams (differential) last year, 4 of them had a negative hitout differential. We were one of those three teams (along with West Coast and Gold Coast) that had both a positive clearance and hitout differential. Based on the stats, we are a very effective clearance team and its is a strength of ours. 

People think about hitouts like it's 1975, where a dominant tap ruck could feed a midfield. But 50 years ago (even 20 years ago) there was a lot of space around the stoppages so a tap ruck could create more advantage. Nowadays it's far more about the midfielders whilst the ruck is more dominant for what else he can do (ie, mark, tackle, win contested footy). They need to not be terrible in the ruck, but serviceable seems to be just as effective as excellent. The correlation between hitouts and clearances is very weak across the competition, so I don't know whether you can make an argument us being 3rd for hitouts and 6th for clearances represents an issue. 

We should be marketing this game to the neutral supporter as an easy to enter game.

Might put a few dollars in our coffers if we could get 10k or more of general admission.

  On 14/03/2021 at 23:47, Diamond_Jim said:

We should be marketing this game to the neutral supporter as an easy to enter game.

Might put a few dollars in our coffers if we could get 10k or more of general admission.

If you were a neutral supporter DJ would you go to game of none finalists from the previous year? 
Is there anyone out there that is that desperate to go to a game? I will be surprised if there are more than 25k at this game. It will make a good case for those who were crying out for it to be moved to The dome. 
If you take the emotion out of where games are played we should play most of games at the dome. 

Edited by old dee

  On 14/03/2021 at 21:07, Clintosaurus said:

Yep. Confident about being 3-0 too.

Pleasing to see some dinky dyed in the wool (red and blue) optimism can be still found here.

  On 14/03/2021 at 22:46, Dee Dee said:

Got level 3 in front of Grey Smith Bar, very handy if needed! So if we win I’ll need to use it and if we don’t I’ll definitely need to use it?!

Likewise. Will it be like the cricket where we can drink in our seat? Not sure if i've missed announcement about this. 


  On 14/03/2021 at 23:05, Lord Nev said:

All teams ranked by averages.

You can't make that point with anything based on total clearances (like an average) because it doesn't adjust for the number of stoppages that a team participates in each game. It needs to be a differential in order to adjust for that. In fact, one of the most interesting stats in all of this is .....

.... Melbourne were the best team in the league at preventing opposition clearances. Teams had only 26.9 clearances against us last year, comfortably better than any other team. 

Probably better would be to work out the probability of each team winning a clearance. We were +6% chance of winning a clearance (6th best), with Port being best on +16% and Adelaide worst being -20%. Interestingly Richmond were 16th with a -12% probability.

Thought Jordan was pretty average against the Dogs

I think Chandler will play

 

  On 14/03/2021 at 22:46, Dee Dee said:

Got level 3 in front of Grey Smith Bar, very handy if needed! So if we win I’ll need to use it and if we don’t I’ll definitely need to use it?!

Used to do the same; after quarter time it was starting to become an expensive habit.

  On 14/03/2021 at 23:15, DeeSpencer said:

Goodwin made a successful change of defensive system last year. Defending deeper and being more comfortable conceded inside 50’s.

We have a new midfield coach, a clear sign the club are aware of issues.

I would’ve made list changes - out Brayshaw and/or Viney, in flanker, Rivers/Salem on ball. But we never get the inside word on what deals were available or even know who makes those calls.

It’s largely semantics but I don’t think Goodwin isn’t aware of problems, he just can’t fix them. It’s still his responsibility- the list and skills aren’t where they should be. It’s just there’s no easy fixes.

Our best fixes last year were Melksham on ball for more kicking. Melksham was the answer! And pissing Oliver off so much by coaching him to do better, which by reports had him thinking of leaving. 

He made a tweak to our defensive system, hardly game-style changing.

And the fact that there has been little to no list change and/or positional change supports my claim. 

We still see inside mids rolling onto a wing/half forward. We see the same mix in the middle. 

I saw little to no change in the way we entered inside 50 over the first two practice games. 

It's all very much the same. 

One would think that with a midfield brigade like ours, we would trade aggressively for players that really compliment what Goodwin is trying to achieve forward of centre. 

I just simply cannot believe we didn't chase Zac Williams hard to really add a dynamic element to our starting four. Adam Saad, Tom Phillips, Shaun and Jack Higgins... 

These players should have been replacements for ANB at a forward flank, AVB through the middle, Jones, Brayshaw and Harmes on a wing, Hunt at half back. 

I just can't see where our improvement comes from this year when compared to the improvement from teams around us who have meaningfully added to their lists. 

Max and May are closing in on twighlight years. One would have thought we'd be doing everything in our power to reshuffle the list. 

Edited by JimmyGadson


  On 14/03/2021 at 23:51, old dee said:

If you were a neutral supporter DJ would you go to game of none finalists from the previous year? 
Is there anyone out there that is that desperate to go to a game? I will be surprised if there are more than 25k at this game. It will make a good case for those who were crying out for it to be moved to The dome. 
If you take the emotion out of where games are played we should play most of games at the dome. 

sad but true. I often used my AFL membership to head along to a lesser game. Admittedly it is usually because one of the teams has a star player you want to watch.

I'd be happy to go along and see Brisbane or WCE play the Bulldogs for example. (Hate the woof woof that goes on the scoreboard after a goal... nearly as bad as North's "zoom".)

  On 15/03/2021 at 00:07, Axis of Bob said:

You can't make that point with anything based on total clearances (like an average) because it doesn't adjust for the number of stoppages that a team participates in each game. It needs to be a differential in order to adjust for that. In fact, one of the most interesting stats in all of this is .....

.... Melbourne were the best team in the league at preventing opposition clearances. Teams had only 26.9 clearances against us last year, comfortably better than any other team. 

Preventing? 

Or have they figured out that letting us win first possession isn't the end of the world given our propensity to turn it over when under a bit of heat? 

  On 15/03/2021 at 00:07, Axis of Bob said:

You can't make that point with anything based on total clearances (like an average) because it doesn't adjust for the number of stoppages that a team participates in each game. It needs to be a differential in order to adjust for that. In fact, one of the most interesting stats in all of this is .....

.... Melbourne were the best team in the league at preventing opposition clearances. Teams had only 26.9 clearances against us last year, comfortably better than any other team.

 

I'm not sure you can discount me using averages and then use them yourself.

 

  On 14/03/2021 at 23:47, Axis of Bob said:

And the point I'm making is that there has been very little difference between our strong clearance numbers in 2018 and our strong clearance numbers in 2020, just the number of stoppages that we have been involved in when compared with the rest of the competition. Slipping for 4th overall to 6th overall is barely significant (especially since we were 3rd in between), as it still says we are a top level clearance team. 

Of the top 7 clearance teams (differential) last year, 4 of them had a negative hitout differential. We were one of those three teams (along with West Coast and Gold Coast) that had both a positive clearance and hitout differential. Based on the stats, we are a very effective clearance team and its is a strength of ours. 

People think about hitouts like it's 1975, where a dominant tap ruck could feed a midfield. But 50 years ago (even 20 years ago) there was a lot of space around the stoppages so a tap ruck could create more advantage. Nowadays it's far more about the midfielders whilst the ruck is more dominant for what else he can do (ie, mark, tackle, win contested footy). They need to not be terrible in the ruck, but serviceable seems to be just as effective as excellent. The correlation between hitouts and clearances is very weak across the competition, so I don't know whether you can make an argument us being 3rd for hitouts and 6th for clearances represents an issue. 

 

2018: 1st for centre clearance differential.

2020: 12th for centre clearance differential.

I disagree that's a 'strength' and that there's "very little difference" there. That's a big drop.

I do very much appreciate your in-depth analysis, even though I don't agree it's still really interesting to read.

 

Edited by Lord Nev

 

 

  On 14/03/2021 at 22:44, JimmyGadson said:

But we have been poorer at them..  

Well coached and drilled opposition sides figured out how to combat our clearance dominance pretty early on in 2018 and have adapted since.

  On 15/03/2021 at 00:37, JimmyGadson said:

Preventing? 

Or have they figured out that letting us win first possession isn't the end of the world given our propensity to turn it over when under a bit of heat? 

So your argument is that teams have figured out how to stop our clearances ..... by allowing us to win clearances? I'm sorry, but this is getting pretty silly now. 

  On 15/03/2021 at 00:22, JimmyGadson said:

I just simply cannot believe we didn't chase Zac Williams hard to really add a dynamic element to our starting four. Adam Saad, Tom Phillips, Shaun and Jack Higgins... 

These players should have been replacements for ANB at a forward flank, AVB through the middle, Jones, Brayshaw and Harmes on a wing, Hunt at half back. 

I just can't see where our improvement comes from this year when compared to the improvement from teams around us who have meaningfully added to their lists. 

Max and May are closing in on twighlight years. One would have thought we'd be doing everything in our power to reshuffle the list. 

Agree with all of that. But I have to assume no one wanted McDonald or Brayshaw on 700k a year. And we paid big overs for Tomlinson and even Langdon (yes Langdon cost too much IMO).

I wouldn’t have signed Ben Brown and have instead chucked another 20k at McKernan as depth, then put that money in to a outside runner. Cut Mitch Brown for another cheap as chips runner too. Retired Jones and Jetta to free up cash for a mid tier option.

In terms of improvement the best possible version of our backline has a lot of talent. The midfield can get twice as good if the lesser players support Gawn, Oliver and Tracc - whilst those 3 elite players combine individual brilliance with team play. I don’t know if Brown, Weid, Fritsch and role playing smalls are enough or will even work but for this year at least the biggest test is on Goodwin and Yze sorting the mids out. 


Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.

Featured Content

  • REPORT: Hawthorn

    There was a time during the current Melbourne cycle that goes back to before the premiership when the club was the toughest to beat in the fourth quarter. The Demons were not only hard to beat at any time but it was virtually impossible to get the better them when scores were close at three quarter time. It was only three or four years ago but they were fit, strong and resilient in body and mind. Sadly, those days are over. This has been the case since the club fell off its pedestal about 12 months ago after it beat Geelong and then lost to Carlton. In both instances, Melbourne put together strong, stirring final quarters, one that resulted in victory, the other, in defeat. Since then, the drop off has been dramatic to the point where it can neither pull off victory in close matches, nor can it even go down in defeat  gallantly.

    • 0 replies
    Demonland
  • CASEY: Footscray

    At twenty-four minutes into the third term of the game between the Casey Demons and Footscray VFL at Whitten Oval, the visitors were coasting. They were winning all over the ground, had the ascendancy in the ruck battles and held a 26 point lead on a day perfect for football. What could go wrong? Everything. The Bulldogs moved into overdrive in the last five minutes of the term and booted three straight goals to reduce the margin to a highly retrievable eight points at the last break. Bouyed by that effort, their confidence was on a high level during the interval and they ran all over the despondent Demons and kicked another five goals to lead by a comfortable margin of four goals deep into the final term before Paddy Cross kicked a couple of too late goals for a despondent Casey. A testament to their lack of pressure in the latter stages of the game was the fact that Footscray’s last ten scoring shots were nine goals and one rushed behind. Things might have been different for the Demons who went into the game after last week’s bye with 12 AFL listed players. Blake Howes was held over for the AFL game but two others, Jack Billings and Taj Woewodin (not officially listed as injured) were also missing and they could have been handy at the end. Another mystery of the current VFL system.

    • 0 replies
    Demonland
  • PREGAME: Brisbane

    The Demons head back out on the road in Round 10 when they travel to Queensland to take on the reigning Premiers and the top of the table Lions who look very formidable. Can the Dees cause a massive upset? Who comes in and who goes out?

      • Like
    • 97 replies
    Demonland
  • PODCAST: Hawthorn

    The Demonland Podcast will air LIVE on Monday, 12th May @ 8:00pm. Join Binman, George & I as we dissect the Demons loss to the Hawks. Your questions and comments are a huge part of our podcast so please post anything you want to ask or say below and we'll give you a shout out on the show. If you would like to leave us a voicemail please call 03 9016 3666 and don't worry no body answers so you don't have to talk to a human.

      • Haha
      • Love
      • Like
    • 42 replies
    Demonland
  • POSTGAME: Hawthorn

    Wayward kicking for goal, dump kicks inside 50 and some baffling umpiring all contributed to the Dees not getting out to an an early lead that may have impacted the result. At the end of the day the Demons were just not good enough and let the Hawks run away with their first win against the Demons in 7 years.

      • Thumb Down
      • Like
    • 343 replies
    Demonland
  • VOTES: Hawthorn

    After 3 fantastic week Max Gawn has a massive lead in the Demonland Player of the Year award from Jake Bowey, Christian Petracca, Kade Chandler and Ed Langdon who round out the Top Five. Your votes please. 6, 5, 4, 3, 2 & 1.

      • Like
    • 32 replies
    Demonland