Jump to content

CASEY: Rd 21 vs Carlton VFL


KC from Casey

Recommended Posts

11 hours ago, goodwindees said:

Tomlinson MUST come in as either a tall defender to play on one of their tall forwards, or as a defensive forward on James Sicily.  

The poor form of Casey against Carlton was a revelation, to some extent, and not one from which a great deal of reliance can be extracted for the AFL team. For the AFL team the losses of Petty, Fritta and stability - including further complications in our backline - heralds impending 'game plan' handicaps against teams that have 'worked us out' so change, however subtle, is required once again. 

Tomlinson could be useful to this purpose as a cog in the gear chain.

A couple of years ago, he was played on the wing opposite to Langers, using pace, finding space, attacking aerially, feeding the ball forward to midfield advances when opportunities (limited) presented or into the half-forwards and bringing the ball to the ground.

The kick-outs from full back were one-sided all of the time, by-passing Tomlinson, and the true midfield where opposition teams luxuriated in the predictability of such 'set' intents were consistently under the coverage pump. These days, we make better use of the central corridor. Hopefully, that has increased the role of (Tomlinson's) the outer wing. Bearing in mind that Tomlinson's fitness is excellent, his height and mobility are valuable and his 'space finding' is most probably still very good, we could have an avenue of the double-edged sword in forward progress of the ball to our advantage - at the same time - still using Langers in his roles on the opposite side of the ground, far, wide and longitudinal. 

Our midfield, Clarrie, Tracca on occasion, Sparrow, a defensive forward-moving Rivers, and our elite smalls including Chandler moving forward and across into the forward line (our best current shot at goal), will always take some beating.

The real benefit in my mind is that this may be a time to also release Lever fully into his intercept role - nearly always successful - by adding the 'available' Grundy to the backline mix to work in partnership under instruction from/with May, Hibbo and McVie/Salem, thus adding the needed height factor to the backline and in turn, providing Lever the release to play his best contribution to the annihilation of opposition forward pushes.

Lever's intercepts are one of our greatest assets yet at the moment, he has no reliable passing targets - just a mix of opportunities and good luck. Tomlinson may well play a part in this process from the wing as a key, on-his-own target, additionally releasing Langers on the opposite wing to penetrate further forward more often, more dangerously and negated far less often.  

These are just thoughts, containing process gaps and obvious hurdles, but these may well assist to overcome some ball passage barriers that we are currently experiencing. It might also have some valuable 'mobile-releasing' functions for Gus, Spargo, ANB, JJ, Chandler and the unbeatable Kozzie.

 

Edited by Deemania since 56
  • Like 2
  • Thinking 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

16 hours ago, Redleg said:

Exactly.

Our whole club is riddled with poor disposal.

17-5 inside F50 our way in last quarter and we kick one goal. 5-6 absolute sitters missed.

Missed passes the whole game and relentless bombing.

 

I agree Redleg.  So many wasted chances on the weekend from MFC and at Casey.  Skills are disappointing.  Forward 50 entries desperately need more work.  Goalkicking needs serious improvement.  Scoring is s as crucial part of the game and we are lacking right now.  

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

41 minutes ago, Deemania since 56 said:

The poor form of Casey against Carlton was a revelation, to some extent, and not one from which a great deal of reliance can be extracted for the AFL team. For the AFL team the losses of Petty, Fritta and stability - including further complications in our backline - heralds impending 'game plan' handicaps against teams that have 'worked us out' so change, however subtle, is required once again. 

Tomlinson could be useful to this purpose as a cog in the gear chain.

A couple of years ago, he was played on the wing opposite to Langers, using pace, finding space, attacking aerially, feeding the ball forward to midfield advances when opportunities (limited) presented or into the half-forwards and bringing the ball to the ground.

The kick-outs from full back were one-sided all of the time, by-passing Tomlinson, and the true midfield where opposition teams luxuriated in the predictability of such 'set' intents were consistently under the coverage pump. These days, we make better use of the central corridor. Hopefully, that has increased the role of (Tomlinson's) the outer wing. Bearing in mind that Tomlinson's fitness is excellent, his height and mobility are valuable and his 'space finding' is most probably still very good, we could have an avenue of the double-edged sword in forward progress of the ball to our advantage - at the same time - still using Langers in his roles on the opposite side of the ground, far, wide and longitudinal. 

Our midfield, Clarrie, Tracca on occasion, Sparrow, a defensive forward-moving Rivers, and our elite smalls including Chandler moving forward and across into the forward line (our best current shot at goal), will always take some beating.

The real benefit in my mind is that this may be a time to also release Lever fully into his intercept role - nearly always successful - by adding the 'available' Grundy to the backline mix to work in partnership under instruction from/with May, Hibbo and McVie/Salem, thus adding the needed height factor to the backline and in turn, providing Lever the release to play his best contribution to the annihilation of opposition forward pushes.

Lever's intercepts are one of our greatest assets yet at the moment, he has no reliable passing targets - just a mix of opportunities and good luck. Tomlinson may well play a part in this process from the wing as a key, on-his-own target, additionally releasing Langers on the opposite wing to penetrate further forward more often, more dangerously and negated far less often.  

These are just thoughts, containing process gaps and obvious hurdles, but these may well assist to overcome some ball passage barriers that we are currently experiencing. It might also have some valuable 'mobile-releasing' functions for Gus, Spargo, ANB, JJ, Chandler and the unbeatable Kozzie.

 

mania - interesting thoughts.  
Other than suggesting Grundy as a back man, if I haven’t misinterpreted you. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, monoccular said:

mania - interesting thoughts.  
Other than suggesting Grundy as a back man, if I haven’t misinterpreted you. 

Yes, don't really like this for Grundy, as well. But he is available and could do a temporary role in this regard - certainly to  discourage opposition forward pushes in his 'zonal' area across differing forward pushes. It could also release May to come further up the ground - even Hibbo - for some more 'heavy' attack on the incoming [censored]. Bringing the ball to ground is another role for Grundy in such an array - as we have so many very good smaller clearance-types in that zone (thinking Hibbo, McVie, Ginger Meggs, Salem) plus an angry Viney providing further discouragement to opposition intent. 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

40 minutes ago, spirit of norm smith said:

I agree Redleg.  So many wasted chances on the weekend from MFC and at Casey.  Skills are disappointing.  Forward 50 entries desperately need more work.  Goalkicking needs serious improvement.  Scoring is s as crucial part of the game and we are lacking right now.  

Red Leg I have been concerned at our lack of marking generally this year I means the on ballers have to work harder to gain possessions its areal weakness when you look at the stats. Ohh for a contested marking CHF

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

KICKING WOES by KC From Casey

In a game that was billed as Casey’s last chance to fight its way back into contention for a vital top four place on the VFL ladder with one round left before the finals, the Demons fell short by eight points after a disastrous display in front of goals in the second half against Carlton VFL at Ikon Park on Sunday.

After booting six goals from eight scoring shots to half time to trail by 9 points, Casey’s forward line accuracy fell apart in the second half kicking 3.13 to 4.6 in that period. During the final term, the ball virtually lived in their forward line (inside 50s were 17 to 5 in their favour) they managed one single goal while the Blues scored goals in their only two forays forward in the first twenty minutes of the quarter. The Demons can only blame themselves as they missed several easy shots at goal, hit the post on numerous occasions and made poor decisions in the front half. In addition, the disposal and decision-making going forward also left a lot to be desired. 

Early in the game, Carlton’s small brigade outran the Demons and forced their defence into error with their dominance. It was only through individual efforts that Casey managed to claw its way back into the game. All that was nothing in a wasteful third term that was compounded by the many misses at the end.

Luke Dustan was once again prolific in his ball getting and endeavour towards the ball but not necessarily always in the execution. He had 38 disposals, eight clearances, seven tackles and kicked a goal. Similarly, James Harmes was active with 30 disposals, one more than Bailey Laurie who also had a busy day along with Charlie Spargo (28 touches). Taj Woewodin showed the benefits of his stint at AFL level with 25 touches and seven clearances.

The Demons came into the game at the scene of their 2022 VFL premiership triumph looking for a key forward to cover the loss of Harrison Petty through injury but it was the limited impact of their talls that was their Achilles Heel with limited marks taken up forward despite no lack of opportunity. In his comeback from a long layoff, Tom McDonald managed just one goal, as did youngster Matt Jefferson while the usually accurate Josh Schache  finished with three behinds. Will Verrall battled hard in the ruck and showed a lot of promise for the future with his 17 hit outs.

Matt Buntine was the best of the Casey listed players and Jimmy Munro was his usual indefatigable self. Tom Freeman defended strongly in the second half.

All in all however, it was a disappointing result for the Demons who will rue some narrow defeats late in the season and must now win next week against the Brisbane Lions VFL side if they are to avoid a wild card playoff in a fortnight’s time.

CASEY DEMONS 2.1.13 6.2.38 8.10.58 9.15.69

CARLTON VFL 2.3.15 7.5.47 9.11.65 11.11.77

GOALS

CASEY DEMONS Brown Buntine Dunstan Grey Jefferson Laurie McDonald Spargo White

CARLTON VFL Cahill 4 Ronke 2 Akeui Boyd Crocker Honey McMahon

BEST 

CASEY DEMONS Dunstan Laurie Spargo Tomlinson Woewodin Buntine

CARLTON VFL Binns Boyd Young Cowan Ronke O’Brien

Statistics 

Jed Adams 6 kicks 3 handballs 9 disposals 4 marks 1 tackles 40 dream team points
Kynan Brown 1 goal 1 behind 5 kicks 3 handballs 8 disposals 1 mark 3 tackles 43 dream team points
Matt Buntine 1 goal 1 behind 10 kicks 9 handballs 19 disposals 5 marks 4 tackles 86 dream team points
Luke Dunstan 1 goal 16 kicks 22 handballs 38 disposals 7 marks tackles 149 dream team points
Kyah Farris-White 1 handball 1 disposal 1 tackle 6 hit outs 12 dream team points 
Tom Freeman 9 kicks 3 handballs 12 disposals 7 marks 1 tackles 58 dream team points
George Grey 1 goal 1 behind kicks handballs disposals marks tackles dream team points
James Harmes 15 kicks 15 handballs 30 disposals 3 marks 2 tackles 82 dream team points
Matt Jefferson 1 goal 6 kicks 3 handballs 9 disposals 6 marks 48 dream team points
Bailey Laurie 1 goal 13 kicks 16 handballs 29 disposals 3 marks 5 tackles 109 dream team points
Tom McDonald 1 goal 4 kicks 6 handballs 10 disposals 3 marks 3 tackles 9 hit outs 60 dream team points 
Tom McRae 6 kicks 6 handballs 12 disposals 2 marks 3 tackles 48 dream team points 
Andy Moniz-Wakefield 1 behind 8 kicks 8 handballs 16 disposals 3 marks 5 tackles 71 dream team points 
James Munro 1 behind 4 kicks 14 handballs 18 disposals 4 marks 4 tackles 63 dream team points
Josh Schache 3 behinds 6 kicks 4 handballs 10 disposals 2 marks 36 dream team points 
Deaykin Smith 4 kicks 6 handballs 10 disposals 3 marks 3 tackles 46 dream team points
Charlie Spargo 1 goal 16  kicks 12 handballs 28 disposals 6 marks 3 tackles 105 dream team points
Roan Steele 1 behind 5 kicks 7 handballs 12 disposals 3 marks 2 tackles 47 dream team points
Adam Tomlinson 23 kicks 4 handballs 27 disposals 8 marks 2 tackles 104 dream team points 
Kye Turner 4 kicks 1 handballs 5 disposals 14 dream team points
Will Verrall 2 kicks 8 handballs 10 disposals 1 mark 1 tackle 17 hit outs 43 dream team points
Mitch White 1 goal 10 kicks 3 handballs 13 disposals 5 marks 1 tackle 61 dream team points 
Taj Woewoedin 1 behind 12 kicks 13 handballs 25disposals 3 marks 5 tackles 92 dream team points

  • Thanks 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites


2 hours ago, Demonland said:

KICKING WOES by KC From Casey

In a game that was billed as Casey’s last chance to fight its way back into contention for a vital top four place on the VFL ladder with one round left before the finals, the Demons fell short by eight points after a disastrous display in front of goals in the second half against Carlton VFL at Ikon Park on Sunday.

After booting six goals from eight scoring shots to half time to trail by 9 points, Casey’s forward line accuracy fell apart in the second half kicking 3.13 to 4.6 in that period. During the final term, the ball virtually lived in their forward line (inside 50s were 17 to 5 in their favour) they managed one single goal while the Blues scored goals in their only two forays forward in the first twenty minutes of the quarter. The Demons can only blame themselves as they missed several easy shots at goal, hit the post on numerous occasions and made poor decisions in the front half. In addition, the disposal and decision-making going forward also left a lot to be desired. 

 

Still scratching my head wondering how this game got away.

3.13 doesn't tell the whole story because there were countless other F50 entries that counted for zero with poor decision making or poor skill execution. I gave up counting how many times Casey hit the post I'm guessing it was 6 to 7 times including one ridiculous Kynan Brown miss from a couple of metres out.

It felt a little bit like the AFL match where we simply were not destined to win the game. We achieved nothing from our weekend other than my hate of everything to do with the CFC just being taken up a notch.

 

 

  • Thanks 1
  • Love 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, Demonland said:

KICKING WOES by KC From Casey

In a game that was billed as Casey’s last chance to fight its way back into contention for a vital top four place on the VFL ladder with one round left before the finals, the Demons fell short by eight points after a disastrous display in front of goals in the second half against Carlton VFL at Ikon Park on Sunday.

After booting six goals from eight scoring shots to half time to trail by 9 points, Casey’s forward line accuracy fell apart in the second half kicking 3.13 to 4.6 in that period. During the final term, the ball virtually lived in their forward line (inside 50s were 17 to 5 in their favour) they managed one single goal while the Blues scored goals in their only two forays forward in the first twenty minutes of the quarter. The Demons can only blame themselves as they missed several easy shots at goal, hit the post on numerous occasions and made poor decisions in the front half. In addition, the disposal and decision-making going forward also left a lot to be desired. 

Early in the game, Carlton’s small brigade outran the Demons and forced their defence into error with their dominance. It was only through individual efforts that Casey managed to claw its way back into the game. All that was nothing in a wasteful third term that was compounded by the many misses at the end.

Luke Dustan was once again prolific in his ball getting and endeavour towards the ball but not necessarily always in the execution. He had 38 disposals, eight clearances, seven tackles and kicked a goal. Similarly, James Harmes was active with 30 disposals, one more than Bailey Laurie who also had a busy day along with Charlie Spargo (28 touches). Taj Woewodin showed the benefits of his stint at AFL level with 25 touches and seven clearances.

The Demons came into the game at the scene of their 2022 VFL premiership triumph looking for a key forward to cover the loss of Harrison Petty through injury but it was the limited impact of their talls that was their Achilles Heel with limited marks taken up forward despite no lack of opportunity. In his comeback from a long layoff, Tom McDonald managed just one goal, as did youngster Matt Jefferson while the usually accurate Josh Schache  finished with three behinds. Will Verrall battled hard in the ruck and showed a lot of promise for the future with his 17 hit outs.

Matt Buntine was the best of the Casey listed players and Jimmy Munro was his usual indefatigable self. Tom Freeman defended strongly in the second half.

All in all however, it was a disappointing result for the Demons who will rue some narrow defeats late in the season and must now win next week against the Brisbane Lions VFL side if they are to avoid a wild card playoff in a fortnight’s time.

CASEY DEMONS 2.1.13 6.2.38 8.10.58 9.15.69

CARLTON VFL 2.3.15 7.5.47 9.11.65 11.11.77

GOALS

CASEY DEMONS Brown Buntine Dunstan Grey Jefferson Laurie McDonald Spargo White

CARLTON VFL Cahill 4 Ronke 2 Akeui Boyd Crocker Honey McMahon

BEST 

CASEY DEMONS Dunstan Laurie Spargo Tomlinson Woewodin Buntine

CARLTON VFL Binns Boyd Young Cowan Ronke O’Brien

Statistics 

Jed Adams 6 kicks 3 handballs 9 disposals 4 marks 1 tackles 40 dream team points
Kynan Brown 1 goal 1 behind 5 kicks 3 handballs 8 disposals 1 mark 3 tackles 43 dream team points
Matt Buntine 1 goal 1 behind 10 kicks 9 handballs 19 disposals 5 marks 4 tackles 86 dream team points
Luke Dunstan 1 goal 16 kicks 22 handballs 38 disposals 7 marks tackles 149 dream team points
Kyah Farris-White 1 handball 1 disposal 1 tackle 6 hit outs 12 dream team points 
Tom Freeman 9 kicks 3 handballs 12 disposals 7 marks 1 tackles 58 dream team points
George Grey 1 goal 1 behind kicks handballs disposals marks tackles dream team points
James Harmes 15 kicks 15 handballs 30 disposals 3 marks 2 tackles 82 dream team points
Matt Jefferson 1 goal 6 kicks 3 handballs 9 disposals 6 marks 48 dream team points
Bailey Laurie 1 goal 13 kicks 16 handballs 29 disposals 3 marks 5 tackles 109 dream team points
Tom McDonald 1 goal 4 kicks 6 handballs 10 disposals 3 marks 3 tackles 9 hit outs 60 dream team points 
Tom McRae 6 kicks 6 handballs 12 disposals 2 marks 3 tackles 48 dream team points 
Andy Moniz-Wakefield 1 behind 8 kicks 8 handballs 16 disposals 3 marks 5 tackles 71 dream team points 
James Munro 1 behind 4 kicks 14 handballs 18 disposals 4 marks 4 tackles 63 dream team points
Josh Schache 3 behinds 6 kicks 4 handballs 10 disposals 2 marks 36 dream team points 
Deaykin Smith 4 kicks 6 handballs 10 disposals 3 marks 3 tackles 46 dream team points
Charlie Spargo 1 goal 16  kicks 12 handballs 28 disposals 6 marks 3 tackles 105 dream team points
Roan Steele 1 behind 5 kicks 7 handballs 12 disposals 3 marks 2 tackles 47 dream team points
Adam Tomlinson 23 kicks 4 handballs 27 disposals 8 marks 2 tackles 104 dream team points 
Kye Turner 4 kicks 1 handballs 5 disposals 14 dream team points
Will Verrall 2 kicks 8 handballs 10 disposals 1 mark 1 tackle 17 hit outs 43 dream team points
Mitch White 1 goal 10 kicks 3 handballs 13 disposals 5 marks 1 tackle 61 dream team points 
Taj Woewoedin 1 behind 12 kicks 13 handballs 25disposals 3 marks 5 tackles 92 dream team points

Good write up. No stats for grey other than kicked 1.1.must have had at least 2 kicks ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Interesting ladder position in VFL, at least to me.

Casey and Bulldogs sit 6 and 7 on ladder on same points, casey 6 ahead on %.

Last game with Bulldogs playing port so should win and Casey playing Brisbane at Casey with at least 1 or 2 players not available due to firsts playing later on sunday.

So if Casey lose and Bulldogs win Casey will slide to 7 on ladder and go into the wildcard draw. Not good.

However, it is far better for Goodwin's crew to have Casey playing so fringe players get a run.

 I remain quietly optimistic about Casey's chances.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Was at the game yesterday, and Spargo was outstanding with ball and without, huge running efforts and making position, efforts which were often ignored or just bypassed his teammates lack of awareness. Tommo was excellent (as usual). Tmac was horribly short of a run. Struggled to accelerate, get any elevation, and was gassed after moderate efforts. I’d be staggered if he gets anywhere near fit enough for promotion over the next month. 

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 minutes ago, Webber said:

Was at the game yesterday, and Spargo was outstanding with ball and without, huge running efforts and making position, efforts which were often ignored or just bypassed his teammates lack of awareness. Tommo was excellent (as usual). Tmac was horribly short of a run. Struggled to accelerate, get any elevation, and was gassed after moderate efforts. I’d be staggered if he gets anywhere near fit enough for promotion over the next month. 

Love Tmac but that was my take as well - hard to see him getting enough fitness back in the time remaining to be a weapon.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

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...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Demonland Forums  

  • Match Previews, Reports & Articles  

    WILDCARDS by KC from Casey

    Casey’s season continued to drift into helplessness on Sunday when they lost another home game by a narrow margin, this time six points, in their Round 13 clash with North Melbourne’s VFL combination. The game was in stunning contrast to their last meeting at the same venue when Casey won the VFL Wildcard Match by 101 points. Back then, their standout players were Brodie Grundy and James Jordon who are starring in the AFL with ladder leaders, the Sydney Swans (it turned out to be their last

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Casey Articles

    LIFE SUPPORT by Whispering Jack

    With Melbourne’s season hanging on a thread, Saturday night’s game against North Melbourne unfolded like a scene in a hospital emergency department.  The patient presented to the ward in a bad way. Doctors and nurses pumped life-saving medication into his body and, in the ensuing half hour, he responded with blood returning to his cheeks as he stirred back to life. After a slight relapse, the nurses pumped further medication into the bloodstream and the prognosis started looking good as the

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Match Reports 19

    PREGAME: Rd 16 vs Brisbane

    The Demons head back on the road for their fifth interstate trip this season when they head up to Brisbane to take on the Lions under lights on Friday night at the Gabba. Who comes in and who goes out?

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 187

    PODCAST: Rd 15 vs North Melbourne

    The Demonland Podcast will air LIVE on Tuesday, 25th June @ 8:30pm. Join George, Binman & I as we analyse the Demons victory at the MCG over the Kangaroos in the Round 15. You 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. Listen & Chat

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 49

    VOTES: Rd 15 vs North Melbourne

    Captain Max Gawn has a considerable lead over the injured reigning champion Christian Petracca in the Demonland Player of the Year Award. Alex Neal-Bullen, Steven May, & Jack Viney make up the Top 5. Your votes for the loss against the Kangaroos. 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 51

    POSTGAME: Rd 15 vs North Melbourne

    The Demons almost blew a six goal lead and ultimately hung on to win by three points over the North Melbourne Kangaroos at the MCG and have temporarily jumped back into the Top 8.

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 568

    GAMEDAY: Rd 15 vs North Melbourne

    It's Game Day and it very well could be the last roll of the dice for the Demon's finals aspirations in 2024. A loss to the bottom side would be another embarrassing moment in a cursed year for the Dees whilst a win could be the spark they need to reignite the fire in the belly.

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Melbourne Demons 709

    THE HUNTER by The Oracle

    Something struck me as I sat on the couch watching the tragedy of North Melbourne’s attempt to beat Collingwood unfold on Sunday afternoon at the MCG.    It was three quarter time, the scoreboard had the Pies on 12.7.79, a respectable 63.16% in terms of goal kicking ratio. Meanwhile, the Roos’ 18.2.110 was off the charts at 90.00% shooting accuracy. I was thinking at the same time of Melbourne’s final score only six days before, a woeful 6.15.51 or 28.57% against Collingwood’s 14.5.89

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Match Previews 8

    FROZEN by Whispering Jack

    Who would have thought?    Collingwood had a depleted side with several star players out injured, Max Gawn was in stellar form, Christian Petracca at the top of his game and Simon Goodwin was about to pull off a masterstroke in setting Alex Neal-Bullen onto him to do a fantastic job in subduing the Magpies' best player. Goody had his charges primed to respond robustly to the challenge of turning around their disappointing performance against Fremantle in Alice Springs. And if not that, t

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Match Reports 7
  • Tell a friend

    Love Demonland? Tell a friend!

×
×
  • Create New...