Jump to content

Operation Mihocek & Frampton


adonski

Recommended Posts

1 hour ago, Fat Tony said:

Collingwood were actually very efficient given they had a lot o difficult shots at goal. 

If this is the future of an enjoyable day at the footy good luck. Just about need a pHD in graphical analysis to begin to make any sense of it. Where to begin? The y axis (vertical) is ... and the x axis (horizontal) is… Parabolic curves, independent,dependent and controlled variables and outliers. Lines of best fit, plot points... Think of all the homework required.

 

Edited by Tarax Club
lies, dammed lies and statistics
  • Haha 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, Dr. Gonzo said:

We have enough quality up forward as long as they stay on the park.

Petty/JVR as key fwds

Fritsch/Petracca/Smith as midsize fwds (and likely McAdam)

Pickett/ANB/Spargo/Chandler as pressure fwds

 

Disagree.

We don't have enough finishing or class in that forward group.

Even Petracca for how amazing he is as a powerful mid/forward is simply awful with his ball use far too often for an elite player.

ANB, Spargo and Chandler similarly just don't give us that elite finishing ability. One more of those small forwards needs to be a specialist goal kicking pressure forward and not just a role playing forward.

Our list forward of centre is completely vanilla aside from Pickett.

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

8 hours ago, Gawndy the Great said:

They like most recent GF teams have had relatively good luck with injury to key players. When Daicos went late in season, it was no surprise they started loosing. Lets see how they back it up next year with a limited pre-season and slogging it out for a whole year with an aging list. I fully expect them to compete but they'll come back to the pack - not that they were miles in front anyway. 

They will get even more attention next year with every team coming up with and/or refining the blueprint to beat them. They will get a difficult draw. There will be no easy games for them next year (bar West Coast). 

Well, they made a prelim last year. So their pre-season this year will be limited by an extra week?

Backed it up this year, won the flag and were missing Adams and McStay.

Key players missed throughout the entire year in Howe, Adams, Moore, De Goey (Suspension), Daicos.

They've had an incredible year and have been the best team in it.

 

But remember guys! @binman and @Binmans PA believe their game simply can't stand up in finals

So the fact that they won the Grand Final means nothing, alright?

  • Like 2
  • Clap 1
  • Shocked 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

3 hours ago, JimmyGadson said:

Well, they made a prelim last year. So their pre-season this year will be limited by an extra week?

Backed it up this year, won the flag and were missing Adams and McStay.

Key players missed throughout the entire year in Howe, Adams, Moore, De Goey (Suspension), Daicos.

They've had an incredible year and have been the best team in it.

 

But remember guys! @binman and @Binmans PA believe their game simply can't stand up in finals

So the fact that they won the Grand Final means nothing, alright?

They weren't the only who said their game wouldn't stand up come finals. Could easily pick out a few more. They're quiet now..

How's their shrewed recruitment? Markov and Hill added for extra speed and skill that compliments their game plan.

Kudos to McRea, he's a fine operator. 

  • Like 6
Link to comment
Share on other sites

13 hours ago, Tarax Club said:

If this is the future of an enjoyable day at the footy good luck. Just about need a pHD in graphical analysis to begin to make any sense of it. Where to begin? The y axis (vertical) is ... and the x axis (horizontal) is… Parabolic curves, independent,dependent and controlled variables and outliers. Lines of best fit, plot points... Think of all the homework required.

 

It's a very good graphical representation of the data. The x axis is time, the y axis is expected score and the dotted line is chance of winning.

One thing I saw immediately from the score charts was confirmation that Collingwood kicked 4 goals from set shots outside 50. That was a huge difference in this game.

Edited by old55
Corrected my mislabelling of the axes.
  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, JimmyGadson said:

Well, they made a prelim last year. So their pre-season this year will be limited by an extra week?

Backed it up this year, won the flag and were missing Adams and McStay.

Key players missed throughout the entire year in Howe, Adams, Moore, De Goey (Suspension), Daicos.

They've had an incredible year and have been the best team in it.

 

But remember guys! @binman and @Binmans PA believe their game simply can't stand up in finals

So the fact that they won the Grand Final means nothing, alright?

They were the most consistent team for the year and had the least structural injuries when it mattered. 

The one week when they won territory, they were as inaccurate as we'd been in our two finals.

My view is we left a flag on the table this year, but clearly our injuries in the same zone of the ground caught up with us, and our inability to convert our territory dominance were the biggest reasons for this.

We'll make tweaks, list changes and be there again next year.

Given Collingwood actually won something this year, I expect this to solidfy the sort of ball movement all teams need. But the elephant in the room to the 'we need to be more offensive' group is that ultimately defence is again what won the finals.

Collingwood's explosive ball movement was not a huge factor in the finals series. It was their defensive unit that exceeded expectations IMV, and won them the flag, rather than their forwards or their offence. As is always the case.

Clearly Bobby Hill was the exception to this, without him against us in the QF and no Bobby Hill yesterday, and they don't win either game, so one forward certainly had a say in their results. But for the most part, having the entire team behind the ball and then countering attacking worked.

Defence will still win finals and GFs remains a truism, it's just about our coaches maximising our territory dominance and kicking a winning score when the forwardline is crowded like it was for Collingwood yesterday.

  • Like 8
Link to comment
Share on other sites


14 hours ago, adonski said:

Pretty definitive proof of the giant myth of the key forward and their impact on success

Efficiency is King, speed kills, and hopefully our trade & draft period reflect that thinking....!

NO 🤮

  • Shocked 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

5 hours ago, JimmyGadson said:

Well, they made a prelim last year. So their pre-season this year will be limited by an extra week?

Backed it up this year, won the flag and were missing Adams and McStay.

Key players missed throughout the entire year in Howe, Adams, Moore, De Goey (Suspension), Daicos.

They've had an incredible year and have been the best team in it.

 

But remember guys! @binman and @Binmans PA believe their game simply can't stand up in finals

So the fact that they won the Grand Final means nothing, alright?

We lost to them by 7 points, with Gus ko’d 2 minutes into the QF, effectively losing say 30 possies from an experienced versatile player and replaced by a totally non effective player, so down a fresh player at the end and having 32 more inside F50’s. Poor goal kicking and without Petty, Melk and BBB, all of whom if fit would have been better than their replacements. Also with Gus out Tracc wasn’t able to go forward. They had Daicos out.

32 more inside F50’s is usually a 12-15 goal win.

I wouldn’t say Binman and Binman PA were totally wrong, as with any luck at all, we win that QF and play off in the GF against one of Lions or Pies and possibly win it.

Pies imo are well coached, but have had enormous luck this year and we had a lot of bad luck. Look at all the non Giants frees last week and Pies win by a Point.

We haven’t won an arc decision in my recent memory.

Edited by Redleg
  • Like 5
  • Thanks 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

4 hours ago, old55 said:

It's a very good graphical representation of the data. The y axis is time, the x axis is expected score and the dotted line is chance of winning.

One thing I saw immediately from the score charts was confirmation that Collingwood kicked 4 goals from set shots outside 50. That was a huge difference in this game.

So you're prepared to put the ruler thru Euler? My understanding a graph should communicate a summary of the information (data) succinctly and simply as possible. Allowing the reader to ideally correctly interpret the 'data' with relative ease.

Pleased you've been able to glean some useful information from the 'graph' but to my eye the boys and girls at Champion Data or whoever put the graph together moonlight at Bernard's in Elizabeth Street.

old55 your moniker suggests 'old school' so I'm going to cut you some slack... the horizontal or  x axis is the independent variable or time. The vertical or y axis is the dependent variable ? (wave a magic wand over that).

Edited by Tarax Club
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, DubDee said:

Pies kicked 12.18. clearly inefficient 

they won because they had 14 more inside 50 and Hill had the game of his life

They won because they played high pressure, high tempo footy that allowed them to play the game in their forward half whilst still spreading the ball to find quality scoring chances too.

But they also got lucky with low quality chances turning to goals - Sidebottom, De Goey x 2 from outside 50, Crisp which bailed out their lack of key forward impact. Just one of those misses and they might lose and the question would be where are their key forwards?

Brisbane got outplayed for most of the game and pulled goals from their backside with a demonstration of forward talent from Daniher, Bailey, Cameron, McCluggage. Defended their back 50 very well too. 

Overall the lessons from the game were you need forward talent and you need to play fast to score. 

But Brisbane need a forward/mids coach who can organise them defensively as much as we need one to organise our attack. They don’t chase!

  • Thinking 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites


17 hours ago, dazzledavey36 said:

Was getting shouted down mid year for talking up how good Mihocek is for Collingwood from a structure point of view.

Very underrated forward of the competition. 

Their recruitment has been absolutely spot on. They recruited for speed and when and got Bobby Hill who just fits perfectly into their game plan alongside Tom Mitchell who gave them inside hardness that they lacked last year.

They'll only get better.

No, they likely won't. We all said it about the demons of 21 and the Bulldogs of 16. 

They had a lot fall into place and played well on the day. 

As their rise showed and as our stagnation post-21 showed, things are never as good or as bad as they seem. 

The reason for this is that honestly - most lists across the comp are pretty even. Every team has their 3/4/5 stars - and if they roll, you can throw a blanket over the rest. 

It all comes down to coaching, connection, mentality, and a bit of luck. Players matter far less than everyone thinks they do. 

  • Haha 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 minute ago, fr_ap said:

No, they likely won't. We all said it about the demons of 21 and the Bulldogs of 16. 

They had a lot fall into place and played well on the day. 

As their rise showed and as our stagnation post-21 showed, things are never as good or as bad as they seem. 

The reason for this is that honestly - most lists across the comp are pretty even. Every team has their 3/4/5 stars - and if they roll, you can throw a blanket over the rest. 

It all comes down to coaching, connection, mentality, and a bit of luck. Players matter far less than everyone thinks they do. 

Best you were saying this last year.

They'll ve top 4 again next year without hesitation. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

35 minutes ago, Tarax Club said:

So you're prepared to put the ruler thru Euler? My understanding a graph should communicate a summary of the information (data) succinctly and simply as possible. Allowing the reader to ideally correctly interpret the 'data' with relative ease.

Pleased you've been able to glean some useful information from the 'graph' but to my eye the boys and girls at Champion Data or whoever put the graph together moonlight at Bernard's in Elizabeth Street.

old55 your moniker suggests 'old school' so I'm going to cut you some slack... the horizontal or  x axis is the independent variable or time. The vertical or y axis is the dependent variable ? (wave a magic wand over that).

Sorry it was my mistaken axes labelling - the x axis is time and the y axis expected score and win probability. So as you expect.  Don't  blame the author for my mistake (now corrected above in the original post for first time reader clarity)

The goal scoring position charts are very informative.

I am old school on this, a big fan of Edward Tufte. He would be happy with the work we're discussing.

Suggest you look just a little bit harder. Did you actually expand the Tweet?

Edited by old55
Link to comment
Share on other sites

There's a bit of Richmond 2017 style to Collingwood with their forward set up yesterday.

Play the Mihocek as the sole key forward focus similar to Jack Riewoldt and then the remaining forward line was made up of smalls in Hill, Elliot, Ginavvan and McCreery.

Meanwhile they had Frampton doing a full lock down role on Harris similar to Jacob Townsend who was tagging Jake Lever in the 2017 grand final.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, old55 said:

Sorry it was my mistaken axes labelling - the x axis is time and the y axis expected score and win probability. So as you expect.  Don't  blame the author for my mistake (now corrected above in the original post for first time reader clarity)

The goal scoring position charts are very informative.

I am old school on this, a big fan of Edward Tufte. He would be happy with the work we're discussing.

Suggest you look just a little bit harder. Did you actually expand the Tweet?

Referring to Simon v Garfunkel 1969 (visually) "Still, a man sees what he wants to see. And disregards the rest."  Appreciate the reference to Edward Tufte, but the AFL graphic is not in the same football park or within a bull's roar of Minard's Carte Figurative. Nebulous comes to mind, I'll stick to sculpture.

Edited by Tarax Club
Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 hours ago, godees said:

Sidebottom 33y 8m

Pendlebury 35y 8m

Mitchell 30y 3m

Mihocek 30y 8m

Adams 30y

Howe 33y 8m

Cox 32y 6m

Elliot 31y 1m

Crisp 30y in a couple of days

Hoskin Elliott 30y

 

They are the new Geelong.

I came here to say this. All 10 of the 30+ crew played big roles in the season and the GF (except due to injury eg Taylor Adams).

Daicos led their disposals yesterday with 29. The next 6 players (every other player with more than 17 disposals, except Bobby Hill) was in that list of over 30s.

I'm not saying they'll fall in a hole next year, but it's a very short window that could close very quickly. And is very reliant on a couple of young guns.

 

Contrast that with our list, we only have a few players over 28 in our best 22. Sure May and Gawn are big holes to fill, but Viney is the only other consistent best 22 aged 28+ that we'll be hard pressed to replace in the next 4 years with what isn't already on the list.

And we were a dice roll away from it all coming together this year.

It means we are drafting and trading to improve our position, not cover our losses. And we have lots of cap space becoming available with TMac, Brown, and potentially Harmes, Jordan, Melksham, etc.

Screenshot_20231001_143128_Chrome.jpg

Screenshot_20231001_143807_Chrome.jpg

  • Like 1
  • Thinking 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 hours ago, godees said:

Regarding the OP, Joe Daniher nearly got Brisbane over the line. A quality key forward is still hugely valuable.

He had great hands during the game and got some great goals, but gee he made a lot of mistakes when up the ground though.  Not a smart footballer. 

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  

    GETAWAY by Meggs

    Calling all fit players. Expect every available Melbourne player to board the Virgin cross-continent flight to Perth for this Round 4 clash on Saturday afternoon at Fremantle Oval. It promises to be keenly contested, though Fremantle is the bookies clear favourite.  If we lose, finals could be remoter than Rottnest Island especially following on from the Dees 50-point dismantlement by North Melbourne last Sunday.  There are 8 remaining matches, over the next 7 weeks.  To Meggs’

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons

    DRUBBING by Meggs

    With Casey Fields basking in sunshine, an enthusiastic throng of young Demons fans formed a guard of honour for the evergreen and much admired 75-gamer Paxy Paxman. As the home team ran out to play, Paxy’s banner promised that the Demons would bounce back from last week’s loss to Brisbane and reign supreme.   Disappointingly, the Kangaroos dominated the match to win by 50 points, but our Paxy certainly did her bit.  She was clearly our best player, sweeping well in defence.

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons 4

    GARNER STRENGTH by Meggs

    In keeping with our tough draw theme, Week 3 sees Melbourne take on flag favourites, North Melbourne, at Casey Fields this Sunday at 1:05pm.  The weather forecast looks dry, a coolish 14 degrees and will be characteristically gusty.  Remember when Casey Fields was considered our fortress?  The Demons have lost two of their past three matches at the Field of Dreams, so opposition teams commute down the Princes Highway with more optimism these days.  The Dees held the highe

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons 1

    ALLY’S FIELDS by Meggs

    It was a sunny morning at Casey Fields, as Demon supporters young and old formed a guard of honour for fan favourite and 50-gamer Alyssa Bannan.  Banno’s banner stated the speedster was the ‘fastest 50 games’ by an AFLW player ever.   For Dees supporters, today was not our day and unfortunately not for Banno either. A couple of opportunities emerged for our number 6 but alas there was no sizzle.   Brisbane atoned for last week’s record loss to North Melbourne, comprehensively out

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons 1

    GOOD MORNING by Meggs

    If you are driving or training it to Cranbourne on Saturday, don’t forget to set your alarm clock. The Melbourne Demons play the reigning premiers Brisbane Lions at Casey Fields this Saturday, with the bounce of the ball at 11:05am.  Yes, that’s AM.   The AFLW fixture shows deference to the AFL men’s finals games.  So, for the men it’s good afternoon and good evening and for the women it’s good morning.     The Lions were wounded last week by 44 points, their highest ever los

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons 3

    HORE ON FIRE by Meggs

    The 40,000 seat $319 million redeveloped Kardinia Park Stadium was nowhere near capacity last night but the strong, noisy contingent of Melbourne supporters led by the DeeArmy journeyed to Geelong to witness a high-quality battle between two of the best teams in AFLW.   The Cats entered the arena to the blasting sounds of Zombie Nation and made a hot start kicking the first 2 goals. They brought tremendous forward half pressure, and our newly renovated defensive unit looked shaky.

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons 11

    REMATCH by Meggs

    The Mighty Demons take on the confident Cats this Saturday night at the recently completed $319 million redeveloped GMHBA Stadium, with the bounce of the ball at 7:15pm. Our last game of 2023 was an agonisingly close 5-point semi-final loss to Geelong, and we look forward to Melbourne turning the tables this week. Practice match form was scratchy for both teams with the Demons losing practice matches to Carlton and Port Adelaide, while the Cats beat Collingwood but then lost to Essendo

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons

    WELCOME 2024 by Meggs

    It’s been hard to miss the seismic global momentum happening in Women’s sport of late. The Matildas have been playing to record sell-out crowds across Australia and ‘Mary Fowler is God’ is chalked onto footpaths everywhere. WNBA basketball rookie sensation Caitlin Clark has almost single-handedly elevated her Indiana Fever team to unprecedented viewership, attendances and playoffs in the USA.   Our female Aussie Paris 2024 Olympians won 13 out of Australia’s all-time record 18 gol

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons 3

    EPILOGUE by Whispering Jack

    I sit huddled in near darkness, the only light coming through flickering embers in a damp fireplace, the room in total silence after the thunderstorm died. I wonder if they bothered to restart the game.  No point really. It was over before it started. The team’s five star generals in defence and midfield ruled out of the fray, a few others missing in action against superior enemy firepower and too few left to fly the flag for the field marshal defiantly leading his outnumbered army int

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Match Reports 6
  • Tell a friend

    Love Demonland? Tell a friend!

×
×
  • Create New...