Jump to content

Featured Replies

1 hour ago, Ghostwriter said:

Set up the guillotine y’all. The boys have a day off today. I know right! How dare they have a day off when we’re 0-4! I’m so outraged that I’m gonna flood Demonland with my ridiculous whinging and whining.

And by day off I mean there’s no scheduled training of any type. Many of them choose to train in some capacity on a day off, some are involved in footy clinics for kids or visiting elderly and/or ill fans. But still… wah wah wah 😩

Also, they all attended a club function last night, a trivia night with player-sponsors, and get a load of this… they were having fun!!! Preposterous!!! I even saw some of them laughing!!!

was spargo smiling?

 
  • Author
1 hour ago, whatwhat say what said:

was spargo smiling?

Is that a trick question? 😁

17 hours ago, bing181 said:

... and Sydney Swans:

No wonder they keep getting hammered in GFs!

 
7 hours ago, Roost it far said:

running around laughing

So it’s not about whether it’s useful as part of an overall training program, it’s what it looks like. I.e. it’s all performative and they’re not performing “failing football team” to your liking. Perhaps you could drop past training with some hair shirts?

4 hours ago, Superunknown said:

I tend to disagree

The different shape of the balls requires different technique, no?

I make no comment on the benefits of practising with a soccer ball for body movement and activating different muscles and movement patterns. It’s why as a golfer/cyclist/runner/surfer I do exercises specific to those sports but also different stuff for balance and general functional movement

4 hours ago, Superunknown said:

I tend to disagree

The different shape of the balls requires different technique, no?

I make no comment on the benefits of practising with a soccer ball for body movement and activating different muscles and movement patterns. It’s why as a golfer/cyclist/runner/surfer I do exercises specific to those sports but also different stuff for balance and general functional movement

4 hours ago, Superunknown said:

I tend to disagree

The different shape of the balls requires different technique, no?

Therefore if one’s skills with AFL ball are deficient, ought one practice with that ball?

I make no comment on the benefits of practising with a soccer ball for body movement and activating different muscles and movement patterns. It’s why as a golfer/cyclist/runner/surfer I do exercises specific to those sports but also different stuff for balance and general functional movement

Deficient is doing a lot of work there. Even when a club recruits a foreigner who had never seen a Sherrin they'd still do enough skills tests to feel it worth flying this novice out here. I have trouble believing any AFL player's skills start off deficient. Some have better ones than others and body and mind can affect them but no player is deficient. (If any Melbourne player were I suspect the Demonland archives would show angry posters saying so soon after recruitment)


7 minutes ago, bing181 said:

So it’s not about whether it’s useful as part of an overall training program, it’s what it looks like. I.e. it’s all performative and they’re not performing “failing football team” to your liking. Perhaps you could drop past training with some hair shirts?

Relax

5 minutes ago, Go Ds said:

Deficient is doing a lot of work there. Even when a club recruits a foreigner who had never seen a Sherrin they'd still do enough skills tests to feel it worth flying this novice out here. I have trouble believing any AFL player's skills start off deficient. Some have better ones than others and body and mind can affect them but no player is deficient. (If any Melbourne player were I suspect the Demonland archives would show angry posters saying so soon after recruitment)

I am please that I was so profound you saw fit to quote thrice.

We’re not talking about foreigners. We’re talking about elite players mostly who’ve grown up playing our indigenous brand of football. I also didn’t make mention of anyone’s starting point. Obviously these players are elite and good enough to on a list.

Others have commented our goal kicking is sub optimal (which I agree with - 2023 finals say hi).

I’m not saying they’re not practised, I’m just wondering aloud about the potential benefits of increasing focus even for a short period on a key skill of our game (leaving aside comments about decision making etc)

Bit like practising an aspect of a deficient golf game by finding a high leverage point for dramatic change. Until it improves (which for many it never will but that’s a different story because golf is a Truly evil game)

Edited by Superunknown

4 hours ago, Go Ds said:

BTW is it true the batsman whose average is almost double everyone else's practised hitting a ball - a GOLF BALL - with a STUMP. I dunno, maybe that helped him hit a cricket ball with a cricket bat.

Used to practice on king sized snooker tables so pub pool felt like a kids game. Smashed everyone.

Goal kicking practice should be done with posts half distance apart. WE’LL NEVER LOSE AGAIN.

 
5 minutes ago, BoBo said:

Used to practice on king sized snooker tables so pub pool felt like a kids game. Smashed everyone.

Goal kicking practice should be done with posts half distance apart. WE’LL NEVER LOSE AGAIN.

Junior golf long course and very small greens = +++ short game and putting = 2-4 shots lower on metro courses in pennant

5 hours ago, Ghostwriter said:

Surely you know I’m gonna say he doesn’t have favourites, and that’s because I believe he doesn’t. If he does, he sure hides it well.

I took issue with your comment because I think it’s highly disrespectful to suggest a head coach selects his “favourites” over others in the side. That’s so unproductive and extremely unprofessional. Do you really think, especially at 0-4, Goody would prioritise mate-ship above everything else?

Apologies for this. This was not my intention at all I was just having a bit of fun with it and its been taken the wrong way I think perhaps. I have coached under 16s footy and basketball. Its that old thing where we don't admit it to many if anyone. but we as coaches certainly have a few players that we are close to and bond with that hold a special place I certainly have a few favorites that I connect with and respect (I certainly won't tell others though). Thats all I was asking based off your observations as I know how much you see Goody connect and get behind all the players. Just your guess really but I hear you.

For the record I don't think Goodwin picks players based on who his favourites are, I think its childish to think that way about a professional coach at the highest level (nor would I do this at junior level). I was playing off this false Demonland narrative in my previous post mainly because I liked the meme. I think Goody selects players like Melksham because he has a good relationship with and trusts him, having a longer history of coaching him and giving him some key roles of which he's been very successful at Melks time at the Dees. Thats why he's thought of so highly by Goody. I know he feels the same for many other players at the club.

Sorry Ghosty! Huge fan of your work and all your contributions to the Demon Army and this forum

Edited by Young Blood


Goodwin absolutely has favourites as does every coach. It's not so much about who the coach is mates with but there are players at every club who get a much longer leash than others. Guys like Lachie Hunter will get pushed out of the club for breaking standards while guys like Oliver will get chance after chance no matter how many time standards are broken.

21 minutes ago, Superunknown said:

Junior golf long course and very small greens = +++ short game and putting = 2-4 shots lower on metro courses in pennant

It’s settled. All training from now is to be done with one of the following parameters:

smaller/bigger

thinner/thicker

lighter/heavier

longer/shorter

courser/smoother

louder/quieter

wetter/drier

more physics/less physics

hyper realistic/abstract

hyper gravity/microgravity

Getting good at one game means playing the same game, but different.

  • Author
1 hour ago, Young Blood said:

Apologies for this. This was not my intention at all I was just having a bit of fun with it and its been taken the wrong way I think perhaps. I have coached under 16s footy and basketball. Its that old thing where we don't admit it to many if anyone. but we as coaches certainly have a few players that we are close to and bond with that hold a special place I certainly have a few favorites that I connect with and respect (I certainly won't tell others though). Thats all I was asking based off your observations as I know how much you see Goody connect and get behind all the players. Just your guess really but I hear you.

For the record I don't think Goodwin picks players based on who his favourites are, I think its childish to think that way about a professional coach at the highest level (nor would I do this at junior level). I was playing off this false Demonland narrative in my previous post mainly because I liked the meme. I think Goody selects players like Melksham because he has a good relationship with and trusts him, having a longer history of coaching him and giving him some key roles of which he's been very successful at Melks time at the Dees. Thats why he's thought of so highly by Goody. I know he feels the same for many other players at the club.

Sorry Ghosty! Huge fan of your work and all your contributions to the Demon Army and this forum

All good, YB. I’m sometimes too sensitive and I’m trying to change that but I’m a work in progress. Thank you for explaining. And while I wouldn’t say they’re favourites, there are two players with whom Goody is extremely close, and that’s Clarrie and Koz. Both of these guys regard Goody as kinda like a father.

2 hours ago, BoBo said:

Used to practice on king sized snooker tables so pub pool felt like a kids game. Smashed everyone.

Goal kicking practice should be done with posts half distance apart. WE’LL NEVER LOSE AGAIN.

I hope players practise every possible kick from 5 to 50m and then some up to 75m (and even a bit with balls of different weights and sizes)

11 minutes ago, Go Ds said:

I hope players practise every possible kick from 5 to 50m and then some up to 75m (and even a bit with balls of different weights and sizes)

Maybe a water logged ball from 45, not a wet ball but a good old fashioned water laden ball. If you can kick that 45 then you’re good to go


3 hours ago, Superunknown said:

I am please that I was so profound you saw fit to quote thrice.

We’re not talking about foreigners. We’re talking about elite players mostly who’ve grown up playing our indigenous brand of football. I also didn’t make mention of anyone’s starting point. Obviously these players are elite and good enough to on a list.

Others have commented our goal kicking is sub optimal (which I agree with - 2023 finals say hi).

I’m not saying they’re not practised, I’m just wondering aloud about the potential benefits of increasing focus even for a short period on a key skill of our game (leaving aside comments about decision making etc)

Bit like practising an aspect of a deficient golf game by finding a high leverage point for dramatic change. Until it improves (which for many it never will but that’s a different story because golf is a Truly evil game)

Umm, that was a combination of my phone and the new Demonland format mucking up. I don't know enough about training sessions - how many more kicks of a Sherrin would each player have had if Goodwin etc decided instead to do more kicking drills? Is it many? Maybe if the coaches listened to some of us on DL something useful would rub off. I'm just hoping we're talking about professionals genuinely doing their best.

Still I wonder how much practising kicks and handballs players have as second nature improves much anymore than someone walking an hour a day is improving their walking action. IMHO a lot of the big disposal errors are due to complacency, jadedness, pressure or fitness. Those won't be fixed by robotically kicking for an extra half hour. (At least a soccer game lifts spirits, gets players moving and for anyone sick of seeing a Sherrin get misused or going past them to the opposition goal they're getting some respite while still training.)

15 minutes ago, Roost it far said:

Maybe a water logged ball from 45, not a wet ball but a good old fashioned water laden ball. If you can kick that 45 then you’re good to go

The brain stores all this information. That doesn't mean people have pinpoint accuracy. But players through trial and error have a good idea what they can do, including how far they can kick, and they can factor in the breeze, tired legs, a waterlogged or slippery ball etc. I think a little experimentation in sport is invaluable. For all we know the next big change - the next headstart for a team - is taking place at an AFL team.

1 minute ago, Spargonicus said:

Eewww

This wasn't meant to be double-entendre-y. We've been alluding to s Pink Floyd song

46 minutes ago, Go Ds said:

I hope players practise every possible kick from 5 to 50m and then some up to 75m (and even a bit with balls of different weights and sizes)

The next evolution of AFL will be specialised ultra long kickers. Steph Curries, but for AFL. Players that nail goals consistently from 60 meters.


3 hours ago, BoBo said:

It’s settled. All training from now is to be done with one of the following parameters:

smaller/bigger

thinner/thicker

lighter/heavier

longer/shorter

courser/smoother

louder/quieter

wetter/drier

more physics/less physics

hyper realistic/abstract

hyper gravity/microgravity

Getting good at one game means playing the same game, but different.

Glad we cleared that up! To be clear I don’t really care either way. I’m pragmatic. Whatever gets our team playing - including kicking for goal - betyer

37 minutes ago, Go Ds said:

Umm, that was a combination of my phone and the new Demonland format mucking up. I don't know enough about training sessions - how many more kicks of a Sherrin would each player have had if Goodwin etc decided instead to do more kicking drills? Is it many? Maybe if the coaches listened to some of us on DL something useful would rub off. I'm just hoping we're talking about professionals genuinely doing their best.

Still I wonder how much practising kicks and handballs players have as second nature improves much anymore than someone walking an hour a day is improving their walking action. IMHO a lot of the big disposal errors are due to complacency, jadedness, pressure or fitness. Those won't be fixed by robotically kicking for an extra half hour. (At least a soccer game lifts spirits, gets players moving and for anyone sick of seeing a Sherrin get misused or going past them to the opposition goal they're getting some respite while still training.)

Agree with most of that

On the mechanical repetition - I wonder if that’s the case? Realise you reach a point of marginal gains

If I could draw a parallel with golf practice - acknowledging of course the sports are very difference particularly physical pressure upon one’s physical personage and split second decision making - there’s a reason one practices repetitively and mechanically key skills.

I’m talking approach

Anyway like I said I don’t care all that much and I’m not expert

Like you (I think) I just want our team to be the best it can be

If that’s introducing 30 minutes of doing the Macarena per session let’s do it

(Trying to introduce a bit of levity)

32 minutes ago, Go Ds said:

This wasn't meant to be double-entendre-y. We've been alluding to s Pink Floyd song

Sure you have, mate. Sure you have.

 
47 minutes ago, BoBo said:

The next evolution of AFL will be specialised ultra long kickers. Steph Curries, but for AFL. Players that nail goals consistently from 60 meters.

Going back to the future, hey? Plenty around for most of my life even early this century like the Roccas. Some things like drop kicks get phased out completely but others might come back. Those successful torps are such a morale and momentum changer. I know coaches feel that they're too hit and miss. But if a player gets some easy marks 65m out because the defenders have pushed back and suddenly two goals are scored for a while after the flooding is lessened , creating possible gaps, and a team is less predictable. I think it's a good idea.

41 minutes ago, Superunknown said:

Agree with most of that

On the mechanical repetition - I wonder if that’s the case? Realise you reach a point of marginal gains

If I could draw a parallel with golf practice - acknowledging of course the sports are very difference particularly physical pressure upon one’s physical personage and split second decision making - there’s a reason one practices repetitively and mechanically key skills.

I’m talking approach

Anyway like I said I don’t care all that much and I’m not expert

Like you (I think) I just want our team to be the best it can be

If that’s introducing 30 minutes of doing the Macarena per session let’s do it

(Trying to introduce a bit of levity)

Maybe it would help to play back some of those struggling players' actions in slomo and have some expert see if techniques have worsened. But certainly 'soccer-gate' is a beat-up.

Oh and when the Footy Show had their Grand Final episodes each 'also-ran' team had teammates learning dance routines. There may well be some players back then who bonded over the Macarena.


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

  • REPORT: Brisbane

    “Max Gawn has been the heart and soul of the Dees for years now, but this recent recovery from a terrible start has been driven by him. He was everywhere again, and with the game in the balance, he took several key marks to keep the ball in the Dees forward half.” - The Monday Knee Jerk Reaction: Round Ten Of course, it wasn’t the efforts of one man that caused this monumental upset, but rather the work of the coach and his assistants and the other 22 players who took the ground, notably the likes of Jake Melksham, Christian Petracca, Clayton Oliver and Kozzie Pickett but Max has been magnificent in taking ownership of his team and its welfare under the fire of a calamitous 0-5 start to the season. On Sunday, he provided the leadership that was needed to face up to the reigning premier and top of the ladder Brisbane Lions on their home turf and to prevail after a slow start, during which the hosts led by as much as 24 points in the second quarter. Titus O’Reily is normally comedic in his descriptions of the football but this time, he was being deadly serious. The Demons have come from a long way back and, although they still sit in the bottom third of the AFL pack, there’s a light at the end of the tunnel as they look to drive home the momentum inspired in the past four or five weeks by Max the Magnificent who was under such great pressure in those dark, early days of the season.

      • Thanks
    • 0 replies
    Demonland
  • CASEY: Southport

    The Southport Sharks came to Casey. They saw and they conquered a team with 16 AFL-listed players who, for the most part, wasted their time on the ground and failed to earn their keep. For the first half, the Sharks were kept in the game by the Demons’ poor use of the football, it’s disposal getting worse the closer the team got to its own goal and moreover, it got worse as the game progressed. Make no mistake, Casey was far and away the better team in the first half, it was winning the ruck duels through Tom Campbell’s solid performance but it was the scoreboard that told the story.

      • Thanks
    • 3 replies
    Demonland
  • PREGAME: Sydney

    Just a game and percentage outside the Top 8, the Demons return to Melbourne to face the Sydney Swans at the MCG, with a golden opportunity to build on the momentum from toppling the reigning premiers on their own turf. Who comes in, and who makes way?

      • Thanks
    • 118 replies
    Demonland
  • PODCAST: Brisbane

    The Demonland Podcast will air LIVE on Monday, 12th May @ 8:00pm. Join Binman, George & I as we analyse a famous victory by the Demons over the Lions at the Gabba.
    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.
    Listen LIVE: https://demonland.com/

      • Clap
      • Love
      • Thanks
      • Like
    • 25 replies
    Demonland
  • POSTGAME: Brisbane

    The Demons pulled off an absolute miracle at the Gabba coming from 24 points down in the 2nd Quarter to overrun the reigning premiers the Brisbane Lions winning by 11 points and keeping their season well and truly alive.

      • Haha
      • Love
      • Like
    • 422 replies
    Demonland
  • VOTES: Brisbane

    Captain Max Gawn still has a massive 48 votes lead in the Demonland Player of the Year ahead of Jake Bowey. Christian Petracca, Harvey Langford and Kade Chandler round out the Top 5. Your votes please. 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.

      • Thanks
    • 60 replies
    Demonland