Everything posted by Webber
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Are we struggling under the weight of scrutiny?
I read this and my immediate thought was âthis isnât about the MFC, or the team, itâs about youâ. And I get it, those of us who are truly invested are guilty of projecting our emotional state onto the club, team, players and other supporters.
- PODCAST: QF vs Collingwood
- PODCAST: QF vs Collingwood
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PODCAST: QF vs Collingwood
Hey Gents, looking forward to the podcast. Binman will rightfully point out how he predicted that a poor first quarter, and anything beyond a 3 goal jump would be hard to pull back, and others on Demonland will want an explanation and fix for our forward 50 connection, inefficiency and kicking inaccuracy. But I reckon you should iterate to all that thereâs a bigger elephant in the room. Injuries across a season are the most objectively reliable indicator of success, for any team. Look at just our forward lineâŠâŠlong stretches of unavailability for Tmac, Ben Brown, Bailey Fritsch, Harry Petty, and now Jake Melksham. No JVR this week to boot. Our injury stats this year (obviously compared to our flag competitors) simply look like making it a bridge too far. Itâs a depressing perspective, I know, but wonât be ignored. Itâs the most inconvenient truth in football.
- POSTGAME: QF vs Collingwood
- POSTGAME: QF vs Collingwood
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POSTGAME: QF vs Collingwood
He jumped to smother the ball. It was COMPLETELY justified. That he turned the shoulder rather than holding his hands out and coming front on is something else. Heâll get off though, because theyâll argue lack of time and need to protect himself. JVR will get suspended because his eyes werenât on the ball, and he raised his elbow. Sad, but true.
- POSTGAME: QF vs Collingwood
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POSTGAME: QF vs Collingwood
Effectively killed our season in that first quarter. We knew thatâs what theyâd bring, more than anything else about the game. Match them, and it was ours to lose. Let them get a more than 3 goal jump, and it would be too much. That we failed to stop them is enormously disappointing and frustrating. But we just werenât up to it. Hope itâs not a wasted chance at a flag, but itâs sure looking that way. And to any of you saying Collingwood donât deserve to be where they are now, wake up! Itâs a four quarter game.
- GAMEDAY: QF vs Collingwood
- GAMEDAY: QF vs Collingwood
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GAMEDAY: QF vs Collingwood
Unless we can disrupt them defensively by moving more quickly on transition and from half back, this ainât happening. Hopefully Tracc can lift, and the Pies tire. They should, cos theyâve been fading in the last month, but our inside 50 game at the mo is simply awful. Making it so so easy to defend. Ugly stuff, but thereâs time.
- GAMEDAY: QF vs Collingwood
- GAMEDAY: QF vs Collingwood
- Bailey Smith
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AFLW: Rd 01 vs Collingwood
Brilliant. And the bolded is really the stuff people donât understand as much as I wish. Itâs HALF the human market, FFS, absolutely ripe to become more attracted and more fully invested than ever before (which is already a lot). My optimist hope is that they couldnât stuff it up they tried, but as you say, with the money available, they could be doing so much more, and faster and smarter (just like those fabulous Dees women last night).
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AFLW: Rd 01 vs Collingwood
Ah, the utterly perfect put-down* *(no disrespect to the appropriate use of Velcro fastening footwear)
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AFLW: Rd 01 vs Collingwood
Definitely word of the day.
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AFLW: Rd 01 vs Collingwood
To say weâre all hanging out to hear about young Ms Binners reaction is the understatement of the weekend I reckon.
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AFLW: Rd 01 vs Collingwood
In the world of elite sport, thatâs just bio-anatomically observant, @rpfc. Same for the men. I reckon the team as a group looked fitter and stronger, almost as if theyâd been working to that end! Their running, strength in the aerial contest and physicality in tackling was, to me at least, who went to the first Melb v Bulldogs game at the âG, exponentially greater than that of course, and simply better year on year. Itâs just so satisfying seeing the comp evolve from its inception, despite the AFLâs half-arsed bet-hedging lack of optimal commitment. I look at Tyla Hanks, who I saw play in her first year (at Victoria Park), when I said to Mrs. Webber (yes, I did), sheâll be a Dees skipper one day, and how sheâs now one of the best âpureâ footballing talents running around. Itâs just plain exciting. Ikon Park (excepting for that big CFC logo) is perfect for AFLW, too. Just like I used to imagine a fully aligned womenâs AFL comp, I like to imagine a time when the AFL has the gumption to build an AFLW specific stadium, and have a proper season, not some 10 round tease.
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AFLW: Rd 01 vs Collingwood
Brilliant! And deserved. Am I right in thinking Georgie Campbell is ex-Dee Tony Campbellâs daughter?
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Jake Melksham Injury
Partial tears do exist, but theyâre never reconstructed. The policy is play on until or if it ruptures fully. A âgoodâ ACL is uncomplicated by other concomitant injury - no meniscal (cartilage) damage, no (or minimal) medial ligament tear, no joint surface damage or bone surface fracture. A straightforward rehab at Jakeâs career point would see him in full match play at 9 months post-surgery. 12 months is the recent preferred time only to avoid general joint irritability. At 9 months, the graft is fully consolidated into the bone and fully revascularised (has a blood supply).
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Max Gawn made me smile
Not just the Dees who are blessed to have Max, the AFL should be on their knees thanking him for being so different to the banal, controversy stoking rubbish the footy media generally trot out. Heâs a champ, he knows it, but also that his footy and his club is paramount.
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Jake Melksham Injury
More likely I think @La Dee-vina Comedia is that he would go allograft, hope his rehab is optimal, and return to full matchplay at 9 months, which would be start of June (theoretically assuming he had surgery this week). The only reason full return to sport has more recently been pushed to 12 months is not to do with graft strength (itâs fully revascularised by 9 months), but decreased incidence of knee joint irritability. That would ultimately settle, so itâs a minimal long term risk. Optimally, heâd get 3 months footy pre-finals. Will all depend, as it should, on how Jake feels about another go round.
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Jake Melksham Injury
Yeah, havenât seen one for years, quite simply because they break. Surgeons have therefore gone off them, because they run like spooked sheep from âfailuresâ. The Swans player whose name I canât remember was an exception, but if he followed clinical patterns it would have broken by now. Thus, anyone who gets one, ultimately needs an allograft (own tissue) replacement anyway, meaning another significant knee surgery, increased likelihood of early degeneration in the knee, and so on. The next best, and thus fastest, is a cadaver graft, harvested from donor bodies, but the graft still has to go through a âdeadâ phase, before enlivening again with its own blood supply, meaning still 6-9 months (as against 9 - 12). The only difference between that and standard allograft (hamstring, quadriceps or patellar tendon) is the absence of issues related to harvesting your own tissue, which isnât a problem long term anyway. Cadaver grafts are popular in countries with âopt outâ organ donor programmes (and meniscal transplants are WAY ahead in those places). Our organ donation policy is âopt-inâ, which nobody wants to talk about, so cadaver grafting is niche in Australia. Too much info?