He skies a ball up in the air in the first quarter that results in a Richmond goal. In the last quarter he disposes of the ball straight into the hands of Dusty Martin for another Richmond goal. That's two goals he's given away. Then there's the contests he loses to his opponent where his teammates have to cover for him. Taking an uncontested mark that adds to your stat sheet doesn't make you an impressive footballer unless you judge footballers by the number of possessions they collect.gurugeoff wrote:Ruscoe was tough, body on body, in a few contests
Madgen certainly has some impressive stats for one so maligned
Post Match. Pies trump Tigers. All comments, please.
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+2RudeBoy wrote:+1Skids wrote:Nah, can't agree with 'Breathed new life into the team'... I rated our win over Melbourne much more convincing than that win.
Look, don't get me wrong, it was a top effort, especially to kick 7 in the last.
I guess I'm referring to the peanut brigade who continue to bag bucks... hello, he's gone, you don't need to keep reminding us that YOU think he can't coach. Move on, stop polluting every thread with your diatribe against the great man, we get it.
Fact is, we've been thereabouts most games this year, a couple that we lost by a few points are reversed and we're almost in the top 8.
The biggest turnaround as far as I can see, was getting Billy back. Totally changes our forward structure.
Btw, it also helps not playing 3 ruckmen.
Can we congratulate Harvey on a great third up effort in getting the boys up against Richmond after dropping the third ruckman and playing Callum Brown where he belongs in the center contests, without trying to create an argument that his predecessor, who will always be a legend of the Collingwood Football Club, can't coach.
I think a bit to much has been made of this move. There are a number of recent high draft picks who played mid field as juniors but did their apprenticeships on the flanks in the seniors. Both Parish and Dow ( both inside top 5 picks ) recently attributed their good form to starting their senior careers as high forwards.BazBoy wrote:I believe too much is made of “playing a roll” which Bucks was
Playing Callum Brown in midfield after the VFL coach put him there
Harvey may have hit on something
McGrath ( pick one ) started at half back before going into the centre a couple years ago. Walsh ( number one ) spent his early days on the wing. We can’t expect U18 year old midfielders to hold their ground or run out four quarters against seasoned pros in the mid field.
Brown has now played 50 games ( four pre seasons ) and dominated his last couple VFL games, so the timing seems about right to me. He needs to back it up of course but the signs were good against the Tigers.
Yep. And often worse: they stand like statues to take the chest mark and the defender takes an intercept mark.Pies2016 wrote:...
It’s a pet hate of mine when players stand flat footed to take the mark and the trailing defender has the time to punch the ball back 30 metres in the opposite direction. Happened time and time again yesterday. I get it that we aren’t great by foot but there is no excuse for the intended recipient to not keep coming up to meet the kicker. Rant over.
OTOH, no one uses that to excuse the kicker when he has poor disposal efficiency and many turnovers. But some excuse the ruckman's clanger hit outs 'cos they claim all his teammates are useless. Not very consistent beliefs IMO.
Yeah, this is the real Richmond. When I say their success was all about their fitness and injury management, some on here get very upset. (There are some closet Tiggers admirers here... and some who are totally out of the closet. )Pies2016 wrote:...
One of the things that makes you a good team is the ability to limit the opposition doing what they want to do. Today was as much about Richmond as it was Collingwood. Richmond haven’t won for a month, so it’s not like they are hard to move the ball quickly against, particularly with a third of their best 22 ....
But the more we see the more that becomes obvious. Don't forget that the Champion Data stats showed that Richmond still had the second best (smallest) injury profile in the AFL (to round 14 when the stats were shown). The differences are:
1] small injury toll is not the same as zero injury toll, which Richmond have taken for granted
2] the injuries have been to players they really need, sometimes concentrated in the same position (e.g. leaving them with no ruckman).
afl.com.au:
"The Tigers' famed manic effort has dissipated. They ranked second in the AFL last year for forward-half intercepts but are 16th since round 13, their pressure ranks second worst in the League in that period and their goals per inside 50 conceded sees them placed 15th (they were fourth in this key statistic last year). Against the Magpies, the Telstra Tracker shows the Tigers recorded 190 sprint efforts to Collingwood's 217. Even at half-time, with the Pies trailing by 17 points, the alarm bells would have been ringing with Collingwood leading the sprint count."
As I've said before, it takes no skill to bring manic effort. It does take fitness and a clear run with injuries. Without those, a gameplan based on manic effort just will not work. We've seen that with Richmond the last 4 weeks.
Not meeting the ball carrier in the corridor is a sin because you know there “ should “ always be someone on your hammer guarding the area. I think we’re so used to taking uncontested marks in areas that aren’t dangerous, the opposition don’t even bother to pressure the marking player in our back half.K wrote:Yep. And often worse: they stand like statues to take the chest mark and the defender takes an intercept mark.Pies2016 wrote:...
It’s a pet hate of mine when players stand flat footed to take the mark and the trailing defender has the time to punch the ball back 30 metres in the opposite direction. Happened time and time again yesterday. I get it that we aren’t great by foot but there is no excuse for the intended recipient to not keep coming up to meet the kicker. Rant over.
OTOH, no one uses that to excuse the kicker when he has poor disposal efficiency and many turnovers. But some excuse the ruckman's clanger hit outs 'cos they claim all his teammates are useless. Not very consistent beliefs IMO.
If you’re going to be an option up the middle you have to either be on the move out in front or have no opposition player within 30 metres. Obviously a flat kick helps too. Was nice to see Ruscoe and Henry kick a flat ball when it was needed. It’s an underrated skill.
I have them with 7 - 8 of their best 22 out and most of them are new injuries since round 14. The other thing that’s impacted their recent performances is that if you don’t have any injuries for a couple seasons and then get them all at once, then you are effectively introducing to many inexperienced players into the team in one hit. You go from senior players only worrying about their own game, to senior players having to direct traffic to all the new players who don’t have a clue.K wrote:Yeah, this is the real Richmond. When I say their success was all about their fitness and injury management, some on here get very upset. (There are some closet Tiggers admirers here... and some who are totally out of the closet. )Pies2016 wrote:...
One of the things that makes you a good team is the ability to limit the opposition doing what they want to do. Today was as much about Richmond as it was Collingwood. Richmond haven’t won for a month, so it’s not like they are hard to move the ball quickly against, particularly with a third of their best 22 ....
But the more we see the more that becomes obvious. Don't forget that the Champion Data stats showed that Richmond still had the second best (smallest) injury profile in the AFL (to round 14 when the stats were shown). The differences are:
1] small injury toll is not the same as zero injury toll, which Richmond have taken for granted
2] the injuries have been to players they really need, sometimes concentrated in the same position (e.g. leaving them with no ruckman).
afl.com.au:
"The Tigers' famed manic effort has dissipated. They ranked second in the AFL last year for forward-half intercepts but are 16th since round 13, their pressure ranks second worst in the League in that period and their goals per inside 50 conceded sees them placed 15th (they were fourth in this key statistic last year). Against the Magpies, the Telstra Tracker shows the Tigers recorded 190 sprint efforts to Collingwood's 217. Even at half-time, with the Pies trailing by 17 points, the alarm bells would have been ringing with Collingwood leading the sprint count."
As I've said before, it takes no skill to bring manic effort. It does take fitness and a clear run with injuries. Without those, a gameplan based on manic effort just will not work. We've seen that with Richmond the last 4 weeks.
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always always always step into the pass!K wrote:Yep. And often worse: they stand like statues to take the chest mark and the defender takes an intercept mark.Pies2016 wrote:...
It’s a pet hate of mine when players stand flat footed to take the mark and the trailing defender has the time to punch the ball back 30 metres in the opposite direction. Happened time and time again yesterday. I get it that we aren’t great by foot but there is no excuse for the intended recipient to not keep coming up to meet the kicker. Rant over.
OTOH, no one uses that to excuse the kicker when he has poor disposal efficiency and many turnovers. But some excuse the ruckman's clanger hit outs 'cos they claim all his teammates are useless. Not very consistent beliefs IMO.
You cant fix stupid, turns out you cant quarantine it either!
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Skids wrote:Nah, can't agree with 'Breathed new life into the team'... I rated our win over Melbourne much more convincing than that win.
Look, don't get me wrong, it was a top effort, especially to kick 7 in the last.
I guess I'm referring to the peanut brigade who continue to bag bucks... hello, he's gone, you don't need to keep reminding us that YOU think he can't coach. Move on, stop polluting every thread with your diatribe against the great man, we get it.
Fact is, we've been thereabouts most games this year, a couple that we lost by a few points are reversed and we're almost in the top 8.
The biggest turnaround as far as I can see, was getting Billy back. Totally changes our forward structure.
Agree re the Bucks haters, im not one of them. I actually rate our win over the Tigers as equal to the Deeeees one, both were truly great efforts, against all odds.
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