If He ReBuilds it, Finals will Keep Coming
Collapse
X
-
Hardly a "rebuild". We still have the same core of players who took us to two consecutive grandfinals, and the second of those was less than two seasons ago. If we emerge out of the tough second half of the season still poised to challenge, what Roos (and his team) will have proved is that his core of very good players is ultra-consistent in that they can maintain such high levels of play for an extended number of season, and that the team has the ability to evolve its approach subtly in a way that the media seems to have underestimated.Comment
-
Agree with liz. Talk of a 'rebuild' is just crap, and the meeja trying to cover their tracks as to how a supposedly ageing side on the decline, their bodies beaten by years of playing hard contested footy, could suddenly find themselves in the top 4.
The reason why it makes me cross is that a deeply flawed theory ('bottoming out', 'rebuilding', 'premiership window') has become accepted wisdom to the point where even results that prove that it's largely nonsense, are interpreted through its prism. It's a bit like religious fundamentalists responding to the triumph of the theory of evolution by saying, 'Yes, well, I am prepared to concede that God in his cleverness created us from dust with our brains wired to believe in evolution'.
Two comments of his are worth noting:
The Swans began this season with a massive 11 players that were either already 28 or would turn 28 during the course of the season.
The Swans have long been accused, including by this column, of being the AFL's most boring team to watch but there has also been a significant change in their style of play this season.
For the first time since Roos became coach, the Swans are averaging over 100 points per game and this is even more impressive considering Hall's long-term spell on the sidelines.
I said several weeks ago in a thread on our low-scoring status:
If we win more, our average for and against will start to look better and better. If we hit a streak of form and make it to 9-1-3 at the split round, I guarantee that by then our average goals kicked/game will be better than 14, and better than most of the comp. It's a symptom, not a cause.
(The jury is still out on the accuracy of my above statement, by the way: we need 10 goals against Melbourne to exceed a 14 average, and at the moment we've kicked more goals than 9 other sides but a higher score than only 8 others-- Adelaide one less goal but 20 more behinds.)Comment
-
...but bottoming out does work. Hawthorn is testament to that. Geelong sort of bottomed out. I think the point is you don't have to bottom out to remain competitive. Personally, I think what keeps us competitive without bottoming out is our expanded rookie list. It is a massive advantage.He had observed that people who did lie were, on the whole, more resourceful and ambitious and successful than people who did not lie.Comment
-
...but bottoming out does work. Hawthorn is testament to that. Geelong sort of bottomed out. I think the point is you don't have to bottom out to remain competitive. Personally, I think what keeps us competitive without bottoming out is our expanded rookie list. It is a massive advantage.
Hawthorn have achieved nothing yet.
And while I agree our expanded rookie list is some advantage, I don't think you can say it is "massive". The only senior players we've got from it are Bevan and Barlow. I think it's a long bow to draw to say other youngsters developed more quickly because they got to play alongside Rowe, Shaw, Clarke and Potter for a couple of years.Comment
-
Wild speculation, unsubstantiated rumours, silly jokes and opposition delight in another's failures is what makes an internet forum fun.
Blessed are the cracked for they are the ones who let in the light.Comment
-
Comment
-
The only way to get a flag is the old-school method of teamwork, fitness, mental toughness, a touch of individual brilliance and a bit of luck to boot. High draft picks will most probably give you one of those 5.
Have Buddy, Mitchell and whatever other top picks are on the Hawks' list playing at their absolute best, alongside teammates with a low fitness base, a weak team plan, and insufficient mental resolve, and you've got an ordinary side.
You don't need to subscribe to Blight's 'bottom 6' theory to recognise that if Carlton do win a flag with the current crop, it'll be because blokes of the calibre of Carazzo and Thornton (who both made it via the rookie draft) can play at the required level, not just because the other 17 can stand back and applaud while Fevola, Kreuzer, Murphy, Gibbs and Judd do their thing.
Geelong never bottomed out at all. The changes to their playing list from 2006 to 2007 were minimal.Comment
-
Comment
-
Dean Cox came from the rookie list, and he is the premier ruckman in the AFL.
Brett Kirk is a champ, came from the rookie list.
The rookie list is a great idea from the AFL.Comment
Comment