Bevan
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The kick went onto the wing. Bit of a stretch.Bevo bandwagon driverComment
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The eternal connundrum "what happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object" was finally solved when David Hasselhoff punched himself in the face.Comment
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You've stumped me there. But the point is his opponent didn't kick a goal after being their most dangerous forward after the Bevanator was moved onto him. Jones had kicked three goals in the second quarter. Admittedly Hale had kicked 4 behinds. Bevo quietened their most dangerous forward. Job well done.Bevo bandwagon driverComment
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What you mean is two clangers led to turnovers after which goals were kicked further down the ground. Both turnovers were near the centre of the ground. So the Kanga kicked it from the centre square after Barlow was dispossed from a hospital handpass? The handball went into our side of the centre square!
The kick went onto the wing. Bit of a stretch.Comment
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You've stumped me there. But the point is his opponent didn't kick a goal after being their most dangerous forward after the Bevanator was moved onto him. Jones had kicked three goals in the second quarter. Admittedly Hale had kicked 4 behinds. Bevo quietened their most dangerous forward. Job well done.
1. Bad Disposal
2. Lack of awareness
3. Bad/slow decision making
4. giving away stupid free kicks.
and occasionally 5. going in too hard when not required.The eternal connundrum "what happens when an unstoppable force meets an immovable object" was finally solved when David Hasselhoff punched himself in the face.Comment
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I would say 1-3 are the same things. His bad disposal is a result of poor decision making (actual technically poor kicks aren't that common with Bevo), which is due to lack of awareness.Officially on the Reid and Sumner bandwagon!Comment
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I'd say if we can trade Bevan at seasons end for a half eaten chicken sandwich, we've done pretty well for ourselves.Ed Considine's day out - Round 3, 16th April 1995.
11 Kicks, 13 Handballs, 8 Marks, 1 Goal, 1 Behind, 1 Tackle, 1 Hitout, 3 Brownlow votes (his only votes)
Ed = GodComment
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You've stumped me there. But the point is his opponent didn't kick a goal after being their most dangerous forward after the Bevanator was moved onto him. Jones had kicked three goals in the second quarter. Admittedly Hale had kicked 4 behinds. Bevo quietened their most dangerous forward. Job well done.I knew him as a gentle young man, I cannot say for sure the reasons for his decline
We watched him fade before our very eyes, and years before his timeComment
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His game against North was ok by the below average standards of 42. Not one of his worst.
He will look at his stats and think - gee I played ok, got some kicks, some marks. Some "stats" as one or two like to point out on RWO in defence of 42.
Yes, he does link up ok with team mates in uncontested runs out of defence... most of these kicks and handballs are reasonable even though there's a training drill level of pressure. He gets stats because the opposition forwards have already zoned off and left him and 2-3 other Swans to play kick to kick with themselves as they try to run the ball sideways then out of defence. That is where Bavan gets his easy stats. A mule could get those stats.
But what he won't understand is why he loses the critical 1% one-on-one battles that end up costing goals.
He, and this coaching group don't seem to be working on the more critical problems that occurr with 42 virtually every week...
The fact that he stood 2-3m from his man in a stoppage on the wing and allowed him to get an easy disposal off to his team mate running past and create another easy forward entry, or, because he can't watch the ball and his man in defence he was too slow off the mark and allowed the opponent an uncontested mark on a forward lead from an average kick, or, when he flew to punch a pack ball he was never going to reach and left his man unattented on the ground to get the spillage and create a goal... it goes on and on.
I think we really miss the incomparable defensive hardness of Ross Lyon who would have pointed these things out to 42 once he saw more of him at senior level. I don't think it would have helped much though, other than influencing Roos to delist him.
No other team would have 42 on their list so no hope for a trade.... even for a half-eaten sandwich.
I'm not going to mention the obvious howlers that 42 contributes most games.
Lol, could you imagine a season highlight reel of those at the B&F?!? Can anyone think of a tune to go with it??Last edited by Bear; 6 July 2009, 10:10 AM."As a player he simply should not have been able to do the things he did. Leo was a 185cm, 88kg full-back and played on some of the biggest, fastest and best full-forwards of all time, and constantly beat them." Roos.
Leo Barry? you star! We'll miss ya, ''Leapin''.Comment
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Woo ??? it is really simple. He played on the forward line in the first half and did well. He was switched onto Cory Jones (he plays for the team in the blue and white) our opposition today. You see Corey had kicked three goals. Thats through the big posts. They got six points for those. And the coach switched Bevo onto Jones after half time. And son you know how many goals Jones kicked after half time when Bevo was playing on him as a defender? Well son actually none. And most coaches would be pretty chuffed with that. Thank mum for the din dins when she tucks you in tonight. Its bed time.
Bevan is certainly familiar with those. He can find them from 25 metres out.Comment
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