The trials and tribulations of lewis roberts-thomson

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  • ScottH
    It's Goodes to cheer!!
    • Sep 2003
    • 23665

    It would be interesting to see the stats on how many goals he's saved, over the last month or so.
    He always seems to be helping others, being the last line of defence, to stop the quick kick out of a pack, etc.

    Comment

    • dimelb
      pr. dim-melb; m not f
      • Jun 2003
      • 6889

      Originally posted by ScottH
      It would be interesting to see the stats on how many goals he's saved, over the last month or so.
      He always seems to be helping others, being the last line of defence, to stop the quick kick out of a pack, etc.
      Especially the times when he has positioned himself smack in the middle of the big sticks. Well done the Hyphenator.
      He reminds him of the guys, close-set, slow, and never rattled, who were play-makers on the team. (John Updike, seeing Josh Kennedy in a crystal ball)

      Comment

      • Trickster
        On the Rookie List
        • Jul 2009
        • 377

        Originally posted by Trickster
        "Holy Donuts Regman-the Juddernought is heading straight for us"
        "Fear not Blond Wonder-I have a specky in my pocket and I'm not afraid to use it"

        Comment

        • old blood
          On the Rookie List
          • May 2010
          • 30

          This thread must be running out of puff by now, but someone needs to make this point about LRT ... he's being played out of position.

          He is far better suited to playing at half-back where he can use his pace and agility. However, someone has to stand in the goal square and wrestle the gorillas and I doubt that we have anyone else at this stage who can do it.

          Comment

          • Velour&Ruffles
            Regular in the Side
            • Jun 2006
            • 898

            Lrt

            Time for some love. The praise is gradually getting louder on this forum but it ain't loud enough yet. The guy:

            (a) can play - disposal is statistically better than at least half of our side
            (b) is extraordinarily courageous - knows no fear
            (c) plays under the Defence Magnifying Glass where you only get noticed when things go wrong.

            His headclash against the Tiges was just the latest of many examples of what he is about. Never takes a backwards step. Fearless and loyal. Disposal more than adequate (yeah yeah, he makes mistakes but show me a player who doesn't). The fact that he now takes regular contested marks in heavy traffic is huge. By the time he's done he'll be rated as one of our elite defenders in the last 30 or 40 years. Go Lewie - love your work.
            My opinion is objective truth in its purest form

            Comment

            • Velour&Ruffles
              Regular in the Side
              • Jun 2006
              • 898

              Originally posted by Velour&Ruffles
              Time for some love. The praise is gradually getting louder on this forum but it ain't loud enough yet. The guy:

              (a) can play - disposal is statistically better than at least half of our side
              (b) is extraordinarily courageous - knows no fear
              (c) plays under the Defence Magnifying Glass where you only get noticed when things go wrong.

              His headclash against the Tiges was just the latest of many examples of what he is about. Never takes a backwards step. Fearless and loyal. Disposal more than adequate (yeah yeah, he makes mistakes but show me a player who doesn't). The fact that he now takes regular contested marks in heavy traffic is huge. By the time he's done he'll be rated as one of our elite defenders in the last 30 or 40 years. Go Lewie - love your work.
              Okay so I later noticed the thread: The-trials-and-tribulations-of-lewis-roberts-thomson.

              I should do my research better but I'm pleased to see that a few others agree with me.
              My opinion is objective truth in its purest form

              Comment

              • Cheer_Cheer
                Regular in the Side
                • Jul 2009
                • 739

                I think LRT is now our number 1 defender without a doubt.. He gets the biggest and ugliset every week and does a blinkin good job.. I really hope he takes the honours against BBBH in rd 21....Go Beaker !

                Comment

                • TheHood
                  On the Rookie List
                  • Jan 2003
                  • 1938

                  Has been in great form. The thing to love about Lewie is that he's continued to improve and that is now at the point where is courage and his nouse are matched by skill level too.

                  He's a great mark down back and likes to play on quickly to relieve him of pressure. Nothing worse that taking that mark on a searching switch of play, tonnes of forward pressure and doing something stupid like kick into the man on the mark.
                  The Pain of Discipline is Nothing Like The Pain of Disappointment

                  Comment

                  • Bloody Hell
                    Senior Player
                    • Oct 2006
                    • 3085

                    Originally posted by Cheer_Cheer
                    I think LRT is now our number 1 defender without a doubt.. He gets the biggest and ugliset every week and does a blinkin good job.. I really hope he takes the honours against BBBH in rd 21....Go Beaker !
                    No way is he ahead of Grundy. He's been pushed to FB because of his disposal. Reg with 26 touches at 81% efficiency today!
                    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

                    • Triple B
                      Formerly 'BBB'
                      • Feb 2003
                      • 6999

                      Originally posted by Bloody Hell
                      No way is he ahead of Grundy. He's been pushed to FB because of his disposal. Reg with 26 touches at 81% efficiency today!
                      I don't reckon there is a struck match between them.

                      Reg was great, but don't lose sight of the fact that he was the lone real tall deep in defence amongst a Carlton forward line who wouldn't have been out of place in the Lilliput firsts. You'd expect he would take a mountain of marks and get plenty of ball.
                      Driver of the Dan Hannebery bandwagon....all aboard. 4th April 09

                      Comment

                      • Auntie.Gerald
                        Veterans List
                        • Oct 2009
                        • 6480

                        its horses for courses but our fast break footy played last week thru the corridor has certainly enabled us to use smaller backs and flood forward

                        will be interesting to see what we do when LRT and or Bolton are back !!
                        "be tough, only when it gets tough"

                        Comment

                        • tiffanyspacem
                          On the Rookie List
                          • Jul 2010
                          • 2

                          Originally posted by Bloody Hell
                          No way is he ahead of Grundy. He's been pushed to FB because of his disposal. Reg with 26 touches at 81% efficiency today!
                          I tend to agree with this.
                          Grundy moves quite effortlessly and gracefully. LRT makes good moves on ocassion but it seems like it takes a lot more to pull them off.

                          Comment

                          • Primmy
                            Proud Tragic Swan
                            • Apr 2008
                            • 5970

                            Originally posted by tiffanyspacem
                            I tend to agree with this.
                            Grundy moves quite effortlessly and gracefully. LRT makes good moves on ocassion but it seems like it takes a lot more to pull them off.
                            LRT is not much of a runner and he looks clumsy but he is not. He is a modern day Dunks. A somewhat immovable mass down back and his efforts to harras and spoil and take marks is way up there. He does move up the ground, and that worries the opposition because they don't rate him either. He and Reg have different roles to play, and he does his very well indeed. No need to compare them. They both have their strengths.
                            If you've never jumped from one couch to the other to save yourself from lava then you didn't have a childhood

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                            • liz
                              Veteran
                              Site Admin
                              • Jan 2003
                              • 16778

                              Originally posted by Primmy
                              LRT is not much of a runner and he looks clumsy but he is not. He is a modern day Dunks. A somewhat immovable mass down back and his efforts to harras and spoil and take marks is way up there. He does move up the ground, and that worries the opposition because they don't rate him either. He and Reg have different roles to play, and he does his very well indeed. No need to compare them. They both have their strengths.
                              I am not sure that is true. When he first started getting given key defender (as opposed to third tall defender) roles, it was on the likes of Richo and Jon Brown. And he has performed very creditably on both these players in some games. He got those roles because he was an endurance runner, as opposed to a full back with good burst speed off the mark. He used to look very exposed one-on-one in the goal square, and sometimes that was exploited. Mick Malthouse would regularly take the player LRT was on back to the goal square, for example.

                              I think it is a huge credit to him that he has developed his game to the point he can now play at full-back. He clearly reads the play / flight of the ball far better than he did a few years ago. He can still be exposed by well directed, low kicks to a quick leading forward - the Pies game this year, against Dawes, is a good example. But kicks like those are ones most full-backs will struggle to defend against unless they have some help from another player filling the gap where the forward wants to lead to.

                              Comment

                              • Flossie
                                On the Rookie List
                                • Jun 2007
                                • 76

                                Originally posted by Primmy
                                LRT is not much of a runner and he looks clumsy but he is not. He is a modern day Dunks. A somewhat immovable mass down back and his efforts to harras and spoil and take marks is way up there. He does move up the ground, and that worries the opposition because they don't rate him either. He and Reg have different roles to play, and he does his very well indeed. No need to compare them. They both have their strengths.
                                I wish LRT had been out there today against Melbourne. I thought the entire defense was woeful.

                                Comment

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