Excellent vision of Rampe incident which totally supports Ramps explanation.
Round 18 Swans v Dogs Match Thread
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Great news - and that vision paints a different story to it all.Excellent vision of Rampe incident which totally supports Ramps explanation.
https://twitter.com/davidzita1/statu...QKwk_9TTaxWD2Q
Really need Rampe in there leading and playing well!"You get the feeling that like Monty Python's Black Knight, the Swans would regard amputation as merely a flesh wound."Comment
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And we won. Yay us.Having watched Horse’s press conference and the footage, it seems the two competing arguments will be about who was responsible for the contact.
- Our broad argument will be as Duyrea swings onto his left, Rampe closes position in preparation for a marking contest and to spoil, but McNeil veered back at the last minute and the contact was accidental on Rampe’s part and a function of McNeil moving back just as Rampe is in the middle of a normal piece of defensive positioning.
- The AFL broad argument will be that Rampe moved early, with some speed and intent to block or bump McNeil, and was responsible for the contact and what followed.
Some of the footage is a bit vague, but if I had to guess, the AFL will lean heavily on the behind the goal footage to make a case Rampe’s movements were more substantive and aggressive. Not saying it’s right, but that’s where their case seems to lie.
I’m sure it’ll all be more complicated than that, but you get the idea.'Delicious' is a fun word to sayComment
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Could not agree more Liz.
I only get to a handful of the off season sessions and gulden is next level.
His intent and ability to anticipate is elite but so to is his ability to scan and execute.
You are so right regarding his body language for himself but also he does not hide his body language with his team mates either.
He drives high standards.
I think any of us who have played or watched a lot of very good sports people have noted they have minimal deficiencies and an incredible ability to scan while ball in hand.
Always looking for the most attacking option that leaves the defence grasping at air."be tough, only when it gets tough"

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He is special, Auntie. We are so lucky to have him. The way he goes for the ball and turns reminds me of our great Bobby Skilton, though Bobby could kick with either foot. I would say currently Errol is our best player and our future captain.????Could not agree more Liz.
I only get to a handful of the off season sessions and gulden is next level.
His intent and ability to anticipate is elite but so to is his ability to scan and execute.
You are so right regarding his body language for himself but also he does not hide his body language with his team mates either.
He drives high standards.
I think any of us who have played or watched a lot of very good sports people have noted they have minimal deficiencies and an incredible ability to scan while ball in hand.
Always looking for the most attacking option that leaves the defence grasping at air.Comment
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+1. He’s been directing traffic since his first few games.
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Gulden was mentioned in the latest episode of the ESPN Footy Podcast, where one of the regulars is a Champion Data employee who provides stats to back up their discussions. They were talking about the best kicks in the AFL and one of the other hosts mentioned that he 'felt' that Gulden was one of the best kicks in the competition and asked the CD guy whether the stats backed that up. He said overall Gulden was landing kicks 2% less than expected (based on the difficulty of the kick, distance, pressure applied) than the average, but interestingly when broken down into short (<40m) and long (40m+) kicks, Gulden was 2nd worst in the comp (behind B.Crouch) in short kicks, and 7th best in long kicks.Comment
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It was good to see he played on instinct and moved the ball on quickly for a change instead of taking a mark and letting all the opposition flood back
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I think there's a little mix of genuine creativity, confidence in his own skills and the "you miss 100% of the shots you don't take" mindset that leads to Errol's overall kicking efficiency seeming a bit lower than we might expect. The short vs. long is quite interesting, I wonder how many of those short kicks are when playing an inside role (which I guess pressure applied would cater for) or cute/outlandish genuine attempts to thread a needle.Gulden was mentioned in the latest episode of the ESPN Footy Podcast, where one of the regulars is a Champion Data employee who provides stats to back up their discussions. They were talking about the best kicks in the AFL and one of the other hosts mentioned that he 'felt' that Gulden was one of the best kicks in the competition and asked the CD guy whether the stats backed that up. He said overall Gulden was landing kicks 2% less than expected (based on the difficulty of the kick, distance, pressure applied) than the average, but interestingly when broken down into short (<40m) and long (40m+) kicks, Gulden was 2nd worst in the comp (behind B.Crouch) in short kicks, and 7th best in long kicks.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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In his presser today, it was revealed Luke Beveridge broke his hand hitting the White Board during half time. He also cryptically made it known that he wasn't happy Rampe getting off, despite not directly saying so & not commenting further on the tribunal's decision.Comment
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