lie down with dogs, geth...........
End up on top of the ladder??
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lie down with dogs, geth...........
I'd be interested in hearing specifically where I was disrespectful.
In any case, though, it's probably worth saying that respect is earned, and you're being rather rude.
In what way is this not a broad question? Need I define what a broad question is first?
I point to a lack of players taken ready to play AFL level immediately, and a desire to cut players that have demonstrated that they had rather a lot of footy to give.
Henderson got us McKay, but what if instead of drafting both Harry and Charlie, we had gotten just one? Instead of trading Tuohy, we'd retained him? Gibbs couldn't have been convinced to remain?
Did we have to cut as hard and completely as we did?
TPK ahead of Worpel as well.
Dow is not the selection I'm disputing. In isolation, the selection is fine; collectively, he's drafted a single 'ready to go' midfielder in Kennedy who then proceeded to have precisely the same injury he had at the giants which has hampered him all the way through.
It's the critical mass of small, light bodied and not immediate impact players that I'm criticising. They're there in every draft; SOS selected for ceiling, not floor, and that's my issue.
If we were more attractive earlier, could we have lured Jack Steele? What would we look like then?
... you're not reading this with an interest in understanding, BF.
Go pick an argument with someone else if you're smarting for one.
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Critical mass is the smallest amount of fissionable material which is required to sustain a nuclear chain reaction; in this sense, I'm referring too many small, high ceiling/low floor mids at the same time.Critical mass? Who are you referring to?
Not what I said. I said (in order) that:So, I ask why it's necessary to bring in people from outside the club in order for us to be successful. You then tell me it hasn't worked in the past, completely ignoring the failures of the outsiders we've brought in too...
The past has a way of informing the future, especially when people seek to ignore it and damn the torpedoes.I then tell you that past is irrelevant to the future. Different people will mostly have a different way of doing things.
Yep.Yet, I'm the one smarting for an argument?
You're always up for a fight, you mean.I didn't even ask you in the first place. I'm always happy to have a healthy debate.
Silvagni was not an outsider.Pagan was an outsider and so was Bolton..
So we've gone, outside, inside, outside, outside, inside
That's 2/5 that are/were Carlton people...
So that doesn't answer how bringing Carlton people in are an ongoing problem?
Just trying to ascertain why it's necessary to bring in outsiders in order to obtain success?
Critical mass is the smallest amount of fissionable material which is required to sustain a nuclear chain reaction; in this sense, I'm referring too many small, high ceiling/low floor mids at the same time.
Not what I said. I said (in order) that:
- we may not want to get more club champions ostracised from the club due to firing them after they fail.
- an awful lot of the people who were at Carlton recently were either not good at their roles or were eclipsed by other clubs; ie, that they weren't successful, and neither were we.
- those we have remaining have, in the majority, left football, and might be bringing in an outdated model for how a football club/department should be run.
At no point did I say that it hasn't worked in the past, or have I even mentioned the failures of the outsiders we've brought in.
- an awful lot of the people who were at Carlton recently were either not good at their roles or were eclipsed by other clubs; ie, that they weren't successful, and neither were we.
Carlton people from this side of the millennium - during which footy has changed an awful lot - haven't been the most successful.
If you wish to put further words in my mouth, could you at least take me to dinner first?
The past has a way of informing the future, especially when people seek to ignore it and damn the torpedoes.
Yep.
You're always up for a fight, you mean.
You go through patches in which you seem to actively pursue an argument on here. Unfortunately, I don't have time to accommodate you further today; I have further studying to avoid doing.
Silvagni was not an outsider.
Yeah but just because some haven't been doesn't mean all won't be.
Was SOS bad for our club?
SOS wasn't bad for our club in the way he did his job but his departure whenever it occurred and however it occurred was always a given to be messy. If his name was Bill Bloggs nobody would have cared all too much.
Bill Bloggs was a genius when it came to trading. Made the most of very little currency so we didn't have to go to the draft for one top line talent per year, and picked up physically developed players to help us through a tough period. People look and see failed recruitment. I look at players like Jed Lamb playing 44 games over 3 years as achieving exactly what it was supposed to achieve.
I still would have hated losing that tough negotiator Billy Bloggs.
All I'm saying was that the breakup, whenever it came was going to be difficult.
There didn't need to be a breakup.
Well, not at that time but it was always going to happen at some point in time.
SOS wasn't bad for our club in the way he did his job but his departure whenever it occurred and however it occurred was always a given to be messy. If his name was Bill Bloggs nobody would have cared all too much.
Not really. It only got messy because of an outsider sticking his nose where it doesn't belong.

but I have my doubts we needed to cut so deep and so hard
No, it could have just been a mutual parting of the ways with zero angst. Forces made it untenable.
We'll have to disagree, SOS has never left a club without there being some level of angst involved, he's not an easy person to get along with. Once again, not a criticism, just how he is.
Again...You literally said it here in this very post:
and here:
I didn't put words in your mouth... or posts. I've quoted them again.. word for word.
More misinterpretation.So Kernahan's presidency (as an example) is an indication that another president of former Carlton glory (Fraser Brown as another example) is going to lead us to more failure? ok...
No, you're misinterpreting my posts and quoting specific sentences shorn of context in order to disagree with me.What fight? I'm merely pointing out the logical flaws in what you're saying.
You clearly have no respect for my responses, seeing as you feel yourself free to disassociate the words I use from their meanings.Do I? So I should just allow you to rebut my point with responses I disagree with and let it slide? Well... I guess you are entitled to your opinion..
Is this fact or speculation? Assistant coach at 4 clubs and List Manager at 2. He kept getting hired despite angst at 6 clubs?
I get the GWS exist may not have been great considering he was poached and took Brodie with him. That's not a character flaw though. GWS were content to keep him for quite a while.
I see him as a quiet, introverted type who doesn't speak for the sake of speaking. Being that way myself, I can see how it comes across as being bristly. It really is quite the opposite though.