jenny61_99
Premium Platinum
Too true! Forgot the proper!Actually it’s 7 P’s
Proper prior preparation prevents piss poor performance



Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.

Due to a number of factors, support for the current BigFooty mobile app has been discontinued. Your BigFooty login will no longer work on the Tapatalk or the BigFooty App - which is based on Tapatalk.
Apologies for any inconvenience. We will try to find a replacement.
Too true! Forgot the proper!Actually it’s 7 P’s
Proper prior preparation prevents piss poor performance



I know they missed a few, but I suspect we had the easier shots.
Wasnt the reason we lost in any case.
I think they were threatened, we never went awayDoesn't matter what the end margin was, we never looked likely and Collingwood were never threatened. It wouldn't have taken much to roll them but it was asking too much for us.
This is why we should have Cumming and Edwards at HB, both penetrating kicks.Oppositions have worked out who some of our least damaging ball users are. Teams used to let Kelly alone in the back pocket knowing once he got it he'd nest it until eventually kicking it down the line.
I'd avoid Laird as an outlet too...Whilst he does look for infield options, he doesn't have enough of a pentrating kick to challenge defenses when he eventually kicks it long.
Log in to remove this Banner Ad
Not horrendous - I was at both the Suns and the Pies games so maybe that skewed my opinion.Saints - 2.0
Essendon - 0.0
North - 0.0
Suns - 1.2
Geelong - 0.1
GWS - 1.0
Freo - 0.0
Carlton - 0.0
Port - 1.0
Collingwood - 0.1
So not a big first quarter scorer at all. Only once scored multiples, 3 games with 1 and 6 games (out of 10) without a goal on the first.
That's 2 weeks in a row now, HBF have been BOG against usYep, at the game it was quite apparent that their shots were from much tighter angles and I think we rushed 6 behinds too. I'd say that was a good part of our game in that we were able to force them wide. The 3 ootf's and Rachele's miss exacerbated all of this. Biggest let-down for me was being unable to control the likes of Josh Daicos. Both ANB and Keays were terribly loose, and weren't even able to punish him the other way when we did manage to get the ball back.
Ahh yeah, that too. Collingwood are a good side.How about Berry not getting a kick away when running towards goal?
That is unrelated, nothing to do with Collingwood. The fact is that this is Berry's MO. He always thinks the oppo disappear when he is running with the ball.Ahh yeah, that too. Collingwood are a good side.
You dont see him get tackled that often.That is unrelated, nothing to do with Collingwood. The fact is that this is Berry's MO. He always thinks the oppo disappear when he is running with the ball.
This is the is the most 2025 thing ever.Nicks worries, panics and blames.
Do you reckon Nicks is getting over to Rankine and Curtin supporting them after those poor shots, or is he jumping into his press conference and blaming the players for a lack of composure?
The players have the occasion in their mind because they know it's a big moment and they know they'll be blamed personally if they fail. So they shrink and perform worse.
Extra pressure is piled on because Nicks goes around being nervous about these games.
“There are so many hard match-ups, there’s so many things they do well, which is why they are rated as one of the best teams in the competition at the moment,” Nicks said.
“That’s the challenge that faces us this week, and the group is itching to get over there and have a crack at Collingwood and get a win over a team that has had the wood on us for a while.”
Twice in the presser before the match he brings up how tough they are and how poor we are against them. Of course that rubs off on the players.
So when they're taking those shots they're under the pressure of the big game, knowing it's against a tough opponent we have a poor record against, and knowing they will be blamed if they fail. That's the Nicks way
“Stereotype threat” is the idea that when a negative image becomes associated with a group, it takes on a life of its own, and the outcome and behaviours are more likely to be repeated. In a classic study on this subject from 1999, scientists asked men and women to take an arithmetic test. Some students were told that men and women performed equally well on the test; the others were told that men performed better. When the scientists told the women that women performed just as well as men, they subsequently performed as well as the men on the test. When women were told that women tended to perform worse, they performed worse than men on the test. Being made aware of the stereotype seemed to affect whether participants would adhere to it or not.This is the is the most 2025 thing ever.
The players missing absolutely gimme shots on goals is the fault of the coach for something he said in a press conference before the game!
You talk about blame culture, this is it right here. God forbid the players actually take some accountability.
Fmd
That is unrelated, nothing to do with Collingwood. The fact is that this is Berry's MO. He always thinks the oppo disappear when he is running with the ball.
I didn't notice it in his first AFL games, where his value was in great tackling power in tight.Does he? Never noticed that, he tends to try to fend off/break a tackle in my book. It was a little bit to do with Collingwood defending hard and laying a good tackle or he would have had a kick at goal.
Ill keep an eye out for that, its an interesting point!I didn't notice it in his first AFL games, where his value was in great tackling power in tight.
I watched a fair bit of him in the twos after he went out of favour. There, he continually tried to power through oppo tackles to get the ball out, no bad thing, but he got pulled down often, not unexpectedly. Then, on the occasions when he broke free, he had a tendency to think he had all day to look around and decide what to do, but he got caught from behind much more often than he should have.
He's not that fast as a runner, but his bigger problem is a lack of awareness/slowness of mind in these situations. He needs to play within his capabilities and get rid of the ball! On Saturday, I knew well in advance that he would be tackled unnecessarily rather than having a hack at goal. This was based on my experience of him in the SANFL.
Honestly, there are so many holes in this theory in the context of this conversation that it's hard to know where to start.“Stereotype threat” is the idea that when a negative image becomes associated with a group, it takes on a life of its own, and the outcome and behaviours are more likely to be repeated. In a classic study on this subject from 1999, scientists asked men and women to take an arithmetic test. Some students were told that men and women performed equally well on the test; the others were told that men performed better. When the scientists told the women that women performed just as well as men, they subsequently performed as well as the men on the test. When women were told that women tended to perform worse, they performed worse than men on the test. Being made aware of the stereotype seemed to affect whether participants would adhere to it or not.
Stereotype threat can permeate sport, too. It can affect “any situation where you have the possibility or worry that people might judge you based on your actions or inclusion in a certain group – that could be race, that could be gender, that could be the team you play on,” said Sian Beilock, the cognitive scientist and author of Choke: What the Secrets of the Brain Reveal About Getting It Right When You Have To.
In sport and life, past failure can make future failure more likely. Since 1999, South African cricketers have lugged stereotype threat around with them, like an unwanted piece of oversized baggage, from one major tournament to the next. South Africa’s head coach between 2011 and 2013, Gary Kirsten, called the legacy of previous failures “a dark mist that hangs over South African cricket in knockout events”.
me in the GBU thread round 3 v North Melbourne said:It’s been a feature of the Nicks era Crows that we collectively switch off when an opponent is lining up for goal. We are prone to: (a) short passes to free players in much better positions, (b) better kicks wheeling around the back and getting a handball receive, (c) giving up easy marks in what should be pack situations when the kicker goes to the top of the square instead of having a shot.
Hmm hadnt noticedTwo more of these (at least) on the weekend. Houston kicking the first goal wheeling around the back and getting a short kick from Membrey. Elliott taking a chest mark from a long kick to the hotspot.
Add that to Burton in the Showdown last week.
A constant issue.
If you don't believe it makes a difference you've got your head in the sand.Honestly, there are so many holes in this theory in the context of this conversation that it's hard to know where to start.
So essentially the reason players like Fog, Keays, Tex etc.. have continued to kick accurately this year is not to do with their skills or ability to master their craft, but rather their psychological capacity to overcome the crushing weight all of our players are carrying from 'worrying that people might judge them based on your actions or inclusion in a certain group'.
Truly, I've now heard it all.
Interesting, considering that was a direct copy/paste from a sports psychologist.Honestly, there are so many holes in this theory in the context of this conversation that it's hard to know where to start.
So essentially the reason players like Fog, Keays, Tex etc.. have continued to kick accurately this year is not to do with their skills or ability to master their craft, but rather their psychological capacity to overcome the crushing weight all of our players are carrying from 'worrying that people might judge them based on your actions or inclusion in a certain group'.
Truly, I've now heard it all.
Need to fit pineapple in there somewhere.Too true! Forgot the proper!![]()

It's a really good observation, especially when you consider that the Pies had Cameron and Cox as targets during their "down the line" chains. More than once we had O'Brien and RT competing against each other too, sometimes even Dawson.One underrated thing that I think was a big issue for us too was how often we had to drag Thilthorpe out of the F50 line. We just went to bombing it fairly often, which meant we were pulling Thilthorpe trying to get the contested mark. Look at his heat map from the game, it's mostly all red on down the line kicks, either in the back half (long to the right, our favourite) or pulling him up to half forward.
View attachment 2319928
Just not going to get much goal scoring from him when that's where he's getting the ball.
One underrated thing that I think was a big issue for us too was how often we had to drag Thilthorpe out of the F50 line. We just went to bombing it fairly often, which meant we were pulling Thilthorpe trying to get the contested mark. Look at his heat map from the game, it's mostly all red on down the line kicks, either in the back half (long to the right, our favourite) or pulling him up to half forward.
View attachment 2319928
Just not going to get much goal scoring from him when that's where he's getting the ball.
So you’d expect he’d drop players who continually underperform right?This is the is the most 2025 thing ever.
The players missing absolutely gimme shots on goals is the fault of the coach for something he said in a press conference before the game!
You talk about blame culture, this is it right here. God forbid the players actually take some accountability.
Fmd