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What They're Saying - The Bulldogs Media Thread - Part 4

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NEARLY 35 years after a tin-rattling campaign in the streets of Footscray ended a proposed merger with Fitzroy, the Western Bulldogs have officially reopened the Mission Whitten Oval following the completion of a state-of-the-art $78 million redevelopment.

After commencing construction in March 2022, following years of negotiations behind the scenes, the training and administration base has now been handed over in a landmark moment for a club that was once debt-riddled and set to become the Fitzroy Bulldogs in 1989.

The iconic E.J. Whitten Stand has been transformed across the past two years and now houses the administration staff, club museum, an 82-seat theatrette with a 10 square-metre video board, matchday pavilion with 920 undercover seats painted red, white and blue and a new merchandise shop.

The football department has been settled in the Barkly Street end of the of the new facility for most of the season, where an 1800 square-metre indoor training field has been built next to what is believed to be the largest gym in the AFL, as well as a heat chamber, 15-person sauna, and cold and hot pools.
Western Bulldogs CEO Ameet Bains said the project started not long after the club ended its 62-year premiership drought in 2016, and is the culmination of significant contributions from many, most notably former president Peter Gordon, who helped save the club from the merger in the late 1980s and then returned in 2012 to help protect its long-term health, securing $36 million in funding from the Victorian Government for the redevelopment.

"A project of this nature doesn't materialise easily. There is a lot of groundwork that needs to be undertaken, ranging from sourcing the funding to the ideas and the design. It has been a project that has been eight years in the making. The club owes a great deal of gratitude to former president Peter Gordon, who was instrumental in pushing for government support many years ago," Bains told AFL.com.au.
Bains said the transformation of Whitten Oval will stun former players and staff members who return for the first time to discover a facility that is as well-equipped as any across the AFL and fill them with pride, which is what occurred last week during a day for father-son prospects at the club during the school holidays.

"I think for everyone that has been closely connected with the club over time there is that element of equal parts pride and equal parts disbelief," Bains said.

"Our president, Kylie Watson-Wheeler, used to come to Whitten Oval as a girl when it didn't look like it does now. Her involvement in the project in the last few years has been integral.

"We have a lot of past players into the club and it came as a bit of shock to them last week when a number of them came for a father-son day."
Across Luke Beveridge's 10 years at the Kennel, the Bulldogs have almost annually targeted the trade and free agency periods to improve the list, signing [PLAYERCARD]Adam Treloar[/PLAYERCARD], [PLAYERCARD]Liam Jones[/PLAYERCARD], [PLAYERCARD]Josh Bruce[/PLAYERCARD], [PLAYERCARD]Taylor Duryea[/PLAYERCARD], [PLAYERCARD]Alex Keath[/PLAYERCARD] and [PLAYERCARD]Rory Lobb[/PLAYERCARD] in that time, as well as [PLAYERCARD]James Harmes[/PLAYERCARD] and Nick Coffield last October.

The new Mission Whitten Oval will challenge Sydney, Carlton, West Coast, Essendon and Collingwood for the best facilities in the competition, making the Dogs an attractive proposition for those looking for a new club.

While the environment and the calibre of people inside the building contribute to becoming a 'destination club', Beveridge believes the new facility will help attract and retain talent in future, with the premiership coach cheekily admitting it will help woo those who come for covert tours after dark.
"I've been extremely proud of how far the club's come, been really grateful for the men and women who have sat on boards, been philanthropists, rattled cans or formally been employed or contracted with our football club to get our club to this unbelievable position. It is just an incredible place to come every day," Beveridge said.

"At this time of year, if you're thinking about acquisition options as far as your list management goes, it is the time where clubs are talking to players, and if you're ever going to have a sneaky visit from an opposition player, it is now a place where it is one of the priorities to say come and have a look at where you might be doing your weights or swimming in the pool and feeling the vibe, getting a free coffee. We haven't been in that position before but now we are. It is a good place to be."

The free coffee Beveridge is referring to comes via the custom-made La Marzocco machine on level one, which has instantly become a central meeting place for every member of the organisation, connecting the administration with the football department for the first time in a long time.
The Western Bulldogs' AFLW team will host four home games at Mission Whitten Oval later this year, plus two other night fixtures between North Melbourne and Port Adelaide, and Essendon and Sydney in September and October. Pre-season AFL games will also be held at the new facility in future.

After years of construction and even longer of planning, the Western Bulldogs now have a home that is the envy of the competition.
 
"At this time of year, if you're thinking about acquisition options as far as your list management goes, it is the time where clubs are talking to players, and if you're ever going to have a sneaky visit from an opposition player, it is now a place where it is one of the priorities to say come and have a look at where you might be doing your weights or swimming in the pool and feeling the vibe, getting a free coffee. We haven't been in that position before but now we are. It is a good place to be."

Remember Garcia, you may have been promised the world in your Geelong tour, but did they give you free coffee? Didn't think so.
 

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Jeremy Cameron just on Seven News: "Saturday night was one of the worst games I've ever played."

mmmm, me thinks he can't remember the 2016 prelim.
Heard him on a podcast talking about the 2016 prelim was the worst game he’s ever played and he’s been so good since because of how crap he was that night.
 
Thanks MYOB
I pretty much avoid SEN these days, but Sanderson, and particularly Davis, gave some great insights. Is Davis just a commentator these days? Wonder if he's interested in coaching at all.
 
Heard him on a podcast talking about the 2016 prelim was the worst game he’s ever played and he’s been so good since because of how crap he was that night.
He was garbage for the first 3 quarters of Geelong’s 2022 grand final win over Sydney too before stat padding and celebrating like a flog in junk time. Also only had 4 possession (although 2 goals) in the big 2021 PF against the Dees. He’s had some very quiet games on the big stage.
 
Just clicked on the afl.com.au article on Nine Things We Learned from the round to see what they said about us. Looks like all they had was:

Injuries are just one part of the problem for the Swans​

 
Just clicked on the afl.com.au article on Nine Things We Learned from the round to see what they said about us. Looks like all they had was:

Injuries are just one part of the problem for the Swans​


Did the same. Nothing about us!
 

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Similar story on the ABC:

What I thought was interesting was this quote from Longmire (and others have made similar comments in the media recently):
"We were right off it," he said.

"We didn't lead and push back with the ferocity that we normally do.

"We've been competitive for the entire season and we weren't tonight.

"We got off to another poor start and not any real part of our game looked like it should."
I find it interesting because the same sorts of things were said about Geelong (and by Geelong) last week, and I think the same with Carlton the week before. None of the geniuses in the media have had a look at those three events and worked out what the common thread was. Us. They're looking in the wrong place. The Bulldogs are the common ingredient. We're the ones making it happen to each of those top three clubs.

Maybe one of them will read this board this week and the penny will drop.
 
Similar story on the ABC:

What I thought was interesting was this quote from Longmire (and others have made similar comments in the media recently):

I find it interesting because the same sorts of things were said about Geelong (and by Geelong) last week, and I think the same with Carlton the week before. None of the geniuses in the media have had a look at those three events and worked out what the common thread was. Us. They're looking in the wrong place. The Bulldogs are the common ingredient. We're the ones making it happen to each of those top three clubs.

Maybe one of them will read this board this week and the penny will drop.
There was a post on the Sydney board saying they think the dogs are their main threat for the flag and they don't want to play us in the finals. At least some of them get it, the media and experts still don't trust us though
 
Similar story on the ABC:

What I thought was interesting was this quote from Longmire (and others have made similar comments in the media recently):

I find it interesting because the same sorts of things were said about Geelong (and by Geelong) last week, and I think the same with Carlton the week before. None of the geniuses in the media have had a look at those three events and worked out what the common thread was. Us. They're looking in the wrong place. The Bulldogs are the common ingredient. We're the ones making it happen to each of those top three clubs.

Maybe one of them will read this board this week and the penny will drop.

We're so lucky that we keep coming up against teams who are having an off day/night.
 

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Similar story on the ABC:

What I thought was interesting was this quote from Longmire (and others have made similar comments in the media recently):

I find it interesting because the same sorts of things were said about Geelong (and by Geelong) last week, and I think the same with Carlton the week before. None of the geniuses in the media have had a look at those three events and worked out what the common thread was. Us. They're looking in the wrong place. The Bulldogs are the common ingredient. We're the ones making it happen to each of those top three clubs.

Maybe one of them will read this board this week and the penny will drop.
ABC didn't send a journalist to the game either, despite the fact that the Swans are the biggest team in Sydney these days and are obviously still top of the ladder and premiership favourites. You'd think there'd be a bit of local interest and traction, but no.
 
Posted in the game day and review/autopsy threads. As I was on the road for most of the game (and Triple M is flaky on the outskirts and region outside Ballarat) I was forced to listen to the ABC Sydney feed thru the AFL app.
Saddington and Sinclair spent the whole second half focussing on why Sydney were behind, but the geniuses didn't cotton on that there was another team playing! Fatigue, injuries, blah, blah, blah. Not one piece of analysis that identified the intent and coaching and commitment by the opposition.
I reckon you'd struggle to get a more one sided commentary if you had Longmire, Heeney and Gulden calling the game!
 
Same here ! Birthday party for the Daughter in law today so only update was via the App.Settling down now for the replay and may watch the First Crack review for extra enjoyment before bed.
Cheers
S
 
Posted in the game day and review/autopsy threads. As I was on the road for most of the game (and Triple M is flaky on the outskirts and region outside Ballarat) I was forced to listen to the ABC Sydney feed thru the AFL app.
Saddington and Sinclair spent the whole second half focussing on why Sydney were behind, but the geniuses didn't cotton on that there was another team playing! Fatigue, injuries, blah, blah, blah. Not one piece of analysis that identified the intent and coaching and commitment by the opposition.
I reckon you'd struggle to get a more one sided commentary if you had Longmire, Heeney and Gulden calling the game!
I had to pop out during the 3rd quarter to collect my daughter. 3AW was my only chance to listen as I drove. Whoever those numpties were, focussed entirely on the Swans ‘off day’. Spent 3 minutes carrying on about Gulden missing a shot, how unlike him it is, blah blah blah. Happened to mention JUH just kicked a goal.
Worst commentary I have ever heard.
For the first time in my life, I was happy to get back to the tv, and good old BT.
 
Kingy made some good points about us on First Crack (the only footy show I watch). Our biggest strength and point of difference is the number of quality talls we have. We dominate other teams in the aerial game. Longmire also mentioned this in his post game - "we didn't even try to win the aerial game, but we didn't get the ball to ground enough." Then King made another good point, when he asked rhetorically: "How do you take that away from them?" We took away Sydney's ball movement today because we defended the corridor ferociously. Height and raw marking power isn't something our opposition can nullify through planning, and the fact that our talls are all so mobile means that we aren't giving up any run or ground ball game by playing them.
 
Posted in the game day and review/autopsy threads. As I was on the road for most of the game (and Triple M is flaky on the outskirts and region outside Ballarat) I was forced to listen to the ABC Sydney feed thru the AFL app.
Saddington and Sinclair spent the whole second half focussing on why Sydney were behind, but the geniuses didn't cotton on that there was another team playing! Fatigue, injuries, blah, blah, blah. Not one piece of analysis that identified the intent and coaching and commitment by the opposition.
I reckon you'd struggle to get a more one sided commentary if you had Longmire, Heeney and Gulden calling the game!

The injuries/off day or night commentary is incredibly lazy, but standard for commentators these days. Much easier to roll out a few excuses than any real insights into the team belting the top of the ladder side.

We're the team that played in a bog heap at Geelong, we're the team that had to travel yesterday, that's fatiguing, right?

Papley, Rampe, Rowbottom, that's who they were missing. That wasn't the reason for their loss.

Sydney people. Always an excuse.

Anyway, nothing will harsh this buzz.
 
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