The Exorcist
Club Legend
- Joined
- Sep 30, 2007
- Posts
- 1,810
- Reaction score
- 2
- Location
- Melbourne
- AFL Club
- Carlton
- Other Teams
- Arsenal
I already responded to that point, so why are you mentioning it again? Of those three Carlton wins, Fevola kicked 7 goals in a 23 point win, and then he kicked 8 goals in a 30 point win, while the other match was when Collingwood were decimated with injury and confidence was at it's lowest point of last season.Of course it's dangerous, but in five matches so far this season, Carlton has kicked approximately 91 total points less than they had at the same stage of last season, although that is partly due to Judd missing for three matches, and a new structure. So far Collingwood has kicked 23 points more, which would have been greater if it wasn't for poor conversion (70 goals and 79 behinds total to date), while the highest score that an opposition has kicked against Collingwood has only been 13.15.93 by the Western Bulldogs in Round 1. In the last three weeks, the opposition has only been able to kick 10 goals, 8 goals, and 8 goals.No, it wasn't the sole reason. Collingwood's confidence at the time was at it's lowest point of the season as well with only 3 wins and 5 losses and 11th on the ladder.
As for your use of statistics (which you use a LOT), you tend to ONLY focus on the positive Collingwood stats, or highlight opposition stats when it shines a positive light on the Pies. Not that there's anything wrong with that, but it raises severe questions on your objectively, especially when it's subjective in the belief that it's objective - for example, there's a crucial stat that you downplay in your all talk about Fev not playing for Carlton or the Pies' injuries and low confidence, etc, and that is that the Blues just bet the reigning premier.
Yes KS, the Pies' confidence must've been pretty low at that point in the season, but I guess not as low as the Blues who are the worst performed team of the last decade. Still, the Blues won that game.
At day's end, the Pies deserve to be favourites. I'm not going to repeat the reasons why, other than to say the Pies play top line pressure football, they just whittle away at the opposition until it cracks. The question from a Carlton perspective is, if the Blues can withstand the Pies pressure, can the Carlton midfield and small forwards recapture yesterday's form?







