KE - what I don't understand is that in 2011 he worked his arse off in games which clearly didn't suit him and made an impact. The Geelong and Hawthorn Games come to mind in that instance.
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We have numerous smaller players in our side to play the crumbing/roving forward role, we don't need a 194cm/100kg beast doing it.
And we were Tippett-centric, but Walker needs to keep his head up and not stop working if he is making unrewarded leads.
He appeared to decide that Tippett was drawing so much of the ball, that there wasn't much point in him providing an option.
I think it's just a matter of maturity.KE - what I don't understand is that in 2011 he worked his arse off in games which clearly didn't suit him and made an impact. The Geelong and Hawthorn Games come to mind in that instance.
I think I've been pretty consistent in my concerns over his work-rate both offensively and defensively.
Also didn't say the second paragraph, but he will be exposed as a flat track bully, in the long term, if he isn't willing to work harder when things don't go his way.
That's my issue with the Hawthorn game - he didn't work hard enough, it seemed as though he put the cue in the rack because he didn't think it was going to be his day.
I wasn't happy with his Dogs game either, he's better than he showed in that game.
It seems as though, in your opinion, we aren't allowed to be critical of a players performance without it meaning we think the player in question is shit and has no value or future![]()
I can't say it enough, I rate Walker enormously, I think he's got the potential to win a Coleman, but he frustrates the hell out of me at the moment, because I believe his biggest single weakness is his work-rate - which should be the easiest thing for him to turn around.
On the flipside, I guess this is what it feels like to finally have a Key Position player who actually has potential.
Hawkins, Schoenmakers, Riewoldt, Hendersen are no different; the reason they get some much attention is because they are capable, but they're probably too young, mentally and physically, to fully show it.
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And you have made up yours Alex....
I think it's just a matter of maturity.
The general comment is suggest he is lazy or just not good enough and is nothing more than a flat track bully but it's been proven he can perform against top sides. See the comment made by Cap's above. Last year he had fantastic games against Hawthorn, Carlton and Geelong. Yet this week, he's had a bad game and he had achieved nothing in between.
Be as critical as you like but look at the player and his performances as a collective unit, not one individual game.
I think he had been fantastic this year with one bad (very poor game) against Hawthorn but why?
Rather than jumping down his throat because he's had a bad game and just assume he's gone back to his old habits, why not look at it and ask, why was this game so bad. Were their other reasons?
Taylor Walkers biggest problem has not changed in three years.
He does not have the instincts of a key forward. He doesn't know how to get to the fall of the ball. He often makes a last minute movement towards the fall of the ball but is too late and either an opposition player has an easy mark (think showdown 1 last year) or he gives away a clumsy free kick.
Taylor still thinks like a small forward. A classic example was in the third quarter against Gold Coast. At the 15-26 mark (check it out on HD) Bernie wins a free and bombs it to 15 metres from goal. Tippett was on Brennan and Lynch was nearby marked by May. Taylor and Warnock ran from the square towards the contest. Taylor stops and allows Warnock to get to the contest while he doubles back to the goal square, Warnock spoils Tippett, Petrenko crumbs and kicks it to the goal square to Taylor for an easy goal. At the time I commented "and that's going to work against the good teams"
He can do things that most other tall forwards can't but he still has to do the basics i.e. make a contest.
Bernie is in many ways more disappointing. He can be exceptional in some games and appear totally disinterested in others. He lost me in the Carlton match last year. Playing as a high half forward he continually let his man run the ball down the ground and jogged behind him at half pace. Very few players who can play as well as Bernie have such lows in their bad games.
Should we drop them? They both seem to be very slow learners. I'm afraid that they won't get it until we trade them and then they will come back and bite us on the bum.
SO you wanted Walker to come in and be the third Crow in a marking cotenst? one which he was clearly not going to have an impact?
so rather than get goal side, you want him either on the ground from smashing a pack or under the ball? with the most likely result being the smarter defender not going up and cleaning up the crumbs whilst AFC posters scream that Walker should have left the contest for Tippett...
are you mad Freddy Basset?
Walker plays like any leading forward in the history of the game
just because the AFC refuse to kick to leading players, that doesn't mean Walker doesn't have key forward instincts FFS he gets in a position to kick goals nearly every opportunity he can - that is why people like you and a few good men are bitching about him!
Interesting that a bloke called Dermott Brereton, who played a bit, also comments that Walker is not your normal forward in that most of his goals come from snapshots or off the ground.
What does Brereton say about Franklin?Interesting that a bloke called Dermott Brereton, who played a bit, also comments that Walker is not your normal forward in that most of his goals come from snapshots or off the ground.
What does Brereton say about Franklin?
I'll raise you Dermie with Bassett..... I know whose opinion I value higher.
The thing with Taylor is that if he doesn't kick goals he's a complete liability out there. Same can't be said for Tippett as he can create goals by making a genuine contest. If Taylor has 0 goals next to his name at the end of a game...you can tell that he was probably one of the worst players on the ground. He needs to learn how to impact a game without kicking sausage rolls. It's a reason why Tippett's a better player at this stage.
Interesting that a bloke called Dermott Brereton, who played a bit, also comments that Walker is not your normal forward in that most of his goals come from snapshots or off the ground.
Good post. It's like playing with 17 men.
If not on my phone I would check his goals last year against good teams and bad teams. So far this year against good teams 0.
That he has amazing pace and endurance hence the reason he is pushing so far up the ground now. Very rare we see Franklin playing out the goalsquare these days. But I do agree, they play a similar forward role albeit without the pace.
Are you complimenting me?
In all seriousness, not many players I have seen read the play aswell as Nathan. And he was an elite forward as a kid... Horrible kick though
The funny thing about basset, well from my memory is I don't recall him missing many set shots when he had the opportunity.