You sure I wasn't the mate sitting next to you, Tugga? I used almost those exact words at the game on Monday. The shift from forward to non-existent momentum with our disposal and ball movement was just so glaringly obvious after quarter time.
Some credit to the Dogs who clearly lifted their defensive rating, but the number of times we stopped, propped, stuttered, and ignored blokes like White and Tambling who were clear in the middle of the ground was astonishing. Credit to Foley and Newman for trying to get things rolling at times, but there were so many culprits any positivity was stifled.
That whole "it's now someone else's problem" was very evident. Good call.
In the interest of preserving the page, I won't quote the whole post Rayzor.
I know we have agreed to disagree on some matters, and that's alright too, but this one was a fantastic post. A great read.
Attrocious accuracy when kicking for goal does not constitute "giving up without a whimper" in my book. Maybe we've got a different personal definition?
My definition involves a significant proportion who fail to lead, fail to run with the ball, fail to chase, fail to take their position in the zone, fail to compete, and/or fail to be man up at stoppages.
This wasn't the case. We went inside 50 just as often as the Dogs in Q4, andhad as many shots at goal. That blokes like Simmonds, Richo and others are unreliable when kicking from distances that U/18 players would be ashamed of missing doesn't mean they "gave up", but that they lack their required level of skill.
And that we were able to force the Dogs wide so often out of their defensive 50, at least three times causing them to kick out on the full coming out anti-clockwise from the Coventry end, is testimony to the fact that our zone was generally holding up pretty well.
Again, that we ended up repeatedly turning the ball over from the boundary kick-ins is more due to ineptitude than attitude.
And your point is?
Why do these teams (Cats & Dogs) warrant such empathy for "playing well below their best", yet Richmond are condemned for playing well below our best.
Maybe these two teams were "playing well below their best" because the opposition applied some decent contested pressure on them, prompting them to play that way?
Or is it purely coincidental that two top teams chose the same team to drop their guard, and that they won't always be vulnerable to such solid pressure?
Ghost I am a firm believer that the solution to all the points you raise is simple and has been evident for at least the past two seasons, myself and Rayzor have also had a healthy debate over this.
My theory is that when we play defensive high possession football , and by that I mean stop start, kicking to the boundary line football, we look terrible and generally get beaten.
In contrast I believe when we play more attacking football through the middle of the ground we are as capable as most sides within the league.
As an example I have previously claimed, and still stick by it, that over the past 2 seasons our use of the centre of the ground has increased significantly in the latter parts of the season which has mirrored our improved performance.
I also believe that for all but the final quarter against Geelong we were very good at using the centre corridor and attacked at all costs.
I personally think defensive , as I call it , makes several areas within the playing group look a lot worse .
Ie Skills errors, tackling, defensive pressure, marks inside 50. and the inability to play well in big games.
Its only my 2 cents worth, but I would love to see the side come out week after week and take the game on and don't play players who refuse to use the centre corridor.









