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Cats must seize the moment
03 March 2006 Herald Sun
Mike Sheahan
03 March 2006 Herald Sun
Mike Sheahan
THE full measure of Geelong's capabilities will remain a matter of keen interest and debate for up to seven months.
What is already apparent, though, is that Geelong is stronger than it has been for years.
Many years. Perhaps since the Grand Final year of 1989, when the Cats won 16 of 22 home-and-away games (percentage of 146.8) to finish third. They then won two finals by a total of 157 points to reach the big one.
That team lost the GF by six points. While the margin was flattering, Geelong ran into the best of Hawthorn's great teams of the 1980s.
Whether the class of 2006 is equally capable remains to be seen, but the Cats have an exciting two seasons ahead.
They have finished fourth and fifth in the past two years, and were unlucky or got stagefright in the final game in both years.
It's basically the same list this year, but a list that looks much healthier.
Charlie Gardiner, Tom Harley, David and Steve Johnson, Brad Ottens and David Wojcinski all missed at least nine of a possible 24 games last year. Skipper Steven King never seemed fully fit.
Harley remains a concern, but is being nursed into the season, which is wise thinking given his importance to the structure and the positive reinforcement he provides those who play in his vicinity.
A knee and hip continue to trouble him, but he will be kept in cotton wool until right. Probably Round 3.
The query on Geelong remains the top end.
Who are the matchwinners, the A-graders?
Matty Scarlett still is the team's best player, playing out of full-back.
The best players in premiership teams play forward or in the midfield.
Mark Thompson will be hoping Gary Ablett, Jimmy Bartel, James Kelly and Ottens can rise to the level.
Ablett isn't far away. He was a close-up third in the best-and-fairest last year and learnt plenty playing in the midfield and being mugged by opponents for two hours a week.
His skills aren't at issue and his work ethic is strong. If he gets the protection implicit in the new interpretations applicable to taggers, he will exert huge influence.
The Geelong midfield is loaded with talent and variety. If King can find fitness and form and give the smaller players a head start, they will run riot.
"If" is a little word with huge ramifications for the Cats.
If King can find fitness and form, if Harley can regain full mobility, if Steve Johnson's ankle ever will allow him to show his full repertoire of tricks, if Ottens can turn promise into productivity, if Cam Mooney can keep his talent and his self-control in balance, if Wojcinski can recover his pace and acceleration after a knee reconstruction, if Andrew Mackie and Kane Tenace are about to blossom?
That's a long list, yet there are queries at every club.
The Cats have been given a dream start to the season with home games against the Brisbane Lions, Kangaroos and Hawthorn.
It's a nice contrast to 2005, when they played their first game at home in Round 6.
They were good last year without being great, but finished the season in encouraging style: four wins in a row before a three-point loss to the Swans at the SCG in the second semi-final.
At the risk of sending Geelong supporters into a dark mood, the Cats led Sydney 6.11 to 3.12 at three-quarter-time and managed to lose.
Remember, though, no Paul Chapman, no Ottens, no Peter Riccardi, no Nathan Ablett, and no King when it mattered most.
They were so battered and bruised, they would have been easy pickings the following week, but it was a good lesson: you can't fumble your opportunities at this level.
All is in readiness for a genuine crack at the title this year.
The list is strong – the overs from the club's best team include several players who could step straight into the 22 if need be – and coach Thompson is heading into his seventh season.
Remarkably, he will become Geelong's second longest serving coach this year, replacing Malcolm Blight behind the legendary Reg Hickey.
The Cats have shown huge faith in him, and he has responded with two solid years that have produced 29 wins from 49 starts.
Given reasonable luck with injury, there can be no excuses for anyone at Geelong this year.
The Cats must finish top four and then it's down to personnel and nerve.
Anything can happen in September; the immediate target is to win two of the first three games on the way to at least 14 for the home-and-away series.
If they can't manage that, they will be a major disappointment.
I don't think they will disappoint.








