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The Jamarra Thread

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Will Jamarra ever play senior footy for the Bulldogs again?

  • Yes

    Votes: 46 14.6%
  • No

    Votes: 228 72.2%
  • Unsure / Don't care

    Votes: 42 13.3%

  • Total voters
    316

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I think the Jamarra situation ends the debate about changing player numbers. Seems like whenever we’ve done it, that player gets cursed. They either leave the club, fall off, or get a horrible injury (Flea). Can anyone think of a player upgrading their number in recent times that hasn’t turned sour?
Matty Boyd went okay after shifting from 42 to 5.

Then there’s Tom Campbell (45 > 15), Lewis Young (33 > 2), Marcus Adams (33 > 25), Nathan Hrovat (24 > 13). I’ll see myself out…
 

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T.i.t.s. Kennedy should have stayed at 54. Iconic number

Iconic for the year but **** was the only big name to wear it

54Kennedy, Rick198114
54Darcy, Anthony199312
54Sampson, Glen19806
54Barham, Jamie19821
54Cullen, Mark19861
 
Most of those players at least have a winning mentality and a drive to be afl players. The narrative that Geelong would just let him coast along is ridiculous.

That's the conclusion that I keep coming back to...
...Even when he was going ok, there were too many moments when he looked like he didn't want to be out there.

Obviously, I don't know if it's a work-rate/effort thing, or that tiny (and that's all it takes) internal voice telling him that he'll get hurt, but his ratio of games played to half arsed efforts doesn't appear to be in the "determined AFL player" range to me.

Running around as a big kid having fun against other kids is one thing, and some people (no matter how they physically mature) will always see themselves as just that. Big kids.

It wouldn't surprise me if there is an (again tiny) element of fear (and therefore avoidance) involved in how this has all played out.

I doubt very much that he plays another AFL game.
 
That's the conclusion that I keep coming back to...
...Even when he was going ok, there were too many moments when he looked like he didn't want to be out there.

Obviously, I don't know if it's a work-rate/effort thing, or that tiny (and that's all it takes) internal voice telling him that he'll get hurt, but his ratio of games played to half arsed efforts doesn't appear to be in the "determined AFL player" range to me.

Running around as a big kid having fun against other kids is one thing, and some people (no matter how they physically mature) will always see themselves as just that. Big kids.

It wouldn't surprise me if there is an (again tiny) element of fear (and therefore avoidance) involved in how this has all played out.

I doubt very much that he plays another AFL game.
People got abused for voicing those observations at the time. Now most have come to agree.
 

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Very few players come back from significant off field issues and are part of a premiership team.

They may do ok or well themselves, ie Hogan but rarely are they significant contributors to the ultimate success of their team whether they stay or go.

JUH has missed a full season after missing practically a full season via Covid. That is 2 in 6 seasons and has shown little to suggest he has the desire put in the discipline required to be a professional footballer.

Clearly with Connors comments he is still not in the right place, yet there are people that think he can turn it around
 
People got abused for voicing those observations at the time. Now most have come to agree.
100%! You could clearly see it. Naughton would spring back to his feet, chase, harass and tackle. I remember non Bulldog friends trying to tell me that Jamarra had gone past Naughton and I’d say “are you just watching highlights or reading the newspaper statistics?” Obviously or at least hopefully, the coaches were seeing this too. There was always something not right or committed to his game. And if you critiqued that here, to some people it was from a nefarious motive. Yet we were all wishing we weren’t seeing what we were seeing.
Wasting this talent will haunt him for the rest of his life if he doesn’t make some sort of footy career out of himself. This is why Tom Boyd is such a success now. He was, against odds we didn’t know about at the time, able to achieve something tangible out of his career, he had some money and was able to leave on his own terms. If Jamarra finally wakes up in a few years and his career is almost burned and is scrambling to make something out of it and time runs out, he will be unfulfilled and haunted by this.
 
Very few players come back from significant off field issues and are part of a premiership team.

They may do ok or well themselves, ie Hogan but rarely are they significant contributors to the ultimate success of their team whether they stay or go.

JUH has missed a full season after missing practically a full season via Covid. That is 2 in 6 seasons and has shown little to suggest he has the desire put in the discipline required to be a professional footballer.

Clearly with Connors comments he is still not in the right place, yet there are people that think he can turn it around
I think he can, but that has more to do with the word "can" and less with the word "him", if that makes sense. Anybody can, but only few will.

With that in mind, I would imagine most people are more hopeful, than they are genuinely thinking he can.
 
100%! You could clearly see it. Naughton would spring back to his feet, chase, harass and tackle. I remember non Bulldog friends trying to tell me that Jamarra had gone past Naughton and I’d say “are you just watching highlights or reading the newspaper statistics?” Obviously or at least hopefully, the coaches were seeing this too. There was always something not right or committed to his game. And if you critiqued that here, to some people it was from a nefarious motive. Yet we were all wishing we weren’t seeing what we were seeing.
Wasting this talent will haunt him for the rest of his life if he doesn’t make some sort of footy career out of himself. This is why Tom Boyd is such a success now. He was, against odds we didn’t know about at the time, able to achieve something tangible out of his career, he had some money and was able to leave on his own terms. If Jamarra finally wakes up in a few years and his career is almost burned and is scrambling to make something out of it and time runs out, he will be unfulfilled and haunted by this.

What is more, some games you could see he had a real desire to stay involved and contribute defensively. In those games he looked very much like a number one draft pick with limitless potential.

It only served to make the poor games somewhat jarring in comparison.

I had hoped it was just youth and the penny would drop over time but that certainly seems further than nearer now.
 
People got abused for voicing those observations at the time. Now most have come to agree.
Not really, I think it was just that even a half-arsed Jamarra was (is?) an incredibly gifted instinctual forward who had the athleticism of a big but the eye for the goal nous of a small.

He was 8th and 4th across the league for total shots at goal in each of the last 2 years, in some cases being 8-10 years younger than the other players in the top 10. I keep going back to that stay because it shows what a good all-around (other than accurate goalkicking, but I digress) forward he was, and the reason that we seemed to struggle to truly understand how good he was was that he was exceptionally balanced as a forward, without any specific trait that stood out.
 

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I read that as Conner’s saying, “yeah, he’s pretty f***** up, but wouldn’t it be awesome if he came good”

Also read it as hopefully someone else picks him up, as it won’t be at the Bulldogs
 
Admittedly his second efforts looked poor in comparison to Naughton and Darcy , but he is a 197cm kpf with a couple of preseasons. Have you watched the King brothers in action ? They couldn't chase down a steamroller
 
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Admittedly his second efforts looked poor in comparison to Naughton and Darcy , but he a 197cm kpf with a couple of preseasons. Have you watched the King brothers in action ? They couldn't chase down a steamroller
It wasn't physical limitations that prevented JUH giving second and third efforts, it was attitude.
 
Admittedly his second efforts looked poor in comparison to Naughton and Darcy , but he a 197cm kpf with a couple of preseasons. Have you watched the King brothers in action ? They couldn't chase down a steamroller

Exactly, on this front he was much better than the Kings, Curnow and Larkey and on par with many of the other key forwards. He had 32 tackles to Naughton’s 20 last year.
 
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