Skip to main content

Topics

This section allows you to view all Topics made by this member. Note that you can only see Topics made in areas you currently have access to.

Topics - madbluboy

2
Robert Heatley Stand / What's wrong with Carlton
McGuane's take

Quote
Since Round 11 last year, Carlton has recorded seven wins and one draw from 18 games.

That’s a winning rate of just 38.9 per cent.

For a team that entered 2023 surrounded by plenty of hype and expectation, the first six weeks have been largely underwhelming.

The side has produced just three victories and a draw and has an ordinary percentage of 92.4.

AFL analyst Mick McGuane looks at where the Blues need to get to work if they want to play finals this year.

CLEARANCE CATASTROPHE
Carlton made a name for itself last year as a dominant contested ball and clearance team.

The Blues ranked second last season in both clearance differential and points from clearances differential.

Those numbers have since fallen off a cliff, with the side sitting 12th and 16th in the two categories respectively this year.

Carlton has won the clearance count in just two of its six matches this season and is sitting 3-3 when it comes to contested possession wins.

When you have an onball brigade boasting the likes of ruckmen Marc Pittonet and Tom De Koning and midfielders Patrick Cripps, George Hewett, Adam Cerra, Matthew Kennedy and Sam Walsh (accepting the fact he has only played 2 games) you should be putting up better numbers than that.

The Blues are not getting bang for buck when they are winning first possession at stoppages, either.

Turning first possession gains into effective clearances should be an immediate focus as it is something that will only enhance their attack.

Currently, the midfield is lacking synergy and cohesion and, too often, the Blues are structurally collapsing their “shape” outside the contest, limiting the usable options for the ball winner to help kickstart their offence.

They need to study the Western Bulldogs, who saturate the stoppages and structurally set up around the ruck contest as well as any side.

The Bulldogs chain out of stoppages with effective, quick handballs and putting a teammate into space is paramount for Carlton to improve its connection to its forwards.

The Blues have been a high possession team under coach Michael Voss, but it is not working for them right now.

Carlton had 446 disposals to St Kilda’s 360 last weekend, yet lost the inside-50 count 52-56 and lost the match by 22 points.

In general play, they played too safe and wanted to defend with the footy.

It is time to introduce some dare and embrace a chaos, go-forward style of game.

The Blues have assets in front of the ball but are disconnected and are not using them.

FORWARD-HALF EFFICIENCY
It is inconceivable that a team which boasts Twin Towers in attack — Charlie Curnow and Harry McKay — is averaging just 75.2 points a game this season.

That ranks the Blues a lowly 15th on the points for table.

Given the midfield they have got and the amount of possession they generate, you have to ask the question — Are players too happy to just rack up touches without having much impact?

Against St Kilda last weekend, Cerra (39 disposals), Walsh (38), Blake Acres (36), Cripps (34) and Hewett (29) were the five leading possession winners on the ground. Only one Saints player — Jack Sinclair (27) — had more than 24 disposals for the night.

It was evident that Carlton was trying to take away St Kilda’s pressure game through uncontested marks, but it appeared to become counterintuitive as their build up to go forward was too slow and methodical — making it predictable and giving St. Kilda a chance to set up the ground defensively.

The other important aspect of forward-half efficiency is picking the right options and hitting your targets inside-50 with what is known as the ‘money kick.’

The AFL average for retaining possession from kicks inside-50 stands at 47 per cent.

Cerra has had 31 kicks inside 50 for a retention rate of 45 per cent, while wingman Ollie Hollands (40 per cent) and Blake Acres (38 per cent) are also going at below-par rates.

Captain Patrick Cripps is no better than the AFL average, with just 47 per cent of his 19 kicks inside-50 having been retained by his side.

Who is Carlton’s version of Sydney’s money kick player Errol Gulden?

Until the Blues improve their ball security going forward, they will continue to be hurt the other way.

Carlton ranks 15th for conceding opposition points from defensive half, giving up over six goals per game on average.

Having a slow midfield group doesn’t help you to get back and defend on turnover, either.

Just have a look at how Adelaide punished Carlton on turnover in round 5 and how slow the Blues midfield group looked when asked to chase.

WHERE ARE THE MIDFIELD GOALS?
From his first six games last season, Cripps kicked 11.4 from the midfield.

From his first six games this year, he has booted only seven behinds.

The skipper is but one example of a midfield group that is simply not contributing to keeping the scoreboard ticking over this year.

Zac Fisher (2.1), Ed Curnow (1.2), Cerra (1.2), Acres (1.1), Walsh (1.0), Matthew Kennedy (0.2), Hollands (0.2), Lachie O’Brien (0.1) and Hewett (0.0) have also added very little.

Those sort of returns are not good enough.

Maybe it is time for Cripps to be challenged to take on more of a midfield-forward role in a bid to add to the scoreboard, in a similar vein to what the likes of Dustin Martin, Christian Petracca, Patrick Dangerfield and Marcus Bontempelli have done.

Because at the moment, the Blues are a one-trick pony in front of the ball.

Key forward Curnow has been exceptional, kicking 21.11 and providing a constant threat for the opposition to manage.

He has kicked 33 per cent of Carlton’s total goals this year.

But beyond Curnow, the avenues to goal are limited.

HARRY NEEDS PRACTICE
The great American football coach Vince Lombardi once said, “Practice doesn’t make perfect. Perfect practice makes perfect.”

When I look at Harry McKay, I don’t think he knows what the ‘perfect practice’ is with his goalkicking because he doesn’t have a routine bed-down.

AFL goalkicking greats Tony Lockett, Jason Dunstall and Matthew Lloyd all had routines and reverted back to what they knew worked – time and time again.

They believed in what they practised.

When McKay takes a mark inside-50, it is anyone’s guess what kick is coming next.

He will do a snap shot one minute and a drop punt the next minute – both from a similar area of the ground.

McKay needs to make time to do the extra work and develop a regular routine so it will be transferable to match day.

From there, he has to forget about the little man in his head telling him to ‘try this’ or ‘do that’.

The negative thoughts that appear to be entering his mind during the pressure cooker of a game are not only opening McKay up to criticism but also to ridicule.

Signing big contracts comes with high standards and expectations, so he must start to honour his end of the bargain.

Right now, he looks mentally fragile and defeated when he lines up for goal.

His shot at goal accuracy is sitting at a disappointing 39.1 per cent.

His club needs him to be better than that.

The constant misses can also drop the morale of his teammates, who are doing the hard work further up the field to provide him with scoring opportunities.

DISAPPOINTING DEVELOPMENT
Where is Paddy Dow?

The answer is in Carlton’s VFL side, which is not somewhere a No. 3 draft pick in his sixth season should be.

Dow has been super consistent across his five VFL appearances this year, but the Blues either don’t believe he can bridge the gap to AFL level or have no faith in him.

If that is the case, why didn’t they make the hard decision to find Dow a new home through the trade period last year?

If they do believe in him, why not play him?

If Voss thinks he is low in the midfield pecking order, then why not develop him for another role?

Another top-10 draft pick, Lachie O’Brien, is getting senior games but similarly hasn’t kicked on as hoped.

Yes, he is playing an outside wing role.

But can he be trusted when it comes to his decision making and contest work when the game is in the balance and the footy is at its hottest?

Meanwhile, Liam Stocker (St Kilda) and Will Setterfield (Essendon) are firing for their new clubs after struggling to find a regular spot in the Blues’ line-up last season.

These cases — along with McKay’s goalkicking woes — raise questions over whether Carlton’s development coaches are doing enough to fast-track some of the young talent under their care.

HONEYMOON IS OVER
Over the next eight weeks, we’ll learn a lot about both this Carlton side and the coaching ability of Michael Voss.

The honeymoon period is over for the second-year coach.

Credit where credit is due, Voss was able to bring a change of attitude and some vastly-improved competitiveness to the side in his first campaign in charge last year.

However, the drop off in the second half of last season was poor and the way the Blues have started this year has not been any better.

Voss gets a huge tick as coach for preparing his team well each week.

But is he changing things in-game that he needs to change when the game is not on Carlton’s terms?

Carlton fans are getting restless and the jungle drums will be beating even louder if their team can’t overcome a struggling West Coast in Perth this weekend.

After the Eagles, there are games to come against Brisbane, Western Bulldogs, Collingwood, Sydney, Melbourne, Essendon and Gold Coast before the bye.

Just imagine if the Blues only win two of their next eight games.

It could very quickly become another wasted year if Voss and his side are unable to promptly address some glaring issues.

As things stand, I’m not tipping Carlton to feature in September as there looks to be more doom and gloom ahead.

It is over to Voss and his players to prove me wrong and it must start this Saturday with a dominant display against a depleted West Coast.
7
Notice Board (Visitors Enter Here) / Game threads
Just a request but could we could put Pre- game, In-Game and Post-Game at the beginning of the titles as they get chopped in the scroll bar and cause people to post in the wrong thread?
14
Blah-Blah Bar / Saudi Snub
Apparently a minutes silence for the victims of the London terror attack wasn't part of their culture.




Except it was last year when they honoured the memory of members of the Brazilian soccer team Chapecoense who were killed in a plane crash.