Re: Carlton 2024 Predictions / Expectations
Reply #43 –
Yes he did, and he probably should have won the Rising Star if I recall.
But my comments stand, it's not about stats it's about a player's experience and effectiveness.
Having finished dead last on the AFL ladder, I also recall a lot of debate on this very forum about the value of the different player ranking systems. In particular a lot of debate about why Cripps SC and AFL ranking was so low. It was because some ranking systems do not just award points for possessions, but they deduct points for clangers, poor DE, etc., etc.. As such sMurph was Carlton's highest ranked, Cripps was down in the 70s in several rankings.
Of course for Cripps the 2014 debut season was injury interrupted, just 3 games, so in 2015 he was basically in his 2nd season before everyone had been exposed to him in match ups. In effect that gave Cripps an extra pre-season before his 2nd round of genuine opposition. In 2017, his stats went up but he fell in the rankings.
Which just reinforces what I stated earlier, it's not about stats and the like, it's about experience and effectiveness.
This concept of 2nd year blues is about match ups, players and clubs having experience of opponents, and developing and training for tactics to counter them. It's not instantaneous, it takes time. We call it 2nd year blues because it takes one or two match ups to determine what works, but I suppose you could call it the 25 to 50 blues, and it's another reason why getting players to 100 games quickly is so important.
It's absurd to suggest a player has attracted the same level of scrutiny before they play a game or have an impact, it's not until a player touches up an opponent that the focus really begins.
Clutching at straws LP. Second year blues is a fan's construct, as is the alternative 25 to 50 games blues. Neither happens in the real world.
Clubs compile dossiers on potential draft and rookie picks. Those dossiers are passed on to the opposition analysts when players are drafted by other clubs. No AFL player is given a season, or 25 games, without the opposition having tactics in place to curb their influence. Furthermore, players aren't left to their own devices when coming to terms with their AFL careers. They are given every support possible, on and off the field.
Consider Jaxon Binns. He's yet to make his AFL debut but has excelled at VFL level. Opposition clubs put a lot of work into him last season because he was a standout player. He will have had the benefits of a year playing in the VFL and training with the AFL team, as well as his first full pre-season, when he does make his debut, but his opponents will know as much about him as any other player in our team.
When will Jaxon be struck down by the second year blues; 2024, 2025 or after he has played 25 or 50 games?
It is a nonsense