Re: Pick our team in parts - Part 4 - 5 on the bench
Reply #85 –
I don’t think you understand your post 🙄
Why mention Dean covering Silvagni, a HF and FP covering Charlie, or ask who will cover TDK if that’s not what you meant?
Is a HF and FPs imrproved output covering for Charlie like for like?? No its not.
I don't know the best way to get this across, but from a really simplistic point of view what i'm saying is this.
Think about it like a video game rating system.
Each player has their own strengths and weaknesses and an overall rating. Charlie might be an 88 / 100.
When you add up our best 2025 6 players in our forwardline, maybe we average 75.
If you simple swap out like for like and replace Charlie with.....HOK, maybe he is a 70. Our overall rating of our forward line goes down because we don't have a charlie replacement - like for like.
Now, let rejig our whole forwardline.
1. Charlie out - Hok in. (for example)
2. Durdin out - Ainsworth in
3. Motlop out - Hayward in.
Now, in a 'like for like' the first 1 is a loss, but the second 2 are a gain. So 'overall' we are covering charlie with the other 2 upgrades. This is your whole argument and one that i am going along with. How much it goes up, who knows. Does it get back to our '75' 2025 forward line base, is up for debate. But lets assume its a break even, even with some natural development of Moir helping that area.
My question is this.
What part of the midfield is improving enough to cover the loss of TDK? In 2025, maybe we were a 84 midfield.
If TDK > Pittonet, then in a like for like, maybe we drop to a 78 midfield in 2026.
What other areas improve to the point to make up for the 'points' we lost from pittonet taking over from TDK?
IS Cripps, Hewett, Cerra and Walsh going to get better? Asking a bit much there IMO, especially since Cerra and Hewett had their best years IMO.
So where is the other improvement coming from to cover for TDK? NOT in a like for like.
Why do you insist on one for one comparisons to "cover the loss of" whoever it may be? It's a team game and changing structures and gameplans, and improving ball movement and running patterns can result in more scoring opportunities. More accurate kicks for goal means a more efficient forward line and, combined with forward half defensive pressure, means fewer opposition rebounds and less pressure on our team defence. Your video game analogy is fine, for understanding video games, but has absolutely no relevance to AFL list management or team performance.
Take our midfield for example. Last season it was generally seven or eight of Cripps, Hewett, Walsh, De Koning, Cerra, Acres, Lord, Docherty and Pittonet, with Cottrell, Binns and Haynes getting a couple of games there as well. Cripps was well down on his usual form, Walsh missed games through injury, Acres was struggling with his back. This season we have Acres and Walsh back to full fitness, Smith ready to debut and Cripps, Hewett, Cerra, Lord and Pittonet from our 2025 midfield. Then there's Ollie Hollands back from defence, Reidy, who is looking a much better prospect than I expected, and Chesser, the Camporeales with another pre-season under their belts, and Hayward, Ainsworth and Florent all capable of time in the midfield. Collectively, our midfield cohort is significantly stronger than it was last season.
Swapping three players for three players is not "rejigging our forward line." Rejigging our forward line is appointing a new assistant coach determined to end our forward line's reliance on one or two players, improving our connection and ball movement inside 50, creating more scoring opportunities, and requiring our forwards to have the complete and unconditional buy-in of successful teams. Our list managers have given Josh Fraser the cattle he needs to achieve that.