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Topic: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney (Read 1051 times) previous topic - next topic
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Re: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney

Reply #45
Paul im as change averse as anyone, but sometimes you have to acknowledge when your coach just doesnt have us on the right trajectory.

Leave aside supporter analysis for the minute. As far as the club is concerned, they need to :
a. correctly identify where the problems lie
b. make correct decisions based on correct analysis.

If it turns out that Voss is the or a problem, then fine. But I very much doubt it. The club (however abstractly or concretely you may wish to define that entity) has IMO, simply forgotten how to win. This is self evident and has played out across a variety of regimes, coaches, list managers, etc., and apart from some progress here and there, is still struggling to be like Hawthorn, Geelong etc. You can have all sorts of arguments about what comes first (winning or winning culture), you can have all sorts of arguments about coaches, players, list managers that you either  love or hate etc., but until the club has that breakthrough moment, there will always be that element of doubt in the minds of players, coaches etc. That mental space is hard to pinpoint and hard to define, but very real IMO.

Re: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney

Reply #46
I sat behind the goals at ground level so btw that and the goons in front us standing up all the time, it was to “see” the game. My comments are
As follows:
- we controlled the game quite well in the first half
- we transitioned the ball very well in the first half.
- at about the 10 min mark of the 3rd, we looked out of petrol and fatigued. The mistakes started at that point.
 I thought it was going to be a tough assignment  but a 12 goal to 4 3rd was as bad as I have seen from us. I dont know what we do at the 1/2 time break in the rooms with food and drink but its been a while that we come out in the 3rd looking they need a sleep because their bellies are full.
Not a good start to 2027


You know, you raise an interesting point GTC old son. I also lift an eyebrow or two when I see the massive sugar and carb hits at half time. Seems to be a dietician playbook from decades ago.

The folks I know through my work rely on quality electrolytes during sustained exertion... high in magnesium, potassium and sodium - no sugar! As for white bread carbs... p1ss off! And some folks are okay on fruit, others not at all. And definitely no caffeine tablets - great way to dehydrate!!
Only our ruthless best, from Board to bootstudders will get us no. 17

 

Re: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney

Reply #47
I'm now wondering which player(s) will be leaving at seasons end!!!
3 of our best left last year!!!
Players of that calibre don't leave unless there is something drastically wrong at the club.

Re: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney

Reply #48
If you go back and watch the replay, you'll find Swans dobbing goals from on or outside the F50 arc, that's a night out and they were on a high.


I can assure you I have no intention of watching the replay...haha.

Re: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney

Reply #49
I'm now wondering which player(s) will be leaving at seasons end!!!
3 of our best left last year!!!
Players of that calibre don't leave unless there is something drastically wrong at the club.

One did leave for alot of money.

Re: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney

Reply #50
So 5 minutes into the 3rd quarter the boys decided not to play for Voss? Don't think so.

We haven't ran out games well since we sacked Andrew Russell.
That's actually how it often happens. In those situations players tend to just give up, where they don't for someone else.

Re: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney

Reply #51
I'm now wondering which player(s) will be leaving at seasons end!!!
3 of our best left last year!!!
Players of that calibre don't leave unless there is something drastically wrong at the club.

Keep your powder dry, Cocko. Still plenty of 2026 remaining.
Only our ruthless best, from Board to bootstudders will get us no. 17

Re: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney

Reply #52
Seen enough of Fogarty, doesn't do near enough, pass.  Frank is a far more important and effective player, pity he is injured.
Very tempted to play Byrne or Flynn, we need crumbing forwards that actually can, not blokes that clearly can't don't or won't.
Oh, and Williams to never, ever go defensive side of centre again.
DrE is no more... you ok with that harmonica man?

Re: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney

Reply #53
You would have to have rocks in your head to think we were going to win.
When you 22 points up 10 min into the 3rd qtr, yes, I do expect to win from there much more often than not.

Re: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney

Reply #54
Paul im as change averse as anyone, but sometimes you have to acknowledge when your coach just doesnt have us on the right trajectory.

Leave aside supporter analysis for the minute. As far as the club is concerned, they need to :
a. correctly identify where the problems lie
b. make correct decisions based on correct analysis.

If it turns out that Voss is the or a problem, then fine. But I very much doubt it. The club (however abstractly or concretely you may wish to define that entity) has IMO, simply forgotten how to win. This is self evident and has played out across a variety of regimes, coaches, list managers, etc., and apart from some progress here and there, is still struggling to be like Hawthorn, Geelong etc. You can have all sorts of arguments about what comes first (winning or winning culture), you can have all sorts of arguments about coaches, players, list managers that you either  love or hate etc., but until the club has that breakthrough moment, there will always be that element of doubt in the minds of players, coaches etc. That mental space is hard to pinpoint and hard to define, but very real IMO.

im not saying make the call now, but if it comes when it comes this continuation of trend will stand as one of the reasons why.

A little while ago, I mentioned downhill skiing would be an improvement.  We got there at times, where we are gold provided we are on top.

Thay evolution needs to happen.  I know that quarter was damaging for various reasons but the way the Swans piled on goals last night was typical of an issue identified back in covid years which cost teague his job.
"everything you know is wrong"

Paul Hewson

Re: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney

Reply #55
Paul im as change averse as anyone, but sometimes you have to acknowledge when your coach just doesnt have us on the right trajectory.

Leave aside supporter analysis for the minute. As far as the club is concerned, they need to :
a. correctly identify where the problems lie
b. make correct decisions based on correct analysis.

If it turns out that Voss is the or a problem, then fine. But I very much doubt it. The club (however abstractly or concretely you may wish to define that entity) has IMO, simply forgotten how to win. This is self evident and has played out across a variety of regimes, coaches, list managers, etc., and apart from some progress here and there, is still struggling to be like Hawthorn, Geelong etc. You can have all sorts of arguments about what comes first (winning or winning culture), you can have all sorts of arguments about coaches, players, list managers that you either  love or hate etc., but until the club has that breakthrough moment, there will always be that element of doubt in the minds of players, coaches etc. That mental space is hard to pinpoint and hard to define, but very real IMO.


Sure is very real.

Why does our discipline, focus and intensity drop so dramatically when challenged? Why do we react (or simply drop our bundle) rather than respond? Why is our mental discipline and toughness so fickle? Do we collectively sulk when we're scored against? Is there an element of downhill skier in our culture?

Mentally tough individuals and teams love adversity, they love being challenged and tested. We seem to fear adversity and challenge. Mentally tough individuals and teams step into and confront fear(s), whereas also-rans seek ways to avoid fear(s).
Only our ruthless best, from Board to bootstudders will get us no. 17

Re: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney

Reply #56
im not saying make the call now, but if it comes when it comes this continuation of trend will stand as one of the reasons why.

A little while ago, I mentioned downhill skiing would be an improvement.  We got there at times, where we are gold provided we are on top.

Thay evolution needs to happen.  I know that quarter was damaging for various reasons but the way the Swans piled on goals last night was typical of an issue identified back in covid years which cost teague his job.

I would suggest this issue precedes Teague by several years, and if that's true, I'd say the issues are deeper than the coach.

Re: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney

Reply #57
...and another thing... how demoralizing it must be to dominate a half of footy with almost 30 inside 50s for a return of 4 goals!
Only our ruthless best, from Board to bootstudders will get us no. 17

Re: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney

Reply #58
Sure is very real.

Why does our discipline, focus and intensity drop so dramatically when challenged? Why do we react (or simply drop our bundle) rather than respond? Why is our mental discipline and toughness so fickle? Do we collectively sulk when we're scored against? Is there an element of downhill skier in our culture?

Mentally tough individuals and teams love adversity, they love being challenged and tested. We seem to fear adversity and challenge. Mentally tough individuals and teams step into and confront fear(s), whereas also-rans seek ways to avoid fear(s).

It's like the kid at school that always scores 50-60% on their math tests. After 10 exams where you just scrape through, your whole-of-body behaves accordingly. The way you feel about math, the way you prepare for exams, the way you behave in class, your expectations wrt marks etc. This is not just limited to not "liking" math, but can be observed in physical habits like the faces you pull, slouching in class etc. Breaking through to score very high marks can be done, but it's rare and requires a certain character.

None of our players, at least not in Carlton jumpers, have experienced much winning. They are all professional, they are all trying their hardest. They all want to win. But that little voice inside your head when things don't go your way is very familiar. You accept some wins, some floggings, some honorable losses, and mid table finishes because like the kid in math, your history precedes you.

All 18 teams are competing in a very limited space. Coaches and players are pulled from a limited pool, they all have the same cap, same budget, same list limitations etc. The margin for gaining an advantage over other cubs is miniscule.



Re: AFL Rd 0 2026 Post Game Prognostications Carlton vs Sydney

Reply #59
I went to the basketball at JC Arena and didnt watch the game live and have just watched the replay today and it was really a rinse and repeat of the previous Swans game and many other games from last season where we were competitive but poor forward line efficiency again cost us a decent half time lead. We had control around the contest but fiddled with the ball, bombed it and couldnt hit the hard kicks to our forwards.
Once the Swans evened up the contested work in the middle the game swung and their better players took over. The lack of defensive pressure and ability to find a man when we were under pressure from their clearances was the same as previous years and it was a procession of goals.
Cripps got frustrated and lost his cool and I think there has to be some talk of him relinquishing the captaincy as its affecting his game. We also have the same problem that our initial contested midfield group in Cripps, Hewett and Walsh are out of the game once we lose the clearance and the opposition players like Heeney, Gulden, Warner just run away with no pressure leaving our defense on the back foot hoping that entry pass wont hit the target but thats not going to happen with quality like what the Swans have running the ball in.
Gulden and McInnerney had 24 scoring involvements between them...thats unacceptable as was the tackle count numbers but I guess if you cant catch the players you cant tackle them.
Positives...Pittonet did a good job on Grundy and was handy down forward but any game where your normal non goal kicking ruckman is your best forward thats not a great indication of your forward line operating well.
Smith and Dean......thought Smith won the ball well and showed he knew what he was doing but the extra pace of the game and quality of his opponents rushed his disposal and being a light body vs the hardened Swans players was a challenge but he was one of our better players imho.
I thought Dean contested well and like his father didnt take a backward step and just needs the gametime and experience playing on senior players but I like what I saw and he will be a player.
Walsh got plenty of ball but probably needs to get more out of his possessions so he hurts the opposition more with his kicking.
re: Charlie looked like the pregame hype affected him, wasnt a factor and looked a bit subdued and thrown out by having to play against his old teammates.
I wouldnt panic and start dropping players yet but the thing that concerned me more was the lack of leadership and resilience of the team when things got tough and if I was Voss Id be singling out my leaders and demanding more of them.