If you want to see whoesale changes week in week out, go follow Carlton or Richmond.
If you want to see whoesale changes week in week out, go follow Carlton or Richmond.
I'm loving hearing talk of Lake being rushed back in to the Hawks lineup...
I really hope he plays...Our forwards owe him one.
After 4 weeks on the sidelines, I suspect he'll get what he deserves.... If he's picked.
Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it's time to pause and reflect... MT
Hawthorn play a brand of footy that does not rely on any one player. Tagging individuals like Mitchell or Hill can be effective but they will still have options like Bourgoyne, Smith, Roughead, Langford, Rioli or Lewis to use.
For Sydney to win and continue to win against hawthorn we need 22 players prepared to play 4 quarters of relentless, no quarter football.
Lake, Smith and Lewis will all come back into the team and Hodge and Whitecross apart put them at their strongest for several years.
Our midfield must win the clearances, contested balls and cause turnovers across the ground.
We cannot expect our back 6, regardless of personnel to withstand the delivery of pressure free passes that the hawthorn forwards enjoyed in the GF.
I have seen every game live this year, except Freo, and apart from our performance against Port, have yet to see all 22 sustain the effort for the entire game. Anything less on Saturday will spell disaster, Hawthorn believe they have our measure and on the evidence so do I.
If they beat us up again, we can't win a GF with this team. Every other team in the comp will see this as a blueprint for their own success.
Having reported on the strategic change, I also have some radical structural changes in mind,
1. Tippett is too slow to play on the forward line against Hawthorn, on the other hand, he is quicker than Hale or McEvoy, so assuming that either of them play, Tippett should play directly against them i.e. As a back or follower.
2. Use Reid and Franklin as high half forwards. The Hawthorn backline works best zoning off and helping win turnovers from errant high balls into the defensive 50. By playing these two between the arcs we deny Hawthorn their favoured situation.
3. Use Goodes exclusively in goal square and forward 50. Against Lake, Gibson or Frawley he may win more ball from this position but more importantly he provides a focal point for our attack that may release the other two talls.
4. Use Rohan to cover Suckling and Birchall, both these are used as release players delivering the ball further forward and in attack. He has the speed and coverage to stop their penetration by applying pressure.
5. Use Mitchell's opponent whenever possible. Mitchell has no defensive game, he is a great reader of the game and places himself brilliantly at stoppages and in zones, but he is vulnerable when we have possession. Making him accountable every time we go into attack will prey on his lack of speed and commitment to his defensive side. This is why Ben must get this job. He has the discipline, strength and courage to go with Mitchell all night but still have the skills to run off hi when necessary.
6. We must protect Hannebery from the snipers. Last year he was cleaned up repeatedly and so far this year other teams have made him the target of similar plans. He is our most damaging midfielder, we must be prepared to stand beside him.
I agree strongly on protecting Hannebery. Hawthorn fear his capacity and used borderline bash tactics to stop him last year after he put his stamp on the GF in 2012. How best to do this I don't know - I'd be tempted to smuggle Barry Hall into the middle, but failing that we need to find some way of reducing his exposure.
He reminds him of the guys, close-set, slow, and never rattled, who were play-makers on the team. (John Updike, seeing Josh Kennedy in a crystal ball)
I just had a look at the stats from the GF last year for the first time.
Pretty depressing reading.
144 less possessions tells the story of the day.
He will have played that day over in his head numerous times.
I'm sure he has thought through, and discussed strategies to cope with this sort of attention.
If Parker can replicate his form last week, the Hawks will have more than enough to handle, and Hanners may have a better game.
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