And David King is completely wrong. Has he considered the possibility that our players just play with more dare when they've got no choice, because they are under substantial scoreboard pressure.Scollop wrote: ↑Sun 18 Aug 2024 9:39am David King on Foxfooty gave us these 'corridor' stats and talked about the frustration Saints fans might have (that we can play with such dare and excitement). He said the Saints were basically forced into playing that way because of the scoreboard.
They didn't exactly smash us in the first half. We weren't far off with matching them in contested ball and clearances and inside 50's....but we had 40 disposals in the corridor in the first half and that changed dramatically for the second half.
We had 92 disposals in the corridor in the second half. We took every opportunity to look inside.
I was shocked at how good we were in that second half and how quickly we moved the footy and how well we played through the corridor.
David King said that's not the way the Saints normally play. He reckons we "rarely play with the brakes off". Meaning dare and express ball movement through the corridor is not happening often enough.
Jason Dunstall asked; Whose fault is it?
King said; "It has to be Ross's decision to play the way they (normally) play. There's no one more responsible than the senior coach."
King asked Dunstall if he agreed with that. Dunstall referenced the coaches as a group and sat on the fence. Dunstall says he wasn't sure whether it was the players or the 'coaching panels' fault.
Lyon only tweeked a few things at half time (such as Stocker into the middle. It helps when you win contested ball, even better when you smash the opposition in contested ball. It also helps when you don't fumble under pressure, contest in the air and make better decisions.