Bluthy wrote:BigMart wrote:He is slow in thought and from hand to foot with the footy now... But as a defender and drop off defender he is elite
Still in our best 5 players
Poor call IMO
Elite? He's not Elite. He's a utility player who transitioned into a defender in the last couple of years because we didn't have anyone else. Webster had to cover Stringer further up the field because 1) Sean can run with him 2) Dempster is only comfortable being that last line defender.
I feel like this happened with Schneider last year - a guy we delisted and then rookied and suddenly everyone is saying he is pure silk and should keep him for another 2 years. I think its fear of the future that makes people look at some of these older guys with rose-coloured glasses and ignoring their deficiencies. Dempster is a good solid player but he lacks run and good kicking and makes our defence pretty flat. He's been a great warrior but he's not elite. He's never been elite.
3rd in last year's B & F suggests he's amongst
our elite, Bluthy.
From the AFL website coming into this season, in an article about all clubs' over 30's:
"Sean Dempster: Should still be considered among the best third-tall defenders in the AFL given his ability to intercept mark (No.3 in the AFL in 2015)."
Note - "3rd tall defender". I'd also suggest no player can take a lot of intercept marks if he is a) confined to the last line of defence, and b) concerns himself only with his opponent. His decision making on when to peel off and go to the contest, to help out, is reflected in finishing last year with the 3rd highest number of intercept marks.
It is also reflected in this other mention on the AFL website, this time in an article entitled "Team first gems - your club's selfless warriors" (August 19th, 2015)
"One-percenters: Sean Dempster (98), AFL rank (equal-13th): The ever-reliable defender flies under the radar but he's loved at the Saints, where he's unmatched for unglamorous team acts like spoils, smothers and shepherds."
You do not get figures like that without getting involved.
He may have fallen off a cliff at the end of '15, but I seriously doubt that, particularly given the way he prepares.
We're not playing a 2nd key defender. He got a heavy knock to the head against Port, and we played rubbish football against the Doggies, and in such a way (the turnovers- and he wasn't responsible for anywhere near as many as some others) that blokes down back were scrambling to cover the ball that kept rebounding at real speed.
And, Schneider's decline bears no relationship to Dempster - he didn't fall off a cliff, he declined as his body wore out (and he was never an elite physical specimen, anyway, but Dempster is).
As they say in the form guides, but not for the same reason - "Look elsewhere".
'I have no new illusions, and I have no old illusions' - Vladimir Putin, Geneva, June 2021