SOS Tony Lockett
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- DownAtTheJunction
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SOS Tony Lockett
It really is time to get specialist help for our forwards. I have 3 nominations. First up I’d be on the phone to our greatest ever goalkicker, Tony Lockett. I wonder if a call has ever been made. What a coup it would be to get him back to Moorabbin. There is no doubt Lockett has rekindled some of his love for the Saints and he may just jump at the challenge at helping someone like Max King. There is the opportunity over the next few weeks with the Saints in Sydney and then Queensland. Then we have the bye. King is apparently injured and may be due a spell. It could be just the impetus he needs. The other aspect is that a reconnection with Lockett would bring hope and belief back to a club that is sadly in need of energy and confidence.
If it is not possible to lure Lockett then I’d go for one of the best set shot kicks of the past (perhaps somewhat left field) in Paul Hudson. Gosh I’d get his dad, in a heartbeat if he was inclined. Hudson jnr had a great set shot routine and super conversion. I believe he lives and works in Melbourne, so let’s get on the phone.
The Candidates
Tony Lockett (with the best strike rate of 69.74%) insisted ‘the two most important things’ were the ball drop and making proper contact with the foot. ‘They were the things I was conscious of, almost to the stage of trying to kick the ball out of my hand,’ he said. ‘I felt that if I dropped the ball (from) too high, the ball had time to do anything before your foot came through.’ Lockett said he was amazed and frustrated that goalkicking hadn’t improved. ‘(It) should be relatively simple, especially set shots because you take your time and go through the process …’ Lockett would always check with the umpire where the mark was before he walked in, focusing on the goal umpire because ‘he stands in the middle of the goals no matter where you position yourself’.
Peter Hudson – ‘I’d stand at the end of my run-up and roll up on to my toes a couple of times. That simple movement put my mind into gear. ‘(Then I) put the ball in the vice,’ – or in other words, he kept it as still as possible. The Hawk genius then followed the ‘straight-line’ method – he’d run straight towards a stationary target behind the goals, drop the ball from the ‘vice’, watch it on to his boot and finish with a straight follow-through. (Paul Hudson used a similar approach).
Matthew Lloyd – ‘I dropped the ball from too high and I stabbed at it and I might have had an arc at times, too, so Dave (Wheadon, assistant coach) used a split-screen to compare me with Tony Lockett and it was a stark contrast because he was so far over the ball. So I tried to bridge the gap. I got immediate results and when I missed one, I knew why, whereas previously I didn’t. I went from a 50 per cent strike rate to 70 per cent.’ Of those to have kicked at least 750 goals, Lloyd’s conversion rate of 68.59% is second only to Lockett. ‘I took as long as I needed to lower my heart-rate and remove some lactic acid and fatigue,’ he said. ‘In my first five or six steps, I’d focus on something behind the goals and in my last six or seven steps, I’d focus on my ball-drop, keeping my head down over the ball, running straight, kicking straight and following through. ‘There weren’t many things that could go wrong.’
Alas I fear we have wrongly committed to assistant coaches who are not the very best. Without a true expert I strongly doubt that King, Higgins and company will ever achieve consistent accuracy.
If it is not possible to lure Lockett then I’d go for one of the best set shot kicks of the past (perhaps somewhat left field) in Paul Hudson. Gosh I’d get his dad, in a heartbeat if he was inclined. Hudson jnr had a great set shot routine and super conversion. I believe he lives and works in Melbourne, so let’s get on the phone.
The Candidates
Tony Lockett (with the best strike rate of 69.74%) insisted ‘the two most important things’ were the ball drop and making proper contact with the foot. ‘They were the things I was conscious of, almost to the stage of trying to kick the ball out of my hand,’ he said. ‘I felt that if I dropped the ball (from) too high, the ball had time to do anything before your foot came through.’ Lockett said he was amazed and frustrated that goalkicking hadn’t improved. ‘(It) should be relatively simple, especially set shots because you take your time and go through the process …’ Lockett would always check with the umpire where the mark was before he walked in, focusing on the goal umpire because ‘he stands in the middle of the goals no matter where you position yourself’.
Peter Hudson – ‘I’d stand at the end of my run-up and roll up on to my toes a couple of times. That simple movement put my mind into gear. ‘(Then I) put the ball in the vice,’ – or in other words, he kept it as still as possible. The Hawk genius then followed the ‘straight-line’ method – he’d run straight towards a stationary target behind the goals, drop the ball from the ‘vice’, watch it on to his boot and finish with a straight follow-through. (Paul Hudson used a similar approach).
Matthew Lloyd – ‘I dropped the ball from too high and I stabbed at it and I might have had an arc at times, too, so Dave (Wheadon, assistant coach) used a split-screen to compare me with Tony Lockett and it was a stark contrast because he was so far over the ball. So I tried to bridge the gap. I got immediate results and when I missed one, I knew why, whereas previously I didn’t. I went from a 50 per cent strike rate to 70 per cent.’ Of those to have kicked at least 750 goals, Lloyd’s conversion rate of 68.59% is second only to Lockett. ‘I took as long as I needed to lower my heart-rate and remove some lactic acid and fatigue,’ he said. ‘In my first five or six steps, I’d focus on something behind the goals and in my last six or seven steps, I’d focus on my ball-drop, keeping my head down over the ball, running straight, kicking straight and following through. ‘There weren’t many things that could go wrong.’
Alas I fear we have wrongly committed to assistant coaches who are not the very best. Without a true expert I strongly doubt that King, Higgins and company will ever achieve consistent accuracy.
- Wayne42
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
What about all the time Ben Dixon spent at the club as the goal kicking coach, that achieved 2 fifths of F*** all.
Either Dixon was shite at his job or he was given Mission Impossible.
Either Dixon was shite at his job or he was given Mission Impossible.
The Saints are under review, will it make any difference to the underachievers ?
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
Good post. Let’s hope there is some work being done on them getting solid fundamentals that stand up to pressure.
Such as running towards what you are aiming at and getting as far over the ball as you can.
What could be a more important skill than making your shots at goal count? Being a poor kick for goal is something that can be worked on and dramatically improved. Ask Stewart Loewe.
All the forwards should be working on it as part of every training session
Such as running towards what you are aiming at and getting as far over the ball as you can.
What could be a more important skill than making your shots at goal count? Being a poor kick for goal is something that can be worked on and dramatically improved. Ask Stewart Loewe.
All the forwards should be working on it as part of every training session
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
Nah. I will go that he was just s*** at his job and his heart , if he even has one, was not in it.
f****** pathetic appointment IMHO.
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- Enrico_Misso
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
Yes, The Heater was a magnificent kick.
His problem was getting the ball.
The rest of Australia can wander mask-free, socialise, eat out, no curfews, no zoning, no police rings of steel, no illogical inconsistent rules.
They can even WATCH LIVE FOOTY!
They can even WATCH LIVE FOOTY!
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
Wasn't an issue in 97Enrico_Misso wrote: ↑Sun 06 Jun 2021 6:07pmYes, The Heater was a magnificent kick.
His problem was getting the ball.
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
Doing is different from being able to teach
Even if he was interested, which is doubtful as plugger has seldom looked back at the Saints since he walked out... there is little to suggest that teaching and communication is/was a strength of the great man.
Heatley is another... he was barely interested in footy when he was playing with us. What’s the slightest indication that he could teach it now
Even if he was interested, which is doubtful as plugger has seldom looked back at the Saints since he walked out... there is little to suggest that teaching and communication is/was a strength of the great man.
Heatley is another... he was barely interested in footy when he was playing with us. What’s the slightest indication that he could teach it now
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
Here we go again
Why not get Stewart Loewe to teach them to mark
Get Robert Harvey to teach them how to be as good as him
Get Lenny Hayes to teach them to tackle
Get Nathan Burke to teach them how to be tough
Get Winmar to teach them how to be mercurial
What a great idea, wheel out champions to tell our players how to be great!!!!
BTW
If Tiger Woods showed me how to swing a club, would I play off scratch - because ATM I’m slicing the f*** out of it!!!
Why not get Stewart Loewe to teach them to mark
Get Robert Harvey to teach them how to be as good as him
Get Lenny Hayes to teach them to tackle
Get Nathan Burke to teach them how to be tough
Get Winmar to teach them how to be mercurial
What a great idea, wheel out champions to tell our players how to be great!!!!
BTW
If Tiger Woods showed me how to swing a club, would I play off scratch - because ATM I’m slicing the f*** out of it!!!
- shanegrambeau
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
Pretty much how I feel too.B.M wrote: ↑Sun 06 Jun 2021 8:36pm Here we go again
Why not get Stewart Loewe to teach them to mark
Get Robert Harvey to teach them how to be as good as him
Get Lenny Hayes to teach them to tackle
Get Nathan Burke to teach them how to be tough
Get Winmar to teach them how to be mercurial
What a great idea, wheel out champions to tell our players how to be great!!!!
BTW
If Tiger Woods showed me how to swing a club, would I play off scratch - because ATM I’m slicing the f*** out of it!!!
Has there been many cases of these appointments actually working.
Players are kicking the ball a different way to the ways these ‘mentors’ did.
I think informally it might work but it might not be a champ. Terry Jenner played about 8-12 tests and was an immense help to Warnie who played about a 100.. or so the story goes.
They can find a mentor, a go-to guy, but not necessarily a champ.
You're quite brilliant Shane, yeah..terrific!
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
Rarely a champ can relay his attributes to others
Generally a good teacher who understands skill acquisition is best equipped to coach skill
Often great players like Lockett are natural geniuses, and often don’t even realise why they are so good or how they are so good.
Loewey could mark because he is a man mountain with dinner plates for hands - can’t teach that
Can’t teach the one touch genius and creativity of Harvey and Winmar
Can’t teach the toughness of Burke and Hayes
You can take what you’ve got and coach it to be more effective
But not turn s*** into strawberry jam
Generally a good teacher who understands skill acquisition is best equipped to coach skill
Often great players like Lockett are natural geniuses, and often don’t even realise why they are so good or how they are so good.
Loewey could mark because he is a man mountain with dinner plates for hands - can’t teach that
Can’t teach the one touch genius and creativity of Harvey and Winmar
Can’t teach the toughness of Burke and Hayes
You can take what you’ve got and coach it to be more effective
But not turn s*** into strawberry jam
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
Exactly as you said, "you can't turn s*** into strawberry jam" but our list needs a major overhaul.B.M wrote: ↑Sun 06 Jun 2021 9:19pm Rarely a champ can relay his attributes to others
Generally a good teacher who understands skill acquisition is best equipped to coach skill
Often great players like Lockett are natural geniuses, and often don’t even realise why they are so good or how they are so good.
Loewey could mark because he is a man mountain with dinner plates for hands - can’t teach that
Can’t teach the one touch genius and creativity of Harvey and Winmar
Can’t teach the toughness of Burke and Hayes
You can take what you’ve got and coach it to be more effective
But not turn s*** into strawberry jam
The draft is our way forward and irrespective of our past failures, we need to load up again and play to the rules a hell of a lot better. A well run club has astute recruiters and we need to get this right above anything else, otherwise we are just going to be treading water for the next decade also.
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
LOL - I know that there is no place for the drop kick in todays football - but I picked up the ball for the first time in a while yesterday - and was not striking it properly - I had a few kicks with a drop kick - and it straightens your kicking action incredibly - if your ball drop is bad there is no way you are going to even strike the ball - maybe there is room for practice over very short distances with a drop kick. Bottom line is that if the technique is right 20/30/40/50 metre kicks are then just a matter of force applied.
Queue comments about Drop Kicks .........
Queue comments about Drop Kicks .........
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
Our "forwards" have no confidence in their kicking ability accuracy because their ability is extremely limited. They are correct to feel that way. Our selectors might well take note.
The one exception is Max. He will come good i.e. better than 55% from 40m.
The one exception is Max. He will come good i.e. better than 55% from 40m.
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
Sainter_Dad wrote: ↑Mon 07 Jun 2021 2:23pm LOL - I know that there is no place for the drop kick in todays football - but I picked up the ball for the first time in a while yesterday - and was not striking it properly - I had a few kicks with a drop kick - and it straightens your kicking action incredibly - if your ball drop is bad there is no way you are going to even strike the ball - maybe there is room for practice over very short distances with a drop kick. Bottom line is that if the technique is right 20/30/40/50 metre kicks are then just a matter of force applied.
Queue comments about Drop Kicks .........
What about the ‘Place Kick’?
For a team kicking at 30%, could we do any worse?
The last goal was kicked with a place kick in 1955 at Brunswick St. by a Fitzroy player, who even then, considered it unusual and risqué.
But in 1955, they kicked at better than 30% even with water logged, out of shape footies.
You're quite brilliant Shane, yeah..terrific!
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
Sainter_Dad wrote: ↑Mon 07 Jun 2021 2:23pm LOL - I know that there is no place for the drop kick in todays football - but I picked up the ball for the first time in a while yesterday - and was not striking it properly - I had a few kicks with a drop kick - and it straightens your kicking action incredibly - if your ball drop is bad there is no way you are going to even strike the ball - maybe there is room for practice over very short distances with a drop kick. Bottom line is that if the technique is right 20/30/40/50 metre kicks are then just a matter of force applied.
Queue comments about Drop Kicks .........
What about the ‘Place Kick’?
For a team kicking at 30%, could we do any worse?
The last goal was kicked with a place kick in 1955 at Brunswick St. by a Fitzroy player, who even then, considered it unusual and risqué.
But in 1955, they kicked at better than 30% even with water logged, out of shape footies.
Seriously folks: https://www.researchgate.net/publicatio ... k_in_Rugby
You're quite brilliant Shane, yeah..terrific!
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
'' Just goes to show doesn't it? Some pple just don't have a clue.
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
Peter Hudson improved Stewie's kicking no end.B.M wrote: ↑Sun 06 Jun 2021 8:36pm Here we go again
Why not get Stewart Loewe to teach them to mark
Get Robert Harvey to teach them how to be as good as him
Get Lenny Hayes to teach them to tackle
Get Nathan Burke to teach them how to be tough
Get Winmar to teach them how to be mercurial
What a great idea, wheel out champions to tell our players how to be great!!!!
BTW
If Tiger Woods showed me how to swing a club, would I play off scratch - because ATM I’m slicing the f*** out of it!!!
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
Not referring to you mate,someone else's ridiculous comment in this thread.
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
Correct. Because he imparted good, simple fundamentals.saynta wrote: ↑Mon 07 Jun 2021 3:41pmPeter Hudson improved Stewie's kicking no end.B.M wrote: ↑Sun 06 Jun 2021 8:36pm Here we go again
Why not get Stewart Loewe to teach them to mark
Get Robert Harvey to teach them how to be as good as him
Get Lenny Hayes to teach them to tackle
Get Nathan Burke to teach them how to be tough
Get Winmar to teach them how to be mercurial
What a great idea, wheel out champions to tell our players how to be great!!!!
BTW
If Tiger Woods showed me how to swing a club, would I play off scratch - because ATM I’m slicing the f*** out of it!!!
These champion goal-kickers may not necessarily have it in them to teach, but ignore what they are on record as saying in the subject at your own peril.
It’s not that hard. A set routine. Proper aim. Body as far as possible over the ball. Guide ball on to foot as per Plugger. Don’t stab at it. Kick through it. Don’t lift your head to see where it has gone until it has well and truly left your boot.
This type of thing.
And Marto, if you are still slicing, learn how to hit a big “duck” hook. Then it is just a matter of degrees to turn it into a nice baby draw. And no, you probably wouldn’t play off scratch - unless you have excellent scoring touch and short game - but you would improve and rid yourself of that ugly over-the-top banana ball.
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Re: SOS Tony Lockett
I bet he'd probably fix your slice though - as would most golf pros.
We're talking about one specific, controlable aspect of the mechanics of football.
Goal kicking has little to do with being able to find the ball, running patterns, reading the play, etc.
It's about technique and practice.
I agree that just because someone is a champion player, they don't make a good coach. But there might be one or two points they bring up that resonate.
I'm sure a total rework of everyone's technique isn't needed...Just a few minor tweaks or slight change to the routine.
Got to be worth a try. Becuase whatever we're doing now clearly isn't working.