dragging guys who have just kicked a goal
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dragging guys who have just kicked a goal
i noticed this happen at least three times on friday night ... milne and armo were two of the players involved.
can anyone explain the rationale behind it?
is ross worried that we'll get a run on or something?
is it tempo football taken to the extreme of trying to stop in its tracks any momentum we might develop?
to me it is ridiculous. i would have thought you drag the guys who have just conceded goals, not kicked them.
i'm sure someone will come up with "it's the way modern football is played, etc, etc" but i think it is a pure crock.
lockett would have hardly been on the ground if we dragged him after every goal he kicked.
where is the incentive to kick one if it is only going to earn you a spell on the pine?
can anyone explain the rationale behind it?
is ross worried that we'll get a run on or something?
is it tempo football taken to the extreme of trying to stop in its tracks any momentum we might develop?
to me it is ridiculous. i would have thought you drag the guys who have just conceded goals, not kicked them.
i'm sure someone will come up with "it's the way modern football is played, etc, etc" but i think it is a pure crock.
lockett would have hardly been on the ground if we dragged him after every goal he kicked.
where is the incentive to kick one if it is only going to earn you a spell on the pine?
Last edited by bigcarl on Sun 18 May 2008 2:52pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: dragging guys who have just kicked a goal
It was probably their turn to rest and after a goal is the best time to do an interchange.bigcarl wrote:i noticed this happen at least three times on friday night ... milne and armo were two of the players involved.
can anyone explain the rationale behind it?
is ross worried that we'll get a run on or something?
is it tempo football taken to the extreme of trying to stop in its tracks any momentum we might develop?
to me it is ridiculous. i would have thought you drag the guys who have just conceded goals, not kicked them.
i'm sure someone will come up with "it's the way modern football is played, etc, etc" but i think it is a pure crock.
lockett would have hardly been on the ground if we dragged him after every goal he kicked.
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Re: dragging guys who have just kicked a goal
mate, if they are hot and running on confidence they should stay out there.plugger66 wrote:It was probably their turn to rest and after a goal is the best time to do an interchange.
Re: dragging guys who have just kicked a goal
The fitness guys will claim if they stay out there to long there skills and thinking and workrate drop off. Every club does it so there must be something in it I suppose.bigcarl wrote:mate, if they are hot and running on confidence they should stay out there.plugger66 wrote:It was probably their turn to rest and after a goal is the best time to do an interchange.
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Re: dragging guys who have just kicked a goal
so that makes it an irrefuteable truth of football does it?plugger66 wrote:Every club does it.
Re: dragging guys who have just kicked a goal
Yes i would say so otherwise they all wouldnt do it.bigcarl wrote:so that makes it an irrefuteable truth of football does it?plugger66 wrote:Every club does it.
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Re: dragging guys who have just kicked a goal
All 16 clubs are wrong. You are right.bigcarl wrote:so that makes it an irrefuteable truth of football does it?plugger66 wrote:Every club does it.
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Re: dragging guys who have just kicked a goal
this is half our problem. we should set a few trends of our own rather than mindlessly following what everyone else is doing.plugger66 wrote:Yes i would say so otherwise they all wouldnt do it.bigcarl wrote:so that makes it an irrefuteable truth of football does it?plugger66 wrote:Every club does it.
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nothing wrong with bucking trends. just because everyone else is doing it doesn't necessarily make it right way, or the only way.starsign wrote:this is a quantum leap in your argument Big Carl, and to suggest in this instance our paid experts follow everyone else "mindlessly" is a little naivethis is half our problem. we should set a few trends of our own rather than mindlessly following what everyone else is doing.
the teams who do well are often ones who challenge conventional wisdom and not follow it like sheep.
that is how the game evolves.
i think there is a sound and valid argument for keeping a guy who has just kicked a goal ON the ground.
his confidence is up ... after all he has just kicked a goal. he's hot, he's feeling 10 foot tall and invincible ...
... so let's sit him on the pine for a while so he can think about where he went wrong
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There are probably both scientific & practical reasons for taking players from the ground after kicking a goal, as has already been stated. We see it hapen but don't understand why. Saying that ALL clubs do it is too simplistic. Most of the advances in player management in the AFL in recent times are sports science related. Clubs, including ours aren't going to let their secrets out via mug punters like us. We need to trust that they know what they are doing !!
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It has nothing to do with controlling the tempo of the game. The purpose is to get fatigued players off the ground to recude the risk of injury and fatigue related skill errors.bigcarl wrote:it is "tempo footy" taken to the ridiculous extreme of stopping your own team's momentum.
Yeah nah pleasing positive
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sports medicine and "scientific" football have their place, i suppose, but in this instance appear to fly in the face of commonsense.vacuous space wrote:It has nothing to do with controlling the tempo of the game. The purpose is to get fatigued players off the ground to recude the risk of injury and fatigue related skill errors.
surely if a guy is kicking goals he stays on the ground.
btw, i'll bet the hawks don't drag buddy every time he kicks one. they'd keep him out there in the hope that he'd kick another soon.
i would.
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Agreed Bigcarl.
I noticed this as well on friday night and was amazed.
Seemed to me it wasnt a rotation thing , more like a reward was the impression i got .
object of the game is to kick a bigger score than the opposition, hows a gut gonna get on a roll if he isnt there and surely if a particular guy isnt there doesnt iot gewt affected directly from the midfield ?
I noticed this as well on friday night and was amazed.
Seemed to me it wasnt a rotation thing , more like a reward was the impression i got .
object of the game is to kick a bigger score than the opposition, hows a gut gonna get on a roll if he isnt there and surely if a particular guy isnt there doesnt iot gewt affected directly from the midfield ?
What will be next from this club ?
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it's part of our policy of giving the opposition a "fair go".Prodgers wrote:I told my girlfriend it's part of the 'fair go' policy at St. Kilda that everytime a player kicks a goal he goes off the ground to give someone else a go. She thought i was telling the truth cause they kept going off after kicking goals
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When a player who is not a forward at the time of kicking a goal kicks a goal, he is therefore out of position, and would have to move a distance to get back into the right spot for the restart.
If you interchange that player straight after he kicks a goal, a new player can come on in a different position, and in another player can pick up the goalkicker's opponent.
What I'm getting at is that it's a good way to mix it up and strategically confuse the opposition.
Makes sense doesn't it?
If you interchange that player straight after he kicks a goal, a new player can come on in a different position, and in another player can pick up the goalkicker's opponent.
What I'm getting at is that it's a good way to mix it up and strategically confuse the opposition.
Makes sense doesn't it?
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Old Basketball adage - if the player is running HOT, give them the damn ball!
I agree, if a player is beating their oppposition, and the opposition number to that player hasnt changed - why bench them ? Would understand if the player is absolutely spent - but gezz surely our players all have a level of fitness to play a full game by now if required!
Otherwise, a couple of injuries in a game such as Richmond - and we are absolutely GONE
I agree, if a player is beating their oppposition, and the opposition number to that player hasnt changed - why bench them ? Would understand if the player is absolutely spent - but gezz surely our players all have a level of fitness to play a full game by now if required!
Otherwise, a couple of injuries in a game such as Richmond - and we are absolutely GONE
If everyone speeds, why haven't you been overtaken?
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I would have thought the better analogy was to compare kicking a goal to a fast bowler just getting a wicket. Anyone would get fired up with their success (wicket or goal) but their is a downside in that eventually the player will get too tired to continue to perform at the same level.
I agree with some other posters that I don't think one goal is the best time to bring someone off. I can't imagine how they'd have reached the point of diminished returns after one goal!
Armo has become one of our very few mid-fielders that seems to regularly kick goals (it's a novel idea in the St. Kilda mid-field, unfortunately!), and kcks accurately from most reasonable distances. I get thoroughly pissed off seeing our goal kickers taken off the field because I just don't know who else is going to kick any goals for us!
Kicking goals just doesn't seem like a very high priority with the current coaching staff. Do we even have a goal kicking coach? Don't you think it would be useful with all our wasteful sprays? Even Lenny, who gives his all for the club, would benefit. I don't think it is wrong to admit your weaknesses. You have to admit to them 1st before you are willing to improve them and that's all I want to see happen to this team.
I agree with some other posters that I don't think one goal is the best time to bring someone off. I can't imagine how they'd have reached the point of diminished returns after one goal!
Armo has become one of our very few mid-fielders that seems to regularly kick goals (it's a novel idea in the St. Kilda mid-field, unfortunately!), and kcks accurately from most reasonable distances. I get thoroughly pissed off seeing our goal kickers taken off the field because I just don't know who else is going to kick any goals for us!
Kicking goals just doesn't seem like a very high priority with the current coaching staff. Do we even have a goal kicking coach? Don't you think it would be useful with all our wasteful sprays? Even Lenny, who gives his all for the club, would benefit. I don't think it is wrong to admit your weaknesses. You have to admit to them 1st before you are willing to improve them and that's all I want to see happen to this team.