I should point out that you have run with a misinterpreted quote.BAM! (shhhh) wrote:Funny that you mention Aussie, as I was thinking of him quite a lot when reading the article.meher baba wrote:I don't recall seeing an inordinate amount of freewheeling or players leaving their man under Thomas.InkerSaint wrote:I'll bet it took a lot of time and effort to learn to adhere to those structures.
It must have been a bitter pill to swallow after years of freewheeling and low accountability.
The only freewheeler who stands out in my mind was Aussie Jones, but he used that tactic to great advantage and is, in any case, long gone.
I realise that coaches like Roos and Lyon use the term "accountability" quite a lot, but I think they mean something more complex than simply maintaining structure and not doing whatever you feel like.
I recall after his early retirement, an interview with him after he's taken up a coaching position in the ammos asking him what the biggest adaptation was.
His comment was that in the AFL, defense pertained largely to looking after an area, and he was adjusting to it being more about looking after a specific player.
That comment made an impression on me then, I found myself thinking of it as I read Nick's comments, and even more as I read the various inferences of those comments.
On one hand, the thread is an example of people finding evidence for what they'd already concluded. The idea that there was no structure is ludicrous. One of the hallmarks of the team was the forward zone - a structure. However, it's absolutely and blindingly obvious that Ross Lyon puts a much higher priority on team structures; how one structure/zone feeds to the next, when and who should be zoning v taking a man... and set plays which flow from those structures and situations.
FWIW, my inference of the quote is that Dal's talking about the match review - for Thomas the defining factor was love of the jumper, he believed in the gameplan. For Ross, winning or losing comes down to many smaller things. IMO the main interest is that where Thomas may have failed in the latter, it's only within the last 12 months the Saints have taken Lyon's message on board and given the former to be able to take advantage of the structures... but Dal was far more concise
I was referring to Dal Santo - not the team. His difficulty adjusting is a matter of public record... I don't see where I've jumped to any conclusions or "shaped" the facts.