jackcass wrote:Pies4shaw wrote:swoop42 wrote:The dogs are the ones with legitimate excuses with a first year coach.
Beveridge has achieved a lot in just one preseason and shows it's totally tosh to believe it takes years to implement changes to game plans that markedly improve a sides performance.
It's taken us 4 to show some genuine improvement.
We've had a cushy draw and less injuries yet still heading for another 11-11 season.
Contract extension beyond 2016 must not be offered now unless we make finals.
The Welfare is coming off a ridiculously low base and I have seen nothing to suggest they will be seriously competitive within the next 5 years. They have no key position players of any acceptable quality (unless Boyd suddenly comes good) and are incapable of beating a decent team in a final.
I think you're seriously underselling the Doggies. They definitely have some gaps but factor in the quality of the kids they've got developing and they're definitely a team on the rise.
I may be underselling them - I just don't think that Ping-Pong style of play will beat decent teams on the MCG.
They really are much better-performed at Docklands than elsewhere. This season, they have won 6 of 8 games there at an average of
122 points per game - call it 18.14 per game (and they lost to St Kilda and Fremantle but even in those they kicked 13 and 14 goals, respectively). Away from Docklands they've won 4 of 7 and scored
72 points per game - call it 10.12. Admittedly, that includes Richmond in round 2 and the Swans in round 5 but, however you view their performances away from Docklands, 7 of their best 8 scores for the season have been at Docklands (and include their two losses there).
In fact, their only score of more than 12 goals
away from Docklands was in July against a weakened Gold Coast - and that was only 14 goals. Apart from that game against hapless opposition, they've kicked 8, 9, 9, 9, 11 and 12 goals in their non-Docklands games.
No, those statistics don't excuse Collingwood losing to them - but they do, I think, justify my scepticism about the Welfare's likely future progression.