Nick is a far better all-round player, wearing heavy tags and dominating clearances and inside ball in many games this year, often carrying and willing the team often with minimal support in a way the very elite mature-bodied mids have done at their peak. Don't underestimate that; he's now years ahead of most gun midfielders. Now watch what another pre-season and a team reset does.shawthing wrote:There's not a single Collingwood player (and I'm including Nick in this) who has improved on last season.
Josh is the one who isn't backing up his season, but that's for similar reasons that Moorey and Q have been down, i.e., the midfield has been under the pump and we haven't been able to play our forward pressing game to restrict the opponent's forays. Josh is an attacking outside player facing too much ball coming at him. Once we start breaking even over the ball and our forward pressure is back, watch him return to his level.
The team plays a very distinctive style, and Fly has chosen not to drop it. That means we concede games we potentially could've otherwise won or kept closer, but without losing all the work that gone into the ball movement that creates those incredible end-to-end goals, some of which we saw today. Mess with that this year, and it's gone for next year. It's a coaching choice, but who can argue?
Schultz has struggled to reach expectations, but you couldn't look at his highlight reel prior to recruiting him and have predict that.
The ageing list is a follow-on from past recruiting failures; nothing can be done about that now. And even if 3/4 of the 'thereabouts' talent doesn't make it, the VFL system looks like it prepares players better than ever in our history. If it's already developed a few keepers, such as Richards, Dean, Harrison, Jiath and Longy, and the system is only just warming up, we will be in far better shape than ever.
Someone rightly mentioned the ridiculous players Geelong have recruited, far above their rightful weight. Remember, this Collingwood is now a destination club, so those players will follow, with the good players we blood who don't make it helping. I do think Sleepy Hollow and some of the interstate clubs have the advantage over the city lights for those seeking a certain lifestyle, but the club can't have done any more than it has under McRae to become a desirable destination.
So, hang in there. At least we now make long-run calls we have always wanted, even if that means some interim frustration overcoming past list, player development and club culture mistakes.