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On the occasions when Pendles dodges a contest, I personally don't think it's because he's soft. He has no problems going in hard when the situation demands it, but makes choices sometimes - maybe based on his Bball background, to choose when to put his body on the line.
I have no problems with that, he doesn't lack courage he's just not reckless.
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
thebaldfacts wrote:Lot of people have been criticising Pendles for not going hard enough at the footy, so i thought I would praise him.
Did anyone see him back into the on coming Scum player in that marking contest early in the last quarter?
Great to see that he put his body on the line.
good call, there where questions earlier this year about him in marking contests about him not going hard enough and on at least one occasion not going at all, not just on Nick's but some commentators as well, it was good to see him answering it on friday night.
I saw it. The most pleasing thing was that he didn't just back back, he took a look, saw the blues player was coming and went anyway.
Pendles is a determined competitor. He has acknowledged he has a weakness in his game but I believe he has the character and grit to try and overcome it.
I'm not concerned about his hardness. The two areas I'd like to see him improve on are his overhead marking (should come as he improves his strength. At 190cm he could be a difficult prospect), and to run with the ball more (we're starting to see a little more of this). Absolutely rapt with his development so far, and he seems very level headed and fully comitted to improving his game. To date, he's the best player from the '05 draft.
^ Yes, easily the best player from that draft IMO. Well ahead of Murphy, Thomas and Ellis at this point (although Ellis does have the distinction of playing extremely well in a grand final to his credit).
He is our architect in the midfield: he has the best peripheral vision and the best hands in our side. He was playing superlative football before his injury and against to the Blues he was getting right back to his best. He is a huge part of our September drive.
"The greatest thing that could happen to the nation is when we get rid of all the media. Then we could live in peace and tranquillity, and no one would know anything." - Sir Joh Bjelke-Petersen
Pendlebury is currently a B+ player...getting closer and closer to cracking it as a genuine A grader.
No doubt he has courage. He has also improved his clerance work out of sight and is showing signs of becoming more dangerous by contributing to more goals.
All he needs now is to develop consistency in his efforts. No doubt he is displaying more courageous signs...but i could also find a number of instances he could've gone harder. So doing it every week is his challenge.
His other challenge is becoming more damaging. Instead of opting for the 20m short pass, it would be good to see him winning more of the ball forward of centre like Dane Swan does...and using his footskills to kick it 50metres onto a team-mates chest.
There's more to life than footy.........just not much more.
stui magpie wrote:On the occasions when Pendles dodges a contest, I personally don't think it's because he's soft. He has no problems going in hard when the situation demands it, but makes choices sometimes - maybe based on his Bball background, to choose when to put his body on the line.
I have no problems with that, he doesn't lack courage he's just not reckless.
The thing to bear in mind as well that 'hardness' is all well and good, but sometimes it just pays to pick your battles.
Blokes the size of Pendles who use their bodies like battering rams have shorter careers. There are certainly times when its your turn to put your hand up and cop a hit, but I honestly think sometimes sidestepping a non-essential contest is probably a smart move in today's game.
His worth to us is the ability to find space and hit a target, not backing into packs or cleaning blokes up. We have others in the side who can do that bullocking work. I just think we overstate its importance at times.
Last edited by Collingwood 4 eternity on Sun Dec 13, 2009 2:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
1990 Grand Final :
"From the back pocket, this will be probably the last kick, he need not even kick it, the drought is over. 32 years they've waited, let the celebrations begin" Sandy Roberts