The AFL teams that need to turn things around

By Michael DiFabrizio / Expert

Bulldogs coach Rodney Eade addresses his players during the AFL Round 07 match between the Western Bulldogs and the Sydney Swans at Manuka Oval, Canberra. Slattery Images

The weekend put the spotlight on a few clubs – not to mention a few coaches – while also taking it off others. Nothing typified this more than Melbourne’s surprising 96-point over Adelaide, which saw a lot of pressure taken off one side’s shoulders and on to another’s.

But it didn’t just stop there. Looking at the other games, there was plenty of bait for the media to bite on.

Western Bulldogs

After seven rounds, the Bulldogs have just two wins. And they were both at home. And they were against the Gold Coast Suns and Brisbane Lions.

This is not the record of a premiership contender.

The latest loss was to Sydney, an understandable enough result on paper (it was played on mutual territory in Canberra and the Swans are always a tough opponent) but unforgivable when you consider, in an effort to put his players on notice, coach Rodney Eade dropped All-Australian Brian Lake for the clash.

After being blitzed by Essendon in Round 1, the Dogs’ other two losses were a competitive effort away to Fremantle and a game against Collingwood in which the reigning premiers were made to look uncomfortable, for the first three quarters anyway. In both cases, the Dogs weren’t good enough – but they weren’t so bad that some instant soul-searching was necessary, either.

There were too many positives. Too many excuses. “We travelled all the way to Perth and were beaten right at the death,” players could say. “We made the reigning premiers panic,” they would be able to suggest.

Hopefully, that can now stop. Surely the 2-4 record – and where those two wins came from – is enough to tell the players that what they’re doing at the moment isn’t enough.

The next two weeks will tell us a lot. Richmond at Etihad and West Coast in Perth await. Hawthorn and Geelong follow, and on the surface they would appear to be the more important games, however more “competitive” performances against mid-range teams simply can’t be tolerated.

The Bulldogs have the next two weeks to show the past three weeks isn’t what they are about.

Geelong had a similar start to this in 2007, giving the odd glimpse into their potential whilst dropping games premiership sides aren’t meant to drop. After a disappointing loss on the road, a game they thought they should have won, the penny dropped. Something “clicked”.

The next week, they chalked up a 157-point win and their ultimately successful charge towards the premiership began. And what fixture did that triple-figures thumping come from?

Richmond at Etihad.

It’s time to find out what kind of side the Dogs really are. More of the same will tell us plenty.

North Melbourne

The Kangaroos’ chances of playing finals in 2011 already appears slim to none. The one thing that had to change this year for finals to happen was their performance against the top teams but, as the weekend’s big loss to Geelong showed, nothing’s changed on that front.

Since Brad Scott took over as coach at the start of last season, the Roos have played last year’s top four – Collingwood, St Kilda, Geelong and the Western Bulldogs – a total of eight times. You can read the game-by-game results here, but the simple overview is this: North have lost every single one of these games and by an average of 69 points.

Losing to Collingwood by 87 points in Round 2, and Geelong by 66 on the weekend, has extended the trend but the real worrying sign is that the results against mid-range teams – what got them so close to September last year – are no longer going their way either.

Hence, North find themselves in 15th place with a 1-5 record.

Luckily for Brad Scott, he can probably afford a year like this. His list is young and a tough year is forgivable for a man two years into the job. However, can North Melbourne as a club afford it?

A few years have passed since the rejection of the AFL’s relocation offer to the Gold Coast and their future is looking only narrowly more secure. Now, to be fair, the club cops a lot of unfair criticism over that decision and what’s happened since.

However, a few more years in the bottom half of the ladder would hardly be ideal in the fight to keep North in Melbourne.

Brisbane Lions

Michael Voss needed his side to beat the Gold Coast Suns on Saturday night. A win-less start to the year did not need a loss to the AFL’s newcomers to compound the club’s woes. Yet it’s happened, and the pressure on Voss will only increase as a result.

We all knew it would be a long year for Lions fans, but to be without a win, and with six losses, would have to worry those in power at the club. So what does Voss need to do to keep his job?

There’s only one option. He must channel his inner Mark Harvey.

First, let’s back up a bit. At the end of 2009, Voss was convinced the Lions were in striking distance of a flag and so went on a trade week recruiting spree.

We all know how that ended up. The Brendan Fevola trade proved to be a disaster. Key players left as a result.

Anyway, now that the dust has settled it’s obvious Voss overestimated where his list was at. It’s obvious, too, the trade week gamble wasn’t the smartest of ideas.

And this is where Harvey comes in. Harvey’s time at Fremantle started off in a very similar fashion to Voss’ time at the Lions – he thought going deep into September was a realistic possibility, he topped up his list accordingly, then it all blew up in his face.

Many thought there was no recovering for Harvey, that there was no way to bounce back from such a disastrous beginning. Craig Hutchison even wrote at the end of 2009: “The hard, cold, brutal truth for Fremantle is that Gold Coast, now, is closer to a premiership than the flailing Dockers.”

But here’s how it all turned around. When it became obvious the gamble for a flag wasn’t going to work out, Harvey stuck his hand up. He admitted he’d got it wrong. He said from that point on, it was all about the youth.

While those words opened him up to criticism, as did the subsequent two years of rebuilding, the fact he didn’t put off making such a statement probably saved his job – and it’s a huge reason behind why Fremantle were able to be the big improvers of 2010 and are right up there again this year.

You might say Voss is already turning to youth, but is it with the same commitment as we saw with Harvey and Fremantle?

Simon Black’s pre-season comments, in which he was confident the club could return to playing finals, suggest that the Lions have not adopted the same sort of all-out rebuilding philosophy that the Dockers had.

Maybe it’s time for Voss to go all-out. It might be just what’s needed to save his job.

St Kilda

The Saints put in a good performance last night. But that wasn’t what they needed. What they needed was a win. Carlton’s thrilling three-point victory means the Saints’ record now reads one win, one draw, four losses.

This is not what we expected from a side that forced a grand final replay last year and lost the previous year’s grand final by just 12 points.

A date with Hawthorn at the MCG awaits this weekend, hardly the kind of fixture Ross Lyon would have wanted now his side are in this position.

The Crowd Says:

2011-05-12T05:52:48+00:00

nick bencorelli

Guest


Should we kick the SA teams out of the AFL until they re-build Adelaide Oval?

2011-05-11T02:37:37+00:00


Adelaide (occasionally) show glimpses of brilliance much like Melbourne. Also their coach is a respected man in football and his recent comments regarding this young group of players is highly complimentary. If you saw last weekends' game you would think he was full of it :)

2011-05-10T15:30:28+00:00

amazonfan

Roar Guru


Absolutely, which is why I think it's too early to judge Hird. Manyn people (Essendon fans) are proclaiming him as some kind of messiah, however Voss also did well in his first season.

2011-05-10T14:12:58+00:00

Twilight Zone

Guest


Hmmm, 2007 Geelong turned it around from that fateful game vs Richmond at Etihad. Oddly enough, following that game, they played West Coast - who the Doggies play after Richmond. Oooooooohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh. I will be as arrogant as the Cattery in 2015 ;)

2011-05-10T12:43:45+00:00

Swampy

Guest


Voss was a fantastic player who lead by example and had a seriously good set of teammates around him. Sadly this just hasn't translated into the coaching ranks. It has happened to many other greats of the game in all sports. Just being a star player, even a captain does not guarantee success as a coach. Some succeed and some don't. Voss is one that at this stage hasn't. Maybe with some time out he will come back with another team and have different results. James Hird at this stage looks to be on the succeed side but time will tell. If you look at other sports it is rarely the best player that becomes the best coach. Jose mourinho was a battling defender who barely made it to the top level, sir Alex ferguson was an average Scottish leaguer, Phil Jackson was a bench player, Wayne Bennett... the list is long. If voss were to be sacked however where does it leave the lions and would it change their likely results? -- Comment left via The Roar's iPhone app. Download The Roar's iPhone App in the App Store here.

2011-05-10T03:55:32+00:00

davelee

Guest


why is adelaide not mentioned in this article? they are almost up a certain creek without a paddle.

2011-05-10T03:11:02+00:00

Macca

Guest


Voss and Brisbane are in better shape than the Saints and Lyon. Look at the recycled players Lyon has picked up, Dean Polo, Andrew Lovett, Ryan Gamble, Brett Peake, Farren Ray to name a few, none of which played last night. Nw look at the number of young blokes Brisbane has playing for them at the moment, Luenberger & McAuley are going to be a great Ruck combination for years, Rich, Redden, Polec etc are all going to be stars, now look at the St Kilda side and as who are the young stars there?

2011-05-10T00:43:14+00:00


Agreed. I thought Vossy would do well at Brisbane as coach but then the debacle concerning Fevola occurred and the proverbial hit the fan. I really don't see how a first time coach could take such a huge gamble. Now, with 20/20 hindsight, it appears that, barring a miracle, Voss will not remain coach of the Lions.

2011-05-10T00:39:48+00:00

TomC

Guest


Agreed amazonfan, although I still think time will tell for Buckley and Hird. The true test of a coach is how the team performs once they've had a couple of seasons to really make their mark on the club. Thats why I think its fair to judge Voss on his performance now, rather than in his rookie season when the Lions finished sixth.

2011-05-10T00:31:44+00:00

amazonfan

Roar Guru


Indeed. I think the biggest mistake Voss made was rejecting the WCE assistant job in favour of the Brisbane senior job. He should have spent a few seasons at West Coast before taking up a senior position in 2012 or 2013. He doesn't have enough experience, and he's also never been at a club other than Brisbane. If you compare him to Buckley and Hird; Buckley will at least have had two years as an assistant coach (although I don't think that spending one's entire professional career at the one club is such a great idea), while Hird is doing amazingly well but is only in his first season. Plus he will have learned from Voss's mistakes and has a terrific team around him.

2011-05-09T23:33:35+00:00

TomC

Guest


The problem for Voss is that he doesn't have the prudence, patience or experience of Mark Harvey. The Lions need someone else to usher in the rebuilding phase.

2011-05-09T22:38:38+00:00

The Cattery

Roar Guru


Dogs - gone. Saints - gone. Lions and North - never there.

2011-05-09T20:38:19+00:00

ChrisH

Guest


You can include Hawthorn in there. We've struggled to beat bottom dwellers and lost to the only top ranked side we've played. In fact what year am I in?, 2009, 2010...no wait, it's 2011

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