Fremantle's maiden premiership looks a fair way off

By Glenn Mitchell / Expert

Fremantle’s premiership window has closed. It is not a case of needing to rebuild, but the club certainly needs to undergo a serious renovation before it can be again considered a genuine flag threat.

Hawthorn last night showed that their loss at Subiaco Oval to West Coast in Week 1 of the finals was an aberration. Try as they might, Fremantle could not get over the top of the dual defending champion.

Yes, there were some questionable umpiring decisions in the opening quarter that led to Hawks’ goals, but that was not the area that cost the Dockers the game.

Goal scoring – the perennial Achilles heel under Ross Lyon – was again to the fore, as was a marked difference in the skill level between the two sides.

Lyon’s game plan is built around strangulation defence, which is all well and good against lesser opponents, but against a club like Hawthorn being able to match their defensive output up forward is the key.

At both St Kilda and Fremantle, Lyon has coached in four grand finals for three losses and a draw. In those four gams his teams have kicked totals of seven, eight, nine and 10 goals.

Last night the Dockers kicked just 10.7, while the Hawks managed 15.4.

Over the past four seasons Fremantle has averaged 71 points in seven games against Hawthorn, while conceding an average of 126 points. Only once in that time has Fremantle scored over 80 points – Round 21 last year at Subiaco, where they won by 19 points (110 to 91).

Throughout the 2015 home-and-away season Hawthorn’s average for-and-against record was 111-70, West Coast 106-71 and Fremantle 84-71.

Again it underlines the inability Fremantle faces in putting positive scoreboard pressure on the opposition – especially the top teams – despite the club claiming a first minor premiership.

It is difficult to see how the team will improve their scoring capacity in the short term.

Last night may well have been skipper Matthew Pavlich’s final game. His 335th game sadly finished with him in the dugout after copping a cork in the last 10 minutes.

Pavlich has been his team’s key power forward over the past 10 seasons, topping the goalkicking in seven of those years. However, the last three years the club’s leading goal scorer has been a small man – Michael Walters in 2013 and 2015 (46 and 44), and Hayden Ballantyne with 49 goals last season.

Few teams win flags with their small forwards being the principal goal scorers.

Just who will provide a key marking target up forward in the absence of Pavlich is a question for Fremantle as they look to reshape their line-up.

The Dockers were hoping to entice Port Adelaide’s Jay Schulz to the club, but he re-signed with the Power at the start of the week.

A few years back †hey tried desperately to lure Mitch Clark to the West, but that fell through.

There is nobody on the Dockers’ current list who looks ready to assume the mantle.

Matt Taberner was selected as another tall forward for last night’s match but he was subbed out at three-quarter time, having had just eight disposals and no scoring shots.

Alex Pearce, who at 20 years of age tasted 13 games in his debut season, is a prospect for the future but the bulk of his football to date has been played down back, and with Luke McPharlin certain to retire he may need to stay in the back half.

The Dockers’ priority in both the trade period and national draft will be on securing big men. History indicates that taller players take longer to mature at AFL level, hence the draft is unlikely to provide a quick fix.

To rectify things in the short term the club will have to rely on free agency or a trade. Recent history though has shown obtaining the services of an experienced big man will be tough.

The tyranny of distance is one of the main problems confronting Fremantle in this regard.

With the exception of Pavlich, no other WA-based player has played over 300 games, and several careers – including the likes of Guy McKenna, Chris Lewis and Dean Kemp – ended mid-season after their bodies succumbed to the rigours of the game and the travel.

Senior and seasoned big men may well be eyeing clubs in the east as a future home to reduce the debilitating effect of fortnightly travel.

With Pavlich and McPharlin – the on-field bookends – missing, and with a lack of players ready to take up the cudgels, the Dockers’ future with respect to cracking their maiden premiership looks problematic.

This time next season Aaron Sandilands will be approaching 34 years of age, and likely at the end of his career. Again, just who will be his replacement is a key decision facing the Fremantle match committee.

Zac Clarke has played 88 games and is yet to show that he has the goods long-term – he was omitted for last night’s game on the back of poor form in the last month of the season.

Jonathon Griffin, at 29 years of age, was serviceable last night but he is more of a journeyman than number one ruckman, having played just 77 games across nine seasons with both Adelaide and Fremantle.

Ross Lyon and Fremantle were regarded as the perfect marriage when he arrived at the club ahead of the 2012 season. Lyon was considered the man to take the Dockers to the flag, and he himself was eyeing the club to provide him with a maiden premiership as a coach.

To date it has not happened and there has to be doubt as to whether it will.

During his nine-year coaching career Lyon has a stellar 68.9 per cent winning record in home-and-away matches. However when it comes to finals, his record sits at 47.5 per cent.

Fremantle need to go backwards to go forward. Whether Lyon will have the passion to remain through that period remains to be seen.

Either way, it is difficult to see Fremantle breaking their duck in the near future.

The Crowd Says:

2015-10-09T03:25:30+00:00

Tom Baulch

Roar Guru


Good luck ever winning a premiership Fremantle!

2015-09-28T01:25:03+00:00

Ivan

Guest


The glib tongue of countless low brow readings masquerading as insightful social commentary. Fremantle an iconic port town... happens to have a football side named after it, that attracts a certain percentage of 'bogans'.......as do every other club in Australia.

2015-09-28T01:13:41+00:00

mattyb

Guest


Fair call that johno,1987-1989 holds tremendous significance to the Victorians.These are the years they started the 'tradition' of rattling cans to help save their precious,almighty clubs.

2015-09-28T00:43:34+00:00

johno

Guest


Nah - 1990, still the VFL from 1987 - 1989

2015-09-27T14:11:30+00:00

New York Hawk

Guest


Jax, in all seriousness, who knows or cares about the McClelland Trophy? The way you bang on about it suggests that it is named after some family member of yours. Let me tell you how much it means - nothing. Zero. Zilch. Sweet FA. I know this because I have seen the Hawks win this McClelland Trophy of which you speak but not go on to win th actual premiership cup. It happened to us in 2012. And if you think that gives any supporter solace or a right to claim that we were the top team, you are more delusional than Don Freo.

2015-09-27T13:59:22+00:00

WhereIsGene

Guest


Agreed. Freo blew their real chance in 2013. The last two years they've limped through the finals and next year I don't see them making the top 4. Will slide down the ladder along with Sydney.

2015-09-27T13:56:43+00:00

WhereIsGene

Guest


Good luck winning a flag with a 3rd year player taking the #1 defender every week - and with another kid in Taberner taking the #2. Face it, your club just doesn't have the forwards or a coach who has a clue how to develop them.... and the reason Freo can't attract players from other clubs is because none of them want to play for the AFL's hardest taskmaster in Ross Lyon and be forced to play his rubbish gamestyle. You have a very, very ordinary list. Your bottom 6 players are awful. Ross Lyon's horrid gameplan helps paper over the cracks but it also stifles creativity and tires the hell out of his teams by the end of the season - which is why they always September. You will not win a flag with Ross Lyon or this group. Too many younger teams will go past you next year.

2015-09-27T10:39:20+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


You calling me a nobody? My own fanclub? Et Tu, Brute?

2015-09-27T10:34:30+00:00

Axle an the Guru

Guest


No one remembers minor premiers.

2015-09-27T09:04:48+00:00

Nev

Guest


As predicted, the melt has been amazing. I feel for Fremantle the club, you have some great players that wouldn't look out of place as premiership winners. For the rabid Fremantle supporters here on the roar, this thread has been glorious. Somehow the club played a game that these supporters deserved.

2015-09-27T07:49:56+00:00

Mark

Guest


If you accepted the result, I wouldn't gloat. You're a bloody sook. It's hilarious.

2015-09-27T04:48:55+00:00

OiDatsMyLeg

Guest


I whole-heartedly agree with your sentiment about individual skills, and I think this was the main difference between the sides. The best teams carve through the opposition as if they were witch's hats but to do that you need to hit targets quickly and accurately. I'd also add decision making to the discussion: too many times players would get the ball after good work, only to turn into congestion, or fire in a long bomb and hope for the best, or simply not provide lead. I don't know how much if this is down to coaching vs player smarts. Freo have always been an up and down team - sometimes great, sometimes truly awful - either over a season or during a single game/half/quarter. I personally think they need to build a stronger sense of self-belief in themselves and their team in order to ride over the troughs better. If their heads are down, sometimes it's hard to see them recover - as evidenced by the losses to Richmond, Hawthorn and WCE in the home and away season where an early deficit couldn't be reigned in. Anyway, as disappointed as we are, Freo did achieve a first: winning the minor premiership. An especially hard task for a so-called interstate team, and full credit to them. And as every footy tragic knows: there is always next year.

2015-09-27T03:15:12+00:00

13th Man

Guest


Not Lyons fault that Sheridan dropped a mark. As an professional AFL footballer you would expect players to execute simple skills. Its not Auskick, the coach isn't there to develop skills, they should already have been developed through junior footy. The coach is there to develop a game plan and tactics. "Why he hell would you kick it backwards towards your own goal" Its called switching the play, if you have no idea about how football is played then don't comment. If executed successfully it allows you to open up space on the other side of the ground. Hawthorn did it plenty of times as well. Difference was they executed it better and didn't make mistakes. Tbh that was the main difference between the two sides, Freo were very competitve but made mistakes whereas Hawthorn didn't.

2015-09-27T02:34:43+00:00

mattyb

Guest


Fair call with the tradition but not sure why you think I've never been to the G?Wonderful ground. You can kinda buy tradition off the Victorians though,Cairns,Darwin,Tasmania,NZ have all payed to start the tradition of Victorian clubs selling off home games for a bit of cash. Tradition is a wonderful thing when you can just pick and choose when to use it for your own benefit.

2015-09-27T02:30:49+00:00

jacques of Lilydale

Guest


How can you be rated an EXPET on this forum Ryan?? Is that a rating you get for serially posting banal posts

2015-09-27T02:29:17+00:00

jacques of Lilydale

Guest


Don's still recovering from the juice he was on on Friday evening

2015-09-27T02:25:19+00:00

jacques of Lilydale

Guest


13th Man, everybody hates Freo, not just Glen Mitchell

2015-09-27T02:22:59+00:00

jacques of Lilydale

Guest


Much rather play a final at the G, somewhere you've never been to mattyb, and yes it is tradition, something you can't buy. Can't imagine a GF at your Dungheap

2015-09-27T02:20:06+00:00

jacques of Lilydale

Guest


Yep

2015-09-27T02:13:56+00:00

jacques of Lilydale

Guest


DonFreo, You're seriously delusional.

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