Barking, biting Bulldogs are the real deal

By Cameron Rose / Expert

The evenness of season 2016 was further underlined on Saturday evening, when the Western Bulldogs travelled to the SCG and, as they did last year, defeated the Sydney Swans on their own patch.

The Dogs opened the year as flavour of the month, winning four of their first five by big margins and going down to Hawthorn narrowly as their only loss.

But they had fallen out of premiership talk in recent times after losses to Greater Western Sydney and Geelong, along with some grinding wins over Collingwood, West Coast at Etihad, and Port in their last five matches.

They were somewhat fortunate against the injury-hit Pies, but were worthy victors against the Eagles and Power, which were high-quality games.

Given this AFL season is as even as anyone can recall, injuries are going to have a huge impact come September, even if no-one from clubland will concede the point. The Dogs have arguably been disrupted more than any other top eight side, particularly in the defensive part of the ground where so much of today’s football is set-up.

Robert Murphy is out for the season. Jason Johanissen missed nine matches, but boy did he know how to make an entrance on his return, and his impact went well beyond the cool-as-ice match-winning goal. All Australian Easton Wood has missed games. Matt Suckling has missed games. Marcus Adams has missed games.

The latter four of these were all there on Saturday, and it was no surprise to then see Sydney kept to their third lowest score for the season, even with Buddy Franklin getting off the chain. The Dogs backline is a wonderful blend of defence, attack, grit and resilience.

Still missing from the overall picture is Luke Dahlhaus, perhaps the best combination of pressure and creativity in the game, and some chance to be leading the Dogs’ best and fairest when he went down with a knee in Round 12.

Tom Boyd will also make the Bulldogs better when he resumes, and hopefully he can now put together continuous AFL football, which we haven’t seen for over a year. On a side note, we could do without his ridiculous suspension. Another example of overkill within clubs. Toby McLean is also best 22 despite being only 20 years old, and adds something different up forward.

The point is the Dogs have done it the hard way and had nothing handed to them.

The Bulldogs have several features of their game, the highlight being the most effective press in the competition, and they also control the ball better than any other side when up and running.

They have an astonishing 13 players (not including Murphy, who won’t be back) averaging 20 possessions or more this season, including all of their prime midfielders, plus half-backs like Boyd, Johannisen and Suckling, and half-forwards like Dahlhaus and Rising Star contender Caleb Daniel.

No other side comes close to that amount of players sharing the load, and they have a beautiful balance between inside and outside players among that group, with most of them capable on either side of the equation.

The Dogs lack scoring power compared to their top-eight rivals, and are ranked tenth in the league in points for, with only the bottom-eight sides beneath them in that stat. Adelaide and GWS, league leaders, average about four goals more per game than them.

Jake Stringer has had four goalless games this year after not having any in his last eleven matches last year. He needs to get rid of those. Tory Dickson kicked three or more goals nine times last season, but only once so far in 2016. If these two could find two or three goals more between them a game from this point on, it would make a huge difference.

An overlooked positive for the Dogs given the early season talk of their Etihad record, is they have now won twice interstate and twice at the MCG this year, both situations they are likely to confront in September if they want to make grand final day. In fact, they only have one loss away from Etihad this year so far.

With Richmond, Gold Coast and St Kilda to come in the next three weeks (where they need to add some yeast to their percentage), the Dogs should be in the top four by the time they hit Geelong and North Melbourne in Rounds 19 and 20. They then get Collingwood, Essendon and Fremantle in the run to finals, and will start favourite in all.

The Dogs are disciplined, tough and skilful for the most part. They’ll be a tough nut to crack for any opponent come September, at any time and at any place. 62 years after their last (and only) flag, the premiership dream is very much alive.

The Crowd Says:

2016-07-07T05:30:01+00:00

Buzzard

Guest


No, but my crystal ball says SWANS are still pretenders and will finish 6th Genius...

2016-07-06T12:21:41+00:00

Mark

Guest


Freudian slip? Looks like you meant to write "isn't setting the world on fire" but how you wrote is actually correct. Stingiest defence in the comp, think we're going ok actually.

2016-07-06T12:17:44+00:00

Mark

Guest


Relying on the best forward in the game isn't the worst thing in the world.

2016-07-06T12:14:22+00:00

Mark

Guest


Having the opposition not being able to run the clock down with 90 seconds to go (something they would practice at training, especially after the Tigers game) involves at least a little bit of luck. To think otherwise is just arrogant. Dogs played well but from that position, Sydney should have won. All the missed set shots means we probably didn't deserve to but there's a difference between games you deserve to win and games you should win. Simple as that.

2016-07-06T12:06:14+00:00

Mark

Guest


That's cute, you think you know what you're talking about.

2016-07-06T12:05:30+00:00

Mark

Guest


Got the lotto numbers genius?

2016-07-06T05:42:42+00:00

Richard

Guest


No comedy today Catter, good to see you up and about.. I knew you had thick skin.. Anyway, Anyone can win the GF ( including the Cats ) just not the below.. Weagles ( Horrid in Melbourne against good teams ) Roos.. ( Injuries to key players are taking a toll imo )

2016-07-06T05:35:25+00:00

Richard

Guest


Hannebury is soft..

2016-07-05T23:25:38+00:00

D.Large

Guest


Up the Roys

2016-07-05T23:25:17+00:00

D.Large

Guest


no thanks

2016-07-05T23:24:49+00:00

D.Large

Guest


agreed

2016-07-05T23:24:31+00:00

D.Large

Guest


Good

2016-07-05T22:27:20+00:00

JohnDee

Guest


Wow mattyb, you're awfully confident in a team that hasn't won a final since 2010. A lot can go wrong in the process of converting potential to premierships, just ask Port Adelaide. At the moment, that's all the Dogs are, potential. Mind you, there's an abundance of it within the club, but until they can deliver in September it all means absolutely nothing.

AUTHOR

2016-07-05T22:18:09+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


He's one of the best I think Justin. They beat Adelaide in a shoot-out, 123 to 108, so they can do it when the time comes.

AUTHOR

2016-07-05T22:17:01+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


The Dogs already have 10 wins, and four near-certain wins against Richmond, Gold Coast, Essendon, Fremantle, plus another two highly likely against St Kilda and Collingwood, that would put them on 16. I suspect teams on 16 wins will finish 3rd-6th or something like that, so percentage is going to be crucial. And the Round 20 clash vs NM is going to be massive.

AUTHOR

2016-07-05T22:14:02+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Thanks Damian. I think they're a better overall outfit too, but I do want to see 2-3 more goals a game. I think when Boyd comes back, and if they can just get a little more from Stringer and Dickson, I think they can find those goals. Your point about their window is good, as is the Saints comparison. As a Richmond fan, I've been waiting 30 years for any sort of window to open!

AUTHOR

2016-07-05T22:12:19+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Very kind words Matty, and a passionate post! I can feel your excitement leaping off the screen and the points you make are very sound. You'll get your chance to finish top four, but you simply must win all those games against the bottom ten. Can't afford to drop one.

AUTHOR

2016-07-05T22:10:16+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Thanks Dougie.

AUTHOR

2016-07-05T22:09:58+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Stringer came home strong last year, so perhaps he's one of those that does get better as the year goes on. And Dickson needs to start chiming in with those bags from last year.

AUTHOR

2016-07-05T22:09:12+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


I must say, I've never heard Men of Mayhem either. I feel like I'm across the Foxtel footy shows, so maybe it's a free to air thing. Catchy.

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