Melbourne are 'Gawn'? Not likely!

By Cameron Rose / Expert

Max Gawn is a match-winning ruckman, hugely influential, and a top 20 player in the game, but his absence over the next three months should barely be felt by Melbourne.

As good as gun ruckmen can be, they are among the most replaceable commodities in the game.

The premiership Western Bulldogs didn’t play a recognised ruckman for most of last year, and coach Luke Beveridge has been known to go without them at all in different phases of a match during his tenure.

Aaron Sandilands is a four-time All-Australian. The least amount of games he has played across two consecutive seasons was 2012-13 when he played 24 of a possible 49 matches. Fremantle made the semi-finals and a grand final thanks to the efforts of Jonathon Griffen and Zac Clarke.

Some people might say the importance of Sandilands was highlighted last year, when he only played five matches as the Dockers undertook the most dramatic fall in the history of the game. Rubbish. Anyone saying that wasn’t using either their eyes or brain when watching Fremantle in 2016, given how deep their problems ran.

Nic Naitanui did an ACL in Round 22 last season. West Coast’s best win of the year was in Round 23, without him, when they took down Adelaide in Adelaide, who were second on the ladder having won 12 of their previous 13 games.

If you think Naitanui’s absence in the elimination final loss was the reason the Bulldogs beat them, then you’ve got bigger problems. Malfunctioning eyes, no brain.

Premiership ruckman Shane Mumford left Sydney at the end of 2013, and the Swans played in the grand final the next year with Mike Pyke taking up the running.

Hell, Todd Goldstein was the dominant All-Australian ruckman in the comp two years ago and based on the evidence of Round 3, 2017 is not even the number one man at North Melbourne anymore.

Two-thirds of the number one ruckmen in the competition this year started their careers at other clubs, and most of those were down the pecking order at the side they came from.

Toby Nankervis was fourth in line for a ruck spot at Sydney last year, and has been a revelation as the number one man at Richmond in the early part of this season. Jarrod Witts is in the same category after leaving Collingwood for the Gold Coast Suns

Sam Jacobs was the third-stringer at Carlton before becoming an All-Australian nominee in his second year at Adelaide. Stef Martin, at Brisbane now, wasn’t even considered a ruckman at Melbourne, but has probably been the best in the competition so far this year.

The point is, ruckmen crave opportunity and, at Melbourne, Jake Spencer will embrace his.

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Champion Data’s AFL Prospectus tells us that Spencer excelled at VFL level last year, in the areas of score launches, score involvements, clearances and contested possessions. It’s a great recipe for a bullocking ruckman, in the mould of a Mumford or Nankervis.

Spencer basically has only been seen fleetingly at AFL level in his nine years at Melbourne, and most observers probably remember a light-weight stripling. He’s 203cm’s and 105kg’s now, and is 27 years old. He looked good in the pre-season and moved well.

Ruckmen often take until their mid-20s to mature, and he could do worse than look at his former teammate Mark Jamar, who was 27 when he came from nowhere to be named All-Australian in 2010.

It needs to be remembered, the Demons are not losing Gawn and being forced to play with 17 men. They do not lose the sum total of Gawn, they simply lose the difference between him and his replacement. Sometimes in the ruck, all you need is a hardened body who can compete, win some contests, halve others, and be hard enough to play against that your midfield can break even or win.

Spencer may not match Gawn for contested marking or goals, nor weight of hit outs, deft palmwork, or simply as a monstrous presence, but he will offer the attributes named above. He is fit, hard and hungry. He is ready.

Gawn is Melbourne’s best player, but not their most important. It should be noted the Demons were dominating Geelong in general play when Gawn went down in the second quarter, and their dominance continued through the third term in his absence. Poor goal-kicking cost Melbourne that game of football, not losing Gawn.

The overall midfield battle – intensity, hardness, clean hands at stoppages, run and carry, good ball use – these are all more important to the outcome of a game than what any one ruckman can provide.

If the Demons butcher opportunities in front of goal as they did on Saturday, it won’t matter who the ruckman is. No ruckman can prevent turnover goals if the McDonald brothers and Jake Melksham continue to be shaky disposers of the ball in the back half.

Melbourne were expected to play finals this year, both externally and internally. It will be an indictment on Jack Viney, Nathan Jones, Clayton Oliver, Dom Tyson, Jordan Lewis and their fellow midfielders if they can’t continue to shape and win games with Spencer as their ruckman instead of Gawn.

Yes, they will need to adjust their tactics at stoppages, but these are professional footballers with teams of coaches to help in this regard. They will need to increase the amount of footage they watch of opposition rucks, and put more time into reading those cues.

Adelaide, Richmond and Geelong are the three unbeaten teams in the AFL at the moment, and they have won the hit out-to-advantage count twice between them so far, from nine matches.

Hawthorn, North Melbourne and Sydney are yet to win a game this season, and collectively, have only lost the hit out-to-advantage stat twice.

Fremantle had 29 hit outs to advantage to Geelong’s six in Round 1, yet lost by 42 points. They also won the count against the Western Bulldogs on Saturday night, but only 15 to five. The midfield battle was decisive in both matches, but it did not revolve around this facet of the game.

Winning a football match is about winning an accumulation of moments. You need to win more of them than your opposition, and capitalise on them when the time arrives. A ruckman, like any player, can only win you a relatively minor amount of these moments.

No, Melbourne are not ‘Gawn’ because of the absence of big Max. Far from it. Opportunity presents. For Jake Spencer to make his name. And for the club to show the maturity they have promised. Let’s see what they deliver.

The Crowd Says:

2017-04-15T07:19:37+00:00

Macca

Guest


Cam - hu hmmmm

2017-04-13T01:59:59+00:00

Aransan

Guest


Rob, I am neutral and I give the Dockers a chance.

2017-04-12T22:59:25+00:00

Macca

Guest


Rob - I support Carlton and just above I said " I can’t see how it could be predicted with any certainty."

2017-04-12T22:26:12+00:00

Aransan

Guest


That is what I thought too Geoff.

2017-04-12T20:43:01+00:00

Rob

Guest


The only reason you cant predict who will win is cause you support the Dockers. I think the Demons will monster Freo this weekend and im yet to speak to a neutral supporter who thinks different.

2017-04-12T15:16:41+00:00

Geoff Foley

Roar Rookie


You do have to factor in the mental side of being 5 goals up/down though if Melbourne did kick straight. Also, a lot of Geelong's scoring was done after the impact of being a man down on the bench took hold on the Dees. All in all, if Melbourne kick straight in the second and start of third quarter, they win. And if Max had not been injured, they might have won anyway.

2017-04-12T14:34:59+00:00

Dalgety Carrington

Roar Guru


Essentially ruckmen (like any player, especially the taller variety) can be a huge weapon and teams can and will structure up around them. Ruckmen, because of their role, can be even more impactful on team play and structure when they are dominant. They are central to the functioning of a midfield, so their loss is likely to be more profound than other players. This is also likely to be a butterfly-like effect, where initially a team may seemingly cover the loss with aplomb, but as time goes on there structures strain under continuing pressures, until they get a chance to establish a new way of playing.

AUTHOR

2017-04-12T10:34:08+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Yes Chris, I know. I was more making the point about Geelong's score. 26 scoring shots is far more likely to result in 14.12 than 20.6.

2017-04-12T08:55:36+00:00

dave

Guest


A dominant ruckman and the other team will just try to shark his hit outs so I don't think the ruck contest is that important. The best thing about having a good ruck is the pressure release kick from defence. Apart from that Freo never seemed to have got the value out of big Sandilands in comparison to his dominance.I don't know why he doesn't just smack it forward 30 metres every centre bounce and we have players swarming forward to the designated area.

2017-04-12T08:13:56+00:00

Steele

Guest


The Dee's blew all their chances by three quarter time. By that stage the cats had their tails up and dominated the last quarter. Poor kicking definitely cost Melbourne the game, your coach even admitted such. No Ruckman eventually tipped the balance as well. And no Hogan. Geelong are an ordinary three and Zero side. Not a flag threat one iota.

2017-04-12T07:39:12+00:00

Tricky

Guest


Yeah Cam what Macca said

2017-04-12T06:14:11+00:00

Macca

Guest


Cam - the more responses you make the more it seems the line "As good as gun ruckmen can be, they are among the most replaceable commodities in the game" isn't actually part of your argument but more good teams can cover the loss of good players.

AUTHOR

2017-04-12T06:07:55+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


My comment on Walker is not because of his obvious talent, but because Adelaide has quite a tall forward-line already, and they are more able to cover the role he plays, so losing one of them is not as big a deal. Walker missed Round 1, Jenkins went down early in Round 2, now McGovern will miss a few months, yet Adelaide rolls on. If it reaches a critical mass, then it becomes a problem. Betts missing time would be a bigger blow.

2017-04-12T05:52:00+00:00

Tricky

Guest


Cmon Cam, the Austrian has announced himself 5 minutes ago, Max announced himself more than a season ago. Bit harsh on Max with that statement - if you really meant that

2017-04-12T05:45:21+00:00

Tricky

Guest


Cam, you say that ruckmen are easier to replace. I find it difficult to get my head around that statement, you also mention that Adelaide are able to cover the loss of Tex over a midfielder in Sloane That tells me you think that Tex Walkers and ruckmen grow on trees and midfielders don't when in reality it is the other way round. Yeah, as you state in the article teams are made up of 22 on the day but surely because of the level of quality difference between Gawn and Spencer there must be some sort of disruption to their structure, how much so only time will tell. To say "we'll bring in Spencer and it'll all be apples" would be folly. I'd be very surprised if Melbourne were to be as nonchalant as you seem to be.

2017-04-12T05:27:13+00:00

Tricky

Guest


Exception to the rule, Brodie Grundy 23 yo

2017-04-12T04:30:39+00:00

handles

Guest


What about the other six scoring shots they had? If they kicked 19 13 instead of 13 19, they win. And the reality is that Geelong kicked 2 in the last 10 when the game was pretty much in the bag. And Melbourne kicked a couple out on the full. The Cats won. Well done. They are a great pair, sorry, team. But they got out of jail when their young opponents couldn't finish them off when the game was there for thee taking. That is what Chris Scott saw. That is what I saw. Not sure what you saw.

2017-04-12T03:14:50+00:00

Cat

Roar Guru


And yet most of Melbourne's behinds were from repeat entries. They may have had less scoring shots if they kicked the goal and the ball went to the centre instead of being trapped inside 50. We'll never know. We do know that very few teams ever win games when they concede 120+ points in a game. That's fact.

2017-04-12T02:26:39+00:00

Birdman

Guest


The Dees are likely to be diminished slightly by the Gawn injury but I agree with Cam's premise that they should be able to win games without him.

AUTHOR

2017-04-12T02:19:21+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


It is completely unfair to compare Gawn with Braydon Pruess. Max is an insignificant amoeba compared to the North monster.

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