In the best game of the round, the Demons forge another bad memory

By Jay Croucher / Expert

As Max Gawn started his run-up, which was really more of a dawdle-up, a little too side-on and considered, I turned to the person next to me and said: “He’s going to miss to the right.”

Gawn did miss, but to the left.

It was fitting: what the Demons have long been best at is surprising you in the different ways that they can fail.

Gawn’s kick, struck with a total lack of conviction that belied the strength and determination of his preceding mark and overall performance, confirmed Melbourne’s latest ignominy.

It was a sad, logical conclusion to a trilogy of disappointment that started at the end of 2017. Their final two performances last season, both at the MCG too, were Gawn’s kick in the form of full matches: an uneasy, unconvincing, squeaky win over the Lions followed by a convincingly catastrophic loss to a Collingwood team with nothing to play for, which ensured that Melbourne would also have nothing to play for the following week.

It was a calamity softened by the thought of what should come next. There was no assured decline looming for the Dees like there seemed to be for West Coast, no hundred-mile walk back to relevance as for North Melbourne, and no crippling ambiguity as to where the team actually stood – see: Collingwood.

The Demons had too much young, realised talent to be held down. So much went wrong last year: injuries to both captains, as well as to Jesse Hogan and Max Gawn – unequivocally the team’s two most important players – combining to miss virtually half the season.

With the promise of better health, and the confirmed excellence of Jake Lever to replace the mostly theoretical excellence of Jack Watts, making finals in 2018 was an obvious and reasonable expectation.

And so they may still make finals – a three-point loss to the team that finished last year’s home-and-away season second on the ladder doesn’t change much. But this was an opportunity: the Demons had key absences (Jack Viney, Tom McDonald) but with Patrick Dangerfield out and Harry Taylor finished after the first quarter, this was a game that the favoured Dees should have won.

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They didn’t, making it another small chapter in their now voluminous misery book. The critical murmurs surrounding the team’s off-season will only get louder. And for whatever the weirdness of that off-season, or at least the weirdness of the discourse around it, signals or doesn’t signal, it’s apparent that there’s just something undeniably off about this team.

They look unstoppable at times – a connected defence repelling attacks, vicious contested ball success leading to break-away, lightning quick handball chains out into space, setting up Hogan or Christian Petracca to cap the brilliance with the most brilliant act in the passage. The way they strangled the life out of Port Adelaide last season, crushed the Crows in Adelaide and ran over the top of Collingwood on Queen’s Birthday spoke to a team whose ceiling is as high as anyone’s.

But then there were two meek, incomprehensible losses to North Melbourne, an early season dagger loss to a Hawthorn team that couldn’t beat anyone, and a total roll-over against the Giants in the final month of the season in a game that was supposed to be a blockbuster.

The inconsistency was shining in this game against Geelong – the powerful, weaving brilliance of Petracca, the interior magic of Clayton Oliver, the dominance of Gawn, and the spectre of Hogan bringing the Demons back from an uninterested, lethargic second quarter where Geelong did whatever they wanted – allowed acres of space at stoppages, with tackles half-heartedly missed as Geelong players spread with an intensity that the Demons had no inclination to match.

It says a lot about Melbourne that they were able to drag themselves back, to the point where they should have won.

But it perhaps says more that they needed to drag themselves back in the first place – suggesting that maybe the lessons of last year still haven’t been learnt yet.

The Crowd Says:

2018-03-28T21:38:31+00:00

Rob

Guest


"Its only pre season" i was told when i expressed concern about St Kildas third quarter against the dees 3 weeks ago. Well it aint pre season now. The 1 thing the dees needed to address in the off season was the dozing off for quarters and blowing the game - they havnt fixed it... they are no certanties for the 8.

2018-03-28T09:59:04+00:00

Mark

Guest


Better than Sydney? Nah.

2018-03-28T06:41:54+00:00

Dony

Guest


it's a fair point, Melbourne were ten points in front when Lewis gifted them that goal. You'd expect better from someone who's played 285 games... not from Jordan Lewis though

2018-03-28T05:41:59+00:00

DougyW

Guest


What about the lack of discipline that Melbourne continually displays. In 2017 suspensions to Lewis, Hogan, Bugg and Vince as well as four other players excluded from selection for drinking. Melbourne just keeps shooting itself in the foot. Then at the weekend Lewis abuses the umpire, gets a 50 metre penalty and gifts Geelong a goal. In 2017 Richmond learnt from its losses, will Melbourne?

2018-03-28T02:00:33+00:00

AJ Mithen

Expert


The Dees were two wins and % away from 4th place last year Seano - they'll easily make that up (admittedly Sunday didn't help). They're better than five of the teams you've named but behind Tiges, GWS and maybe Geelong. Once they sort themselves out they'll be great to watch, rather than funny to watch.

2018-03-28T01:26:04+00:00

Seano

Roar Rookie


They won’t make the 8. Rich, Port, Geel, GWS, Syd, Hawks, crows and Bombers. Who do they push out? Maybe Crows otherwise it’s a lock.

2018-03-28T00:32:50+00:00

AJ Mithen

Expert


Good point Kangajets. I've still got the Dees in the top four.

2018-03-27T23:51:39+00:00

Kangajets

Guest


One narrow loss for an up and coming team , that just builds resilience. I would think the mental scarring at Gws or Geelong from losing prelims 2 years in a row,would be way worse .

2018-03-27T23:49:17+00:00

Cisco Kid

Guest


Gawn with the wind.

2018-03-27T23:16:39+00:00

TomC

Roar Guru


They have a couple of winnable games coming up, so they should be able to build some confidence.

2018-03-27T23:14:05+00:00

User

Roar Rookie


Demons will be there at end of the year, the scope for improvement in this side is massive.

2018-03-27T22:01:40+00:00

truetigerfan

Guest


Comedians across Australia are lamenting the success of Richmond in 2017, rendering their plethora of punchlines redundant and ineffective. Perhaps the baton can be passed onto the Dees?

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