The number one lesson of AFL punditry over the past two seasons has been simple: believing what you see unfolding in front of you can pay off. With that in mind, here are some facts about the first three rounds of the season and whether or not you should believe them.
If you looked hard enough and backed in your judgement, you would have known who the eventual premier was around this time in the past three seasons. Hawthorn was 2-2 with two close losses and a percentage of 141 after four rounds in 2015. The Western Bulldogs were holding their opponents to miserly totals in 2016. Richmond was running their opponents off their feet in 2017. Ex post facto, it all makes sense.
We hit on both the Dogs and Tigers in early season columns and backed the Hawks in to three-peat during the 2015 preseason. Can we make it four in a row?
Not yet. There is too much noise in the first three rounds of 2018. While Port Adelaide have streaked to three straight, Brisbane almost took them down at home over the weekend. Sydney is coming up trumps on my advanced metrics, going 2-1 against the league’s toughest schedule by far. Melbourne is slaying teams on the deck, an indicator of success over the past two seasons.
Gold Coast and West Coast sit inside the eight, Geelong and Richmond sit outside the eight. Hawthorn is in, Essendon is not. As we discussed on Monday, the gap between fifth and 14th is one win and just ten goals worth of percentage.
We’re nowhere near settled into our 2018 inning; it’s cloudy, the deck is green and the ball is swinging, aided in part by the AFL’s competitive balance policies (the sandpaper of our tortured metaphor). But throwing up our hands is not an option; we must hit our way through it.
There are an infinite number of facts from the first three rounds of the AFL in 2018. Scott Pendlebury leads the league in tackles (with 30). Conor McKenna has bounced the ball 14 times. The league’s kick-to-handball ratio is 1.42, an increase of almost 20 basis points (which is enormous). Let’s pick six, and work out whether they are real or not, because why not.
Teams are handballing less
As a general trend the number of handballs per team per game is down significantly from 2017 and is lower than in 2016. Thus far teams have averaged 154 handballs per game, down from 172 in 2017.
The number is down on 2016’s 162.5 per team per game and 159.7 in 2015. We’re on track for the fewest handballs per game since 2007 before the great handball boom of the post-Geelong premiership era (it’s a thing).
Almost every team is handballing less, the exceptions being Carlton, who were the league’s lowest handballing team of 2017, and Collingwood, who are up just over a handball a game. And most clubs are replacing some of those handballs with kicks, while marking remains broadly unchanged. It means the league’s kick-to-handball ratio currently stands at 1.42, the highest since 2006.
What’s going on here? It’s a follow-the-leader response, but indirectly so. Richmond won its premiership on the back of frenetic ground-ball pressure and swift ball movement in attack. The Tigers modified their game plan from years prior, presumably after realising it had a mostly untapped resource on its list. It takes time to adjust a list profile, to make it more in keeping with a preferred game style.
Most teams can up their pressure rate, but it’s more challenging to flick the pace and space switch from a personnel perspective. Some teams can, and have: for example, West Coast tossed out a bunch of its slowpokes and brought in plenty of younger players with pace to burn. And so teams are kicking more as a means of moving the ball quickly and avoiding the tackle traps set as part of the defensive schemes at play in the league.
It’ll come back a little, if only because three rounds of statistics are likely to yield some outlier-type results. But considered alongside the eye test, the change in the league’s meta-game is real.
Assessment: Real.
The Western Bulldogs are a bottom-four team
After two rounds this looked like a foregone conclusion. The Western Bulldogs had been obliterated by the GWS Giants and beaten soundly by the West Coast Eagles. Their trademark had been wiped, their team sapped of experience – by choice, it appears – and their coach’s game day moves looked like they had been concocted by a mad scientist.
The fans were flummoxed and Luke Beveridge himself appeared at a loss to explain what was going wrong. It appears simpler than one may suspect: the Western Bulldogs have fielded the youngest and least experienced team in the league each week of 2018. A team that was already chock full of youth, sprinkled with a literal handful of experienced players, had done what most young teams do.
It is a development that was unforeseen but not unforeseeable. In hindsight, perhaps we should have seen it coming. The Western Bulldogs won a premiership in 2016 with a team that was younger and less experienced than almost all who had come before it, and it has now lost the three oldest and most experienced players available to it.
While the Dogs won against Essendon on the weekend, it came on the back of a stellar performance by Marcus Bontempelli in the forward half and an all-round midfield display in keeping with the Dogs’ premiership year. The load was spread across the more experienced players, allowing the youngsters to chip in at moments throughout the game. It was also an anomalous game in that there was little inside action: just 36 general play ruck contests per estimates compiled from AFL Stats Pro.
Essendon might also be a little overhyped for a not dissimilar reason to the Dogs, all things considered.
The Dogs have Sydney at Etihad Stadium this weekend before travelling to Fremantle and hosting Carlton and Gold Coast in successive weeks. We will know definitively where the Dogs sit after that slate of games. A loss to Sydney will be no cause for alarm, but games against Gold Coast and Fremantle could be telling. For now it’s hard to believe the premiers of two years ago are one of the four worst teams in the league. But this isn’t that team. Believe it.
Assessment: Real.
Tom Mitchell is averaging 45.3 disposals
There is no way known Mitchell will keep up his current rate of ball use for a full season. He set the modern league record for total disposals in a home-and-away season at 787, a mark which no-one had come close to before. Right now Mitchell is on pace for 997 disposals, a full 26 per cent more than the current record.
Mitchell’s role has gets clearer with every passing game: roam packs at stoppages and dish the ball out, and in general play hang around the middle of the ground and link up the forward and back half. Hawthorn’s midfield channels through him.
He has double the disposals of his so-called midfield partner Jaeger O’Meara and the rest of the Hawthorn midfield. This is fine, and it’s not a slight on O’Meara or anyone else, because the load Mitchell carries helps create opportunities for everyone else. He led the league in ‘assisted metres gained’ last year, and I dare say he’s doing it again in 2018.
Assessment: Not real.
Hawthorn is a top eight team
Real, and I’ll tell you why next week.
Assessment: Real.
Nat Fyfe is top five for contested possessions, top ten for clearances, and has kicked a goal and taken a contested mark per game
That he is.
Assessment: Real.
Melbourne is averaging +20.3 adjusted contested possessions per game
The Dees have embraced the swarm mentality of the Western Bulldogs of 2016 and are attempting to win every single contested ground ball in every single game they play. They are blending this with an extraordinarily sharp kicking game and ball movement patterns that would get Blake Caracella (Richmond’s maestro) excited.
Melbourne is third in the league for turnover rate (disposals per turnover) and number one for adjusted contested possession differential per game. They are the only team in the top four for both indicators, which for most other teams are not related in any way. It is a fierce combination that suggests the Demons are a legitimate team who will take some beating all year. And they’re doing it without two of their most important structural pieces in Jack Viney and Tom McDonald.
Anzac Day eve has become something of a blockbuster in a short time, and this season could loom as a decisive battle when it comes to sorting out top-four spots. Yes, Melbourne is that good.
Assessment: Real.
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After three rounds the AFL ladder looks almost unrecognisable from a season ago and is non-conforming with most everyone’s preseason expectations. As we said on Monday, there is much to sort out and still a lot of time to do it.
Cat
Roar Guru
Oh noes! Geelong had the temerity to play three midfielders in the midfield, what is the world coming to?
Cat
Roar Guru
The list wasn't good enough to do a staggered rebuild. Once they knew the full rebuild was needed they may as well go hard at it. Could Harvey have played another year or two? Sure, but what good would another win or three have done for North? They'd still miss finals and would have worse draft picks to show for it.
Philby
Guest
So, you're saying Brent Harvey didn't want to play another year on a reduced contract? Nor Drew Petrie? Seems odd, when you consider he played for much less at West Coast for a year. And Brent Harvey loves the game so much he played another year going around in one of the local leagues, most likely for bugger all.
Ryan Buckland
Expert
The club doesn't need to say a thing, it is all in their actions in starting Ablett, Dangerfield and Selwood at the first centre bounce that the three were available, and running them on the ball for most of the game (particularly the former and latter). It's not a slight, it's just reality.
Birdman
Guest
that was St Kilda's list manager, Chris Pelchen.
Joe
Guest
The article is saying it's currently a fact that Mitchell is averaging 45 disposals a game and Franklin is kicking 5 goals for every behind, but the author doesn't think that fact will still be true by the end of the season. Also, I don't think there's a single person at Geelong who actually thinks in terms of the "holy trinity" rather than the best team. As a Cats supporter, it boggles my mind anyone would think the club believes that. Just because the media rants and raves about the three doesn't mean that's what the club focuses on... since when has the media spoken for the clubs? If you've heard any Geelong supporter this season, they've probably been complaining about the lack of Taylor/Henderson.
Slane
Guest
Salary cap pressure. They had 11 players eating up 69% of their cap space at one stage. Even when they offloaded Dal Santo and Goddard they were still facing a tightnsqueeze. I just read some very interesting comments from their list manager last week.
Philby
Guest
I still can't understand why North Melbourne shoved some of their all-time great champions out the back door, ostensibly due to their age and a need to rebuild, and then kept a very good, but ageing and injury-prone Jarrad Waite, who will not be around anywhere near long enough for North's next flag tilt. Weird.
true blue
Guest
Carlton won't win a game: real.
Gordon P Smith
Roar Guru
Outstanding article, Ryan. There's a reason the sport's called FOOT-ball, as the rules are slanted in favor of disposal by kick; Footscray's not the team it was in September 2016, and Geelong's in deep trouble, especially if they keep thinking "holy trinity" instead of "best TEAM on the field". But I'm not sure what you're saying about Tom Mitchell and Lance Franklin being "not real". You don't sound like you're denying Mitchell's ability to Hoover up disposals or Buddy's to nail it between the big sticks. Is it that their talents aren't making a difference in the big picture for their teams? (In which case, I beg to differ.) Mitchell's got the same advantage Ablett did for so long at Gold Coast - there's no one else in brown and gold fighting him for those midfield disposals. But that doesn't mean his 45 disposals a game aren't giving the Hawks 45 opportunities to score. Admittedly, he's one who's handballing more than kicking it out, which sounds like he's in traffic more often, and he has fewer 1%-ers than any other Hawthorn player who's played a game this season. But he's the only player in my "Following Football" stats who's hit "significant performance" levels in all three games this season so far, and I'd put him in my MVP voting if the Hawks stay in the finals hunt. As for Franklin, he's the sole reason Sydney's my current flag favorite. As you said, they once again were shackled with a ludicrous first six games, and 2-1 with a competitive loss to the only undefeated team is a lot more impressive than 0-6 was last year. Buddy's had only 24 marks and 21 inside 50s - and 14 goals three out of that already. Eight goals in the hostile environment of Optus' opening saved the Swans' first win. Two huge Q4 goals saved their second. If Mitchell's under consideration for MVP, Franklin's on the front page already. Having said all that, I assume you're really just saying they can't keep up the statistical pace they're on. Maybe. I'd honestly be surprised if Lance doesn't come down towards a 2-to-1 ratio, but Tom could very well break last year's disposal record. As always, superb writing, mister Buckland.
Cousin Claudio
Roar Guru
Who's turn is it to win this year's flag. Saints could do with an attendance boost.
1der
Guest
Hawthorn are still fielding a very experienced side even with Burgoyne missing from the calculation. Take out Jarrad Waite for the Roos and include a 20's with 50 games experience and they are with the bottom pack. The significant one is how inexperienced Fremantle are without Sandilands, Mundy, Ballantyne and Johnson included in the numbers.
I ate pies
Guest
That games played table is damning for North Melbourne. They are terrible crap for the experience of their team; it suggests that there's not a lot of upside there.
me too
Guest
finally my team is unreal! 'st kilda to live up to preseason club hype'
I ate pies
Guest
It's the poxy flooding game that they play that forces them to do it. They don't have time to get a clear kick away or they'll get tackled, so they handball.
Birdman
Guest
Personally glad handball rates are decreasing as its been ruining the aesthetic of the game since the Bullies won a flag with it in 2016.
Birdman
Guest
probably but I'm sure he'd prefer a premiership medal
Ditto
Guest
Wondering what the kick to handball ratio after 3 rounds was last season and prior. Just thinking that kicking may be a less risky strategy early in the season. Chaining handballs together may be a method best used when players form is more reliable.
Peppsy
Roar Guru
Titch might not average 45.3 disposals at the end of the season, but surely if he averages above 40 he'll have to be the brownlow favourite.
Birdman
Guest
Who are you tipping in the Hawks/Dees game this weekend, Ryan?