Nine questions to come from Round 11

By Jono Baruch / Roar Guru

Nine games every round are bound to deliver different storylines and many different threads to create debate and talk throughout the week.

Among all the stories and scuttlebutt and what is real and what is not, there are always questions that emerge from each game. In the start of what is hopefully a new series, we go through the games of the weekend and pull out the biggest questions.

1. Who is Sydney’s most important player?
There are so many of them. There’s the obvious case of Buddy Franklin and their ever-reliable skipper Josh Kennedy. There’s the evergreen Jarrad McVeigh and his right-hand man Heath Grundy as the key pillars down back. Dane Rampe sets ups their play from defence, Luke Parker and Dan Hannebery drive them from midfield and Isaac Heeney is a young superstar.

But lost in all of that is a bloke called George Hewett who is becoming one of the better taggers in the game. In the last month he has had jobs on names such as Lachie Whitfield, Tom Mitchell, Nat Fyfe and on Friday night he added Patrick Cripps to his list of scalps.

He managed to keep Cripps to just 17 touches, quelling his influence and gathering plenty of the ball himself including six clearances. This underrated Swan is becoming one of the competition’s most reliable players

2. How far have the Bulldogs fallen?
While the Melbourne train keeps on rolling on, it was incredibly hard to believe that the team they were playing on Saturday afternoon were up on the premiership dais 33 games ago.

In the past three weeks, the Bulldogs have scored a combined 4.14 (38) in second halves. Their trademark fearless play which took them to the promised land is non-existent. They are a young team, but are they playing that young team out of choice or necessity? How many premiership players have improved?

3. Is Shaun Burgoyne one of the best Indigenous players we have ever seen?
We’re spoilt for choice picking the best Indigenous players to play AFL. But right now there is a 35-year-old Shaun Burgoyne who is still doing it all. It begs the question, where does he sit among Polly Farmer, Andrew McLeod, Gavin Wanganeen, Nicky Winmar, Adam Goodes, Michael O’Loughlin, and Lance Franklin? He has the CV to match them all and the desire to get even better

(AAP Image/David Moir)

4. Weren’t things supposed to be better now?
The wandering Suns finally returned home to the Gold Coast only to be met by their old mate Gary Ablett. Admirably, the Suns have been fighting all throughout their travel-heavy first half of the year, notching a few wins and the thought that they would be fresh after the bye soon turned to grave fears about what the second half of the year will hold.

Not only did they get taught a football lesson by the Cats but the casualty list grew with significant injuries to Aaron Hall (pec), Aaron Hall (ankle) and co-captain Steven May (upper leg). With a growing injury list and battling depth, the Suns might finally be home, but Stuart Dew’s role is only going to get tougher.

5. What can the Saints salvage from this season?
At three quarter time, everyone was clocking off for the night but the final quarter from the Saints proved that there may be some life in their season. After an improved performance against the Tigers a week earlier, particularly in front of goals, the straight kicking continued this week, finishing with a flurry to close the gap to a couple of kicks.

There was a lot to like about the way they played the last quarter, particularly from their young kids and better players. Tim Membrey finally found form in front of the sticks, kicking six. Jade Gresham is playing some great footy. Jack Sinclair, Jack Steven and Seb Ross made their regular contributions and on top of that, they have found some good kids in Rowan Marshall, Logan Austin, Bailey Rice, Ed Phillips, Hunter Clark and Nick Coffield (who didn’t play on the weekend).

So there are some building blocks there, it’s just how they assemble them in the next few weeks leading up to and after the bye.

6. Is there still a clear favourite?
Yes. Yes, there is.

It was a brutal reality check for Essendon who got comprehensively belted by a rampaging Richmond side who are just a joy to watch. Damien Hardwick is coaching wonderfully at the moment, even finding room to trial a second tall option which they might have found in Callum Moore who proved he has a place at AFL level. Moore finished with 2.3 goals and presented well up the ground.

With some injury worries, the Tigers have been forced into actually using their entire list, but because the system is working so well, and the players that they bring in are playing excellently, it might give Dimma a few headaches come selection time in September.

(AAP Image/Julian Smith)

7. How far can North go?
They couldn’t make the top four, could they? It is a very real possibility. From predicted cellar dwellers, the Roos are flying high and firmly entrenched in the top eight.

All of their stars are playing really good footy but it has been the emergence of their second tier that has been the real improvement. Guys like Kayne Turner, Jed Anderson, Shaun Atley, Billy Hartung (who might just be in the conversation for recruit of the year, might I add), Trent Dumont and Jamie Macmillan, in particular, have all improved exponentially and have been a big part of the rise.

They too have also rolled out a number of good young kids in Ryan Clarke, Mason Wood, Luke Davie-Uniacke and Paul Ahern – the latter of whom was unveiled this weekend and boy can he play! The battle of the Scott brothers next week is tantalising.

8. Is the time right to turn the heat right up on Fremantle?
I don’t know where this team is at. Great young kids, some stars and plenty of ageing players who were this week left out of the team that got pulled apart by Collingwood. Ross Lyon is a fantastic coach and has the security of a long-term contract but will that be enough?

They are yet to win away from home this year, in fact, they have been poor every single time they have travelled and they look confused and frazzled when the game gets off their terms. I don’t think finals are a possibility even though it remains mathematically possible, and this team needs some regeneration.

9. Was that the Giants’ best win ever?
Undermanned, under siege, and the stakes really high given the nature of where they were playing and the narrative of the team they were playing against. That was a gutsy win by the Giants.

Up against an Adelaide squad hungry for revenge at a packed Adelaide Oval, enter Dylan Shiel and Jeremy Cameron. It was a cracking game of football, but it was those two gentleman, along with their magnificent co-skippers, who got their team over the line. It was a season-defining win which opens the top eight right up. All of a sudden, the Giants are relevant again.

The Crowd Says:

2018-06-07T00:31:24+00:00

User

Roar Rookie


Middle aged and angry- nasty divorce maybe?

2018-06-07T00:29:21+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


If you are offended, make a decision to not make offensive intrusions.

2018-06-07T00:01:38+00:00

Jon Boy

Guest


How old is this guy called Don Freo ? Young and immature or Old and Arrogant.

2018-06-06T23:49:18+00:00

Liam Salter

Roar Guru


Yikes. That’s harsh, Don. Quite rude, as well. It’s also quite ironic, because you regularly respond to comments that “don’t need to be indulged”. You might’ve been being sarcastic or dismissive with your earlier comments, but what you’ve done is added nothing to the discussion. You’re being difficult and abrasive for no reason other than to be a [insert word of negative connotation here].

2018-06-06T23:49:18+00:00

User

Roar Rookie


I'm sure he can make an educated guess on your tone as it tends to fluctuate from desperate to aggressive. Like everyone else on here he probably ignores that fact and realizes to engage in a decent debate with you don is pointless as you always descend into desperate snipes at people instead of discussing subjects at hand.

2018-06-06T23:44:44+00:00

Macca

Guest


"Flippant dismissal is the appropriate response." And yet you give a pompous lecture to yourself. Strange!

2018-06-06T23:37:43+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


There are some folk on here whose comments need never be indulged. The two above always fall into that category and you enter that zone more often than not. This current intrusion being a case in point. Flippant dismissal is the appropriate response.

2018-06-06T23:31:37+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


If you can't read tone, you have some work to do.

2018-06-06T22:50:29+00:00

Macca

Guest


"One thing you need never do is to try to explain to me what someone has said." Because you believe ignorance is bliss? Perhaps if you started showing you actually understood what someone has said people would stop feeling the need to explain it to you!!

2018-06-06T14:17:53+00:00

Liam Salter

Roar Guru


I'm a politics and journalism student. If I strike you as a literalist who likes to explain, I'm doing my job right.

2018-06-06T14:04:27+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


You are such a literalist. You'll get it one day. One thing you need never do is to try to explain to me what someone has said.

2018-06-06T13:54:21+00:00

Liam Salter

Roar Guru


Don, you seem to be making a different point to Jon boy and Mattican. They're arguing that Ross' influence tends to cease when we get to the drafting and trading tables, which is fair. You seem to be arguing that he built the squad, which is primarily untrue. I'd argue that Freo's coaches team has been rewarded with plenty of proper young talent, chosen by our recruiting team. It's Lyon's job to develop a team around this talent, which he hasn't necessarily done to the best of his ability over the past few years, unfortunately. Injuries are no one's fault, of course, but I'm not too sure what they have to do with this discussion.

2018-06-06T13:28:50+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


You two have just made my point. Sooo...I assume you will no longer blame Lyon for Fyfe or Pearce's broken legs or for Sandi's ribs or the knees and calf injuries to the Hills, Bennell, Blakely, Langdon, Ballas, Apeness, Taberner, Sunny... Other people are involved, including...bad luck.

2018-06-06T13:19:27+00:00

User

Roar Rookie


Your right jonboy, coaches have no say in who a club recruits, it us the recruiting dept. If a coach wins a flag yes they deserve the credit, if a good young player comes to your club thank the recruiting staff as they tell the coach who they are picking and even if he questions it he will never get to over rule. If any coach was in charge of building a squad it would be average cause when does a afl coach have the time to trawl over 100s of hours of junior footy.

2018-06-06T11:07:16+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


Mark Harvey gave them their games this year?

2018-06-06T11:07:13+00:00

Jon Boy

Guest


The Mess is 3 years in the bottom half with no improvement in sight caused by playing players not performing and not rotating younger players on the list ,,,,

2018-06-06T11:00:12+00:00

Jon Boy

Guest


He did not recruit or build the young squad. He has not '' built '' Brayshaw, Cerra, Crowden, Banfield, Giro, Jones, North, Dixon, Matera , Meek, Wilson and Switkoski who have just arrived to make what i said makes a ''good young squad'' he has not built them yet.

2018-06-06T10:44:00+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


If he has built a 'good young squad', how has he made a mess? Did you forget what you said in your previous sentence?

2018-06-06T10:43:08+00:00

Jon Boy

Guest


Have to agree 61 point margin was tough ,but without the changes that were made it probably would have been 100 plus, great to see young talent like Giro who covered the most km on the day.

2018-06-06T10:33:58+00:00

Jon Boy

Guest


Ross has just finished the3 year renovation with the three of the old hasbeens dropped last week.Can he get the job done now? I personally do not know. He has made a mess of the last 3 years ....But he has a good young squad. Having a long term contract does keep him in the picture i guess.

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