Ross Lyon finally has the cattle to score more, so let's see it

By Josh / Expert

In March 2014, after coming closer than any AFL coach has before to delivering a purple premiership to the Fremantle faithful but still falling short at the final hurdle, Ross Lyon put forward a simple and measurable goal for his team in the approaching season.

“We want two goals a week more,” said Lyon – an intention that embodies as well as any other the old wisdom that some things are easier said than done.

There’s no need for undue suspense: they did not achieve it. Instead the Dockers averaged the same number of points per game in 2014 as they had the previous year, and bowed out in the semi-finals.

Somewhat counter-intuitively the team then went backwards in 2015, averaging eight points less per game than they had the previous years (and not notably improving their defence), yet still put enough wins on the board to claim their first minor premiership.

It would not result in a second grand final berth. The Dockers were again dealt a death blow at the hands of Hawthorn, and to make matters even more miserable this time it came on home soil.

Fremantle have been in freefall ever since – falling well short of finals three years in a row, and in season 2018 their average of 71 points scored per game (a full 20 points less than they achieved in 2013 and 2014) was the club’s lowest return for a season in their entire 24-year history.

Fremantle under Ross Lyon
Season Average points for Average points against
2012 88 77
2013 91 70
2014 91 73
2015 83 72
2016 72 96
2017 73 98
2018 71 93

After never previously losing a match by 100 points or more in his first ten years as an AFL senior coach (across both St Kilda and Fremantle), Lyon has coached Fremantle to four such losses in the past two seasons.

The most galling of these was a 133-point smashing at the hands of Geelong in the penultimate round of season 2018, which bizarrely came after the Dockers kicked three of the first four goals.

Fremantle led 20-11 at the first change but would manage just five behinds in the remaining three quarters, conceding 23 consecutive goals to the Cats from the beginning of the second quarter onwards.

The match put an exclamation point on a season that, while not without its mitigating factors, was undeniably a disappointment.

An AFL survey conducted in October 2018 confirmed that Lyon’s approval rating among Fremantle fans is at an all-time low.

In this survey, conducted twice a year, Lyon has gone from holding the approval of 71 per cent of the surveyed supporters in June 2017 to being backed in by just 37 per cent of the Fremantle fanbase at the end of the 2018 season.

Only St Kilda coach Alan Richardson (with a 29 per cent approval rating) finds himself lower on the list.

Of course, it would be inaccurate to suggest that these numbers reflect the grinding to a complete halt of any positive momentum at the Dockers.

There are green shoots aplenty for those willing to look for them – in particular the gradual assembly of a young core featuring Connor Blakely, Adam Cerra, Andrew Brayshaw, Sean Darcy and Griffin Logue.

However there’s no denying that come the close of last season, Fremantle were a side badly in need of some good news to delier to their fans – and they achieved exactly that in the 2018 trade period.

Things got off to an unpromising start when the news emerged that Lachie Neale had his heart set on a trade to the Brisbane Lions (despite being contracted until the end of 2019), but the situation improved rapidly after that as first Jesse Hogan and then Rory Lobb signaled their intentions to join the club.

A makeshift list management team of football manager Peter Bell (only a handful of days into the job) and CEO Steven Rosich either played the trade period like a fiddle or nearly bungled the whole thing depending on who you ask. Perhaps a little of both is the truth.

The minutiae of the machinations however have quickly become forgotten footnotes. What fans will recall instead is that when the deadline bell range, Hogan and Lobb were Fremantle players.

(Photo by Michael Willson/AFL Media/Getty Images)

The Dockers have shown a great capacity for luring home Western Australian players over the past three offseasons so this by itself is not necessarily a major coup.

Instead what made this trade period such a major milestone is that finally it seems Fremantle have found the forward-line firepower they’ve been so long searching for.

With all due respect to Ross Lyon’s coaching capabilities, a two-goals per game improvement in season 2014 was always going to be an uphill battle given that Fremantle’s marquee offseason recruits for that year were Scott Gumbleton and Colin Sylvia.

The Dockers have poached a number of forward prospects in the years since: Harley Bennell, Cam McCarthy, Shane Kersten and Brandon Matera. Most have been abject failures, McCarthy could perhaps be (kindly) labelled a qualified success.

None however are cut from the same cloth as Hogan and Lobb. Hogan, with three season of 40+ goals and a Rising Star Award under his belt, counts himself amongst the best and most proven young key forwards in the league.

Lobb’s resume is less impressive, but his 2016 season – in which he averaged 1.2 goals and 6.6 hitouts per game – shows the kind of contribution he can have when played in his preferred role. He’s a great contested mark with scope to take significant steps forward.

Between them it would come as no shock at all if they were to contribute a combined eighty goals or more to Fremantle’s tally in 2019, and that’s not even factoring in the positive flow-on effect they’ll deliver to Fremantle’s other goalkickers by providing forward-line structre.

Either Cam McCarthy or Matt Taberner will get the chance to play as a dangerous third tall rather than need to be ‘the man’. Dockers fans seem to have Taberner earmarked for the role, I believe McCarthy will make it his own sooner or later.

Meanwhile Freo’s smaller forwards will find the crumbs much more forthcoming.

Ross Lyon finally has at his disposal the talent needed to create the more offensively powerful team he desired five years ago – the only question left is, can he?

(Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

Landing quality talent like Hogan and Lobb has allowed the club to deliver the good news fans were craving, but acquiring top-tier trade talent is a move that only retains its positivity so long before performance is needed to back it up.

A recent AFL survey says that Fremantle fans across the league are expecting a ninth-place finish at the absolute minimum in 2019, and if I’m being honest, I’m genuinely surprised expectations aren’t higher.

Perhaps Dockers fans are a more realistic bunch than most – after all, what’s been lost so much in discussing the positives of their offseason performance is the fact that they did indeed lose a two-time best-and-fairest winner in Lachie Neale.

Neale has his limitations, but Fremantle have been able to rely on him to anchor the midfield on the multiple recent occasions where injury or suspension have made their No.1 middleman Nat Fyfe unavailable. If – or more likely when – that situation arises in 2019, where will they turn?

It’s also worth noting that despite the acquistions not just of Hogan and Lobb but also mature players Reece Conca and Travis Colyer, the Dockers have actually fallen down both the age and experience ladders ahead of season 2019.

Fremantle will enter the year as the fourth youngest team in the AFL this year (five rungs lower than the year previous), and the seventh-least experienced (three spots lower).

Read into that what you will. Melbourne and Essendon – both widely seen as having the potential to go deep into finals in 2019 – will both enter the season with less experienced lists on average than the Dockers.

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For me instead the big question is not the loss of Neale nor the step backwards in age and experience, it’s whether Ross Lyon still has the nous to make this team into what he wants it to be.

Don’t take this as any disrespect for Lyon, of whom I have long been a fan. But he has been an AFL senior coach for 12 consecutive years now, longer than any other incumbent bar Hawthorn’s Alastair Clarkson.

Excepting the disturbing longevity of a McDonald’s cheeseburger, there are few things in life which can go such a time without becoming at least just a little bit stale.

At this early stage, I don’t expect Fremantle to play finals in season 2019 – that’s not to say I don’t believe they are capable, but merely that I’m not looking at it as a minimum expectation. After all, as I’ve said a few times already this year, it’s going to be remarkably competitive season.

What I’d like to see instead is – regardless of wins and losses – those two extra goals per game that Ross spoke of five years ago.

Given how far back Fremantle have stepped, it wouldn’t get them all the way to his lofty 2014 dream of a triple-figure scoring average.

But, it would be the concrete step forward we need to believe Ross is still the right man for job.

The Crowd Says:

2019-01-29T05:11:57+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Yes, no, we can all work that out, not necessarily and yes, not necessarily in that order. Good to see you aware (at last) at the range of Freo players out in the past 3 seasons...although you barely scratched the surface of the reality. Just FYI, you can now add Fas to the constantly accumulating list; Doherty, Kreuzer, McGovern,Lang, Pickett, Setterfield, Marchbank. We you unaware of that or did you think accumulating meant something else??

2019-01-29T04:19:31+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


Is 1 injury really an accumulation? I am not sure but you are the one with the experience with "drink fuelled" incidents as a Freo supporter. "I notice Charlie Curnow" Did you notice if he was drinking? Did he do anything wrong? "Blakely is out for 12 to 14 weeks from now, not from the start of the season." Isn't the season only 7 weeks away? Doesn't that mean he will miss roughly as many games as Fyfe did last year or and more than Ballantyne, Hamling or Brayshaw? And Fasolo is out for just 6-8 weeks from now, meaning he may miss just the one game. Also strange you think my post was a celebration, it's almost as if you have forgotten what they are.

2019-01-29T04:01:08+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


A more valid setback from the drink fuelled injury list Carlton is accumulating. I notice Charlie Curnow was at Fasolo's swim through as well. Nevertheless, Blakely is out for 12 to 14 weeks from now, not from the start of the season. Although it is sick to celebrate Blakely's injury, it may well be one of your only causes for celebration this year.

2019-01-29T03:47:52+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


"The mids are immeasurably better with the return of Blakely," not so fast; "Blakely, 22, has been ruled out for 12-14 weeks after he injured the hamstring during an innocuous clash at training on Friday." Seems 2019 will be yet another year where injury has cruelled the dockers.

2019-01-25T07:22:38+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Oh dear! Look at the threads. Look at the indents from the margin. The indent means it's a response to the comment above it. You advertise your limitations with every post.

AUTHOR

2019-01-25T06:38:11+00:00

Josh

Expert


You can definitely rule out winning Round 1, AD ;)

2019-01-25T04:51:08+00:00

Jonboy

Roar Rookie


My one word reply Blakely was in response to DKMAF asking on 22 January at 11.05am ''who will be doing the more of a full time role in the midfield '' my reply " Blakely '' On the 24th of January i was talking about Walters within minutes your reply January 24th @ 8.02 '' He missed most of last year through injury '' In fact he played 18 games.

2019-01-25T04:49:24+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


As long as you are laughing at that, and not Conca's injury, there's an improvement. Good to see some growth.

2019-01-25T04:23:41+00:00

RT

Roar Rookie


You wouldn't have thought so? Why don't you have a look again at the like? As for socially ugly...coming from you. Can't stop laughing.

2019-01-25T04:12:37+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I didn't say that at all. Find that comment and you'll see it is a response to YOUR one word post, "Blakely". I had already pointed out that Sunny missed 4. Learn how to scan conversations. You are being constantly corrected because you don't know how to read the threads and then you post in a totally incongruous spot.

2019-01-25T04:07:19+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I wouldn’t have thought so. I don’t make attacks on players, only on posters who mock players. The likes are from Jonboy and Mattician…that makes its own comment. What makes you think it’s ok to heap it on a player and then take umbrage when the finger points to you? Again, if you don’t want your silliness or your social ugliness pointed out, don’t make silly or socially ugly comments. The alternative is to take responses you don’t like on the chin.

2019-01-25T03:46:20+00:00

RT

Roar Rookie


The like was regarding my comment about your constant personal attacks not my original comment. Try to keep up.

2019-01-25T03:43:37+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Yes, I struggle to see where he'd fit in too...but he is great depth. I also thought he would have struggled to get a game at The Dons. The thing is, though, is that he is a very good player so if he can't get many games, the team must be going alright.

2019-01-25T03:23:46+00:00

Jonboy

Roar Rookie


You finally got ONE right Don.....'' Sandi will miss games'' he has missed nearly 70% of the games in the past 3 years. So your right you can pencil him in for 5-6 games this year. At 36 yo that is good value don't you think ? You also said Walters " Missed most of last year through injury '' in fact he played eighteen (18) hence your exaggerated injury excuses.

2019-01-25T03:03:56+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


I'm not sure you know how it works. No one votes to remove players from Freo's leadership group. At Freo they vote for those they want on the group. They didn't vote Duman or Switkowski to miss the group...they just weren't voted on. Of course someone like Sandi or Ballas would miss out. Sandi will miss games and Ballas has to nail down a spot. You'll work it out if you allow yourself to be guided by me.

2019-01-25T02:57:35+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Nice attempt to back track. It was a cheap joke that only tickled the fancy of one person. It was nasty. If you don’t like the feed back, don’t make the comment.

2019-01-25T02:51:50+00:00

Jonboy

Roar Rookie


Don did you also read where Big Sandi. was voted OFF the leadership group by the players. He has been a loyal servant but i think it sends a message to the list managers. I doubt Ballantyne got any votes either. They are the last two on my bucket list to join the great player M. Johnson and Lyons other favorite's Dawson, Pearce, Suban, Mayne,Sheridan and Sutcliffe. Credit must go to Mayne for his fight back after his last poor 3 years at Freo.

2019-01-25T02:40:46+00:00

RT

Roar Rookie


Simple but I will explain. I was pointing out the irony that you would describe a player who is has a lot of bad luck with injury as being a perfect replacement for a player who was out injured. Absolutely nothing sinister.

2019-01-25T02:33:47+00:00

Jonboy

Roar Rookie


Fair call Jak. just reading up a bit about Colyer in 2017 he started well with a 27 disposal game also kicking 3 goals against Adelaide he has played 79 AFL games obviously inconsistent ( like many) but he has experience and ability and pace to burn. Hopefully coming home he returns to his best. Apart from Walters the other smalls are rookies Switkowski and Schultze. 32yo Ballantyne is way gone past his best Slow and continues to lose his footing. Matera is only a deep forward but Ross pushed him up the ground and he struggled. So Colyer should get the first opportunity to help Walters. Only my opinion of course.

2019-01-25T02:25:23+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


You try to explain what your purpose was other than a put down. It was well received by Jonboy. That's a measure of its worth.

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