2019 AFL season preview: Hawthorn Hawks

By Cameron Rose / Expert

Hawthorn surprised most by finishing fourth on the ladder at the end of the home and away rounds last year, but were not a particularly strong side.

In fact, the competition lacked depth of quality teams in 2018, and there were only four good ones. Hawthorn only had to play one of this quartet after Round 4 last season, and none of them from Round 11 onwards.

A soft draw after the bye rounds saw them rise from tenth into fourth, but no educated football observer was surprised when they were bundled out of September in straight sets.

Still, it was an impressive set of results for a club that was bouncing back from a 12th-placed finished in 2017.

Hawthorn best 22
B: B.Hardwick, J.Frawley, B.Stratton
HB: R.Henderson, J.Sicily, G.Birchall
C: T.Scully, J.O’Meara, I.Smith
HF: J.Worpel, J.Gunston, H.Morrison
F: L.Breust, J.Roughead, P.Puopolo
Foll: B.McEvoy, L.Shiels, C.Wingard
Int: S.Burgoyne, J.Impey, D.Howe, J.Ceglar
Em: K.Brand, T.Miles, T.O’Brien

The named 22 above is quite a short team, given it has James Sicily and Jack Gunston in key positions, when both are more like third talls. Is a smaller side the way to go for the Hawks, or do the likes of Kieren Brand, Tim O’Brien and Ryan Schoenmakers play? It is likely that one or more of them will get regular games, which means a running player or two will have to make way.

But with Tom Scully still on the comeback from a long injury and Grant Birchall more myth than man these days, there are always going to be spots up for grabs.

It must be noted that Tom Mitchell was not considered for the above squad after breaking his leg during pre-season training and is expected to miss the entire 2019 season.

Hawthorn weren’t going to be any good with Mitchell this year, so it’s hard to see them being excellent without him. They weren’t a one-man band last year though, with Gunston and Luke Breust having career-best seasons up forward. Gunston was okay during the finals, but Breust was poor, and the Hawks averaged four goals less in September than they had through the regular season.

Opposition teams would be well served going ultra-defensive on Breust, because he struggles when being clamped and other teammates don’t have his creativity or smarts.

Jarryd Roughead’s form is only going one way after years of magnificent service, and Paul Puopolo offers less value than he did in a stronger side.

James Worpel made a favourable impression from his opportunities, and looks to be a goer with good hands that will no doubt spend significant time in the midfield.

(Photo by Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

Harry Morrison is another young prospect that gained much experience last year, and will benefit from it.

But it’s easy to see why so much is left to Gunston and Breust. They are the head of the forward-line snake, and if you cut them off, the rest will wither.

A player that might get a look in up forward is ex-Saint Darren Minchington. He looked to have a level of ability at St Kilda, but never nailed down a spot. St Kilda has hardly been an environment to develop elite talent, so perhaps Clarkson and crew can find his best.

Jaeger O’Meara will be the prime mover in the middle now thanks to Mitchell’s absence, and most people in the AFL world were pleased to see him finally string together a host of matches. He built his game time up the longer the season went, but played more of an outside role and will likely increase his contested and clearance work now.

Can Scully go straight back to being the player he was in 2016-17 at GWS? It’s unlikely, and patience is going to be required. The idea of him and Isaac Smith running each wing certainly has appeal. Smith is another who played at a high level in 2018, and will need to again if the Hawks are to maintain their standing.

Chad Wingard is an addition to the club that is one to look forward to. With no Mitchell, he should be required to take on more midfield responsibility than he does up forward. His career contained some extreme highs early on, but he struggled for consistent impact as time went on at Port. What can he do under Clarkson?

Liam Shiels has traditionally been on defensive duties through the Hawks midfield, and continues to be a consistent hard body in the clinches and working both ways, but has transitioned the tagging roles to the very effective Daniel Howe.

Ben McEvoy leads the ruck division, with support from Jon Ceglar. McEvoy lacked the influence last year that he had in 2017, which was career best for him. If Ceglar can play most of the year, it will allow McEvoy to spend more time up forward and try to push his goal tally up around a goal a game.

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James Sicily is the stud of the backline, a firebrand with expert judgement in the air, beautiful hands and a thumping boot.

His hot-headed immaturity is often on display, but some players need to play on the edge and it is too much to ask him to curb his natural personality. Rather, it should be embraced and encouraged, and refined to try and keep himself on the right side of being reported.

New captain Ben Stratton is one of the best two lock-down defenders in the competition, so versatile in being able to shut down players with a range of heights, speeds, strengths and skill-sets. Blake Hardwick finished second in the Hawthorn best and fairest last year, using his poise and kicking skill to provide drive from defence.

With a rebounding absence created by Ryan Burton going to Port, the versatile Ricky Henderson may be pushed a bit more behind the ball if Grant Birchall can’t get fit and stay on the park. Shaun Burgoyne is an option there, as he is everywhere, and Jarman Impey is another utility on the list that can play the role.

Alastair Clarkson is an accepted coaching genius, and now he has Sam Mitchell, one of the smartest footballers to ever play, alongside him as an assistant coach after his two years at West Coast. No doubt they will be a force to be reckoned with, especially in regards to taking advantage of the new rules.

(Image: AAP Image/Joe Castro)

But the Hawks are old, carrying a few cripples, and without the depth of quality they have had in previous years.

There are no gimmes among Hawthorn’s double-up opponents this year either, with the two weakest of them, Brisbane and North, holding a 3-0 record over the Hawks in 2018.

Hawthorn are in a transition period, which was covered up by a high finish last year. They are not a contender.

Prediction: 12th

Preview series
12. Hawthorn
13. Port Adelaide
14. Western Bulldogs
15. St Kilda
16. Fremantle
17. Carlton
18. Gold Coast

The Crowd Says:

2019-03-06T06:57:33+00:00

Hawkfan65

Roar Rookie


In response to your comments around a rebuild I would like to point out that Hawthorn had 13 players in the 2013 GF that were not there in the 2008 premiership. They bottomed out (of sorts) then re-built around some core players and history shows what happened from there. Five years of bottom six is a bit rich when you look at the people involved in this club.

2019-03-05T08:24:24+00:00

Dean

Guest


Yes they did lose to those sides but also beat Sydney, Geelong, Collingwood and Melbourne. It's easy to look at the losses to back up your point.

2019-03-05T06:01:01+00:00

Peter the Scribe

Roar Guru


Disagree. They havent got that killer instinct.

2019-03-05T05:25:55+00:00

Dean

Guest


Hopefully under Clarkson he can develop into more of a forward /mid and get to where he needs to. He had a great string of games in the mid last year avg 30 disposals. Will be fun to watch and see how he goes.

2019-03-05T04:09:17+00:00

Raimond

Roar Guru


The Giants have every chance of winning this year. If their top players avoid injury, then they are a major chance.

2019-03-05T03:33:20+00:00

Peter the Scribe

Roar Guru


Wingard is a bit inconsistent though. Not sure if he has ever got as fot as he should.

2019-03-05T03:11:02+00:00

Dean

Guest


I agree to Peter that Burton was going to be a really good player. The only reason l can think of is that the Hawks may have thought he would asked to be traded home at some point in his career and got on the front foot. Port Adelaide did say that they were highly interested in Burton and would have made a play for him at some stage. As much as l didnt like the hawks trading him l am more than happy with Wingard. At least Burton got to go home and play for the club he supported growing up.

2019-03-05T03:05:22+00:00

Dean

Guest


It has been explained numerous times but the players probably wouldn't be looking at other options if they thought the club was on the road to success. All successful sides have taken pay cuts so they could stay together. The giants are the opposite. Doesn't matter how many top draft picks they get a lot of players will continue to leave which doesn't bode well for any future success. If they all get on the park l can't see them as a genuine threat to the other top teams. The window is just about shut.

2019-03-05T01:19:25+00:00

Peppsy

Roar Guru


Always feels like you have something against Hawthorn Cam, and while 12th isn't unreasonable for them without Mitchell, a lot of your reasoning feels... spiteful. Breust was the best small forward in the league last year, yet you write him off like he's never been more than a bit player. Gunston combined with him for the highest scoring forward duo in the comp, there's no way the go from that to useless over one off season. And you blame the draw for the top 4 spot, specifically mentioning Brisbane and North, but ignore that they beat Melbourne (your 4th best team presumably) by 67 points, and Essendon at the height of their powers. You can say whatever you want, but at the end of Home and Away Hawthorn were definitely one of the best teams in the league.

2019-03-04T10:01:16+00:00

Raimond

Roar Guru


It's been explained numerous times why the Giants have been shedding players in last few seasons. Their hopes this year depend on getting their best players on the park.

2019-03-04T09:11:08+00:00

Jrod

Guest


Bit of class mate he got you guys a flag with your best midfielder rubbed out.

2019-03-04T09:09:21+00:00

Jrod

Guest


Geez cam their top 8 record was good last year. Worst loss to any top 8 side was 15pts and that was to the premier (excluding finals) and if they won one of those 3 against Brisbane or North they would have finished 2nd. Some big wins in there as well. I could take your prediction on different terms but I think we well and truly deserved top 4 based on home and away. Pies and Dee's barely beat any top 8 sides all year (both lifted in finals) and got flogged by multiple top 8 sides.

2019-03-04T07:28:00+00:00

Dean

Guest


That's any club HFM. The giants have been in the finals for the past few years and there has been a mass exodus of players leaving that club in the same period of time. A mass exodus didn't happen at Hawthorn, Geelong, Sydney when they were playing finals and the same won't happen at Collingwood, Richmond or West Coast. What happens when GWS eventually drop out of the finals, how are they going to hold onto players then when they can't now. GWS have underachieved and will again be making up the numbers this year. They had there chance and IMO it will be a long time before they have another serious run at a premiership.

2019-03-04T02:56:39+00:00

Raimond

Roar Guru


I’m sure that players would be lining up to play for the Hawks if they missed playoffs for five years straight.

2019-03-04T02:56:07+00:00

Peter the Scribe

Roar Guru


Surely time to just sit back and count your flags Dave. Give the other sides a chance mate.

2019-03-04T02:53:56+00:00

Peter the Scribe

Roar Guru


The Giants have had their chances for a flag. They just don't perform in crucial finals. They are missing something and I feel it may be coaching. They should have beaten the Doggies in 2016, they should have beaten the Pies in 2018. They aren't a finals performing side.

2019-03-04T02:52:20+00:00

Peter the Scribe

Roar Guru


I agree Burton was a real player and strange they let him go.

2019-03-04T02:44:54+00:00

Peter the Scribe

Roar Guru


Most, including me have the Hawks dropping. Swans too.

2019-03-03T23:53:10+00:00

Dean

Guest


Clutching at straws? Hawthorns strong club culture is enough of a lure for many players.

2019-03-03T03:19:08+00:00

Raimond

Roar Guru


What about the 32 years they didn’t make the finals?

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