Is Sydney's Horse just a one-trick pony?

By Rocko / Roar Guru

It’s only Round 1. They were expected to slide. You’re just being too salty.

Yes, I can hear the comments that it is far too early to write off a team of the calibre of the Sydney Swans.

As a red-and-white diehard I have experienced terrific backs-to-the-wall performances over many seasons and have been spoilt with sustained success.

I am also of the opinion you need to take a step back to move forward, so I have no worries with the Swans missing the eight or falling for a couple of years.

What troubles me most is that this is happening in 2019, when I really thought we would start to see a fresh approach to a game plan that has become progressively redundant since the 2016 grand final.

Coach John Longmire jagged the 2012 premiership built around an ‘absorb and slingshot’ approach and with a multi-faceted forward line – the leading goal kicker was Lewis Jetta – to defeat Hawthorn in a terrific grand final.

Fast forward to Saturday night, and up until half-time the Swans had kicked five goals in their previous six quarters of football. The score was one goal, five behinds against a severely depleted Bulldogs defence. This built on the four goals in their humiliating finals defeat to their little brothers across the Anzac Bridge, GWS, two of which came in absolute junk time in the last quarter.

Any football fan moves into the new season with natural optimism, and there was significant talk both externally and certainly from within the Swans around the need to revisit a game plan that has become as useful as an ashtray on a motorbike.

But Saturday brought some nervous tremors. We were seeing a Groundhog Day.

This is a rundown of this regression and where there is no evidence of change.

Sydney coach John Longmire (AAP Image/Joel Carrett)

Lack of pace
There continues to be no pace in the midfield, and the Bulldogs just towelled the Swans in the centre. Warriors like Josh Kennedy and Luke Parker will break tackles or dispose under pressure, but their delivery into the forward line from a clearance is often compromised in pursuit of the hard ball, and kicks are thus scragged or misguided.

There is no punishing outside runners. When Kennedy and Parker were rested, Isaac Heeney, Ryan Clarke or Callum Mills went in. They are courageous players, but it is the same crash-and-bash football to drive the ball forward.

The Swans have in recent years traded both Lewis Jetta and Gary Rohan. While both were flashy and inconsistent players, they did give the Swans pace at vital moments of some matches during a season. The Swans have this year brought in the aforementioned Ryan Clarke from North, another Kennedy Parker-lite model of inside mid.

There is no-one at present demonstrating the capability to consistently break the line and utilise the terrific inside players the Swans have. Ollie Florent may be an answer, but the coaching appears to have him in deep defence or the interchange rather than where he is needed on the wing to add dash to his own development as a player.

Josh Kennedy celebrates with Lance Franklin. (AAP Image/David Moir)

Who is coaching the forward line?
I have been a consistent critic of the Swans forward line for the last two or three years in terms of functionality and forward entry. Just sit next to me at a game.

I find it amazing that forward coach Steve Johnson and Longmire cannot collectively transpose their on-field playing genius and translate this into a well-balanced and unpredictable attack.

Lead patterns are a complete aberration at the moment – last night you could see players crashing into each other, and there is no one or two playing the classic front-and-centre role to crumb a goal.

Tom Papley (Ben Ronke wasn’t selected last night) was playing as a quasi outside on-baller at times too far up the ground. The bottom line is you are doomed going into a game with three talls and no viable crumbing options. The Dogs rebounded repeatedly and at a canter. Recent history will tell you the great sides of any given year can lock a ball in the forward 50 and continuously build pressure to ball-ups or turnovers that lead to goals.

But wait, there’s more. Forward entries are consistently not being played to a forward’s advantage. The ball is not played into space to benefit a forward’s lead or to reap the benefits of good body position on an opponent. The Bulldogs had too many easy spoils and uncontested marks in the defensive 50 from blazing kicks into the forward line.

For those watching last night, the most notable culprit was Will Heywood, who drove the ball into Franklin in a one-on-three situation at a crunch time in the match, ignoring an unmarked Heath Grundy 40 metres out from goal.

This has been coming, though. The nadir for me on the same theme was last year’s humiliating loss to the Gold Coast Suns. Steven May was the lone player patrolling the Swans 50 in the second half and had numerous uncontested marks and counter-attacking opportunities.

I actually think it’s just better to admit there isn’t a structure.

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The Buddy conundrum
As an extension to the last theme on forward-line cohesiveness, Longmire has not mastered the art of utilising Lance Franklin, particularly on the small but wide confines of the SCG, where he should be played semi-permanently on a wing. Buddy is the Swans’ best field kick in addition to his goalscoring wizardry.

Dermot Brereton was highly critical of the Swans mid-2018 at a time when pundits were critiquing Franklin’s value to the team at the midway point of his nine-year deal. Brereton can say a lot of strange things, but his point of view on not maximising the greatest forward of his generation rings true in this instance.

So how do you use Buddy alternatively? A useful blueprint can be obtained from Alastair Clarkson, who played Buddy on the wing at the SCG against the Swans in 2011. Franklin had 28 touches and kicked 6.6 in an eight-goal win.

Franklin’s Achilles heel is his pack marking, and it pains me to watch the consistent and aimless long-bombing to Franklin in congestion in an attempt to score.

Lance Franklin (Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

Mind games?
Usually a coach’s time is up with an AFL side when you see players lacking any sense of instinct to take the game on or overburdened by message or implications for the next step in the game.

On Saturday night for the Swans the signals were indecisiveness with the ball. Sometimes they just took too long or adopted a risk-averse easy-option approach, and in many instances it was the ‘first-look’ sideways approach.

Sydney’s inability to effectively utilise the corridor saw them take a familiar circuitous route to goal, which can be easily repelled or spoiled across half back. Yes, the Swans did turn up for about 17 minutes in that last quarter, but we all know footy goes for about 120 minutes. The team is terrified of risk.

To change, it does go to a reset of values. Fans want 90 to 100 goals from the Buddy show. They want to see dashing and run and young players having the confidence to showcase their skills. They want to see a rebuilding team that is not necessarily winning every week but is at least competitive, entertaining and willing not to die wondering.

Since 2016 the product we are getting is something that may see the Swans on the periphery of the finals but eliminated in the first week at best. It is a holding pattern in which measurement is seen on making finals but not on being damaging once there. While they can help, warriors like Nick Smith, Heath Grundy and Jarred McVeigh are not the answers to our next premiership puzzle. Defensive mindsets must change.

We are in Longmire’s 18th year in a coaching role at the Swans and his ninth in charge. Hee has a fantastic record and is a brilliant man manager, but he will be looked upon as tactically benign if he cannot turn things around in a hurry over this year and in the final year of his deal in 2020.

Wow, that feels better after a Round 1 rant!

It may need a year or two for the Swans to drop before they bounce back, but the question must be: should the horse be there to guide the reins?

The Crowd Says:

2019-03-30T00:40:00+00:00

michael RVC

Roar Pro


Spanner, you may be in agreement with Ghost, but neither of you have any kind of accurate view. The two of you are simply feeding early on what you hope to be the truth one day. Many, many have done the same thing over the last 15 plus years and, like you and Ghost, have been proven wrong. Yeah, yeah…….salary cap blah blah……utter rubbish. Just more whinging about that old and irrelevant story. Ho hum. You keep it on soaking up the Vic media mate.

2019-03-26T22:42:16+00:00

Spanner

Roar Rookie


Sorry Mick but Ghost is on the money - Horse cant coach and the most obvious evidence of that is his reluctance to play one of the most naturally gifted footballers ever, at somewhere other than the graveyard that is full forward ! It is too late now as his athleticism had deserted him but the club paid outlandish money for premierships not facebook likes ! As a point of interest, look up Franklin's finals record with the Swans - very, very ordinary ! As noted, without the salary cap concessions, they would be below Carlton (and may soon be !)

2019-03-26T06:51:56+00:00

john

Guest


I have to agree. I think you are generous on gifting Longmire 2012. That was off the Roos game plan. As soon as Longmire won it he started tinkering. The worst trade in swans history - will be close is tippet - cost us at least one flag. The reality is Longmire is not up to it. Without Kinnear Beatson he would have been sacked long ago. His refusal to play Mitchell for so long, did not look after Newman... and then traded Nankervis because of his Tippet obsession. probably the worst trait is his stubbornness not to change anything. When he kept picking Dean Towers because he was a first rounder - that was wrong.. Mitchell was always ahead of him. Anyway I just want Longmire to finish up so we can get going. It will never happen to him. I will never forget his lead in comments to the 2014 GF - "it is just another game". Clarko cam ready for war - guess who had won by the 15 minute mark of the first quarter... Longmire has been riding the back of Roos for way too long.

2019-03-25T22:34:23+00:00

Paul D

Roar Guru


The last horse I saw struggling as badly as this was CliffsofMoher

2019-03-25T22:11:30+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


Not sure what Longmuir is playing at? Buddy game time being managed? Heath Grundy being played as Ruckmen / Winger / I don't know what the hell? Getting belted in the middle yet Heeney and Mills stay at either end of the ground, not put in the middle where they are clearly getting belted? The Old Horse playing silly buggers? I thought that's what the JLT was for?

2019-03-25T16:24:44+00:00

Powa

Roar Rookie


the problem with the swans is that they are predictable, they win the games they should and lose the ones you think they should, when they finish 5-6th they are not really capable of matching the 4-5 teams above them away from home, and because of the gf always being away, or a certain amount of finals needing to be played at the mcg they predictably lose when they should

2019-03-25T05:04:20+00:00

anon

Roar Pro


It's more about the contract length. Sydney are owing $4 million to a players that hasn't been able to train for 12 months, has become injury prone, still has 4 years remaining on his contract. He's simply not worth anything close to $1 million per year over the next 4 years.

2019-03-25T05:01:22+00:00

anon

Roar Pro


https://tab.ubet.com/resource/sport/afl-predictions-top-8 2nd https://www.afl.com.au/news/2018-03-17/crystal-ball-aflcomaus-2018-predictions 15/18 have them making the 8. The three that have them missing the 8 have them in 9th. https://www.afl.com.au/news/2017-11-04/complete-guide-to-your-clubs-offseason Sydney were $5.50 for the premiership. Wrong, wrong, wrong.

2019-03-25T02:30:14+00:00

michael RVC

Roar Pro


Ghost wishes he had some friends in Vaucluse. Or maybe anywhere.

2019-03-25T02:25:32+00:00

michael RVC

Roar Pro


A balanced view in one sentence. Nice.

2019-03-25T02:24:47+00:00

michael RVC

Roar Pro


Or for that matter, more than the pay cheques of numerous others, mostly With Vic clubs, who are nowhere nzear the player Buddy is and never will be. Nary a stir from the hope brigade in Victoria about it either.

2019-03-25T01:42:55+00:00

Peter the Scribe

Roar Guru


Got to admire Sydney for getting the most out of their players, perhaps they are the best at this, they are certainly consistent in it. I predicted a fall to 15th for them this year and saw nothing to think otherwise against the scratchy Dogs. They need a refresh. Horse has to go.

2019-03-25T00:44:10+00:00

Winston

Guest


This is just another example of over exaggeration after one game. The season opener has seen plenty of upsets. In fact I wouldn't even call this one an upset given Bulldogs always seems to play well against us, and it's at Marvel Stadium as well. I put the loss down to rustiness on the part of the senior players, nervousness on the part of the youngsters, and just a mismatch with the Bulldogs. It's not actually outpace which killed us. It was the number of times Liberator got the clearance from the middle; it was the number of times when the tackle didn't stick and a Dogs player would handball to a teammate standing 2m defence side and then have a free shot. Sure, Bontempelli got away a few times and looked completely unchecked, but that's not a pace issue, but more about us having been slaughtered at the coalface. Even my man Jordan Dawson looked completely ordinary. Blakey looked very nervous the first few touches (and he did turn it around by the end). We'll be alright.

2019-03-25T00:14:55+00:00

tim

Guest


Maybe the swans will follow the lead of the pies and tiges and bring in new people around longmire. Although they should have done this about two years ago when you could see their game plan had got stale. The swans tend to play a better style when Buddy is out, I'm pretty sure they beat Geelong at Geelong buddyless, more option in the forward line than the kick it to buddy gameplan. If they could slot buddy into that gameplan, then they will be a force again

2019-03-24T21:49:07+00:00

Angela

Guest


You may be right about Lance's health Anon, and about his performance on Saturday returning from pre-season surgery but the other comments are unnecessarily cruel and unwarranted. Buddy has done wonders for AFL in Sydney - put bums on seats, most Swans' followers love him as do the blokes he plays with especially the younger players. His 'big pay cheque' is nothing compared to his equivalent in other codes on the world stage and the money he is being paid is fast becoming more common for top players in AFL.

2019-03-24T20:42:20+00:00

Doc Disnick

Roar Guru


So I must be imaging all these people who year in year keep underestimating the Swans suggesting they’ll slip out of the eight then? It seems to be a common theme on this very forum as well. Secondly, I don’t need proof. I prefer your article, which shows a bunch of people tipping the swans to finish around 6th on average. The same place they finished. I’ll say it again clearly for you: the Swans finished sixth. You predicted them as being cooked after round 3. They were far from cooked and finished exactly where the article you read preseason tipped them to finish on average. That’s flat out poor tipping on your part in every way possible.

2019-03-24T14:27:37+00:00

anon

Roar Pro


What were you arguing? Most pundits expected them to drop completely out of the eight last year. That's what you were arguing, and you were wrong. I was right, yet you still cannot accept it when I provide proof from multiple sources.

2019-03-24T13:45:54+00:00

Doc Disnick

Roar Guru


What has the 2017 season got to do with this? So basically, your other article has a bunch of tipsters from the AFL, on average, tipping the Swans finishing around 6th, exactly where they finished. Remind me again what we’re arguing? Ohh, that’s right: Your prediction of them being cooked. Like I said, they finished 6th - I decent effort and far from cooked.

2019-03-24T12:53:54+00:00

anon

Roar Pro


https://tab.ubet.com/resource/sport/afl-predictions-top-8 2nd https://www.afl.com.au/news/2018-03-17/crystal-ball-aflcomaus-2018-predictions 15/18 have them making the 8. The three that have them missing the 8 have them in 9th. https://www.afl.com.au/news/2017-11-04/complete-guide-to-your-clubs-offseason Sydney were $5.50 for the premiership. Wrong, wrong, wrong.

2019-03-24T12:38:15+00:00

Michael Pallaris

Roar Rookie


I hope you're right, Aligee.

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