Sydney vs Adelaide: Friday night forecast

By Adrian Polykandrites / Expert

One of the difficult things about assessing teams early in the season is knowing when to forget about your expectations and trust your eyes.

Round 2 is too soon to throw all of the preseason work out the window, but there were still things to learn from Round 1.

The Swans got outmuscled by the Dogs for a half until Luke Parker flexed his and got his team back in the game.

Too much is left to too few in the Sydney midfield, with Parker and Josh Kennedy carrying an unhealthy load.

Jake Lloyd is a fine player and was among their best in Round 1, but does most of his work on the outside and behind centre – as he should.

The two names commonly linked as the leaders of the Sydney midfield’s Generation Next are Isaac Heeney and Callum Mills.

John Longmire has been reluctant to move Mills from the backline. In his 56 games he has just 35 clearances. A midfield shift appears unlikely.

Heeney presents a greater conundrum. Lance Franklin looked well off the pace against the Bulldogs, leaving Heeney as the Swans’ most dangerous forward.

Isaac Heeney of the Swans flies high (AAP Image/Julian Smith)

With Geelong recruit Dan Menzel out of action for a good while yet, we should expect Heeney to continue to spend at least as much time forward as he does in the middle.

It leaves Sydney uncharacteristically thin around the ball, an area the Crows will expect to exploit with Rory Sloane, Bryce Gibbs and the Brothers Crouch.

Much like it’s strange for the Swans to have questions over their midfield, the biggest concerns on the Crows coming out of Round 1 are on their forward line.

Josh Jenkins was a non-factor and Taylor Walker looked rigid and robotic. At his best, Tex hits the ball hard on the lead and then equally hard with one of the best boots in modern footy.

At his worst, he can’t get separation and can’t impact when the ball hits the deck. It’s been a while since we saw his best.

Perhaps the Crows were worked out by a mastermind coach who had weeks to concoct a plan that would negate their spread, or perhaps Father Time has come for them.

The last time these sides met was in Round 5 last seasons and like tonight, the game was played at the SCG. Despite being without Eddie Betts, Sloane and the Crouches, Adelaide pulled off an ten-point upset win.

Rory Laird grabbed the three Brownlow votes thanks to 30 disposals, five rebound-50s and five inside-50s. The third Rory – Atkins – had 24 touches and three goals, and Walker was the game’s high goalscorer with four.

Jarrad McVeigh was among the Swans’ best in a losing side with 26 touches and seven inside-50s. The 33-year-old remains one of his team’s most important players. He’s never had a lot of pace and has even less of it now, but he’s poised with ball in hand and one of the competition’s best kicks.

Kennedy and Parker combined for just 30 touches last time these teams met. That won’t get it done tonight.

Both sides have made a couple of changes. The Swans bring in Ben Ronke, who will give his side a handy goalkicking threat as well as important tackling pressure, and Irish fourth-gamer Colin O’Riordan.

They come in at the expense of the omitted Jordan Dawson and the injured Heath Grundy, who would have been fortunate to keep his spot if healthy after a stinker in Round 1.

(Photo by Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

The Crows made a pair of forced changes. Interceptor Tom Doedee is done for the year with an ACL injury and veteran ball-winner Richard Douglas is out for more than a month with a serious ankle injury.

Paul Seedsman comes in to provide some dash and Kyle Hartigan as a defensive pillar.

Just how they try to replace Doedee’s intercepting – which replaced Jake Lever’s intercepting – will be interesting. Alex Keath could be freed up by Hartigan’s inclusion, or perhaps they could turn to a smaller player such as Laird or even Gibbs, who has shown in the past he’s more than capable in the defensive third and would add another damaging ball user out of defence.

Last week showed what a futile exercise tipping winners can be, but I’m not yet ready to write off the Crows despite a poor first-up effort.

I think Adelaide will get up by a couple of goals.

That’s my Friday night forecast. What’s yours?

The Crowd Says:

2019-03-30T10:52:19+00:00

Aw

Guest


The swans will be at the bottom because the coach is now constantly outcoached, has no plan b, and most importantly, the players are just not good enough. If this is what the fans have to put up with, then watch the crowds and membership drop massively, and Afl itself die a slow death in NSW

2019-03-29T18:10:45+00:00

Thatisashame

Guest


I've said all preseason....swans won't be anywhere near finals. Swans supporters keep saying the hear it every year but they'll be too 4 this year because Reid is back. They fail to see their midfield is too slow and they play with no imagination. A 1 player forward doesn't help. Prepare for a few years down the bottom swans fans. The era is over

2019-03-29T06:40:18+00:00

John Alan

Guest


Buddy is an integral part of Swans 10 year plan. I hear they're offering Lockett & Capper contracts as well. Back to the future.

2019-03-29T04:43:13+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Tex is gone. Suffering from the “Dizzy Gillespies”

2019-03-29T04:07:56+00:00

anon

Roar Pro


Yeah I noticed Bud has a bit of a gut. Had it throughout last year. Maybe too many canapes at the fashion shows during the summer. Hasn't trained for 12 months now. Bud's in it for the million $$$ per year and instagram followers at this point. Can't be good for morale.

2019-03-29T04:00:59+00:00

Captain Obvious

Roar Rookie


The Swans have limited goal scoring options and with Big Bellied Buddy far from fit their midfield will need to step up and boot some goals. Crows to win for mine.

2019-03-29T03:39:48+00:00

Redbacks fan

Guest


You may have a point in regards to the Adelaide midfield and it was certainly a problem for them at times last two season. M.Crouch aside, their midfielders aren't slow but none of them (Sloane, Gibbs, Greenwood) are particularly fast, making them a bit one paced. That is why B.Crouch is such an important player to get back as he is that explosive player that their midfield lacked. With the new 6,6,6 rule, it will be interesting to see if Adelaide - and other sides - try different players at centre bounces who have break away pace. Atkins was present at a few centre bounces in round 1 which is unusual for him. Gallucci (when fit) and Milera are others with genuine acceleration and pace who could do the same throughout the season. In general play speed through the midfield isn't really an issue for Adelaide as they have probably the best group of outside players/half backs in the competition.

2019-03-29T03:19:35+00:00

anon

Roar Pro


Sydney struggled to win these games last year at the SCG.

2019-03-28T22:59:23+00:00

IAP

Guest


I'm starting to suspect that the Crows midfield is just too slow. Sloane is good, but the Crouch brothers are plodders; they're not going to burst away from any packs or cut the defense apart with a 50 metre bullet pass. The rest of their midfielders are average.

2019-03-28T22:56:58+00:00

IAP

Guest


The Crows will turn it on tonight. If they don't then they're gone for the year.

2019-03-28T21:45:37+00:00

AD

Guest


Crows forwards were ordinary last week, but also done no favours by the midfield. Even if all the Crows forwards had been at the top of their game, there would have only been so much they could do with the midfield moving the ball so slowly before blindly bombing it into the 50. Crows midfielders need to find some run and hit some targets consistently if they're going to be able to move it forward with any kind of speed and system in order to give the forwards a chance. Hard to tip either of these teams on last week's showing, though, so I'm tipping a nil-all draw.

2019-03-28T19:01:25+00:00

Timbo's rules

Guest


Front half of last year the Crows played 3 quarter footy and lost. In the back half they played 4 quarter footy and won. Last week they couldn't even muster 3 quarters. Despite being comprehensively outplayed by Hawthorne I have the feeling that if they had played the full 4 quarters they would have been in a good position to win.

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