West Coast vs Melbourne: Friday night forecast

By Adrian Polykandrites / Expert

It’s fair to say that the first two months of the season haven’t gone as planned for either of these sides.

The Eagles are reasonably positioned with five wins but would be concerned that of their three losses the 42-point defeat at the hands of the Power was their closest.

The Demons would love to have such problems. After winning their past two games – by a combined total of six points – Melbourne are somehow only four points behind fourth-placed Fremantle. Though it might as well be eight, given that Melbourne’s percentage of 75.6 is the worst in the competition.

It doesn’t take much digging to see why the Demons have been so bad: They can’t score and they leak like a sieve defensively.

The midfield is still holding up its end of the bargain, thanks to the usual suspects: Max Gawn, Clayton Oliver and Angus Brayshaw. James Harmes is having a nice season too. 

Melbourne are ranked fourth for inside-50 differential, getting about five more entries per game than their opponents, and in the same position for clearance differential at +36 on the year. They’re fifth for contested possession differential.

But those ball-winning and territory numbers aren’t doing them much good at either end of the ground. 

The Dees are converting just 17.2 per cent of their forward-50s into goals, which is the worst rate of any side. At the other end, they’re conceding a goal on 26 per cent of their opponents’ entries, which is better than only North Melbourne. 

There are excuses, particularly in the backline. Jake Lever is a star defender, and he’s yet to take the field this season as he mends from a knee reconstruction. Steven May was recruited as a defensive pillar and he’s managed just one game, which he didn’t get through.

May’s former Suns teammate Kade Kolodjashnij has gotten on the park just twice, and veteran Neville Jetta has played only four of eight matches. Michael Hibberd is now out of action with a busted collarbone courtesy of Suns skipper David Swallow. When it rains, it pours.

At the other end, nothing has clicked the way it did last season when the Demons were the league’s highest-scoring team.

After a sensational 2018 in which he booted 53 goals, Tom McDonald has managed just six total this year, and his three against the Suns last round were the first time this season he’s managed multiple goals.

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

As if things weren’t bad enough for Melbourne, their leading goal kicker, Jake Melksham, broke his foot against Gold Coast and will be sidelined for a while. Melksham is arguably his team’s most important player. Not only is he a goal kicker, but he’s the player who connects the dots between his side’s midfield dominance and their deep forwards.

Alas, he won’t be out there tonight, which puts added pressure on Christian Petracca.

Petracca has all the tools to perform the Melksham’s role – or just about any other – but has yet to show that he’s more than a moments player. 71 games into his career his output hasn’t been what Melbourne would have liked.

The Eagles are tough to get a handle on. Their two best wins – in which they demolished the Giants in Perth and comfortably beat the Magpies at the MCG – could convince you they are once again a team to be reckoned with.

However, spankings at the hands of Geelong, Brisbane and Port Adelaide would suggest this is another one of those Eagles teams good enough to qualify for finals without being a real premiership threat.

There is still a stack of talent in every part of the ground: Jeremy McGovern and Shannon Hurn down back; Josh Kennedy, Jack Darling and the underrated Jamie Cripps up forward; Andrew Gaff, Luke Shuey and Dom Sheed in the middle; Elliot Yeo wherever the hell he likes. But for whatever reason, it isn’t quite clicking yet.

Unfortunately, we probably won’t learn much about the Eagles tonight. What loomed as a mouth-watering match-up in March suddenly looks rather lopsided.

While the Demons have the midfield strength to get hands to the footy first and bang the ball forward regularly – West Coast are 16th for inside-50 differential – their attack will need to produce something special if they are to put a decent score on the board. With Melksham out, Jayden Hunt and rookie Jay Lockhart are the only Melbourne players to play at least four games and average a goal a game this season.

At the other end of the ground, Darling and Kennedy aren’t playing their best footy, but they could feast tonight on the Demons’ decimated defence. Heck, the Dees might struggle to find a match-up for Oscar Allen.

(Photo by Paul Kane/Getty Images)

The last time these sides met in Perth, West Coast humiliated Melbourne in the preliminary final.

I don’t expect tonight to be quite that one-sided, but it’s in play.

I’m tipping West Coast by six goals.

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

The Crowd Says:

2019-05-18T13:37:32+00:00

berrlins

Roar Pro


I have to eat my own words here, Melbourne really took it to the Eagles. Great game.

2019-05-17T09:48:35+00:00

User

Roar Rookie


Alright 2/4 away, I'm content with the that as away means hopping on a plane not a 70km drive past a pop farm.

2019-05-17T09:40:10+00:00

Yattuzzi

Roar Rookie


gws in Perth. You are judged by your away games.

2019-05-17T09:32:36+00:00

User

Roar Rookie


But travel schedule so far certainly favors the pies, how many games outside Victoria so far?

2019-05-17T09:19:30+00:00

Peter the Scribe

Roar Guru


The same preparation period as the Pies.

2019-05-17T08:55:11+00:00

Julian

Roar Rookie


Gee having either would be nice!

2019-05-17T08:04:33+00:00

User

Roar Rookie


And a thumping of gws, but yes the pies have had one impressive quarter this season and a heap of average footy against bottom eight sides.

2019-05-17T08:01:24+00:00

berrlins

Roar Pro


this has the makings of an absolute old fashioned flogging, on the other hand we don't know which West coast team we'll get, doesn't matter however there is no way Melbourne are winning this, the most they'll do is keep it respectable.

2019-05-17T07:59:22+00:00

Yattuzzi

Roar Rookie


Your only credible win was against the Pies at the Gee. it might say more about Collingwood tha WCE.

2019-05-17T07:32:42+00:00

Seymorebutts

Roar Rookie


Dude I dont know how you came up with that name, but let me say, ''well done'' ;-)

2019-05-17T07:29:34+00:00

Seymorebutts

Roar Rookie


Thats true, and normally I would have run a line through them myself after that. But the Tigers got belted by the Crows in early 2017 and turned the tables in the decider. So they have set a precedent Im happy to see repeated ;-)

2019-05-17T07:29:31+00:00

User

Roar Rookie


Maybe or is it wce realise premiers aren't crowned in the first 6 rds of a season, I'd say it's the latter.

2019-05-17T07:18:59+00:00

Jonboy

Roar Rookie


Eagles will win easily, Melbourne are not playing any where as good as last year and it has nothing to do with a couple of injuries, every club has a couple it evens out at the end of the day. Take the Tigers 10 out 2 down at half time beat freo at home so it is obviously depth in your list . Injuries are a excuse ..... try looking out of the square for the real reasons for a loss.

2019-05-17T06:56:43+00:00

Raimond

Roar Guru


Hoping the Dees get smacked around this week. Eagles by 44.

2019-05-17T06:38:25+00:00

Peter the Scribe

Roar Guru


Every year the eventual premier has a few games when they are off but the Eagles have been belted three times already in the first eight rounds. Brisbane thumped them, Port out hunted and out coached them at home and the Cats toyed with them like a mouse. Must show something in the psyche that is questionable I'd say.

2019-05-17T06:35:26+00:00

Peter the Scribe

Roar Guru


Not sure Melbourne need May with Lever to return.

2019-05-17T06:26:22+00:00

Yattuzzi

Roar Rookie


Some of the losses have been very ugly. Looked like stunned rabbits against G.

2019-05-17T06:18:32+00:00

Julian

Roar Rookie


Granted it was a tough situation to be in. You wanted May and Hogan would have gone eventually. But it also speaks to a bit of arrogance and getting way ahead of themselves. No question they over-rated a kid in Witherden after a good finals run. The bigger mistake in my opinion was the expectation placed on McDonald. A backman who had the luxury of playing alongside Hogan for the majority of the season. He's now had proper work put into him and has been found out.

2019-05-17T05:03:34+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Yep, I have argued that on Melbourne's behalf regularly. You have 5 of your best 6 defense out. Jetta might be a bigger loss than May and Lever. Injury toll is the biggest single reason when explaining form fluctuations...not game plan...not team spirit...not relationship dynamics... It forces players to play roles other than that planned. That takes time.

2019-05-17T04:14:18+00:00

User

Roar Rookie


Just keep on getting the wins west coast, positioning ourselves very nicely.

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