Carlton's nuts and Bolts rebuild

By Sylvester / Roar Rookie

It’s an old cliche, but it holds true: a week is a long time in football.

After a competitive showing against Collingwood in Round 8, Carlton had their colours severely lowered against GWS last weekend, leaving the media, fans and wider football community questioning the players’ endeavour and the direction of the club.

Unfortunately for coach Brendon Bolton, if his side had played on Saturday afternoon, the negative attention could have potentially been shared, with North Melbourne and their continual regression. However, being the last match of the round, Sunday evening had everyone watching the 93-point thrashing, which regrettably had Carlton headlining for all the wrong reasons.

As expected, we saw Blues president Mark LoGiudice and football director Chris Judd publically declare that the club still believes Bolton to be the right man despite the weekend’s loss. Round 6 saw the Blues lose a heartbreaker to the Hawks in Launceston. After leading by as much as six goals, it didn’t surprise many that the coaching brilliance of Alastair Clarkson was able to snatch victory, with Carlton going down by less than a goal. It was a game the Blues should have won, but it was ultimately chalked up as one that got away.

But what was more disappointing was their effort in Round 7 against the Kangaroos. A 58-point loss that many considered a very winnable game meant all the praise many had given Carlton the week before seem meaningless. However, skipper Patty Cripps fronted up and publically stated that the club would respond against arch rival Collingwood, and they delivered – but, once again, late in the fourth quarter and from a very winnable position Carlton had their efforts go unrewarded to record yet another honourable loss.

Are Carlton actually improving? (Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

The public consensus surrounding the current rebuild at Carlton is that it has stagnated or perhaps regressed, so I decided to take a look back at the numbers and compare Carlton’s progress to that of the Demons rebuild under Paul Roos.

When Paul Roos left Sydney he was adamant that his coaching days were behind him. He made this publically clear. However, the AFL did its best to convince Roos to commit for a three-year term with Melbourne, leading to a successor, Simon Goodwin, being appointed in his place at the end of his tenure.

Many forget just how dire things were at Melbourne in 2013 before Paul Roos stepped in. If you take a quick look back, they had six coaches in six years (including caretaker coaches); everyone was questioning their scouting, drafting and ability to develop players; and they were slapped with a $500,000 fine by the AFL for what most of us understood to be tanking.

Melbourne rebuild under Paul Roos

2014 2015 2016
Wins 4 7 10
Losses by 60-plus points 5 4 1
Avg. losing margin (excluding 60-plus-point defeats) 18.23 points 31.54 points 25.54 points
Avg. score for 60.72 71.50 88.36
Avg. score against 88.81 92.9 90.5

Without going back and watching any vision to determine the rate of progress, the raw numbers in this table speak for themselves. Paul Roos started by instilling a defensive foundation that would eventually lead to attack. As you can see, in his first year they had more 60-plus-point losses than wins, which is inevitable when you have such a young group learning a new system. But if you exclude those ten-goal defeats, they lost by an average margin of just over three goals for that entire season, which most would consider competitive at the least.

As we progress through 2015 and 2016, you can see the number of wins increase and the number of heavy defeats decrease. Melbourne’s overall scoring surges by almost two goals a game and their scores against remain relatively steady. As a result, being more attacking leaves them more susceptible to being scored against, which is why we can see an increase in the average losing margin excluding the ten-goal defeats.

Just by looking at that table it’s conclusively obvious Melbourne was taking leaps in the right direction every year under Roos.

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Carlton rebuild under Brendon Bolton

2016 2017 2018 2019*
Wins 7 6 2 1*
Losses by 60-plus points 5 3 7 1*
Avg. losing margin (excluding 60-plus-point defeats) 20.3 points 21.76 points 28.61 points 21.71 points*
Avg. score for 71.27 72.45 61.50 72.22*
Avg. score against 89.91 92.64 103.72 94.55*

It is important to remember that when Bolton took over at Carlton he was left with a team that had spent the last two and a half failed seasons under Mick Malthouse. In that time there was an exodus of senior players, all of whom I’m sure Brendon Bolton wishes he still had access to today.

At the time of Bolton’s appointment the general feeling about Carlton was that this list had to be gutted and take a few steps back before it could go forward. The table of statistics supports that statement; however, comparing Melbourne’s progress to that of Carlton’s has many questioning if Bolton is the right man to take this club to the next step.

A lot has been said about the number of players Carlton has turned over during Bolton’s tenure as senior coach and the excuses are starting to wear thin with their fans. As you look further into their schedule for the rest of the year, it’s hard to see where their next win comes from based on current form.

I think as an industry the AFL and surrounding media have taken massive steps in becoming more patient with senior coaches. I think previously we were too quick to petition for the sacking of coaches and maybe Brendon Bolton has Damien Hardwick and Nathan Buckley to thank for that. We all know progress in a rebuild can’t be measured via the win and loss columns, but eventually the losses will start to mount up.

Coach of the Blues Brendon Bolton (AAP Image/Julian Smith)

Three wins in 31 games and efforts such as those the Blues rolled out against North Melbourne and the Giants are starting to look ugly for Bolton.

I certainly hope Brendon Bolton makes it through this rebuild to enjoy the wins that are inevitably on the other side. But as they say, a week is a long time in football, so let’s see if the Blues can respond this weekend against St Kilda.

The Crowd Says:

2019-05-24T05:54:08+00:00

Fat Toad

Roar Rookie


There is no clear correct answer all could be correct or all wrong.

2019-05-24T05:10:30+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


Better to act when you realise you have made a mistake than allowing it to fester.

2019-05-24T04:18:50+00:00

Fat Toad

Roar Rookie


I agree. They were all factors and are consistent with why he left Collingwood. The selection committee would have known what he had in mind from the interviews. But, once the decision was made, he should have been kept for longer. For mine, I think that Ratten was also dumped too soon.

2019-05-24T04:08:22+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


Fat Toad - Malthouse was coaching for the wrong reasons and coaching a style that was no longer relevant. He took a list that Ratten had built to play fast attacking football and tried to turn it into a kick mark slow play down the line team. Along the way he jettisoned Betts, Garlett, Robinson & Waite and given how Yarran ended up you have to wonder about how Malthouse coaching impacted on him.

2019-05-24T03:44:52+00:00

Fat Toad

Roar Rookie


Malthouse is one of the few coaches in the AFL who has a record at being able to bring a team from near bottom to the top. They are pretty rare. Carlton's mistake with Malthouse was not keeping him long enough to know if his program would work. Carlton's biggest problem is that its supporters are too quick to force change, and any possible good is destroyed in the following turmoil. Further, the supporters seem to think surgery is done with an axe and not a scalpel. If Carlton are going to think changes they need to think surgery not chainsaw massacre.

2019-05-23T23:47:13+00:00

Billbob

Roar Rookie


You need a coach that gives a f…..k about winning games………not a social worker coach. As a tiger man I’d love the baggers to be great again……playing big games with them is both of our DNA’s

2019-05-23T23:16:30+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


Wayne - Goddard was in no condition to return by the time Docherty got injured, Gibbs is currently out of Adelaides side and then Suns would be below us if McGovern was standing a metre back in our game against them.

2019-05-23T22:11:29+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


Melbourne went from 10th oldest in 2015 to 15th in 2016 (Roos last year as coach) the blues have gone from 7th in 2015 to 16th in 2019 (17th in games played). And 7 years after Roos took over what have the deed achieved

2019-05-23T21:07:35+00:00

Wayne Kerr

Guest


Malthouse was responsible for decimating our list. He got rid of Robinson and Garlett for petty reasons. We could do with them both today. Trading Betts, who wanted to stay, is unforgivable. Malthouse believed his own publicity when we beat Richmond in the elimination final. The worst decision we made was sacking Ratten. We were going in the right direction under him, yet our thirst for premierships got in the way. We have never recovered since. Under Bolton we have offloaded Tuohy, and Gibbs. We also overlooked Goddard as a fill in for Docherty. Total rebuilds don’t work. We have very few mature players who can help out our youngsters, Hodge has been a great help up at Brisbane. We lack that at Carlton. Bolton over coaches young players who haven’t mastered his complex game plan. Fagan has taken a much better coaching style up to Brisbane. Dew is proving a much better coach as well. Gold Coast are going gang busters compared to us.

2019-05-23T15:11:43+00:00

Ron The Bear

Roar Rookie


Roos re-shaped the team in 2016. Melbourne was younger than the opposition in every game bar one, yet improved from 7 to 10 wins. Carlton and Bolton have never pared back the team enough for him to put his stamp on it. Even this season, they've fielded a dozen players from other clubs. Too many!

2019-05-23T12:44:00+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


Perhaps you could look at the age profiles of the the blues side over the 4 years compared to Melbourne under Roos? Perhaps you could look at the list starting point of each coach? Perhaps you could look at the age and experience of the side the blues put out on the weekend? Perhaps you could look at how the young players drafted in the last 4 years are progressing?

2019-05-23T12:06:45+00:00

anon

Roar Pro


Too much analysis for a guy that clearly can't coach, players don't respect him, he's taken Carlton from a bad position to worst in their history. Stuart Dew is outperforming him with his state league strength Suns side. Aussies hate bludgers, why do we suddenly give them a free pass if they're in the AFL industry. He's wrecked Carlton. Set them back a further 5 years on top of the 4 wasted years at Carlton. Silvagni and Judd not cut out of it. Has Judd got any experience in the real world in any capacity, let alone in a managerial role as he has at Carlton? He's gone from his life revolving around playing football as a teen, his life revolving around playing footy as an adult where everyone does the thinking for him, to part time gig as a professional fence sitter in the media. Surely there are better people in this country that could fill that role at Carlton.

2019-05-23T11:42:09+00:00

Raimond

Roar Guru


Was it Clarko's brilliance that saw them six goals behind? I'm not praising a coach whose team scrapes over the line against the bottom team.

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