What if the Lions suffer another straight sets exit?

By Dem Panopoulos / Expert

A straight sets exit potentially awaits the Brisbane Lions, but it isn’t as cataclysmic as it may seem on paper.

The fixture against the Bulldogs has notoriously been close. The last six games between the two teams have been decided by an average of 17.5 points. The last five that have been at the Gabba decided by 14.2 points.

This is a Brisbane team that has had to handle expectations in 2021 with varying levels of success, and one that is still developing into a bonafide contender.

Yes, key pillars like Dayne Zorko (32 years old), Mitch Robinson (32), Grant Birchall (33) and Daniel Rich (31) aren’t getting any younger, but as a group, this is a youthful, developing squad.

A third year in contention saw Brisbane sit as the premiership tip for many a pundit pre-season, yet a slow start and COVID fixturing dramas ended up affecting the perception of the team.

An incredibly strong middle stanza catapulted the Lions back up the ladder and strength in the backend of the season secured them a top-four spot.

Given the circumstances and the expectations, does a total of one finals win in what would be five finals matches create cause for concern?

It’s understandable if you were to answer in the affirmative here.

Three top-four finishes, two in the top-two is a fair turnaround from having two wins midway through 2018, but to suggest these finishes to diehard supporters at that point in time would’ve been accepted gleefully.

Charlie Cameron of the Lions celebrates a goal. (Photo by Jono Searle/AFL Photos/via Getty Images)

In fact, a counterargument could be that the Lions haven’t quite hit their true premiership window.

Indeed, 2019 was an incredible ride, a swift rise to success immediately boosted by a coach that had a little time to create the style he wanted and the on-field leadership of Luke Hodge. Might we look at the exceptional rise as an aberration, perhaps in the mould of the Bulldogs in 2016 or Richmond in 2017, without the shock success?

In any other season, we could’ve seen some sort of regression to the mean after 2019 as the club tried to find its feet in the top half of the ladder, let alone as a contender.

Instead, we had almost an entire season of football played in Queensland in 2020, and Brisbane played just three games outside of their home state. Add in shorter games, a more comfortable environment and significant advantages in conditions, and we had a preliminary final team perhaps created in a mirage.

Maybe that’s not fair. It’s certainly not looking to discredit the work the club put in.

But we must be genuinely realistic and consider the fact that even at this time, the core of the group was so young and playing such buoyant, pressure-free football.

Surely, then, two years’ worth of playing finals makes another straight sets exit unacceptable?

Maybe. Kind of.

We touched on the slow start, we touched on the fantastic form through the middle and the resolute end to the home-and-away season.

The Lions have faced strong expectations for the first time, genuinely, since their meteoric rise. Boldly, they’ve adopted a completely different style to almost every other team in the competition.

Brisbane has been the best offensive unit in the AFL by far, finishing 137 points clear of second-place, ironically their upcoming opponents.

They’re a direct, kick-first team, averaging a clear competition-best 6.28 disposals per inside 50. The Lions have been the best clearance team, as well as having the second-most metres gained in the AFL.

It’s a two-fold strategy; the midfield is really strong and diverse, looking to feed the ball into space or gain field position obsessively while adopting a pure counter-attacking approach when winning the turnover in defence.

Daniel Rich deserved his recognition in 2021 and looks set to play for another five years, averaging the most kicks, rebounds and metres gained in the league, while Dayne Zorko, Hugh McCluggage and Mitch Robinson are among the most attacking ball users in the league.

Coach Chris Fagan’s bold strategy has held up well when the team are fit and firing, a fully functioning Brisbane team in 2021 has been among the most efficient in modern history.

When Eric Hipwood went down, there was genuine concern.

Eric Hipwood. (Photo by Chris Hyde/Getty Images)

The friendly draw after that point, against Richmond, Gold Coast, Hawthorn, Fremantle, Collingwood and West Coast, really assisted the club to adjust their forward line.

Crucially, Daniel McStay stood up in that time, just as Marcus Adams had when Darcy Gardiner went down. McStay kicked 14 goals, averaging six marks and four marks in those six games and covered the absence extremely well.

The 26-year-old was injured early against the Demons and the Lions looked toothless in attack.

With such two key offensive absences, it means the Lions must adjust their gameplan ahead of a semi-final.

Is this a valid excuse if Brisbane loses to the Bulldogs this weekend, ending their season after the semi-final?

Yes and no.

What faces this Lions team is a different sort of pressure to what they tend to deal with.

Of course, they’ll play against an opposition that is hoping to have genuinely recaptured some form in the elimination final after three horrific weeks to end the home-and-away season.

On top of that, though, is the absolute necessity to adjust on the fly in the most important game of their season.

Tom Fullarton has been playing as a peripheral figure and isn’t really a natural key forward, while Jarrod Berry is inevitably the tall midfielder that will play predominately forward. Joe Daniher has spent the season playing such a high role up the ground.

Joe Daniher. (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

Jack Payne has been brought in, leaving them with four lockdown defenders in the 22. With Connor Ballenden an emergency, either Payne or Adams must be playing deep forward, or a late change awaits.

That strategy seems extremely risky for a final, more than likely to be ineffective.

The option that would make the most sense, is also extremely foreign. Brisbane might need to play small-ball. Charlie Cameron, Lincoln McCarthy and the plethora of rotational midfield/forwards are certainly up to it, but it’s a responsibility they’re unfamiliar with.

Small-ball never worked for the Rockets or the Clippers and they had over 70 games to try and nail it, while the Lions have been traditionally bold yet pretty regimented without a heap of backup options in their arsenal.

It makes this game against the Bulldogs really tough. The opposition are simply a good mindset away from recapturing grand final-worthy form, and Brisbane are adjusting on the run.

To the initial point though, a straight sets exit isn’t the end of the world for Fagan and his troops.

Lachie Neale handpasses the ball. (Photo by Sarah Reed/AFL Photos via Getty Images)

They’re undermanned in their offensive strength, which obviously hurts. And while there may be initial disappointment and the media will have a field day, this is a squad building for multiple attacks on the premiership and they’re only now approaching their window.

Brisbane’s best players are in their peak and the core future pieces are ranging between 22 and 27 years of age.

Let’s readjust our expectations and see where this team is.

The Lions have three years of finals experience under their belt and will enter 2022 with a vision of winning the flag.

So no, a straight sets exit wouldn’t necessarily be a bad thing for the Lions.

If anything, it will only be the motivation needed to skyrocket them into true premiership favouritism.

The Crowd Says:

2021-09-05T05:41:43+00:00

Ace

Roar Rookie


Oooops!

2021-09-05T02:00:56+00:00

Tim O'Hare

Roar Rookie


McCluggage and Lyons are both elite

AUTHOR

2021-09-04T23:08:14+00:00

Dem Panopoulos

Expert


They lost in straight sets in 2019, so this is their second straight sets exit. 2020 was not.

2021-09-04T20:54:51+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Bagels for Brizzy

2021-09-04T07:19:54+00:00

Canberra Pear

Roar Rookie


I agree with Puntroad. I don't think 2020 could count as straight sets. I get losing two consecutive finals, but the term comes from tennis. If you won the first set, then lost the next two, you wouldn't say you lost in straight sets.

2021-09-03T23:57:09+00:00

Thom Roker

Roar Guru


The Lions list build was second to none at one point. With few injuries, the 2019 NEAFL team went undefeated and only one Academy player got in the side all year, Keidean Coleman, who was then duly drafted. But they had to clear out players like Tom Cutler, Ben Keays, Corey Lyons, Josh Walker, Lewis Taylor, Mitch Hinge, Stef Martin, Sam Skinner, Toby Wooller and Alex Witherden, many of whom are playing first team footy elsewhere. The result of this has been to diminish depth in the list, at the cost of letting go pro depth, in order to bring in young talent through the draft.

2021-09-03T23:38:06+00:00

Thom Roker

Roar Guru


Witherden's papers were stamped when he gave up chasing Brent Daniels in the 2019 final. They Lions brought in Birchall and then they traded Alex for peanuts.

2021-09-03T22:57:23+00:00

Thom Roker

Roar Guru


I think the list reduction and salary cap shrinking has diminished the season slightly. Hearing about how well Sam Skinner is going while Dan McStay is out stings. Peter Wright salary dump cost the Suns all season.

2021-09-03T11:29:29+00:00

Thom Roker

Roar Guru


As I explained and reiterated points from the article, in 2019 they had an easy run, playing Hawthorn, North, Port and the Suns twice and just 8 games against top 8 teams. They went 4 and 4 against top 8 teams and lost both finals, but 12 and 2 against bottom 10 teams. In 2020 they played most of the season, including finals, at home in front of very parochial crowds. They had a terrible first game against Hawthorn, then improved immensely after the restart, losing only to Geelong and Richmond in the regular season. But in a properly equalised season without the shorter games, they'd have faced 3 top 6 sides from 2019, a middle 6 side and the Suns twice with 10 games outside of QLD. This year their results have been similar to 2021 and they got lucky, facing top 8 sides on 8 times, despite the schedule pitting them against top 8 sides from the previous year 10 times. They have only won 4 games against top 8 sides and all victories were at the Gabba. If the Lions can beat the Bulldogs and go to Adelaide and beat Port, they'll be worthy grand finalists. I just don't think they will.

2021-09-03T10:40:45+00:00

Thom Roker

Roar Guru


I'm not bitter about the Lions one little bit. I have plenty of mates who are Lions fans and some awesome memories of the golden era. Name one thing that I said which is false. If they win the flag, which I hope they can do, then I'll be wrong. I don't think they can though.

2021-09-03T09:06:59+00:00

Yattuzzi

Roar Rookie


Dem, you can live by the pen or die by it.

AUTHOR

2021-09-03T09:02:16+00:00

Dem Panopoulos

Expert


Yeah that’s a fair point, already wrote this piece on the Cats a few weeks back though so couldn’t double down! https://www.theroar.com.au/2021/07/30/what-if-geelong-dont-win-the-2021-premiership/

2021-09-03T07:16:06+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


We've got our own Jordan De Goey already- he just be coming back from 12 month injury lay off.

2021-09-03T07:14:54+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


Who's got the best "Reserve Forward" line- pretty much what it's coming down to

2021-09-03T07:12:45+00:00

Thom Roker

Roar Guru


Brisbane’s forward line is full of imports already. I would be surprised if they were in the market for a big name like De Goey.

2021-09-03T07:06:49+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


What about finishing in the Top 4 for three seasons in a row is an Optical illusion to you?

2021-09-03T07:00:31+00:00

DingoGray

Roar Guru


Our list build is in a pretty solid position. But depth is very much an issue. Birchall goes at the end of the season surely, so the Trade of Witherden is one that I think hurts us. A half back flanker to replace Rich is definitely something we need. Young Carter Michael has shown a bit in short period of time in the 2's. While I expect guys like Brock Smith, Ely Smith & Tom Joyce to get AFL exposure next season. I wouldn't mind us having a bit of dip at Tim English if the Dogs are interested in the Trade? Probably pie in the sky stuff. Or even a Jack Gunston for 12 months with Hippy out for 12 months. I think the context of this season- straight sets is certainly not an end of the world. We certainly in better place then a certain other team who's also potentially a straight set victim. Rayner to come back in next season. Another year for guys like Keidean Coleman, Dev Robbo and Prior. I think we are ok.

2021-09-03T06:12:26+00:00

Dusty does Danger

Roar Rookie


Bigger issue if the Cats go out in straight sets!

2021-09-03T05:55:15+00:00

Jordan

Guest


You don't come across as a bitter Ex Lions supporter at all...

2021-09-03T04:17:30+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


On ya Dougie, dogs finally found some mongrel looking forward to what our team will inflict on Sat evening, weather report rain :stoked:

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