Why the pressure is on for Michael Voss and his Blues

By Dem Panopoulos / Expert

It all happens very quickly in the footy world.

A coach takes over a big club and patience is preached, rightfully so. Expectations of immediate miracles are saved for deities, and Craig McRae.

Last year was a pass for the Blues, falling agonisingly short of a finals appearance but showing good signs throughout the season. They finished within a goal of Collingwood twice and Melbourne once. They beat Fremantle, Sydney, Richmond and the Bulldogs.

A year is about all the patience anyone really gets at a big club, if that, and coach Michael Voss led Carlton well enough to suggest they must play finals in 2023.

Tom De Koning of the Blues  (Photo by Bradley Kanaris/Getty Images)

Injuries have inevitable marred the tale of Blues over the past few seasons as they do many a club, but Carlton’s story is more of a series of mistimed absences than anything else, certainly under Michael Voss.

Marc Pittonet was perhaps the biggest one out of 2022 that really proved costly, as Carlton’s most underappreciated, impactful player. Yet even in the three games he returned for at the end of the season, with finals on the line, he looked underdone.

This is a player who, in his first four games of last season, operated at a hitout-to-advantage rate of 44.7 percent, clearly the best in the league at that time, and won 10 centre clearances on his own. It led to four Carlton wins.

Tom De Koning is more of a theoretical player than a strong net positive right now and it showed in his lack of consistency and assertion.

Mitch McGovern was the other long-term absence that was a pain. He finally got the opportunity in defence under Voss and fit the defensive scheme the new coach wants to run with. No access to him or Caleb Marchbank as his deputy forced a shuffle.

Yet those aside, it seemed to be a rotation of players missing at inopportune times that just became baggage on the shoulders of fans and stretched the leniency afforded to Voss further than we may have seen in years gone by.

Matt Kennedy and George Hewett ended up missing the last few games and it coincided with Patrick Cripps putting on his Superman cape and playing through pain in extraordinary fashion.

Adam Cerra, Jacob Weitering and Harry McKay all missed a few games in different spurts, as did Lewis Young and De Koning himself.

The Blues had 18 players play at least 17 games which is great for the core of the team, but only Zac Fisher, Charlie Curnow and astonishingly Sam Docherty, played all 22.

It’s easier to cover long-term absences with planning and training. There are only so many band-aids that come in the little box before you realise there’s an element of luck to all of this.

Sure, some of it has carried over into 2022. Sam Walsh won’t quite miss as much time as initially thought after back surgery which is a great result. Zac Williams’ knee injury is the big one, although there’s plenty of coverage across the back flank.

There’s also the oft-injured but talented David Cuningham who’ll miss some time and would be a wonderful addition to the team with his blistering pace. Whatever “fighting” was involved in this injury, it’s another one on the unlucky list.

That’s about it though for the Michael Voss. He knows Williams won’t be there, there are a couple of short-term niggles, but it’s nothing new for the second-year Blues coach.

Again, this is a team that fell a point short of making finals and was competitive in every single game they played.
Voss arrived with the Blues being the lowest-possession team playing a one-on-one style of defence and turned them into a team that valued having the ball, ranked second for disposals in 2022 and playing a much friendlier scheme out back.

It certainly relieved Jacob Weitering of some pressure. It wasn’t his best season overall but he defended less than half the one-on-ones he needed to previously and was able to distribute to more line-breaking teammates who influenced Carlton’s transition play far better than the 25-year-old had himself. Lewis Young was a wonderful recruit to help.

(Photo by Will Russell/AFL Photos via Getty Images)

The midfield is just so strong and wins the clearances regularly, while the hard running of Sam Walsh and Adam Cerra just outside the contest provided variation and spread.

In attack, there are two Coleman Medalists, one of whom may be the most dynamic forward in the league who is finally realising his potential with some injury luck.

If there was a particular issue that stood out for the Blues, it was the lack of genuine wingmen who could stretch the ground and have the work rate to push into both arcs and affect the play.

The speed and sheer hunger of Matt Cottrell, while well intentioned, puts a cap on his upside. Lochie O’Brien establishing himself in the team has been a positive development but again, his role is rather advanced.

Therefore, heading into 2023 and with Blake Acres, a wingman who has played career-best footy in recent times as a two-way runner who can take intercept marks in defence, tackle through the midfield and send the ball inside 50, immediately transforms what this Carlton team’s ball movement plays like.

Drafting Oliver Hollands with the same ethos will see him get plenty of games this season, while Lachie Cowan off half back has the excellent kicking and attack on the ball that will help cover the Blues.

To cap it all off, the Blues finished last year with the winners of the Brownlow Medal and Coleman Medal. You just don’t lose with that sort of talent in the long term as a competent coach.

And that, ultimately, is the challenge for both Michael Voss and the Blues.

On an individual level, the pressure is on Voss to show he’s up to the level.

He was in charge of the Lions for almost five seasons and his only finals win was against the team he currently coaches.

As an assistant at Port Adelaide, he saw mixed success in a couple of different roles, but the Power were never a true contender.

Michael Voss during his playing career. (Ryan Pierse/Getty Images)

A legendary figure in the sport he was given a season where the pressure was off. Carlton too, was able to get by without a blowtorch applied.

They start the season with Richmond and Geelong. No one will criticise a 0-2 start if competitive footy is shown.
Then, Walsh returns and the Blues face GWS, North Melbourne, Adelaide, St Kilda and West Coast. After seven rounds, they must be sitting in the top four.

Quite clearly, the season-defining stretch for Carlton are the following five rounds – they face Brisbane, the Bulldogs, Collingwood, Sydney and Melbourne. The Swans game is the only time they leave the state.

From that point on, the only finalists they play are Fremantle, Collingwood and Melbourne.

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Last year’s heartbreak afforded the Blues a manageable fixture with a nice run home that can give this team plenty of confidence.

We’re going to find out pretty quickly if Carlton is a team that can win their first final since 2013, or even challenge for a top four spot for the first time since the turn of the century.

More importantly, there’s an expectation that the Blues will be there in September and it’s time to meet it.

Unlike last season, if the Blues don’t play finals, it’ll be a failure that will only further magnify the issues that the club has had for the last couple of decades.

The list is good, the depth is there and the tactics suit. They’ve recruited well and all the pieces fit.

Michael Voss and the Blues are under pressure in 2023, let’s see if they can handle it.

The Crowd Says:

2023-03-14T10:22:05+00:00

Diesel-747

Roar Rookie


What’s TDK worth

2023-03-13T22:18:58+00:00

McNo

Guest


Blues have to make and win a final this year. Two Coleman medalists, All Australians, Brownlow Medalist. They've suffered more injuries than most, and the last several premiership sides attest to how lack of injuries are crucial, but Carlton will need a very long injury list this year for it to be an excuse. Our biggest problem is between our ears currently. Need to absolutely steamroll a few teams this year and nail more of the close ones. Not to mention we have a pretty friendly fixture. Make it break year for Gov and a couple of others too I'd suggest. As for TDK, we're not going to pay $1m a year.

2023-03-13T03:59:19+00:00

Ian katz

Guest


An ordinary side with several injury prone overpaid and overrated players and poor list management eg Will Setterfield and Liam Stocker being shafted . Have been rebuilding for 22 years and are being promoted by the media rather than their skill set and culture.

AUTHOR

2023-03-12T23:53:27+00:00

Dem Panopoulos

Expert


They struggled to show any consistency that season against top 8 teams, had some good moments, struggled a lot too. Watching the method rather than focusing on the results, Port hasn’t truly has been a premiership contender for a long, long time.

2023-03-12T12:32:46+00:00

Dimitri Buckets

Roar Rookie


How do you put paragraphs in these comments? So unnecessarily ugly.

2023-03-12T12:31:06+00:00

Dimitri Buckets

Roar Rookie


“The Power were never a true contender [while Voss was an underling at Port]” Only won a minor premiership and led Richmond in the fourth quarter of a home Prelim in 2020. What would constitute a ‘true contender’, exactly?

2023-03-12T06:20:49+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


They made finals 2009, 2010 & 2011 missed 2012 after a terrible run with injury which started against a drugged up bombers and then got in in 2013. Technically they won enough games to play finals last year, just didn’t win the by 1 goal more

2023-03-11T22:53:07+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


Herald Sun have him being cleared to play

2023-03-11T20:30:50+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


Keep dreaming lads :stoked: Go Blues :thumbup:

2023-03-11T16:05:52+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


You mention the Blues finishing position of 2021 but the other teams' finishing positions of 2022. I see why you did it but it doesn't point to an easy draw. Their finishing positions of 2021 tell a different story.

2023-03-11T16:01:57+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Acres is certainly not quick; he'll run all day and make good linking position but don't expect sizzling acceleration or lightning bursts from packs.

2023-03-11T10:18:35+00:00

PriddisJunior

Roar Rookie


A star 2nd choice ruckman? Righto. Belly has stuffed up. He might be good, and be the tall decoy for the fwd line. It’s hardly a “star”.

2023-03-11T10:14:31+00:00

PriddisJunior

Roar Rookie


Could of they traded up and grabbed one of the sparkling vic mids from last draft? I agree, someone like Tsatas is exactly the sort the middle is lacking... not that he's had much luck. With Crippa only just starting to peak - i reckon yous are a finals lock.

2023-03-11T10:05:14+00:00

PriddisJunior

Roar Rookie


"A year is about all the patience anyone really gets at a big club". What? He's not under any pressure. Blues looked way better last year. Haven't injuries already hit them hard?

2023-03-11T08:16:21+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


After 12 years not making the 8 I'm not surprised you don't want to look backwards, that's some pretty ugly recent history there. Did not realise it was that long until Knackers made me wonder. Of course I could have googled it, but then I would have missed this comment thread :stoked:

2023-03-11T06:53:51+00:00

Diesel-747

Roar Rookie


All changes 2023 - we look forward Andy , not backwards.. go the blues …

2023-03-11T04:59:44+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Nothing like him. I'm praising TDK.

2023-03-11T02:36:13+00:00

andyfnq

Roar Rookie


noice :stoked:

2023-03-11T02:04:21+00:00

Opps74

Roar Rookie


Just waiting for the excuses to come...they were woeful after round 12 last year...many teams still look much better than the blues list and their top tier of players are excellent but they nose dive pretty quickly in talent after the first 8 players...Jack Silvangi the most over rated father son player as well...he is a vfl player...not afl standard

2023-03-11T01:35:41+00:00

Col from Brissie

Roar Guru


Hearing Motlop has tweaked his calf and will miss round 1.

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