TOM MORRIS: Is a Luke Hodge-esque un-retirement from Jack Riewoldt exactly what Melbourne needs?

By Tom Morris / Expert

“We need to maximise our ability to use the ball forward of centre and impact the scoreboard more.

“We leave the door ajar too often. That’s an area we must get better at. That’s a vulnerability. We put our hand up for that one.”

Sound familiar? This was Simon Goodwin.

Not this year, but last year – after Melbourne lost to Brisbane in an MCG semi-final boilover.

“Clearly there was a pattern throughout the year with what we struggled with,” he continued.

“We will unpack all of that as a club. We tried to address it on the run throughout the season… but once again in finals, your vulnerabilities find you. And if they are not corrected, they will keep finding you.

“We must go away and fix it.”

Melbourne had 29 shots at goal but went down by 13 points against the Lions last September.

Against Carlton on Friday night, the Dees amassed 26 scoring shots to 18, only to lose that one too.

The cold reality is they did not ‘go away and fix it’. The issues which lingered in 2022 persisted in 2023.

Melbourne’s problems have not solely been execution, nor the absence of a gun key forward. The star-studded midfield should wear a degree of blame, but no more than that.

No, for some time the Demons’ problems have stemmed from a combination of all these factors: personnel, panicked execution, and poor connection between on-ballers and forwards.

Put them into a melting pot and what do you receive? Back-to-back straight sets finals exits.

“In the end it was just our efficiency with the ball that cost us,” Goodwin said on Friday night.

“That’s two times in the finals we haven’t been able to do that, so we need to get better at that. We will go to work on that.

“What I can guarantee our supporters is we will continue to find ways to get better… we will be a club that pursues getting better.”

As Melbourne found out in last year’s trade period, it’s one thing to say you’re going to improve, but another to do it.

Lachie Hunter and Jacob van Rooyen of the Demons celebrate a goal. (Photo by Michael Willson/AFL Photos via Getty Images)

There were forwards available – Jack Gunston went to Brisbane, Dan McStay found himself at Collingwood, and Rory Lobb finally got to the Western Bulldogs – but Melbourne decided to hitch its $600,000 wagon on Brodie Grundy instead.

The Demons could bank on Jacob van Rooyen enjoying a huge summer, or Harrison Petty continuing his development as a forward. They might even hope Tom McDonald recaptures the form he showed in 2021 as an athletic tall in attack.

But they need to be bolder than that. To think outside the box: just as they did with Grundy, but better. Grundy hasn’t worked, but I don’t blame Melbourne for trying something different.

Surely, when you’re smack bang in the heart of what should be a premiership window, you need to seek solutions aggressively and unapologetically for the present. Another flag with the current group is all that really matters: replenish the list, yes, but focus on 2024.

Melbourne could wait 12 months and go after Oscar Allen, Aaron Naughton, Ben King, Jamarra Ugle-Hagan or Logan McDonald this time next year.

While all are out of contract at the end of 2024, there are no guarantees any will take the Demons’ call, let alone agree to move.

And the reality is Melbourne must be better before then anyway. Waiting 12 months could mean another year wasted.

Another option for them is to package up a suite of 2023 top draft selections – let’s say picks 5, 15, 24 and whatever they receive for Grundy – and offer it to West Coast for Allen.

Knowing their one missing piece is a gun key forward, they could try to extract Allen via a deal the rebuilding Eagles could not refuse.

What’s left should this fail – aside from organic, internal growth?

Two players: Tom Hawkins and Jack Riewoldt.

(Photo by Robert Cianflone/Getty Images)

Riewoldt has retired, while Hawkins is yet to re-sign at Geelong.

I appreciate both are long shots, but if you’re truly in a premiership-winning mode, why not ask the question?

Luke Hodge retired, then played on at Brisbane. Why couldn’t Riewoldt?

The three-time premiership Tiger was a smart footballer right until the end. Yes, athletically he had faded.

But at 35 in 2024, he would at worst help educate Petty, van Rooyen and Fritsch on forward craft. At best, he’d be a target himself.

He’d straighten Melbourne up. Tasmania could wait another year.

If you don’t think Riewoldt is the right option? No worries – I get that. Maybe he’s not. So what about Hawkins?

Put the Geelong sentiment to one side for a moment. He’s precisely what the Demons need: a big body who will lead up at the footy and kick truly most of the time.

He may never want to leave the Cats. But who could have predicted Sam Mitchell would finish up with a year at West Coast? Or Doug Hawkins to spend a year at Fitzroy?

Their legacies are not tarnished at all by a second club, nor is Hodge’s. They are remembered as Hawthorn and Bulldogs champions, just as Riewoldt and Hawkins will be known for their feats at the Tigers and Cats even if they played a year at the Demons.

Even if the answer is a firm no, Melbourne should explore all possibilities. Asking the question costs nothing.

In 12 months, Hawkins could move into a coaching role and continue to assist the development of van Rooyen and co. By then, Melbourne might have a better line of sight on King, Naughton, Allen or any other key forwards testing the market. Van Rooyen may even be ready to assume the mantle as Goodwin’s No.1 target.

And time is ticking – by the start of next year, Max Gawn and Steven May will be 32, and Christian Petracca will be 28. Jack Viney is a warrior, but he turns 30 in April.

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Two things can be true at once: they all have good football left in them, but the clock is still ticking on their careers.

“I don’t necessarily say the window’s closed on them, but their time will run out,” retired Demon Nathan Jones said on Seven after Friday night’s loss.

“Gawn becomes a little bit older, and Petracca and Oliver, and then where’s that next layer of talent?”

Regardless of which approach you deem the most likely to succeed, a re-jigged forward setup is badly needed at the Demons.

There are no easy solutions here, but there are possibilities.

It’s incumbent on Melbourne to explore each and every one of them.

The Crowd Says:

2023-09-20T09:37:20+00:00

Wikipetia

Roar Rookie


draft the prospect.

2023-09-20T08:58:01+00:00

Wikipetia

Roar Rookie


Right club wrong guy. Richmond won't contend while Lynch remains a weapon. We should send him off to win a flag elsewhere. thanks him for service in winning years but especially in the 2022 doldrums We can clear some of his salary as well, Melbourne having Grundy leaving Get Chol back from the Coast. Some magic involved. Pick 5 from Melbourne to us. Pick 25 to the Gold Coast. Lynch and 45 to the Dees, maybe our 2024 second round as well. If they want to low ball us a bit, they can give us 13 and 24. same points value as 5. we can potentially give those to the Gold Coast and get 4 in return, give them our 3rd for their 4th to round it out something like that we then trade in the best Victorian key forward prospect. get games into Ryan and Chol. play Balta forward more. something like that?

2023-09-19T15:30:40+00:00

BillyW

Roar Rookie


Yeh strange article hey... All these questions will be answered with a firm no I'd imagine... WC can rebuild around Allen he's going nowhere... Mitchell unlike Hawkins had understudies he was preventing from getting games And Jack, please...I suspect he's very happy retired! Melb should be all in on Van Rooyen, Fritsch and system! and surely one of their experienced KPF then stands up both kick straight, that's MacDonald and Brown, just need good looks

2023-09-19T11:52:08+00:00

Jimmy Woods

Roar Rookie


Hawkins or Reiwaldt, is that serious. Why not dig up Coventry or Coleman? Agree with packaging up the draft picks to get a generational player like Jeremy Cameron, Tom Lynch and before those two Buddy and Lockett. IMO, the Dees are the most talented at full tilt, but their hunger and hardness isn’t at the kill or be killed level. Not sure my pies are at that crazy level either fwiw, but that’s the tonic for winning. Barassi, Matthews, Clarkson, Hafey, Sheedy. HARD AS NAILS at the contest. Jock McHale & Norm Smith a bit before my time but the stories and themes of their uncompromising leadership seem to have worked over the ages.

AUTHOR

2023-09-19T06:10:45+00:00

Tom Morris

Expert


Thanks and yes, they need a second flag to frank this period!

2023-09-19T05:59:36+00:00

MG

Roar Rookie


Hawkins is an interesting idea. I like it but doubt he would move. Apparently he is on minimum pay? But he has a lot of property investments in Geelong (which is very popular at Geelong - apparently they get a good deal). A big part of Melbourne's forward issues this year was injuries. They've had a lot of players through there this year so I think the lack of connection makes sense. No mention of Ben Brown - I think they are better with him in the team. Harrison Petty seems to be a very good option. If any team gets a good year with injuries, it makes a huge difference.

2023-09-19T05:54:26+00:00

Curmudgeon1961

Roar Rookie


Or 3 goals (50% of shots) Does anybody really believe Clubs seriously practice this skill? Indeed they actively work against it eg. the "defensive" forward , rotating a skilled forward who has just kicked a goal off the ground, Going wide from the wing instead of cutting in (even though the at ground behind the player camera angle shows room) because are running athletes but they don't have skill base to pass to a forward etc

2023-09-19T03:58:34+00:00

RT

Roar Rookie


If you have dominated for a long enough continuous period to kick 6 behinds in a row, you should have managed at least 2 goals instead.

2023-09-19T03:32:40+00:00

Pope Paul VII

Roar Rookie


Did Melbourne actually come last or something? Just because a mob kicks a heap of behinds doesn't mean these are automatically goals if you have a sharpshooter on board. Teams might kick 6 behinds in a row but if your sharpshooter nails the first one it's back to the centre and the other five more than likely never exist. And your score is exactly the same. More ever your opponent has a centre bounce contest is primed to cancel out your score.

2023-09-19T02:59:13+00:00

Mr Right

Roar Rookie


Nice article Tom. You have hit the nail on the head. The clock is ticking in Demon land. After that great year they had in 2021 when they only lost 4 games all year, I would suggest most people believe they have under achieved in the last 2 years. Where do they go from here? Do they think outside the square or stick to there current path to hopeful success? They could replicate other very strong teams that only come away with 1 premiership in Golden Times. E.g. Essendon 2000 & Swans 2012.

2023-09-19T02:31:14+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


The thinking that a suite of draft picks for someone like Oscar Allen is strange. What would WC do with those draft picks? Hope to find someone like Oscar Allen...except 4 years behind in development? Melbourne might like it but WC has a say too and they have far more salary cap space to offer him to stay home.

2023-09-19T02:08:34+00:00

Naughty's Headband

Roar Rookie


Teaching Oliver to look for a target might help. No tall forward would stand a chance against their bombing of the ball to a pack every time. They need to be smarter in the midfield, not chase blokes who are in their mid 30s.

2023-09-19T01:41:05+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Roar Rookie


Hawkins is also unselfish, the most goal assists ever. But either replacing Van Rooyen? His brother is in West Coast's sights, but Jacob to the Eagles is about as likely as the Real McGovern ever going to Carlton

2023-09-19T00:45:41+00:00

Don Freo

Roar Rookie


Better for Melbourne than Van Rooyen? West Coast would like that.

2023-09-18T23:51:20+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


No

2023-09-18T23:06:37+00:00

Arges Tuft

Roar Rookie


Hawkins yes. Jack nup, hes spent. Might also help to stop bombing it in to the same spot 9 out of 10 entries? Big difference! And will get Petty back too. GWS have an awesome midfield too but theirs is educated where to kick to on entry craft and inside the 50. To add to that the mids kick straight on goal. Melb just need to straighten things up (a lot) and adjust the approch to lower the eyes and stop kicking themselfs out of games. Only lost by a kick both finals. Get a new midfield coach.

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