AFL pre-season notebook: Kane Cornes hits new low with response to Bomber blow, 'basic' Dockers have work to do

By Tim Miller / Editor

Four more teams got their chance to dust off the cobwebs on the first day of autumn, and less than a week out from the season proper, it’s far from an ideal time to have injuries to deal with.

Unfortunately, both Essendon and Port Adelaide left their matches with scares, Jordan Ridley’s quad iced up late in the Bombers’ loss to the Cats, while Zak Butters was taken out of Port’s win over Fremantle as a precaution after an early ankle roll.

Neither side are among the eight fronting up for Opening Round, and both will be grateful for the extra few days to try and get their stars right, Port and Butters especially – Ridley’s chances of returning for Round 1 appear remote.

Here’s what we learned out of Geelong’s win over Essendon and Port Adelaide’s win over Fremantle.

Kane Cornes’ new low

From the moment Ridley was seen icing his quad at three-quarter time of Essendon’s clash with Geelong, it was only a matter of time until Kane Cornes chimed in.

And sure enough, everyone’s favourite media pundit couldn’t resist jumping in to loudly proclaim that the Dons’ decision to re-sign Ridley until the end of 2029, having already had three years left to run on his contract, was a recipe for disaster.

For starters, despite the ‘no one wants to see anyone injured’ faux sympathy, it’s pretty low to use an injury to try and validate a hot take. Literally anyone can get injured – the proof came a few hours later, when Zak Butters from Cornes’ beloved Port Adelaide rolled an ankle against Fremantle.

But it’s also baffling because there’s no logic at all to Cornes’ argument. Unless Ridley’s quad injury – which may or may not be a tear, but certainly looks likely to delay his start to 2024 at first glance – ends up requiring his leg to be amputated, he will still be playing plenty of footy this season and, one expects, the five seasons beyond until his current deal expires.

Intercepting defenders with good foot skills and calm heads don’t grow on trees – the Bombers locking him in now until well after he becomes a free agent is a perfectly reasonable bit of forward planning, if slightly overhyped by Dons media given he wasn’t actually going anywhere for at least another three years anyway.

Admittedly, the injury to the same quad Ridley suffered a season-ending injury on last year is an issue, and will require rehabilitation and caution which might keep him out for longer than if it had been a first-time knock.

But we will only know if the long-term contract was right or not far closer to its expiry than right now. Cornes might end up being vindicated – but he certainly isn’t right now, despite what he may claim.

Jordan Ridley suffered a quad injury in Essendon’s pre-season loss to Geelong. (Photo by Michael Willson/AFL Photos via Getty Images)

How do the Dons cover for Ridley?

Last year, Ridley’s injury was a catalyst for the Bombers’ late-season deathspin that turned them from finals contender into cellar dweller, if too late to impact a respectful ladder position.

And while the signs against Geelong weren’t great – the Cats piled on five goals to one in the last quarter for a come-from-behind win that started virtually the minute Ridley was ruled out of the game – the Bombers do have the talent, and the structure, to at least cover for their star interceptor until he returns.

In his first proper match in red and black, Ben McKay was excellent, keeping Tom Hawkins under wraps for large parts and claiming a pair of intercept marks to boot.

Brad Scott’s management of his defence around his new recruit was likewise top-notch; no player loves being left in a one-on-one situation, and McKay was never required to have a single mano e mano battle against the champion Cat. In fact, the Bombers had just eight defensive one-on-ones for the whole match, only losing three – and a horror early moment when Nic Martin was left to defend Hawkins one out in the forward pocket was far from the portent of things to come I was envisioning at the time.

Just as impressive was Zach Reid; after a long string of injuries, it’s looking like 2024 might be the year he breaks out. Claiming four intercept marks, it was he and not Ridley that did the lion’s share of the aerial work, with his more highly touted teammate mostly busy looking after Jeremy Cameron.

The extra responsibility thrust upon him in the last term once Ridley went down limited Reid somewhat, and was a catalyst to the Cats becoming much more dangerous inside 50. But between him and McKay, with the doughty Jayden Laverde (who appears surplus to requirements if Ridley were available) as the second tall, there’s enough to suggest the reliance on Ridley won’t be nearly as profound in 2024.

Their main area of focus will be improving their foot skills coming out of defence – an issue for plenty of last season, the Cats were gifted a series of goals by errant Bomber passes, either intercepted like in the goal below…

… or just a terribly ill-thought out hack kick right to the most dangerous spot on the ground, like here.

Down back or in the guts, Holmes a game-changer for Cats

It’s taken just two pre-season games for the hype around new Cats half-back Max Holmes to grow.

With Cameron Guthrie’s injury against Carlton blowing a new hole in an already weak midfield, all eyes were on Chris Scott to see if he’d hold his nerve and keep his potential midfield ace in the hole in defence against the Bombers.

He sort of did, starting most quarters at half-back with Mitch Duncan in particular given more of an on-ball role; but Holmes’ raw speed made it too tempting to resist giving him regular runs at centre bounces especially.

With seven inside 50s, 19 disposals and more than 500 metres gained, Holmes was utterly unstoppable up to half time, after which the Bombers took steps to clamp down on him.

His role is as close to the Nick Daicos one at Collingwood as I’ve seen: whether down back or on the ball, the 21-year old had little direct defensive responsibility, though 16 pressure acts made it clear he did his bit in that regard anyway, with his freedom to set up possession chains and speed the ball away from stoppages of utmost importance.

The Cats are unlikely to regularly challenge the league’s best midfields this year, though a 14-9 centre clearance advantage over the Bombers was an impressive start.

It will be their run off half-back and turnover game, as it was in 2022, that will decide whether they can bounce back in 2024, and Holmes will be the key.

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‘Basic’, boring Freo need a shot of adrenaline

I wrote early last season that Freo were ‘boring’, ‘brainless’ and needed a Plan B, after their defensive miserliness of 2022 had translated into only stodginess that other teams had rapidly worked out.

To his credit, Justin Longmuir rapidly changed the Dockers style from a high-mark, low-speed system to a more handball-friendly, down the corridor game plan – it didn’t work for long, but a 10-13 record and percentage of 96.7 let them salvage some pride, if not ladder position, from the wreckage.

The Dockers certainly handballed plenty against Port Adelaide, with the ball in near-constant motion when they were in control of it – but there’s a difference between moving the ball and ball movement, if that makes sense.

All too often, Freo allowed themselves to be pushed into corners, or backwards, or wide by the Power’s excellent ground-wide pressure system at Alberton, rarely allowed to access the central corridor and regularly turning it over when they did.

A horror Nat Fyfe kick midway through the third quarter to wreck a painstaking build-up and nearly gift the Power a turnover goal pretty much summed things up: the Dockers neither had the skill nor the ingenuity of a Connor Rozee or a Dan Houston to make something happen and spark a damaging forward foray.

37 inside 50s – still well short of Port’s 56 – for just five marks is a horror return, pre-season or not: sure, Jye Amiss was out with a corked quad, but Matt Taberner hardly got near it, and while Patrick Voss was impressive whenever the ball came his way, he was seldom given a chance to press his case.

David King called them ‘basic’ on Fox Footy’s coverage, lamenting their inability to access the corridor nearly enough – and he was bang on.

Amazingly, by half time, the Dockers had more marks inside 50 (two) from POWER kicks than from their own. At the same point, they had one inside 50 from 25 possession chains starting in their defensive 50. You just can’t kick a winning score with a conversion rate like that.

The solution? Well, Freo have the bare bones of something to spark them: in a new midfield role, Hayden Young was clearly the Dockers’ best, and his beautiful foot skills and decision-making are just the tonic to make them more dangerous moving forward.

Two goals just makes the case even more compelling.

The problem is, unlike what we saw of Freo’s midfield in 2022, there don’t seem to be defined roles among the on-ballers anymore. Caleb Serong is a workhorse and brilliant in close, but for him to be having six inside 50s, equal with Young, is an issue – any opposition would much prefer the former be the one kicking it in there, and eight score involvements for Young to Serong’s three is proof of that.

Serong and Andrew Brayshaw can share the in-and-under work, and Brayshaw is good and quick enough to hold his own on the outside, potentially on defensive side of stoppages thanks to his elite tackling skills.

Young can then be Freo’s Nick Daicos: he is good enough, and important enough to their system, to be allowed to be just an attacking force and have his duties without ball in hand covered for to at least some degree. You can’t say that didn’t work brilliantly for Collingwood in 2023.

Port’s defence can hold up

As much as many of the stats in the above point were an indictment on Freo, they will no doubt be thrilling for Ken Hinkley.

Port’s backline was their major Achilles heel in 2023: quality opposition forward lines, including in both finals, made mincemeat of a group without a monster key back and that put much of its focus into aggressive rebounding rather than desperate defending – which, to be fair, was their only choice with the cattle available.

Neither Esava Ratugolea nor Brandon Zerk-Thatcher will be a world-beater this year, but they’re solid citizens who will hold up fine as long as the pressure upfield remains excellent, and free up Aliir Aliir to do his usual thing.

For the most part, Zerk-Thatcher took the deepest forward, Ratugolea the number one tall, and Aliir whoever was left, with the latter waxing off when required to help out the other two.

They’ll have plenty bigger tests than Freo, both in terms of the quality of their tall forward opponents and in more dynamic ball movement; but the Power specifically identified that pair as worth bringing in to plug a hole, and they gave no indication they won’t live up to that.

Random Observations

– The footage Fox Footy showed of Ken Hinkley telling Zak Butters to quick being so kamikaze at pre-season training was magnificent.

– There’s something about Patrick Voss. Think he offers something different in Freo’s forward line if he gets a Round 1 spot.

– Xavier Duursma’s a nice fit at the Bombers, but I’m not sure he’s ever going to be the player I thought he’d be after his first season.

– Yuck.

The Crowd Says:

2024-03-27T20:26:24+00:00

Maxy

Roar Rookie


— COMMENT DELETED —

2024-03-04T01:37:15+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


I ived in the Hills and worked at the Bridge. One time east of Nairne l lost a wheel off my Isuzu Brick (Bellet). It came of at 85 kph, hit a rock and traversed 70 metres thru the air. I was able to salvage 2½ studs and put it back together. As l got to work my boss sung, after hearing my story, “You picked a fine time to leave me loose-wheel

2024-03-04T01:28:11+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


I'd love a dog but l couldn't get a date, or a Sultana, in a harem.

2024-03-04T01:26:29+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


What signs are you and the former?

2024-03-04T00:46:00+00:00

AdamDilligafThompson

Roar Rookie


Play it backwards the dog was reincarnated, the gf came back, the old man found his marbles and my trucks running like gold.lol. The x use to like Tay Tay thats why inknow a little bit well that's what I tell people.lol. her angry music is better than her happy im in a relationship music, well that's what the x use to say. Yeah she alright I mean I'd do her but margot shts all over her especially as Harley but that just maybe because I'm messed up in the head and find her hot as f especially when she kicking the sht out of people. Thanks as well man much appreciated. :stoked:

2024-03-04T00:42:30+00:00

AdamDilligafThompson

Roar Rookie


Thanks rowdy, when it comes down it if I had a choice of what I could fix or bring back, it would be my dog 100 times out of 100. May sound harsh but thats just how it is.lol. :laughing:

2024-03-04T00:41:12+00:00

AdamDilligafThompson

Roar Rookie


Thanks heaps dingo, I hope so its what's helped to get me through thinking footballs not far away breathe..after all that we wouldn't want to come out and flop this year.lol. thank again man appreciated. :stoked:

2024-03-03T09:24:19+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


I was going to say that about country music played backwards. Dunno about TS. She's attractive but l don't find her so. Gff

2024-03-03T09:22:36+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


Sorry to hear Adam; esp family.

2024-03-03T08:59:35+00:00

Dingo

Roar Rookie


Hey Adam, sorry to hear life has not been good brother. Keep your chin up and hope this year goes well for you and Port ( except against Swans)

2024-03-03T07:05:49+00:00

Wolzal

Roar Rookie


Cornes would go away if no one paid him any attention, but then what would outlets put in their headline for clicks. The media might criticize him, but he is ultimately keeping the whole system fed with his "hot takes".

2024-03-02T23:42:34+00:00

AdamDilligafThompson

Roar Rookie


Ohbyou can imagine how badly ive been waiting for the footy to start.lol. All I need now is to own a truck and have it breakdown and I got the next number 1 country n Western or Tay Tay song. :laughing:

2024-03-02T22:44:27+00:00

Maxy

Roar Rookie


Man,rough time,Hope Port can get the spirits back up in a couple of weeks

2024-03-02T22:30:04+00:00

AdamDilligafThompson

Roar Rookie


Lmfao well a little bit of that too, I went down for family day and its looking so good down there. Otherwise Oh man what a end and start to the year, had to have my 6yo female dog put down 2 weeks before Xmas, broke up with the gf after 6years 2 weeks after that and found out my old man is senile and been put in a home last week. Been interesting to say the least bit I'm still kicking and sticking my middle finger up a t the universe.lol.

2024-03-02T21:31:02+00:00

Maxy

Roar Rookie


Yeah,Tom McCollum think a pick in the 30's a backman but not sure he is any good,I like watching the youngs guys play preseason and see how they go but we had a few injured and he was one of them

2024-03-02T21:26:58+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


Has port got any Tassie players ?

2024-03-02T20:55:20+00:00

Maxy

Roar Rookie


Can Tassie poach contracted players,I know players can leave if under contract but like would it be frowned upon if Tassie targeted contracted players from other clubs,not sure how it goes

2024-03-02T20:51:46+00:00

Chanon

Roar Rookie


Dogs last half was impressive. Sandwrs got going after half time great pick up. Yea l’m sure Tassie will throw the kitchen sink at the young lad, time will tell.

2024-03-02T19:29:37+00:00

Maxy

Roar Rookie


Adam you are back,where have you been!Down at Albertons state of the art new facilities playing on the Pokies

2024-03-02T19:27:31+00:00

Maxy

Roar Rookie


:laughing: Hurts our hip pocket being Port supporters

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