Six Points: Meet the AFL's dumbest team, and the most ridiculous ban in MRO history

By Tim Miller / Editor

Round 1 is run, won and done – and while it’s going to take the ladder a few more weeks to work out what exactly is going on, we’ve already seen plenty of eye-catching stuff this early in the season.

Last year’s grand finalists, Collingwood and Brisbane, are both 0-2 and with some proper thinkin’ to do – meanwhile, in between them geographically, it’s Sydney dominating the league, with both the Swans and GWS undefeated and looking the teams to beat.

Also on 2-0, though somewhat less impressive, are Carlton and Gold Coast, who very nearly let games they had under their control slip through their fingers in Round 1 – but who will nonetheless be thrilled with the four points.

And with James Sicily and Mason Redman both receiving suspensions from the MRO, we’ve already got some juicy off-field controversy to sink our teeth into!

For the first time in 2024… let’s dive in.

1. The Dogs are the AFL’s dumbest team – and they’re getting dumber

There were a lot of signs across the off-season that the Western Bulldogs were finally going to attempt to fix the issues that have consistently plagued them since about the 15-minute mark of the 2021 grand final’s third quarter.

Both their backline and stoppage coaches were moved on; a defensive-first midfielder in James Harmes and a mid-sized defender in Nick Coffield were added to fill holes; more decision-making than ever before was to be taken out of Luke Beveridge’s hands.

Sure, the coach didn’t seem to thrilled with it, and headlines throughout the summer mostly involved some implication of instability or infighting behind the scenes, but often the decisions that cause the most angst prove to be the right ones.

But any sense of optimism that things might be different in 2024 had well and truly dissipated by full time at the MCG on Sunday afternoon. The Bulldogs remain the dumbest side in the AFL by some distance – as much for how they continue to operate, and be beaten, as from what they do with the ball in hand.

This is a team chock full of talent across most lines, with the reigning All-Australian ruckman, the de facto best player in the game in Marcus Bontempelli to lead a star-studded midfield, and a three-pronged forward line that Rodney Eade would have sold a kidney for after three straight preliminary final exits from 2008-10 without a genuine key spearhead.

And yet they continue to lose in the same way. Teams waltz inside 50 and distribute the ball at will to leading forward with a scattergun defence breaking apart like a Kit-Kat.

They are incapable of stopping teams from turning clearance wins into dominant forays forward.

And when it’s their turn to attack, there is seemingly no plan to score beyond bash the ball forward, hope one of Aaron Naughton or Jamarra Ugle-Hagan clunks one, and then pray they kick straight.

The Dogs and Melbourne had the exact same amount of inside 50s – 53 – on Sunday afternoon. Given the Dees’ forward line has spent the best part of 18 months misfiring on the regular, and struggling to convert territory dominance into winning scores, it should embarrass everyone at Whitten Oval that they conceded 16 goals and 29 scoring shots.

It’s not all the defenders’ fault – the pressure upfield on running opponents is a long way below AFL standard – but Liam Jones aside, not a single one of them seems to know where the most dangerous spots are for every inside 50, because they’re left open on the regular.

The personnel gets the whack most of the time from the media, and I’d be shocked if Buku Khamis retains his spot in the team next week, but they’ve also been sold a pup too. Beveridge regularly gives young, developing players or VFL jobbers tasks way beyond what they’re capable of, in a side that is good enough to not require them, and fails to react when they repeatedly get embarrassed.

Not helping Khamis’ case is that for at least half his career the Dogs have tried to turn him into a key forward in the VFL; and yet he was picked as the second tall defender against a team which deliberately stacked its forward line with key targets, sensing vulnerability.

No team is going to sack their coach after Round 1, and the Dogs’ almost complete lack of success before Beveridge arrived makes them less likely than most.

But it’s now three years in a row they’ve dished out the same flaw-filled game plan to start a season, and three years in a row they have seen it cut to ribbons.

The Dogs are the dumbest team in footy – and they simply refuse to learn.

2. The biggest joke of a ban in MRO history

Watching the opening minutes of Hawthorn’s clash with Essendon on Saturday, I was flummoxed when James Sicily gave away a secondary free kick for clashing with Andrew McGrath after a Bombers goal, gifting them with another set shot.

So you can imagine my reaction to discovering on Sunday afternoon that Match Review Officer Michael Christian had seen fit to slap the Hawks’ skipper with a one-game suspension for ‘kicking’.

Having now had a second, more forensic look at the incident, as well as Christian’s verdict, my proclamation is thus: this is the most ridiculous suspension he has handed out while in the job.

For starters, it has to be noted that Sicily did not start this; the Bombers, as is their prerogative, made it their mission from the opening bounce to make his life hell. And it worked – with just 11 disposals and two marks, Hawthorn’s talisman had one of his worst games in memory, as Matt Guelfi in particular kept him under wraps throughout.

But there has to be some understanding, if not protection, for a player standing up for himself against that kind of treatment.

If the rules don’t afford any leeway not just in conceding free kicks, but from a suspension point as well, then all we do is encourage opposition teams to freely gang up on whatever star player they like.

I’m not sure that’s a good look for the game.

Mostly, though, I have an issue with Christian’s summation of the incident. For starters, he has graded it ‘intentional’ contact – sure, Sicily’s kicking out isn’t a great look, but it’s about the first time I can remember the MRO deeming a split-second incident deliberate.

Readers of this column last year will know full well of my frustration every time a bump is graded ‘careless’ rather than intentional – no doubt the Hawks will argue, as everyone who has got a player off a bump via the ‘bracing for contact’ defence, that it was an instinctive reaction with zero damage inflicted.

Put simply: a suspension should serve not just as punishment for bad behaviour, but as a deterrent for others. And there are far more egregious acts in our game that need to be stamped out far more urgently than this one.

I’m perfectly willing to admit, after a second look, that the free kick against Sicily was warranted, as well as a fine for being a massive idiot – kicking out is a dumb thing to do, and a gentle reminder to not do anything so brainless again was well warranted.

But to cost a player a week on the sidelines for it, when so repeatedly in the last three years we have seen far more dangerous, damaging and consequential incidents be deemed legal under the laws of the game?

That just rubs me wrong.

James Sicily was handed a one-match suspension for kicking Andrew McGrath. (Photo by Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

And while I’m at it… if someone can explain the consistency behind Mason Redman copping a week for punching Jai Newcombe when George Hewett wasn’t last week, I’ll be all ears.

3. Mitchell’s Maginness mistake

Anyone who’s even taken a passing glance at my work over the last few years will know this about me: If Sam Mitchell has one fan, that’s me, and if Sam Mitchell has no fans, I am no longer on this earth.

All the same, he made a rare double mistake on Saturday afternoon at the MCG: not with his structures, but with his team selection.

Naming Finn Maginness as the Hawks’ sub is one of the more baffling calls I can remember from any team on that front – and keep in mind, Port Adelaide named Jeremy Finlayson sub in a final last year.

For starters, Maginness, while he has many admirable qualities, isn’t what you’d call a burst footballer. He’s not particularly quick, he’s not a damaging, line-breaking kick; offensively, he hasn’t really offered all that much in his young career.

What Maginness is, however, is a tagger – possibly the best tagger in the league. An important role to play in modern footy, as he proved last year by almost completely shutting down Nick Daicos in a famous Hawks win… just not one all that suited to coming on midway through the last quarter.

Making the sub call even more baffling was the damage Zach Merrett wrought; you’d have expected Maginness, had he been in the starting 22, to have been given the job on the Bombers’ best and most impactful on-baller.

Freed from the threat of a tag, Merrett racked up the footy at will, finishing with 31 disposals and eight marks at a slick 77 per cent efficiency. And efficiency, mind you, was a primary reason the Bombers bested the Hawks, who dominated large passages but were let down by woeful kicking for goal and errors by foot at crucial times.

A better choice for sub would have been first-gamer Nick Watson, who showed exciting signs on debut, particularly with his crumbing craft, but who otherwise faced a tough initiation to the big time with only five disposals, three of them behinds.

Swapping Maginness for Watson would have enabled the Hawks to clamp down on the Bombers’ best midfielder, damaging their system, while giving a young, electric kid a chance to impact the game as a pair of fresh legs with everyone else succumbing to fatigue, as Shaun Mannagh threatened to do in his first game as a Cat on Saturday night.

Mitchell has got far more right as Hawks coach than he has wrong – but this was definitely, in my view, a critical misstep.

4. The Suns can’t afford to let this slip

In 14 years as an AFL club, Gold Coast have started a season with two consecutive wins twice – in 2016 and 2018.

Both were met with tentative whispers that, after years of mediocrity, this was finally the Suns’ time. And they’d go on to win just six games for the rest of those seasons combined, resulting in yet more mediocrity for a side which has offered scarcely anything else since its inception.

It’s easy to say this year feels different, with a new, highly credentialled coach in Damien Hardwick at the helm and a pair of starkly different, yet both impressive, victories under their belt, the latter a workmanlike effort to outmuscle Adelaide in wet conditions that was nearly squandered by a capitulation in the final 15 minutes.

But it’s harder to say that this is now the most important month in Gold Coast’s history to date, which it officially is.

Forget winning over the glitter strip and becoming a Sydney-esque powerhouse – if the Suns have any ambition to end their finals drought anytime soon, this start must be capitalised upon.

They have a strong, in-form midfield, a star-studded forward line with a brilliant spearhead in Ben King, and defensive steel behind the ball. I’m being deadly serious when I say premiership sides in the very recent history have been built on less.

Up next for the Suns is a trip to Ballarat to face the Bulldogs, then Gather Round against GWS, a home date with Hawthorn and a clash with Sydney at the SCG, a venue that has been a happy hunting ground for them over the years (relatively speaking, of course).

5-1 is an entirely reasonable aim, if a very tough assignment, but at the least, 4-2 would set their season up beautifully for a serious crack at the finals. Teams, after all, by and large remain in the eight if they’re there at Round 6.

5. Trade talk officially jumps the shark

Have we really reached the point in AFL media coverage where, literally before the season has even started, there are big media reports on players potentially being hunted by rivals?

Already in 2024, we’ve heard Jamarra Ugle-Hagan is a Hawthorn target – before either team had so much as played a single match for premiership points – while AFL Media’s own Gettable is in full swing with reports, speculation and more.

It drives me mad. Who is even interested in that sort of thing at this time of the year to justify the story? I’ve never met a single person whose pre-season revolves around creating a hit list of players they want at their club, and I’m not sure they exist.

The focus should be, and for most of us, is, squarely on the fresh faces your team is putting out from Round 1, from debutants to those traded in LAST YEAR, and whether they’ll make a difference, be it short term or long.

So sure, Ugle-Hagan might be a Hawk next year; but what about discussing what the Hawks are doing NOW? About Nick Watson and what he can produce on debut, or whether Mabior Chol is the missing link up forward, or whether Jack Gunston has another year of elite footy left in him?

There’s a lot of things I don’t understand about modern footy and its coverage – this is right up at the top of the list.

6. Quit whingeing about score reviews

If you watched any footy over the weekend, you probably noticed that score reviews are back – and in greater numbers than ever.

Yes, whether it was a swathe of calls on the goal line on Sunday between Melbourne and the Bulldogs, to perhaps the weirdest one yet on Thursday night to check whether Charlie Curnow had kicked a goal or had been caught holding the ball, there were a whole lot of them – and the reaction was pretty much universal condemnation.

But I’m far from as annoyed about it. Yes, repeat score reviews hold up the play, kill momentum and are a frustrating part of the modern footy process – but it’s also worth remembering that they are there for a reason, and in my view, comfortably better than the alternative.

I would have thought we’d have learned from last year, when an overconfident goal umpire made an incorrect decision that quite literally cost a team finals, that erring on the side of caution solves more problems than it creates.

For every five frivolous score reviews where the umpire was obviously right all along, there’s a line-ball one that was well worth closer inspection; and for every ten, there’s one which gets overturned when the umpire’s initial call was wrong.

Given we know now how high the stakes can be, I’m well and truly in favour of that compromise, as annoying as it can be sometimes.

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Random thoughts

– Freo fans, I promise a point next week will be about your team if I can swing it. Ridiculously good to mince the Lions after quarter time.

– If I had a nickel for every time there was injury carnage in an early-season game at Optus Stadium…

– There are three certainties in life: death, taxes, and Jack Billings saving his best footy for games against Marcus Bontempelli, no matter who he’s playing for.

– I’m not sure an all-time champion in our game has ever received the flak Patrick Dangerfield has. Legit top-10 ever in my book (and better than Dustin Martin – I will die on this hill).

The Crowd Says:

2024-03-20T07:07:59+00:00

Joel Erickson

Roar Guru


It'll come for North Melbourne. I actually think they've done pretty well in the past few drafts, they just got a kid who couldn't hack playing for anyone not in Adelaide (not that I'm personally complaining). I'd view Port's 2018 draft as similar to Carlton's 2015. Rozee and Butters could easily end up being Top 5 midfielders in this league for the next 5-7 years, and Duursma was really good until he just couldn't stay healthy. I think having that really positive youth in the club has helped Port fill some of their other gaps (although, not with the same quality as the guys Carlton got). For example, I don't think Port gets Soldo if you don't have the sell of being able to put it down Rozee and Butters' throat for the next 3-5 years. Appreciate this spirited debate. Good to have one that doesn't degrade down to personal insults like others tend to do.

2024-03-20T04:43:19+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


My fault, I missed the "and". "Say in 2015 Carlton decided to take Schache instead of Weitering at 1, then took Doedee and McKay" But that is the whole point - if the Blues had done that they would still be an absolute disaster despite having an extraordinary amount of first round picks. However even with the "really good draft" in 2015 it still wouldn't be enough to get the Blues into finals - they needed a massive amount of talent brought in on the cheap from rival clubs. The "really good draft" helped them get that talent through the door but the fact they are a really big club was just as important. Also how often is a club going to land the likes of McKay at 10 & Curnow at 12 in one draft? Again look at North - the y have an amazing tall forward in Larkey, players like LDU, Powell, Phillps, Wardlaw & Sheezel but still have lost McKay and Horne Francis in the last couple of years and are unable to attract any real quality from rival clubs.

2024-03-20T04:25:17+00:00

Joel Erickson

Roar Guru


I said 'get rid of father-son and academies while we're at it'. That's advocating for getting rid of both in my books. Say in 2015 Carlton decided to take Schache instead of Weitering at 1, then took Doedee and McKay. Do you think you get the stream of good free agents and wantaways coming to the club? I would argue no, because those three would have not had the same impact and potential ceiling as the three you got. No matter which way you shake it, your current success is built on the foundation of a really good draft.

2024-03-20T03:54:51+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


"Not sure why you’re asking me that question, I agree that academies are unfair." Because you only advocated getting rid of father son picks not the academies. And honestly if you think a success rate of 45% (less than 1 in 2) of FIRST round picks (not counting the other 16 picks in that time) over a 6 year period, not playing finals until 10 years after the first successful player was picked, losing so many games over that period that we go through 4 permanent coaches (and a couple of temporary ones) and only really getting to a point of some success due to the fact we are one of the biggest clubs in the sport is an endorsement of clubs being able to build through the draft you are delusional. Ask yourself how much money North has thrown at out of contract big names (and even middle sized names) and how many of them have agreed to go to North and become good players?

2024-03-20T03:36:17+00:00

Joel Erickson

Roar Guru


Not sure why you're asking me that question, I agree that academies are unfair. The draft shouldn't be compromised at all, if you nominate for the draft, you should be fair game to go anywhere. Yes, considering those five who worked out are arguably the five most important players in a team that's pushing for a premiership, I'd say that's an advertisement for building clubs through the draft. You don't become attractive to free agents and fringe players at other clubs until you've got the foundations of a contender.

2024-03-20T03:12:50+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


So we drafted 27 players (11 of them in the first round) over 6 drafts (2013 to 2018) and 5 of them worked out and you think that is an advertisement for the draft helping build clubs? And why would the Blues or any club overpay at a mid-season draft when they could pay very little at the end of the year and build a team that will challenge for years? On father Son academies – how many players went to Northern clubs under academy rules in last year first couple of rounds last year?

2024-03-20T02:46:24+00:00

Joel Erickson

Roar Guru


The basis of your club is built on Cripps and Walsh in the middle, Curnow and McKay up front, and Weitering anchoring the back, all blokes you drafted. Maybe I think differently because I support an interstate club, but if you were forced to pay closer to fair value than "relatively little" for some of those other players you mentioned at a midseason trade period, maybe the league would be a little more balanced across the board. And get rid of Father-son and academies while we're at it.

2024-03-20T00:56:34+00:00

Knackaz

Roar Rookie


Good points I hadn’t considered, Dibbsy. My main beef is when there’s an amazing goal kicked that gets disqualified because there may have been a fingernail touch the ball which does not alter the trajectory of the ball in the slightest. If the field umpire or goal umpire miss it, it should be a goal like in the good old days before technology ruined everything. I think the ball hitting the post and bouncing back into play should be play on as it would make the game more exciting. I also believe defenders should not be able to rush or walk through a behind. Keep it frenetic around the goals. It’s all getting farcical now, and very over officiated. The protected space 50 metres penalty should also go …

2024-03-19T22:56:58+00:00

Macca

Roar Rookie


Look at my club, after numerous failed drafts they then absolutely nailed the 2015 draft but then if you look post that 2016 - no players left at Carlton 2017 - despite 2 first round picks the only player left at Carlton is De Koning taken at 30 2018 - Despite having 2 first round picks the only player left at Carlton is pick 1 Sam Walsh 2019 - Despite taking 2 first round picks the only player left at Carlton is Kemp 2020 - Only took 2 second round picks in draft - both still on the list 2021 - Only took 1 second round pick at the draft So in 6 drafts post 2015 the Blues haven't really built any success out of the draft (and there biggest successes have been outside the first round) - where they have built their success is by bring in players like Martin, McGovern, Acres, Cerra & Hewett that they were able to poach for relatively little because Carlton no matter how bad still pull big crowds and are a big club. Carlton are a prime argument against your point.

2024-03-19T22:42:33+00:00

Joel Erickson

Roar Guru


Tha goes for the regulation trade period as well to be fair. I just think struggling clubs have better chances of getting overs for their players mid-season than they do postseason.

2024-03-19T22:41:47+00:00

Joel Erickson

Roar Guru


There's plenty of proof that clubs can draft their way out of the doldrums though. Melbourne were an absolute rabble for years, then they got a few drafts right and became contenders. Port went from being a genuine chance of being shut down to pretty consistently competitive off the back of a few good drafts. Your club has built its current list on the back of a few key superstars you got through the draft as well. You've gotta give clubs the opportunity to draft well, and then it's on them to have a strong culture to keep the young talent.

2024-03-19T22:33:36+00:00

Dibbs

Roar Rookie


That would be much worse. If the posts are play on, it will significantly alter the game, and if 'touched' is still a goal, would 'punched' be a goal? All of a sudden the umpire now has to decide whether there is sufficient contact on the ball (how would you measure that?) or the ball just crossing the line counts a goal; welcome puching it over the line and try's. This is why you gotta be careful what you wish for with rule changes, in trying to make things simpler it just becomes much more complicated.

2024-03-19T07:23:59+00:00

Bretto

Roar Rookie


I would have lost my mind if I was a Swans supporter. But to suggest it was an organised conspiracy is blatantly ridiculous. You were on the wrong end of a terrible umpiring performance - that's it.

2024-03-19T06:47:14+00:00

Knackaz

Roar Rookie


Disagree with score reviews. The AFL needs to simply get rid of fingernail touches ridding the game of goals, and the same for hitting the inside of the post. No other sport dismisses goals (the best part of the game) because of such tiggy touchwood nonsense. Goal umpires just need to have the balls to make a decision, or go and do something else …

2024-03-19T06:38:50+00:00

Knackaz

Roar Rookie


She’s a terrible DEI appointment who would never have got the job if it was merit based. Not listing player weights is just the first of her woke, virtue signalling influence on the AFL. Of course every decision was correct to a woke person. Can’t hurt the umpires feelings now, can we. The AFL is fast becoming a joke in professional sports. Not the game, which is the best game on the planet, but the woke administration, who continue to alienate most footy supporters …

2024-03-19T06:35:05+00:00

nics

Roar Rookie


We are totally on track - Richmond Eagles GF. Book your flights ;). I'll have what you're smoking.

2024-03-19T06:21:49+00:00

Realist

Roar Rookie


Thanks Nics. A least you have the Eagles next Premiership in 2026 to look forward to! :laughing:

2024-03-19T06:03:48+00:00

nics

Roar Rookie


Your point, like so much hot air, has been repeated ad nauseam. I’m sure it could be written about any club propping up the ladder for any prolonged period of time, albeit most people are classy enough not to kick someone when they’re down. Of course, if it soothes your ego to make it again, do whatever floats your boat. If you think a club that wins flags every 8 years is a blight on the competition after two bad seasons, one has to wonder who is the partisan fan here. I haven’t made any personal attacks here – if you’re sensitive about me pointing out the inconsistencies in your argument, that is not my problem. We’re going around in circles here much like our clubs – not sure this discussion is going anywhere so have a good one.

2024-03-19T05:44:08+00:00

Realist

Roar Rookie


Well, we know what actually happened after the Eagles fortunate 2018 GF win.....the Tigers then won the next 2 and the Eagles disappeared into irrelevance and obscurity, a place they will inhabit for a very long time. The point I was making, before you resorted to personal attacks, was a simple and truthful one. And that is that the Eagles are a blight on the competition who will give any Team playing them twice an unfair advantage over the Teams only playing them once. That they are a basket case and an embarrassment for a Club of their former stature and have created an unfair imbalance in the competition that will affect ladder and finals spots. I really hope you get to see your beloved Eagles once again play on the last day in September.

2024-03-19T05:43:16+00:00

.kraM

Roar Rookie


My bad

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