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Gordon P Smith

Roar Guru

Joined February 2017

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I'm a Yank who used to write for the Roar in the days when they were still communicating with us when they chose not to publish. Ah, those were good times...

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The only reason it would ever be considered would be on the basis of economics, and on a team-by-team basis regardless of the total number of teams in the league. The number of amazing players “stuck” in the VFL testifies that the AFL is not struggling to fill out rosters – that’s no reason to consider it. Having an odd number of teams is a PITA, so adding team 20 or consolidating a pair into one team might be worth considering to remedy those headaches, but there aren’t any obvious pairs to be unified (Brisbane/Fitzroy fans would be understandably bleeped if they were to be saddled with a THIRD club heritage to incorporate if you try to swing the Suns into their fold!)…. If the AFL thinks it can financially swing adding another team in Tasmania, it’s hardly hurting enough to fold teams… OH! And as the (former) resident American on staff, let’s set the record straight on that AFL/NFL comparison. If you’re being honest with the American numbers, there are MANY other professional football leagues here – the USFL and XFL are both operating spring leagues with professional players salaried at the same levels as the bottom half of the pay scale of the NFL rosters, so add another sixteen teams there. But the major objection is the dearth of comparable sporting options in Australia in comparison to the vast number of sports that pay good money to its professionals in the US. Apples to oranges…. But it’s an interesting choice of article topics: not sure why you’d take it on when it’s not going to happen barring economic collapse, and no matter which teams you settled on, ANY team you mentioned as being a possibility for downsizing now has its fanbase up in arms and viewing any negative thing you might (even justifiably) write about their team as evidence that you’re somehow biased against them. Not saying that’s fair, but it seems inevitable.

Welcome Tasmania, but the AFL should be a 16-team competition so three clubs must go

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Do Tasmanians really want a brand new stadium?

Doesn’t look like mine’s going to get printed on time this week, so… Had Geelong by 4-5 points (wrong), Richmond by a narrow margin (looks good), Fremantle losing if and only if Kiara Bowers is still out this weekend, Bulldogs by 13; Sunday – had Brisbane winning big at home, but they should win no matter where (stay safe, QLD!); Adelaide big, and Carlton bigger.

2022 AFL Women's season: Round 9 preview

YES. I would gladly take Daisy Pearce as my coach over Wayne Carey, whether my team was male, female, adult, children, mixed, or some freakish combination of all of the above. Becky Hammond has proven with the San Antonio Spurs of the (last I checked) all-male NBA that a woman can coach men just as well as a man can coach women. (And I would take Bec Goddard over both of them, as coach or in the commentary box.)

Seven shock: Wayne Carey dumped from prime time for AFLW legend

So even with a top-six loss, the exception proves the rule: it took a near-perfect performance by the Bulldogs to pull off the upset of a finalist club. If anyone offers a hex-fecta on the six finalists, grab a duplicate of last year for as much as you can get, and shame on anyone who gives out ANY kind of payback on that bet…

AFLW Round 7 preview: How the Bulldogs changed the entire season

That mark for Phillips was certainly an interesting call…while I had no dog in the fight (pardon the pun), I did pray that the call didn’t decide the game after such a stellar contest. Turns out it didn’t.

AFLW Round 7 preview: How the Bulldogs changed the entire season

It was less Adelaide NOT kicking straight and more WBD kicking 8.1 for the day….

AFLW Round 7 preview: How the Bulldogs changed the entire season

Besides the fact that as an American I have a kindred cheering interest in Mason Cox, he’s just a funny, fascinating guy who has managed to play top-level in a sport he didn’t play until a few years ago. If this helps him perform as he could a few years ago (and hopefully better), I hope the league allows it.

Mason Cox plans to sport AFL-first new look in 2022

RE the change in schedule with Brisbane and the Bulldogs sidelined for the weekend – our numbers put Carlton as a 9 1/2 point favorite over Geelong in the replacement game.

2022 AFLW: Round 2 statistical forecasts

As I’m just coming back over from my other “FOLLOWING FOOTBALL” gig doing statistical predictions for American collegiate football (same thing we do for the AFL & AFLW except there are 418 teams), I didn’t have time to get a story in before first bounce today. So here are our quickie predictions, piggybacking on Avatar’s tremendous work so we get on the record in advance of week one……. RICHMOND BY 7 (covers the 5.5)…. NORTH BY 30 (covers the 26.5)…. DEMONS BY 6 (will not cover the 11.5 listed currently)….FREMANTLE BY 24 (covers the 20.5)….ADELAIDE BY 3 (covers the 1.5)…. COLLINGWOOD BY 3 (Carlton covers the +10.5)…..and GWS BY 6 (does not cover the 16.5 they’re favored by – last game, that would barely cover the total!). All the point spreads are as of a few hours ago Friday. We’ll start our regular coverage next week.

2022 AFLW: Round 1 preview

Looking back at our data from 2016, I’m thinking my memory’s getting faulty in my old age, Thom. Before that 42-point debacle in Perth in R23, WBD won the three games preceding that loss, following a big defeat by Geelong in R19. But the sentiment was that there was so much strength in the top six – three at the top at 17-5, including three-time defender Hawthorn and two others with recent titles (Sydney and Geelong), with three more right behind them at 16-6 (GWS, Adelaide, and West Coast). Looking at the “recent form” on the year-end ladder, only Hawthorn matched the two losses WBD had; the other five teams combined for three defeats, all among those 16-6 teams. Sydney and Geelong each had six game winning streaks coming into finals, and the top two teams each finished R23 with 110+ point victories. So the Doggies were at best an afterthought, no matter what their form. Without having researched the topic, I would suspect the Bulldogs were the only seventh place team with a record within two games of the minor premier. (15 wins v 17).

Who really finished on top of the AFL ladder?

Not a stretch. In the 21 previous seasons with this finals format, every single GF has had a top three team in it; both teams were top three in 16 of them. Geelong last year was the first team to make the grand final from 4th in fifteen years; none of the three such clubs (Magpies ’02, Swans ’06, Cats ’20) won. Only GWS in 2019 and those ’16 Dogs made it from an EF to the Grand Final; the double chance clubs are 40 of 42 in the century making it to the last Saturday in September.

Who really finished on top of the AFL ladder?

But after Bontempelli’s zero-Brownlow vote game Friday night, it seems likely that any St Kilda win gives Jack Steele votes that might well put him into the winner’s circle come Brownlow reveal night. (And after Q1 I thought the Bont had three votes sewn up…)

Taking a look at the 'once-around' ladder, and your side's best and fairest

Doran, I’m starting to really look forward to your 18 in 18 article every week – it’s an intriguing concept and you do a great job of starting with the handful of players that “must” be there, and filling in around with the best of the rest as positions allow. I’ve had niggling differences in my selections, but never a prohibitive objection. Nice work.

The AFL team of the week Round 19: 'Chris Scott will definitely have to find a spot for him'

Great choice of topics — the perfect fodder for conversations a plenty! Well written and thought out. Your defenses are hard to refute, especially when your premise specifically says the ones YOU liked. My list would be slightly different (not much!) but it doesn’t make yours wrong. Keep up the good work!

The best twelve Australian rules players I have seen in 50 years watching the game

Good first article — good topic — good way to get the readership involved. There is no right answer to this type of question, of course, which is what makes it so much fun. Thanks for joining the team!

Who have been the best teams in AFL history?

Thanks for taking me under your wing, Daniel, and getting me into gear with The Roar. Getting past the bumpy spots would have been much harder without you. Best of luck with your adventures outside of this venue; here’s prayers for your health.

Four incredible years of sport: My farewell to The Roar

The Suns are one of those teams “behind Fremantle” – they had the same attention as the other seven clubs in that group from slot 12 to 18, where we listed the four times in recent history that such teams actually made finals. (The Suns and Giants are my two teams to barrack for, officially, because I’m not Australian and I figured they needed the fans, so I wear my gold and red on weekends. However, if I’m writing an article about historic odds to make finals, the Suns’ percentages, historically, are famously easy to calculate.)

Each club's statistical finals probabilities with nine rounds to go

With the Giants game moved to the MCG late in the week, it’s hard to know how the point spread will and should adjust. To be safe, we are moving our wager to simply “Giants win”, which as of this moment pays $3.14 on two.

Who wins each of Round 15's matches and why

Given the vibe that always revitalizes a team in Collingwood’s situation – their coach taking the sword in the name of continuity and harmony within the team – expect the Pies to play much harder than they thought they could have before Buckley’s announcement yesterday. So I’m changing my play on this game: Melbourne to win, and that’s it. The circumstances are much more volatile now, and it could be a one-point win or a one hundred point win if the emotions get the better of Collingwood. It’s impossible to be sure.

Week 13: The shifting sands of non-Victorian footy

If what I’ve written can be considered a slight to the Sir Douglas Nichols round itself, I agree that I should retract it and apologize. But the meat of the salutes to the great man and the indigenous people comes in round twelve, as far as I can tell, and except for the Friday opener, there really isn’t anything in the rest of round eleven we can say properly salutes the cause at hand. If that’s worth complaining about, I would argue that’s an argument for the AFL, rather than me for pointing it out…. I am honestly looking forward to Dreamtime and round 12, though.

Round 11 preview: Demons-Dogs and eight filler games

I count myself a Suns supporter from afar, but I kinda hope you’re right — only if it’s because Hawthorn rises from the dead, not because the Suns hit one of those terrible stretches they have been known for.

Round 11 preview: Demons-Dogs and eight filler games

Two answers: for some reason, they’ve stretched the Nicholls round across both 11 and 12. Don’t understand it either, but you’re not wrong about Dreamtime…. Also, in a week when I don’t see a game closer that double digits, I’ll stand by eight fillers. TBH, the Dogs may make the headliner just as much of a rout and make the entire round one to sleep through. At home, West Coast will demolish the Bombers in the first half and coast the rest of the way.

Round 11 preview: Demons-Dogs and eight filler games

Looks like we were both wrong on that Essendon game….

Round 10 forecast

In all the years I’ve written for the Roar, I don’t recall ever seeing any article of mine have its comments section turn into a singles bar before this… First for everything, I suppose.

Safe predictions for AFL Round 9

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