Four Points the Dogs new Tom Boyd why Bevo was best on ground female presidents make history
Josh Schache played the best game of his career in the biggest game of his career. He is already this yearâs Tom Boyd.
A highly talented but unfulfilled footballer, he became a player without position. A high draft pick, he shifted clubs and floated between positions on his teamâs fringe. At times, he was forgotten, at times he teased, at length he played like he carried everyone elseâs doubts with him. After 63 games in six years from a number two draft pick he has emerged in September when the stakes are highest, when his team needs him most, to deliver a career-defining performance.
Josh Schache. Credit:Getty Images
It is reminiscent of Boydâs commanding finals performances in 2016. Like Boyd, Schache has shrugged away career perceptions and misconceptions to find a role and play with uncluttered purpose.
A beautiful kick and with good hands, he has often been too lacking in urgency as a forward, too ponderous as a backman. He could never quite get the game on his terms often enough.
On Saturday night the dynamic changed. As a forward, he played as a defender. As a defender, Aliir Aliir was not ready for this type of forward, nor was he ready for this type of Schache.
Being given a narrow task like tagging often helps midfielders find form because the opponent takes them to the ball, and they can concentrate their mind on just one thing. Schache had a narrow focus on Saturday night and that was to make sure Aliir did not intercept everything that was intended for Aaron Naughton. He was superb at it. Naughton, too, was superb at not letting anything get in his way, or heâd just jump through it if it was.
But Schache was not alone. This was a victory for the Dogs that was constructed in the coachâs box. Luke Beveridge was best on ground on Saturday night.
Every gamble Beveridge took worked. Playing Stef Martin after such a long lay-off with injury was the gamble that worked. Tim English was far more beneficial as the second tall forward next to Naughton and acting as a fellow interference runner on Aliir with Schache. Martin was the enabler of the Dogsâ forward line.
The pre-grand final bye has worked in Martinâs, and thus the Dogsâ, favour. After a long lay-off, having a week off now after a first game can only help him. Doubtless it also helps Steven May and his twanging hamstring.
Beveridge played Marcus Bontempelli, which might have been a risk given the way Bont moved at the end of the semi-final but the way he moved even in the warm-ups on Saturday night, without strapping on his leg, the sillier move would have been not to play him. A week off now will not upset Bont.
Beveridgeâs clever use of Schache and English provides a window on how the grand final will play out and is the Dogsâ best avenue to overcoming the side they sat one rung beneath on the ladder for much of the year.
May and Jake Lever are an exceptional tandem defensive unit, the best in the AFL this year, and so it can be expected the Dogs will seek to nullify them similarly to how they handled Aliir and Tom Jonas. Firstly, their primary objective is as protectors of Naughtonâs space. Secondly, if Naughton doesnât mark the ball they have to make sure neither of Lever or May does.
A difference on grand final day will be that where Port likes to keep Aliir away from the oppositionâs best forward, Simon Goodwin wants to put his best defender May on the oppositionâs best big forward. Youâd expect May to get Naughton. With Harrison Petty a probable opponent for English, Schache could end up trying to occupy Lever.
Mitch Hannan, the former Demon, was surprisingly good in a sort of Josh Bruce role. Itâs the role Bayley Fritsch plays so well at Melbourne as a third tall, elusive marking target. The inclusion of Cody Weightman will give them more bite at ground level.
Cats must face some tough questionsThe searching post-mortem questions at Geelong will query: the state of their list; how much the (non-COVID) virus that ripped through a bunch of players in the last week played a part in their prelim embarrassment; and whether they are so far down the road of topping up after what they gave up to get Jeremy Cameron that they canât go back now. But there is one question that stands separate to all of them.
The question is not whether they can hope to contend again with the same team (they canât, but they might have to), the question is, can they hope to contend with the same game? Can they hope to challenge and go two steps further with an old list playing a game that has again fallen short and again succumbed under intense finals pressure?
Teams that have played for territory have had more premiership success in the modern era than those controlling the ball. Geelong have liked to control the ball, believing if they have the ball you do not. Ownership of the ball means owning the tempo of the game and the manner and method of attack.
It is an effective method but one that in finals, when the pressure around the contest is higher, has often been brought unstuck. They will wonder now whether they have been brought undone by their game plan or whether the gameplan has been brought undone by their playersâ ability to play it.
Watson-Wheeler and Roffey make historyThere is one certainty about the grand final in a fortnightâs time; The president of the new premiership-winning club will be a woman.
For the first time ever, the presidents of the two clubs in the grand final are both female. And this comes after Peggy OâNeal oversaw the Tigersâ last three flags in four years.
Kylie Watson-Wheeler is now president of the Bulldogs. Kate Roffey was installed as Melbourne president this year after, it must be remembered, a remarkable boardroom change.
Given the political dramas that had engulfed Collingwood, Melbourne barely registered a blip for their changes, but they were significant if not seismic. The Demons were undefeated a month into their season when the president Glenn Bartlett was voted out of the presidency by his board.
As a senior Melbourne figure said at the time, it was the type of issue that had the capacity to hijack a season, but it didnât. On the contrary, the swift action proved to have the opposite effect of cutting off any disquiet. Roffey was installed as president and a calm descended at the Demons.
Not hyperboleFinal word to Brad Johnson, who enthused after Saturday nightâs win that it was the Bulldogsâ most meaningful victory outside a premiership.
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