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THE Western Bulldogs will ramp up their focus on Melbourne captain Max Gawn after their main session on Saturday, giving Stefan Martin time to absorb the daunting challenge of confronting the game’s premier ruckman in the grand final.



THE Western Bulldogs will ramp up their focus on Melbourne captain Max Gawn after their main session on Saturday, with senior assistant Steven King set to give Stefan Martin time to absorb the daunting challenge of confronting the game’s premier ruckman in next week’s grand final.

Gawn was the dominant performer in his team’s 83-point thumping of Geelong in the preliminary final, while Martin, who was recalled against Port Adelaide having not played since Round 12, was a strong contributor in the Dogs win.

King, who played in the 2007 premiership with Geelong and has been with the Dogs since the end of 2011, said it was almost impossible to shut Gawn out of the game entirely, but added there would be ways Martin could limit his output.

“Max is a fantastic player in the prime of his powers and traditionally we have gone into games without ruck dominance, so we do put a lot of time into opposition rucks and where we think they are going to the ball and what they try to do around the ground,” King said.

“This week will be no different and Stef has obviously got a heap of experience and is very diligent in the way he prepares for a game.

“I will probably sit down with him more next week I think once we get through the main session on Saturday because I think you can over play it and do too much too early because we have got the extra week.

“So we will let last week digest a little bit and then as a coaching group come up with a few strategies we think will help us and make sure our rucks are across that. You are not going to cut a player like Max Gawn out of the game but hopefully there are a few things you can do to limit him.”

The Demons and Bulldogs are one-one from their two games in 2021, and with deep midfields it is there that the match could be won and lost.

King acknowledged that curbing the influence of Clayton Oliver at stoppages would be important, but said the Dogs would back their system in to try to overcome the Demons.

“We have played them twice this year and once it didn’t go our way and the second time it did,” he said.

“Clayton is a fantastic player, as is a handful of their mids, so it is going to be a fascinating battle within the battle with those midfielders.

“You have to back your system and do what you do but you have got to be aware and have an ability to see what the opposition’s strengths really are without taking too much away from what you want to do.

“So like any game we will prepare and make sure the ball falls in a certain area so we can compete but I think our midfield is capable of matching it with every midfield in the comp and especially now that Stef is back, if we can perform at the level we know we are capable of and are diligent in how we set up then I think we can match Melbourne in there for sure.”