Andrew Demetriou says an interchange cap is coming in 2014 and that is final
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Re: Andrew Demetriou says an interchange cap is coming in 2014 and that is final
The AFL wants to continually speed the game up, yet they introduce a sub rule and a interchange capping? It doesn't match and something has to give: the players welfare and the overall product of the game.W00F!Comment
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Re: Andrew Demetriou says an interchange cap is coming in 2014 and that is final
The players (and coaches) regularly comment on how much the game changes from year to year, particularly those who miss chunks of a season through injury (eg. Morris).
The AFL wants to continually speed the game up, yet they introduce a sub rule and a interchange capping? It doesn't match and something has to give: the players welfare and the overall product of the game.
The difference is coaches use rotations to change the demands on the players. There's very little continuous running done at training these days, it's mostly interval running to improve burst efforts followed by a brief recovery then going again. The coaches argue that burst players will become obsolete, but they don't acknowledge that the strengths of players like Daniel Cross are in danger under the current system.
Dane Swan is an elite runner under the current system but without rotations players like Boyd, Gia, and Cross would carve him up. I don't why we should be so concerned about protecting the skill set of burst players yet be ambivalent to endurance runners.[COLOR="#FF0000"][B]Western Bulldogs:[/B][/COLOR] [COLOR="#0000CD"][B]We exist to win premierships[/B][/COLOR]Comment
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Re: Andrew Demetriou says an interchange cap is coming in 2014 and that is final
I must have amnesia because I distinctly remember AD saying that anyone involved in tanking would be kicked out of the game for good.Comment
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Re: Andrew Demetriou says an interchange cap is coming in 2014 and that is final
[QUOTE=Greystache;311044 I don't why we should be so concerned about protecting the skill set of burst players yet be ambivalent to endurance runners.[/QUOTE]
This is where I stand. A player like Robert Harvey was great because he could run all day and his opponent(s) struggled to keep up. There needs to be a balance so that the game isn't lost to potential talent like him.Comment
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Re: Andrew Demetriou says an interchange cap is coming in 2014 and that is final
The game will always change and evolve. We can let it evolve naturally with coaches finding new ways to gain a tactical advantage or we can try and stifle any changes in the interest of preserving the game in it's golden 1980s form which will create more unforeseen changes which will then need to be curbed creating the endless rule shitstorm we have now.
The current burst running could be seen as an evolution of the AFL tampering with rules in an attempt to speed up the game to counter flooding, which became a non issue on it's own when tactics evolved to implement to forward press. Now anything could happen with the new interchange rules but I bet in 5-10 years the AFL will be trying to counter the effects of these new rules changes again.[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]Comment
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Re: Andrew Demetriou says an interchange cap is coming in 2014 and that is final
The only part I disagree with there hujsh is the golden 1980's. The current leaders and rule committee keep doing the same thing over and over.
Create rule, wait for rule to create something else they dont like and then create another rule to counter act the previous rule.Comment
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Re: Andrew Demetriou says an interchange cap is coming in 2014 and that is final
The game will always change and evolve. We can let it evolve naturally with coaches finding new ways to gain a tactical advantage or we can try and stifle any changes in the interest of preserving the game in it's golden 1980s form which will create more unforeseen changes which will then need to be curbed creating the endless rule shitstorm we have now.
The current burst running could be seen as an evolution of the AFL tampering with rules in an attempt to speed up the game to counter flooding, which became a non issue on it's own when tactics evolved to implement to forward press. Now anything could happen with the new interchange rules but I bet in 5-10 years the AFL will be trying to counter the effects of these new rules changes again.The only part I disagree with there hujsh is the golden 1980's. The current leaders and rule committee keep doing the same thing over and over.
Create rule, wait for rule to create something else they dont like and then create another rule to counter act the previous rule.FFC: Established 1883
Premierships: AFL 1954, 2016 VFA - 1898,99,1900, 1908, 1913, 1919-20, 1923-24, VFL: 2014, 2016 . Champions of Victoria 1924. AFLW - 2018.Comment
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Re: Andrew Demetriou says an interchange cap is coming in 2014 and that is final
The only part I disagree with there hujsh is the golden 1980's. The current leaders and rule committee keep doing the same thing over and over.
Create rule, wait for rule to create something else they dont like and then create another rule to counter act the previous rule.Comment
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Re: Andrew Demetriou says an interchange cap is coming in 2014 and that is final
I actually think the interchange cap is a good thing. Whether its 80, 100 (which I think it will be) or 120 doesn't really matter too much. Having it in place will mean that better players are on the park for longer. Nothing annoys me more than seeing Griffin go streaming into goal and kick one from 50 and then jog to the boundary line for a break.
What I think they should do to compensate though is get rid of the Sub. It should be 4interchange and a capped number of changes per quarter.Comment
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Re: Andrew Demetriou says an interchange cap is coming in 2014 and that is final
I actually think the interchange cap is a good thing. Whether its 80, 100 (which I think it will be) or 120 doesn't really matter too much. Having it in place will mean that better players are on the park for longer. Nothing annoys me more than seeing Griffin go streaming into goal and kick one from 50 and then jog to the boundary line for a break.
What I think they should do to compensate though is get rid of the Sub. It should be 4interchange and a capped number of changes per quarter.
Agree that it can be frustrating to see players come off the ground after dominating a piece of play, but why should any sort of restriction be placed on the interchange?
All rotations are calculated, cap or no cap. With a limited interchange cap you're still going to have players that kick goals but are due for a rest within the schedule of resting players dictated by that cap. If anything, players who have just dominated play but are due for a rest will be placed at more risk of injury due to fatigue if they are left on the ground under a capped system.TF is this?.........Obviously you're not a golfer.Comment
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Re: Andrew Demetriou says an interchange cap is coming in 2014 and that is final
To paraphrase J McEnroe
You cannot be serious
The game is 100 times faster, players more athletic, bigger , stronger than ever before.
To say the game was better in the Oldin' days is romantic nostalgic nonsense to be honest.
Clearly people who never saw Footscray or Stkilda play would think that.
They'll cap it at 120 I reckon. The interchange area looking like Flinders st at 5pm is not a good look for mine, and bringing one player at a time .
I actually agree with the players, 80 is too few as it doesn't allow every player to rest every quarter, which was the point Bobby made on AFL 360 the other night. If you're going to have 22 players on the field/bench, and 4 quarters, common sense dictates the minimum cap should be 88. Players with higher endurance like Daniel Cross are not going to need as many breaks as less fit blokes like Stringer, but it still becomes easier to manage and puts players minds at ease if they know they have a spell on the bench under their belt each quarter.
From a tactical perspective it does, and every year fitness departments push the players to get more out of them, but the physical capabilities of players today is not vastly different from 2007. I'm sure someone like Scott West would still be at the front of the pack in running drills.
The difference is coaches use rotations to change the demands on the players. There's very little continuous running done at training these days, it's mostly interval running to improve burst efforts followed by a brief recovery then going again. The coaches argue that burst players will become obsolete, but they don't acknowledge that the strengths of players like Daniel Cross are in danger under the current system.
Dane Swan is an elite runner under the current system but without rotations players like Boyd, Gia, and Cross would carve him up. I don't why we should be so concerned about protecting the skill set of burst players yet be ambivalent to endurance runners.Comment
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Re: Andrew Demetriou says an interchange cap is coming in 2014 and that is final
Appreciate your view, but why does having a cap or a sub make any difference?
Agree that it can be frustrating to see players come off the ground after dominating a piece of play, but why should any sort of restriction be placed on the interchange?
All rotations are calculated, cap or no cap. With a limited interchange cap you're still going to have players that kick goals but are due for a rest within the schedule of resting players dictated by that cap. If anything, players who have just dominated play but are due for a rest will be placed at more risk of injury due to fatigue if they are left on the ground under a capped system.
Maybe the skills are better than they were in the 80's and 90's, but somehow the game was less predictable. Good players still shone, but they shone on the field for a longer time. If capping interchange will move us back to that then I am all for it. Players will adjust. They will adjust to pacing themselves more through a game.
The game evolved from Sub, to 2 interchange, to 3 interchange and then to 4 interchange before a sub was introduced. Coaches got smart and evolved the game away from specialist players in set position to a bland mass of players occupying space rather than winning the ball. They evolved the game away from the specky/pack marking spectacle to a physical game of keeping off.
I live in London, so I watch pretty much only Bulldogs games. I have to compare it to watching Premier League football. Aussie Rules is always going to be my favourite game, but if I watch a Premier League game then I know that Spurs' best players and the opposition's best players are going to be on the pitch most if not all of the game, meaning they have a greater ability to influence the result. I'm not saying they always do, but having Bale or Dembele or Lennon on the pitch for 90 minutes gives more excitement to the average fan than seeing them run hard for 5 mins and the take a break. The game is better paced.Comment
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Re: Andrew Demetriou says an interchange cap is coming in 2014 and that is final
I actually think the interchange cap is a good thing. Whether its 80, 100 (which I think it will be) or 120 doesn't really matter too much. Having it in place will mean that better players are on the park for longer. Nothing annoys me more than seeing Griffin go streaming into goal and kick one from 50 and then jog to the boundary line for a break."Look at me mate. Look at me. I'm flyin'"Comment
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Re: Andrew Demetriou says an interchange cap is coming in 2014 and that is final
The cap rule will be responsible for returning the game back to the mid 00's risk-averse era, where mass numbers behind the ball and sideways chipping to retain possession will be the new norm. That is probably good news for plodding, unskilled teams who bat very deep when it comes to elite endurance.
I've always said that coaches will be risk averse with fatigued playes, meaning they'll do everything they can not to be scored against. So you're spot on, as far as I'm concerned, in that they'll just put numbers back and coach to find a way forward through slow considered movement.TF is this?.........Obviously you're not a golfer.Comment
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