End of the ‘bye’ rounds – the
mid-season wasteland in the AFL schedule when the football feels very cold,
blank, and June-ish. Except the vacant match slots haven’t seemed to have felt
as pronounced as previous years. Perhaps it is because of the relatively even nature
of the season, with only two wins (OK, effectively three wins given percentage)
separating fourth (Port) from fifteenth (Carlton) on the ladder. Teams down the
bottom of the ladder have about a
one-in-five chance of making the finals – enough to keep the
optimistic hopes of fans alight, rather than have them virtually
extinguished.
One club which has usually had
its hopes already extinguished in recent years is Melbourne, who is now
enjoying its highest-ever rankings spot (sixth). Stretches of years at the
bottom are meant to yield high draft picks and the best young players to help
get a team back up the ladder again. But Melbourne’s stint at the bottom from
2007 to 2010 yielded few long-term players – let alone long-term stars – with
Morton (‘07), Grimes (‘07), Scully (‘09), Trengove (‘09), Gysberts (‘09), and
Cook (‘10), all gone or virtually gone from the club for one reason or another.
At this point the Demons look to be getting good production out of their next
generation of high picks (in particular Clayton Oliver), complemented by solid
pick-ups from other clubs. More proof that, in the modern AFL system, a team won’t
stay down the bottom for years on end.
Meanwhile, the Demons’
victims on the weekend – the Western Bulldogs – seem to be reverting back
to the level they were at before that magical run in the 2016 finals
series. As predicted on this blog as
early as Round 1 this year (I only highlight the predictions that come
true), comments have come about the Bulldogs being ‘off
the boil’, even though they are playing at around the same level as they
did for most of last year. It’s true that they have dropped off a bit more in
the past couple of weeks, but the Bulldogs not being among the top clubs to
date in 2017 was not the hardest thing to predict this season.
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