This year’s top-ranked AFLW team so far, the Kangaroos,
are pulling down the marks close to their goal line.
After
three rounds of the 2019 AFLW season new team the Kangaroos are the
best-performed team, with three wins and a percentage of 250.8. They have won
their first three matches by four goals or more, including an impressive
31-point win against reigning premiers the Western Bulldogs on Friday night.
It may
seem like the Roos are winning out all over the field, and to an extent they
are (they’ve kept their opponents to an average of 20 points). However they
only rank fourth in terms of getting the ball inside 50 metres – with just one
more than Carlton, who they actually lost the inside 50 count to in their first
match.
Where
the Kangaroos have outranked teams is the rate at which they score once they
get the ball inside 50 metres. They have scored 153 points from 86 inside 50
entries, or 1.77 points per inside 50. That rate is better than any men’s team
from last season (though the
West Coast Eagles when they had Josh Kennedy and Jack Darling playing was kind
of an exception).
The
Roos’ forward efficiency has been helped by their prowess at taking marks
inside 50. They have taken 26 marks inside 50 from their 86 entries, at a ratio
of about 30 per cent. The most potent AFL men’s offence in 2018 – Melbourne’s –
had a ratio of less than 25 per cent.
What
also matters is where the Kangaroos have been getting those marks inside their forward zone. In this year’s
Champion Data AFLW Prospectus, Chloe McMillan noted that the two AFLW premiers so
far tended to get more of their scores from kicks close to goal (i.e. less than
15 metres out). A kick for goal from 30 to 40 metres out isn’t really ideal for
the kicking range of some AFLW players. Watch the highlights from Friday
night’s game, and you’ll see that Courteney Munn didn’t have to roam far
from the goal square for any of her four goals, nor generally did the other
North players.
The AFLW Kangaroos are
really doing what every football team hopes to do – mark the ball deep inside
50 and get an easy set shot close to goal. Next week’s match against Melbourne –
who despatched the other of last year’s grand finalists, Brisbane, by almost 40
points on the weekend – could be a belter.
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