Greater Western Sydney may have had their
best side a few years ago, but they are still looking good enough to be in
premiership contention.
2016:
peak-GWS
The 2016 AFL season saw
the emergence of the Greater Western Sydney Giants (I’m not capitalising
Giants) as a top eight side, and was probably their best team and season to
date.
The
Giants won 16 out of 22 home and away matches, with a percentage of 143.1, and
crushed first-placed Sydney in the first week of the finals. They finished with
about five goals worth of ranking points, which historically is really
good.
The Giants were strong all over the ground. They were the second-highest
scoring team, and had the fourth-least points against per game. They also
averaged the most inside 50s and clearances per game.
The
Giants have probably never again been as deep as they were that year either
(see table below). GWS came into the league on a wave of generous draft
concessions and recruitment rules to better enable them to
compete. That 2016 side had their initial young, big name recruits Callan
Ward, Phil Davis, and Tom Scully, then entering the prime of
their careers. They had high draft picks Stephen Coniglio, Dylan Shiel, Toby
Greene, Nick Haynes, Adam Tomlinson, and Jonathon Patton. They had young
All-Australian Jeremy Cameron. They had emerging players Josh Kelly and Lachie
Whitfield. And they had ‘top-up’ veterans Heath Shaw, Ryan Griffen, Shane
Mumford, and Steve Johnson.
It was
possibly ‘peak-GWS’. It ended however with them losing their preliminary
final to a red-hot Western Bulldogs, with Bulldog Clay Smith
playing the game of his life.
The
Giants were expected to be as strong, or even stronger, in years to come.
Player unavailability and departures though weakened their side somewhat over
the next couple of years, although with fewer dominant sides around they still
managed to finish fourth and sixth. In
2017
they lost Coniglio, Griffen, Johnson, Greene, and Whitfield for significant
time due to injuries or suspension. In 2018 they lost Greene again for
significant time, as well as Kelly, Patton, Mumford, and Zac Williams (see
table above). They also lost Devon Smith and Nathan Wilson to other teams.
This
season, it looked like they could be further weakened by player departures.
Dylan Shiel, Tom Scully, and Rory Lobb all left, with the Giants reportedly
facing a ‘salary
cap squeeze’. Maybe the AFL’s seemingly predestined
dynasty had missed its window.
2019: the Giants are looking
close to their best again
It’s
still early in 2019, but the Giants have so far again been performing closer to
their ‘peak’ 2016 levels.
Over
their first four matches of the season, their average net margin adjusted for
estimated opponent strength and home ground advantage is +35 points (see chart
below). The Giants have thrashed finals aspirants Essendon and Richmond, and
impressively, beat top-ranked Geelong at the Cats’ home ground on the weekend
(though they did get well beat by West Coast). They are again among the
league’s leaders for points scored and points allowed.
Looking
further back, since their horror stretch towards the middle of last season, the
Giants have been one of the league’s strongest teams, and now sit second on the
rankings.
Despite
those player departures, the Giants still have a pretty good list. Shiel and
Scully are gone, but their places in the midfield have been filled by some of
the high draft picks GWS got after their initial 2011 draft harvest (see table
in previous section). This includes Josh Kelly, Tim Taranto, and Jacob Hopper,
as well as the team’s leading possession getter Lachie Whitfield, who has
covered so much ground that he leads the team in inside 50s and is second in rebound
50s.
As in
2018 Toby Greene and Jonathon Patton have been mostly unavailable so far, but
the Giants have covered their scoring through increased production from Cameron
and moving Jeremy Finlayson to the forward line. Mumford is back in the ruck. On
the negative side, the Giants have now lost captain Callan Ward to a serious
knee injury.
Can
they keep this up? I still think the Giants are not quite as deep as that 2016
side. Whitfield, Cameron, and Hopper are playing well beyond the levels they
have performed at in their careers to date, and they may need to keep doing so
for the Giants to stay in their current form. They do still have Greene and Patton
to return though.
In any case, the Giants
seem to have kept their ‘premiership window’ open based on their season to
date. Another decent finals run may be ahead of them, and finally, a chance to
win their first premiership.
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