Essendon look to be the pick of the new teams
There are two massive changes
to the AFL Women’s competition for this season. The first is that the
competition has moved to winter, with “Season 7” kicking off just a few months
after the previous one ended. The second is that the four remaining AFL clubs
without a women’s team – Essendon, Hawthorn, Port Adelaide, and Sydney – have now
joined the league, meaning that the league’s expansion is (for now) complete.
In general it has been tricky
to rate these new teams coming in, although most have struggled against the
more established sides (North Melbourne being the main exception). For ranking
purposes I’ve tended to use the bookmaker’s odds to assign each new team an
initial ranking, with the view that these should soon adapt if the strength of
the new teams turns out to be significantly different to prior expectations.
Pre-season expectations however
are looking to be fairly on base with regard to one team so far, namely Essendon
who have built themselves a pretty handy side. They were the only new side to
win on the weekend, and while that win came against another new team in
Hawthorn, it was still an impressive display by the Bombers as they had 17
scoring shots and a +16 contested possession differential.
Essendon’s playing list has a
good mix of both experienced AFLW and VFLW players, and quality rookies. 2020 AFLW
best and fairest winner Madison Prespakis leads the midfield, while former
All-Australian Jess Wuetschner and 2022 All-Australian squad member Bonnie
Toogood give them reliable targets up forward. The Bombers also have some promising
draft picks and players from their undefeated 2022 VFLW premiership side such
as Paige Scott, Alana Barba, Danielle Marshall, and Amelia Radford.
Essendon will certainly have
some tougher tests later in the season than they did on the weekend, but it was
a polished performance by the Bombers in their first match.
An
early trend?
One suggestion coming into
this AFL Women’s season about how the switch to a winter season might change
the style of play was that there may be more tackles and contests, due to the
wetter and colder weather.
While it was not particularly wet on the weekend, we did see a shift to a more contested style of play, or perhaps more accurately a shift away from an uncontested one. Many teams recorded more contested than uncontested possessions in the first round, with an average ratio of 1.03 compared with 0.88 last season (see table below). However this was primarily due to a drop in the number of uncontested possessions, with contested possessions staying at similar levels. Though we might expect some of the new teams to go through some growing pains before being able to create clean chains of uncontested possessions, well-established sides such as Fremantle and Adelaide also struggled to link up.
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