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  • Week 6 2025

    Week 6 2025

    This Week In Football is a collection of some of the best in football currently outside the walls of AFL clubs or broadcasters. Each week a curated grab bag from regular contributors and special guests will provide insight into and beyond the game on subjects of their choosing. For more about our contributors, click here.

    Got an idea or want to contribute? Email thisweekinaustralianfootball at gmail dot com

    Huge shout out to Polly Porridge who designed the images and banners all across This week in football. Her design work is great. And if you are a Swans fan, or Sydney-curious, you should listen to the True Bloods Podcast.


    Before the bounce

    Welcome to the new (and hopefully) final home to This Week In Football. We’ve got a few new writers this week, and a brand new look.

    There’s also a subscribe button at the bottom, so if you want these missives each week straight to your inbox just drop your email in.


    Forever blowing bubbles

    Emlyn Breese – CreditToDuBois.com

    This is a summary of a longer piece I’ve written over at CreditToDuBois.

    Building on commentary in recent weeks, including Jasper’s piece last week, this week I’m going to take on the difficult task of dissecting bubbles.

    In the modern game teams generally defend space more than they defend players. Cody and Sean wrote about this back in 2020. In the broadest and simplest terms, a defence will be relatively happy if they can make close options risky, and long options easy to neutralise – the attacking team want to do the opposite.

    To maximise their chances, the attacking team needs to pose as many credible threats as possible. Even if you don’t use them on a given play, the more places a team feels like it needs to defend, the weaker its defence will be in any one spot. This is where the idea of the bubble comes in – it represents the area on field you can threaten. Initially you have a small bubble, through aggressive ball movement you can expand your bubble quicker than the defence can redeploy to defend it.

    I’m putting forward one (still very much in progress) method of looking at how well teams create credible threat, by looking at where the ball has tended to go.

    For this week at least, I’m limiting my scope just to intercept possessions at centre half back, which I’m defining as 40-60 metres from the defensive goal and within the width of the centre square.

    Let’s cut straight to the chase and dump a great big chart and then go through some through a few observations. I’ve chosen 6 seconds after the point of intercept as our reference point because that offered one of the better points of differentiation between teams. As you go further forward in time, the majority of all ball ends up in the forward sector (the vast majority of the field is in the forward sector at longer ranges, so this makes sense regardless of game style).

    A couple of quick things to consider:

    • Wedges are drawn at the 80th percentile of distance from the point of intercept in that sector – that is, for 4 in every 5 intercept chains the ball will be within the drawn areas 6 seconds after the point of intercept. Wedges are shaded darker based on the proportion of chains that are within that sector.
    • For every team other than Essendon (and St Kilda very marginally), the front sector is the most used
    • For every team other than Essendon, the front sector is the most used for their opponents.
    • Carlton and the Giants’ opponents aren’t going forward quickly – 80% of chains in the forward sector have travelled around 12 metres or less – contrast to Essendon, Richmond, and Sydney where that’s around the 50 metre mark.
    • St Kilda have one of the most balanced threat profiles, pretty well spread across front, lateral, and right 45s. They are also still in the back sector, but with the distance involved it looks like this is probably more from being behind the mark rather than actively moving the ball backwards.
    • Richmond favour long, lateral movement to the right.

    There’s a few important provisos here to keep in mind:

    • This is very much a work in progress, and it’s something I’ll likely keep iterating on through the season
    • The chart presented here doesn’t differentiate between intercept marks and non-marks
    • This is primarily about style, not effectiveness. I haven’t represented retention rates at all here.
    • We are still early in the season so sample sizes are low – things will be impacted by single game anomalies and which opponents a team has faced.

    As always hit me up with any feedback you have. Bluesky is probably the best place to reach me.


    Melbourne’s Inefficiency Inside 50 – System, Skill or Bad Luck?

    James Ives

    The 2025 version of the Melbourne Football Club is historically inefficient. They have the 5th worst Scores Per Inside 50 Rate of any team since 2012. If you remove the 2020 COVID season, they’re the worst.

    You might recall the shot map I released last week, where you could observe an abundance of white space around Melbourne’s hot spot. In reviewing their inside 50 kicks so far this season, you can see it’s not for a lack of trying. 

    Melbourne ranks:

    • 18th in Kicks Inside 50 Retention, and
    • 1st for Kicks Inside 50 resulting in a contest/stoppage
    • 1st for Offensive 1v1s 

    So where is it going wrong?

    I noticed a pattern in their first-quarter entries vs Essendon. Watch the video below and keep an eye on:

    1. Which forwards are sliding?
    2. Which forwards are hitting up at the ball?

    Let’s review these entries through a skill vs decision matrix, before overlaying the system component I touched on above. 

    • Skill: There were a few clear execution issues, but it’s hard to find fault in the long bombs to the hotspot.
    • Decision-making: Largely okay..  Maybe a missed opportunity to use Petracca (Langdon – example 8)
    • System: Melbourne’s ability to transition was exceptional. But upon entering the 50, every forward wanted to slide. These kicks to moving targets towards goal require elite skill and elite athletic profiles. That’s not Melbourne’s forward line. 

    This issue highlights the importance of an improved balance in Melbourne’s leading patterns. Forwards who are willing to stretch the ground vertically and horizontally to maximise the space inside 50 and know when to hit up with the intent to get used or to create a vacuum of space. This is fixable. The game against Fremantle this week presents itself as a last chance saloon to salvage their season. Melbourne’s efficiency inside 50 will go a long way in determining the outcome.


    What’s going on in the middle at Melbourne?

    Jack Turner – the Back Pocket

    Last week Cody accurately pointed out that Melbourne’s once lauded defence seems to be hanging on by a thread, even with Petty back there helping out May and McDonald. In that article he mentioned in passing Melbourne’s issues going forward, and this article builds on that, finding the KPIs that make Melbourne tick.

    In 2021, when Melbourne won their breakthrough premiership, they were ranked #3 for Clearances, #1 for Contested Possessions, #2 for Inside 50s, #2 for Scores per Inside 50 and #2 for Marks inside 50.

    They got it inside 50 more than almost anyone else, and they kept it in there until they scored. Much was talked about their all-star backline, but their attacking power was their secret asset.

    Their forwardline was already their weakness on paper, but through great positioning, good field kicking, and a great plan, they managed to spread the load – thanks to 11 players kicking double-digit goals – with medium-tall Bailey Fritsch and breakout small Kysiah Pickett kicking 99 goals between them.

    In 2025 – after five games – Melbourne currently sit #17 for Clearances, #12 for Contested Possessions, #15 for Inside 50s, #18 for Scores per Inside 50 and #18 for Marks per Inside 50. Their contested possessions, Inside 50s and Clearances were improved against Essendon on the weekend, but are still a dramatic decrease from their prime.

    These five stats, which identify and showcase the synchronisation between midfield and forwardline, are the ones Melbourne have to get right in order to be at their best. Let’s call them Melbourne’s KPIs.

    In 2018, when Melbourne surged into September and won their first final in twelve years – making their first preliminary final since their 2000 grand final loss – they were top six in the league for all of these KPIs. In 2021 they were top four in all five KPIs.

    Clayton Oliver is doing the lion’s share of clearance work at Melbourne, currently ranked sixth in the league for average clearances, but is the only Demon in the top 50.

    With a midfield mix that starts Max Gawn, Clayton Oliver, Christian Petracca, Jack Viney and Kysiah Pickett, you have to wonder how they aren’t able to at least extract the ball and get it into the underperforming forwardline (as was the issue in their doomed finals runs of 2023 and 2024).

    In 2024, there were serious issues around Melbourne’s midfield that we all recognised and understood, but with the full midfield mix back – and seemingly in full health – many expected 2025 to be a different story. 

    The loss of Alex Neal-Bullen and Angus Brayshaw can’t be underestimated, but Petracca pushing hard forward to create a target instead of focussing on winning the clearance seems akin an effort to solve world hunger by figuring out the logistics and transport before you figure out where the food is coming from. His frustration was on display for all to see against Geelong, and it was understandable.

    Whether the major issue is a poor gameplan, a lack of cohesion from a recently very disgruntled playing group, or the fact that these stars just aren’t the same players they used to be – Max Gawn is 33, Jack Viney is 30, and Petracca almost died last year – remains to be seen, but whatever it is, it needs to be fixed in a hurry or this is going to be a very long season for Melbourne fans.


    Scoring: so hot right now

    Mateo Szlapek-Sewillo, One Percenters

    Inspired by Australian sports trivia doyen Sir Swampthing’s recent tweet pointing out that Gather Round was the highest-scoring weekend of footy since Round 2, 2017, as well as persistent claims by pundits that the game is becoming ever faster and more open, I decided to dig into the numbers and divine some truths: is footy actually becoming higher-scoring? How is the composition of scoring changing? And what conclusions – at least tentative ones – might we draw about the future direction of travel?

    Some findings were as expected. Others, meanwhile, cut against the grain of expectation.

    The first and most banal conclusion is that, yes, we are in the midst of a clear upward trend in scoring.

    The chart below shows how many points sides have scored per game since 2017. Shortened quarters from 2020 are prorated for comparability throughout this piece. 

    Early in, 2025 is the highest-scoring season since 2017. That’s a reasonable sample size. At the same point last year, scores per game were within a point of the final season average.

    Let’s turn our attention to score sources – which holds the first finding I’d describe as mildly counterintuitive. Despite the frequency of claims that ball movement is the crucible of modern footy, chains beginning from stoppage wins have contributed an increasing share of scores in every season since 2021. 

    Just because an increasing share of scoring is coming from stoppage chains doesn’t mean that ball movement isn’t becoming more important. Getting the ball from the inside of the contest to the outside and then advancing up the field surely counts as “ball movement” just as much as affecting a turnover. That feeds into the next chart – where scoring chains originate.

    This may be the first indication of a true shift in how footy is being played.

    Ignore centre bounce. It’s a peripheral and, as Cody and Sean flagged in their piece last year, flukey source of scoring.

    The steady increase in scores from back-half chains is suggestive of teams placing a greater premium on the offensive (and defensive) value of moving the ball from back to front. It’s just a shame that publicly accessible data for this metric only dates back to 2021, immediately after the peak of Damien Hardwick’s famously forward-half intensive Richmond side. 

    The evidence for “ball movement” showing up in overall league scoring is somewhat ambivalent. The share of scores generated from turnovers is declining while scores from back-half chains are increasing. Surely, though – surely – the game is becoming more transition-oriented? After all, that’s what every pundit has been saying. Actually… the evidence for that is mixed. The chart below shows the average number of possession chains per side per AFLM game since 2017.

    Possession chains count how many times a side begins with the ball. Right now, despite 2025 being the highest-scoring season since 2017, it also features the fewest possession chains per game.

    Clearance numbers have remained very steady in the entire observation period. Instead, most of the observed decline in the number of possession chains is driven by declines in the number of intercept possessions per game. Again, a chart – and again, the 2020 caveat.

    I interpret this as robust although perhaps slightly counterintuitive evidence for the significance of “ball movement” in today’s game. Possession isn’t just a sword. It’s also a shield. The better you are at keeping the ball, the fewer opportunities the opposition will have to score.

    The average number of opportunities a side will have to generate a score is in decline. But the evidence suggests that sides are becoming much more adept at scoring when they win the ball – regardless of how they win it. 

    2025 marks at least the fifth straight year where the expected value of winning a clearance has increased. The expected value of turnover chains are a similarly strong upward trend. Teams are better at keeping the ball partly because the cost of losing it has probably never been higher.

    What about shot type? With thanks and credit to Andrew Whelan, creator and keeper of the extraordinary Wheelo Ratings website who personally supplied me with the shot type data:

    Since 2017, set shots vs general play have been very consistent, so it’ll be interesting to see whether the large shift between last season and this season persists.

    A related trivia question: one side has clearly scored more of its points from general play shots than set shots to date in 2025 (another is about 50/50). A shout-out in the next edition of the One Percenters newsletter to anyone who correctly guesses the identity of that side.

    Assuming these numbers a) are accurate; and b) hold, I think the most salient question to ask is how are teams becoming so much better at generating scores? Here’s where I agree with the common wisdom: players today are more skilled, attacking schemes are more mature, and (this bit is slightly more speculative) the defensive schemes to nullify them perhaps haven’t quite advanced at the same pace.

    However – this is where it gets properly impressionistic – I wonder if we’re seeing the evidence of something deeper: a shift in the overarching philosophy of how we view and play the game. The evidence is there in a more qualitative way, if you look.

    The best sides are lauded for their aptitude and speed with the ball. Winning “the contest” has never been more weakly correlated with winning actual games. It even feels like the value of defenders is increasingly measured, both in analytical spaces and also the digital pub surrounds of Bigfooty et al, by how much they contribute in possession.
    There have been higher-scoring seasons and eras. But I’d argue they were functions of either a tactically immature game (prior to the early 2000s) or super-dominant sides which overwhelmed the competition by stacking tactical and talent advantages (see: Alastair Clarkson’s Hawthorn).

    This feels slightly different, almost as though the fruit is both riper and more evenly distributed. In that regard, our current direction of travel reminds me just a little of the attacking revolution that swept through elite club soccer around the end of the 2000s – and hasn’t really abated since. Long may it continue.


    Who hasn’t lost a defensive one-on-one contest this year?

    Sean Lawson

    One of the more enigmatic statistics Champion Data and the AFL publish is the contested defensive one-on-one, with the catchy acronym of CDOOO. A one-on-one contest is defined like this:

    One-On-One Contest: A 50-50 contest that occurs after a kick, and involves only two players – a target player and a defender. Each player must have a reasonable chance to win the ball in order for a one-on-one to be recorded. Winning and losing percentages refer to how often a player wins the ball or concedes a possession to his opponent. A neutral result is recorded when the ball is spoiled or results in a stoppage.

    CDOOOs are those that occur in the back half for a given player, and they do have limitations under this definition. Most obviously, weaker team defences can concede more solo contests, which even if won well, may not be what the team wants.

    And that requirement for a reasonably even chance in the contest also matters. If you as a defender can’t get into an even-money position and are simply fully beaten, you may not even be tabbed with the contest and loss, but can’t really be said to have done your defensive job.

    Regardless, though, they contest stats have become a nice way to try to evaluate the defensive prowess of individuals who are often pretty difficult to measure and track.

    A quick look at last year’s leaders shows that it mostly passes the eye test – Harris Andrews and Sam collins facing a lot of these one v one battles with aplomb, losing very few. Less accomplished defenders spreading upwards into higher loss rates, some well organised cover defences like the Swans and Saints facing relatively few isolated 50:50s at all.

    It’s a quirky number, though. The requirement for the contest to be approximately 50:50 and isolated keeps the numbers relatively low, which makes assessing things tricky early in the year. 

    Currently, Darcy Moore has faced the most 1v1 contests this season, 20. Poor Harry Edwards sits second and looks beleaguered, having lost almost half of his contests.

    Moore, interestingly, is seeing contests at double the rate per game he faced last year, which suggests his role may be worth watching as part of the Pies’ more winning approach so far this season. Leaving him more exposed may be enabling more aggressive positioning elsewhere, relying on his individual talent to cover some extra risk-taking

    And Moore has delivered, with only the lost one contest. When did he lose this? Contested losses are difficult to pin down in the AFL app’s generally well tagged statistics-based highlights, because if a player is beaten, they usually don’t record anything taggable (unless they lose by giving a free kick).

    What we can say is Darcy Moore’s only contested one-on-one loss so far this year came against the Bulldogs. I suspect it may have been whichever of the six Sam Darcy contested marks was deemed something approximating a 50:50 contest:

    That brings us to the question here. Which players in 2025 are yet to lose a one on once defensive contest and how long can they last?

    In 2024, for comparison, the most contests without a loss was 8 by Jarrod Berry. It’s hard to sustain a fully clean sheet.

    Here’s everyone who’s seen at least 5 one v one contests without losing one:

    PlayerTeamCDOOOs without loss
    Jacob WeiteringCarlton9
    Sam De KoningGeelong7
    Lachie JonesPort Adelaide6
    Jeremy HoweCollingwood6
    Max MichalanneyAdelaide6
    Brady HoughWest Coast6
    Brodie GrundySydney5

    De Koning and Grundy are playing a different game to everyone else, both being players largely defending their opposite rucks and being notable for beating them on the deck. That may keep them in good stead against the rest of these defenders who could at any point find themselves out of position, pinned to a mismatch or needing to concede a professional free kick.

    Who holds out the longest? Which new contenders will emerge? We may check back later in the year.


    Kicking with width

    Cody Atkinson

    The ABC yesterday published an article about handballing – no need to read it…if you insist…but one thing that intrigued was that in recent years the share of handballs to kicks had actually plateaued a little. Not a great deal, but the mountain may have crested a decade or so ago.

    That raises the natural question around the other part of the equation – that of the kicking game.

    Last year’s Brisbane Lions kicked it more than any other side proportionally. This year it’s another recent premier that is leading the way.

    Brisbane’s ability to shift defence by foot has grabbed the attention of opposition teams – as well as some that have begun to ape the trend. For Geelong this kick heavy style is nothing new – it’s how they have been moving the ball over in recent years.

    The Suns represent the antithesis of this tactical shift. Their games have fewer kicks than any other teams, and a lower kick to handball ratio to boot. The Suns not only mark the ball less than any other side but they also allow fewer marks than the rest of the competition.

    That unspeakable ABC article above included one interesting item at the start – the longest goalscoring handball chain of the year from Port Adelaide. That shouldn’t come as a huge shock – the Power is firmly in the Hardwick school of handball heavy play (despite being strong for marks).

    The longest kick chain that has ended in a goal this year? Well, that would be the Dons – another normally kick-resistant side.

    *The counter broke near the end. I’m sorry.

    Of particular note is the Dons use of width and patience in moving the ball. Even as the commentators egg the Dons via telepathy to use the handball the Dons mostly hold firm. With 13 kicks to just one handball, and a couple of fairly large shifts across the ground, the Dons slide the Hawks around with ease.

    Geelong in their longest kick-exclusive scoring chains show a similar steadfastness in their speed, while utilising the whole width of the ground. Shannon Neale’s goal to open the fourth quarter against Melbourne saw the Cats go the full width of the (narrow) Kardinia Park twice.

    Making sides defend the full field is critical to finding space and mismatches in the modern game. The handball – and actual footspeed – isn’t the only way to do so.


    Are the 2020s becoming the decade of the old bloke?

    Rudi Edsall

    “Age is just a number” has long been the sentiment generally only offered by the most punishing exercise guy that you still follow because you went to high school together.

    But watching Patrick Dangerfield steamroll Adelaide last weekend at an age that would normally have commentators talking about him like an archaeologist would a well-preserved dinosaur fossil made me wonder: is 30 becoming the new 28 in the AFL?

    30 has always been perceived as the footy cliff; the Great Dividing Range where a player goes from In Their Prime to Wizened Old Sage (or worse: Over The Hill), but the best players now seem capable of squeezing every last drop of juice out of their bodies – and perhaps more pertinently, minds – to a greater degree than ever before.

    Clearly it’s likely to be due to advances in professionalism and conditioning, as well as the players’ own personalities – it’s hard to imagine Scott Pendlebury spending his offseason mainlining Bintang and mushy shakes in South East Asia for example.

    Arguably as a big a factor, however, has been a willingness on the part of both player and coaching staff to adapt. Dangerfield is the perfect example: With Tom Hawkins and Gary Rohan both moving on, the Cats needed another presence inside 50 and the decision wouldn’t have been made on a whim.

    The Cats would have reasoned that Dangerfield has the explosive speed and power, overhead ability, ruthlessness and contested marking to be a genuinely difficult matchup inside 50, rather than a player who had an attribute mismatch against their direct opponent that characterises most midfielders who push forward to impact the scoreboard.

    It’s easy to be cynical about such a switch – moving a great one-on-one player forward of the ball isn’t exactly rocket science – but the fact that Dangerfield started the first game of the season inside 50 rather than at the centre bounce was a flex that both club and player are on board with the ploy.
    It’s not just Dangerfield who is redefining himself in the post-30 landscape either – a torn Keidean Coleman ACL last year famously led to Dayne Zorko moving to half back at 35 years old and making the All-Australian team in a flag year.

    Other 30+ players have had career seasons and moments in the 2020s – Tom Hawkins was a 4x All-Australian and won a Coleman and a flag after 30, Isaac Smith was a Norm Smith Medallist at 33, Scott Pendlebury calmly orchestrated a Collingwood flag in the fourth quarter of the hottest grand final of recent memory as a 35 year old, and Steele Sidebottom stretched every millimetre of his 32 year old soft tissues to kick the sealer in that same game from platform 1 at Jolimont station.

    Incidentally, Pendlebury is now 37 and seems to be cruising towards Boomer Harvey’s all time games record – and who knows how many more games he’d have had to his name if player and coaching staff could have found a middle ground at the end of 2016?


    Around the Grounds

    Here’s some other good looks from elsewhere this week.

  • Week 5 2025

    Week 5 2025

    This Week In Football is a collection of some of the best in football currently outside the walls of AFL clubs or broadcasters. Each week a curated grab bag from regular contributors and special guests will provide insight into and beyond the game on subjects of their choosing. For more about our contributors, click here.

    Got an idea or want to contribute? Email thisweekinaustralianfootball at gmail dot com

    Huge shout out to Polly Porridge who designed the new images and banners all across This week in football. Her design work is great. And if you are a Swans fan, or Sydney-curious, you should listen to the True Bloods Podcast.


    Before the bounce

    This week the entire footballing world congregates in the city of churches to watch as much top level footy as is possible in one weekend (outside of Melbourne). Nine games in nine timeslots in one city(ish) offer the most dedicated of footy fans the opportunity to overdose on on-field action.

    It’s also rare that all eighteen clubs are in one place at roughly the same time. It provides the opportunity for discussions great and small between footy staff – hopefully away from the gaze of the tabloid media. Loose lips sink ships, or so the saying goes.

    Week five is also getting preciously close to the point in a season where there’s enough information to really form opinions about teams across the league. This holds even stronger for clubs that have changed coaches or methodologies over the summer. A month and a half provides enough tape and data for opinions to form, and become concreted in. Opposition analysis gets easier to run after this point, and teams will increasingly start to adjust to these changes.

    There’s also the real chance that a team or two comes out of Gather Round with their finals hopes severely dented, if not scuppered entirely.

    This Week In Football we have:

    • False Starts and Flag Fancies (on Fremantle)
    • Eppur si (non) muove (also on Fremantle)
    • Elements of Speed (you’d be shocked but also Fremantle)
    • The fresh ball movement data underlining Carlton’s horror transition game (surprisingly, about Carlton, not Fremantle)
    • More is not always better (not Fremantle)
    • What is the real Gather Round cost? (also not Fremantle)
    • The breakdown of a breakdown (about Melbourne, not Fremantle)

    False Starts and Flag Fancies

    Ryan Buckland

    If I were shown a picture card of the current AFL ladder as part of a psych evaluation and asked for the first thought that popped into my head, it would be the disappointment that is the Fremantle Dockers.

    With the team tucked away safely on Sunday afternoons, you probably haven’t been tortured the way I have so far this year. A team with top talent on every line, a credible and settled back six, adding Shai-frickin-Bolton, just can’t seem to Put It Together.

    That’s my diagnosis. For fits and starts, the Dockers are breathtaking in their endeavour, their speed, their skills. But when the synapses need to fire on a balmy Perth winter’s afternoon in June, the drool starts pooling and the thousand-mile stare sets in.

    Coming into the season Fremantle was a consensus top four selection. Bolton was the finishing touch on a team coach Justin Longmuir had spent five years curating, and it was all supposed to work. The results so far have been anything but the play of a team bound for September. The groans of a weary Dockers crowd – so conditioned to disappointment, so ready to feel it, but still not accepting of it – are already ringing in my ears.

    Something said on the Sunday broadcast piqued my interest, and not (just) as a chance to sink the boot into little brother: the Fremantle Dockers haven’t grown up.

    In a league which the excellent Cody and Sean are telling us is getting older by the year, the Dockers are getting younger. In fact, in the Longmuir Era, Fremantle’s selected team age profile has been below the league average every single week.

    Ross Lyon, still the only coach to take Fremantle to a Grand Final, oversaw the early years of deleveraging once it became clear the team wasn’t quite good enough to win it all. Between 2015 and 2019 the average age of the selected Fremantle side declined from a peak of 26.7 years (~1.5 years above league average and the oldest team in the league) to a low of 24.3 years (~0.8 year below league average and amongst the youngest).

    Hence, the team has bubbled along below league average, rising and falling but staying anchored in the depths of inexperience.

    All things being equal, if a club picks 23 players and the team doesn’t change from one year to the next, the average age will go up by a year. The fact Fremantle’s age has continuously fluctuated around the same marker for each of Longmuir’s five seasons hints this isn’t happening.

    This is a significant contrast to teams who have contended for flags for long periods of time over the past decade. 

    Consider Richmond, from 2016 to 2022, Brisbane from 2018 to 2024, or even West Coast from 2014 to 2020.

    That’s a few selected examples (you can play with the data here). But pick any team who has been at the top for a sustained period over the last ten years and the same broad pattern repeats. Settled coach. Core team forms. The age and experience of the selected team grows by the week, and the contention window opens.

    The Dockers have been hit hard by player departures over the past few seasons. Bradley Hill, Blake Acres, Lloyd Meek, Liam Henry, Jesse Hogan, Adam Cerra, Rory Lobb, Griffin Logue, Darcy Tucker and Lachie Shultz all left the club between 2019 and 2023. None of them are out of the league yet, suggesting they could have been critical cogs in the Longmuir machine.

    They have been replaced by some experienced players coming through the doors, but in the main the Dockers have leaned into the draft. Murphy Reid, a strong Rising Star candidate for mine, is the latest in a line of quality players taken in recent years.

    Fremantle want to play a very precise, controlling game. This is evidenced by an excellent observation of Emlyn Breese this week: the 2025 Dockers have the highest rate of kicking from behind the mark of any team since this stat is available to mere mortals. The second highest is the 2021 Dockers.

    Longmuir himself moved over to a permanent employment contract with the Fremantle Football Club before the start of this season proper, ala Brendon Bolton at the Blues before him. Interpreted as a sign of comfort between coach and club, could it have been tacit recognition that there’s still a ways for the Dockers to go before they reach their apex?

    A fortnight of opportunity to show us what they’ve really got awaits, with the young Tigers on neutral ground and hapless Dees on the wide expanses of the MCG on the slate. Anything less than eight quarters of excellence will be a resounding answer to this question.


    Eppur si (non) muove

    Emlyn Breese / bsky.credittodubois.com

    In news that will surely make David King’s heart sing, Fremantle are by one metric the most stop-start team of any from 2021 onwards.

    In the season to date, only 26.4% of frees or marks to Fremantle sees them do something other than taking the kick from behind the mark.

    The next lowest is also Fremantle – in their 2021 incarnation – at 27.5%.

    This year has an outlier at the other end also  – This year’s Giants are the highest from 2021 onwards at a rate of 38.7%.

    Now, the lowest from 26.4% to the highest at 38.7% gives a relatively narrow band, so let’s see if we can unpack it a bit more. A decent chunk of frees and marks in the forward half will be in viable scoring range. Most of the time a team is going to go back and take the shot – or at least think about doing so and then potentially find a pass in a better position.

    If we only take marks/frees in the defensive half the differences become far more apparent.

    Fremantle in 2025 are still the lowest we’ve got on record at 28.2%, but the highest we’ve got is up at 52.3%, and they’re another 2025 team.

    In fact, the four highest on record are all from 2025 – Gold Coast (52.3%), Port Adelaide (46.0%), Essendon (45.2%) and GWS (44.3%).

    If we limit it even further just to defensive half intercept marks and frees Freo are yet again the lowest in our records (17.6%), and four 2025 teams are on top, although not all four are the same – Port Adelaide (43.5%), Sydney (43.0%), GWS (41.9%), and Collingwood (41.7%)

    Now, this may change over the course of the season. Small sample sizes will often lead to outlier results, but it’s certainly something worth keeping an eye on.


    Elements of Speed

    James Ives

    Off the back of Emlyn & Ryan’s analysis, let’s continue with the Fremantle theme. Here is a snapshot of how long it takes each team to dispose of the ball from a mark.

    Fremantle are clearly the slowest team in the comp across all three zones leading into the forward 50m, closely followed by Collingwood. Essendon, Brisbane and Geelong like to keep the ball in motion. St Kilda, Richmond and West Coast appear to speed up as they move the ball up the ground, while the likes of Gold Coast and Carlton get slower.

    These stylistic differences can part personnel, part where the game is being played. If you’re a front half team generating intercept marks high up the ground, you may need to be patient, rather than blazing the ball back into congestion. If you’re winning the ball in your back half with elite foot skills at your disposal, you may prefer to slice your way up the ground with quick release kicks.

    If you’re neither of these, you may prefer slow long-down-the-lines while over-indexing at the contest to win the chaos game. There’s no right or wrong if everyone’s on the same page.


    The fresh ball movement data underlining Carlton’s horror transition game

    Jasper Chellappah

    New ‘speed of ball movement’ captures from Champion Data in 2025 present a clear summary as to where Carlton’s transition footy is at. These metrics need to be unpacked, but they back up a fair bit of what you can figure out watching the 0-4 Blues yourself. They routinely panic bomb the ball on top of their key forwards’ heads, neglect to create overloads in transition and frustratingly go slow when they have the opposition on their heels. 

    Thanks to CD’s Chistian Jolly on the ESPN Footy Podcast for these fresh numbers.

    To start, the Blues move the ball fastest of all 18 teams from an uncontested mark. That is to say, from the point that an uncontested mark is taken anywhere on the ground, Carlton players gain the most metrage in the least amount of time. Conversely, the Blues are the fifth slowest team in moving the ball from a contested mark. Let’s dive into what that means in a footballing sense.

    When the Blues find an uncontested mark they throw the game back into chaos more than any other team. There’s little regard given to retaining possession, picking holes through defences and methodically working up the ground. In reality, AFL defences are best set up when allowing an uncontested mark – it often means midfielders have rolled behind the ball and allowed the open space. It’s been rare to see the Blues retain possession and work the ball up the ground through switches and the ‘45’ corridor kick. It shows in the fifth least uncontested marks per game.

    Given they’ve struggled to retain the ball, it’s mind boggling to consider that Carlton would consistently bomb the ball forward to outnumbered situations. With no method to the madness, the Blues are systematically kicking long into set defences and turning it over from positions of advantage.

    The game is quicker than ever before. But moving the ball quickly isn’t always wise, and the best teams pick their moments. For example, moving the ball long and direct when the opposition is well set up is not the method of Brisbane, Collingwood or Geelong, our three most recent premiers.

    Michael Voss shoulders as much of the blame for this as his charges. It’s a game plan contrived from the ideals of territory footy and metres gained, where winning the midfield battle would more often than not win you the game. But footy has changed and the Blues haven’t changed with it.

    What makes these numbers all the more confounding is the fact that Carlton is the fifth slowest team to move the ball from a contested mark. You can probably envisage those moments – where a bruised and battered Charlie Curnow has taken his time up off the ground after a big pack mark on the wing, or where Jacob Weitering’s intercept hasn’t kick-started transition but rather led to a slow-play bomb down the line.

    They take the third most contested marks per game so it’s not a rare aspect of their makeup. Carlton win the aerial 50-50s better than the vast majority but concede any advantage they gain.

    The Blues have elite aerialists in Curnow, Weitering, Tom De Koning and the returning Harry McKay. The upside of contested marks around the ground is opposition defences are typically unset. There’s space out the back or pockets of open grass in the corridor to exploit. These are the moments where good teams go quickly, take ground with handball chains or inboard kicks and drive the ball deep inside 50 over the back of the scrambling defence. 

    Adam Simpson explained this concept on AFL360; the ‘small bubble’ and ‘big bubble’ in relation to the fastest ball movement side in the AFL, Brisbane. As soon as they took a mark the opposition wasn’t willing to concede “the bomb goes off” and scoring opportunities present.

    Applying this to the Blues, as soon as they take a contested mark they expand the bubble and the bomb should explode. But it doesn’t. Instead, Carlton becomes the slowest team in the league to move the ball. These are rolled gold scoring opportunities being snuffed out by a lack of recognition and impetus.

    The Blues are playing transition footy the wrong way around. They kick long to shallow inside 50s off uncontested marks and go painfully slow after opening the ground up with contested marks. It therefore makes sense that the club is top four at intercepting the ball in the air, but bottom two for scores from turnover. This group sits at the bottom of the league for disposal efficiency and leads all comers for clangers per outing. 

    There’s an issue of personnel, but on these metrics the Voss game plan simply isn’t stacking up with modern footy standards.


    More is not always better

    Lincoln Tracy

    Last week Cody Atkinson looked at this season’s Ironmen – the players who have spent barely spend any time on the pine across the matches to date.

    Cody makes some great points about the potential benefits of allowing certain players extended stints on the ground.

    But after reading his piece I couldn’t help but think about the fact that just because a player spends a lot of time on the ground doesn’t guarantee they will have a significant impact on the game.

    For example, Ben McKay, who averages 99% time on ground across the three games he has played this year, has copped it from all angles over his performances thus far.

    Which leads me to ask the seemingly obvious question: who has spent a lot of time on the ground but had little to no impact on the game?

    (I will admit that I originally wanted to look at the relationship between distance covered and impact, but that question will have to wait for another day as detailed Telstra Tracker data are not publicly available, as far as I can tell.)

    It’s worth noting the AFL Player Ratings only measures direct impact. For key position defenders a lack of impact can often be a positive – a sign that an opposition side is unwilling to attack them, or unable to due to superior positioning. Until there’s further development in this space (such as from including player tracking information), there’s missing information for the effectiveness of defenders.

    The AFL have an official measure of the direct impact each player has on a game – player rating points – so we can use that in our attempts to find an answer.

    The table below displays the minimum, maximum, and average AFL ratings points for players who average at least 95% time on ground across at least three games. As Cody highlighted last week, the list features a lot of key position defenders.

    McKay doesn’t have the lowest recorded player rating in terms of an individual game – that “honour” goes to Brisbane’s Harris Andrews for his 12-disposal effort in the Lions’ 28-point win against Richmond over the weekend.

    But he does have the lowest average player rating, with scores of 6.4, 5.9, and 4.0 from his three games to date.

    Essendon fans will be hoping the week off will be just what McKay needed ahead of their Gather Round clash against Melbourne on Saturday night.

    At the other end of the spectrum, Carlton’s Jacob Weitering just edges out Sam Taylor (Greater Western Sydney) and Tom McDonald (Melbourne) as the player who has spent the most time on the ground and had the greatest apparent impact on the game during said time on ground.

    The Blues have left their fans frustrated this year, sitting with a 0-4 record despite leading at half time in each of their matches. If the same happens against the bottom-placed Eagles this week, Weitering’s consistency will be of little comfort.


    What is the real Gather Round cost?

    Sean Lawson

    Gather Round is generally regarded as a success for the South Australian government, with the whole city seeming to get decked out with inflated footballs, club colours, and advertising boards, while several thousand travelers roll in to fill the hotels, and the eyes of the footy world fall on Adelaide for a few days.

    All this comes at a monetary cost, however, with the ABC currently estimating 16 to 20 million dollars a year being spent by the government on the event. This is a fair chunk of money, easily the most ever forked out by a government other than Victoria’s on the rights to host footy games. The SA government outlay was enough to get the AFL to quietly put aside any plans of using its answer to the NRL’s Magic Round as a tool for footy promotion in New South Wales, an idea that eventually became the much more watered-down Opening Round concept without the actual addition of extra games to the schedule.

    But how does the Gather Round expenditure, as reported, actually stack up with other outlays by state, territory and local governments for AFL content?

    The Gather Round deal, taking $18 million as the median of the most recent reported values, costs almost double any other AFL content deal on a per game basis, with the WA government spend to bring North Melbourne to Bunbury and Perth, and the Hawks’ new Launceston deal the other contracts currently costing over one million dollars per game.

    However, Gather Round caters to some fairly large crowds and when looked at on a per-attendee basis, looks about middle of the pack with the most comparable deals, roughly on par with what the ACT government spends bringing footy to Canberrans.

    This also means that if other states do try to force the issue with the AFL before Gather Round gets entrenched as a permanent fixture in South Australia (and a permanent fixturing leg-up for its teams), another state is probably going to have to outbid the total expenditure, and in doing so they’ll perhaps do it without any guarantee of comparable crowds in isolated Perth or non-football heartland Brisbane or Sydney.


    The breakdown of a breakdown

    Cody Atkinson

    Zero and four is not a good start to a football season. This is where Carlton, Melbourne and West Coast fans start to wince in unison.

    But for all the issues to date with the Blues and Eagles in 2025, let’s turn our attention instead to the side that has most recently been premiers.

    Most would point to Melbourne’s forward line as being the biggest source of their issues. After all, they’ve struggled to get the ball forward, mark the ball up forward and score at all.

    The three teams at the bottom there? Yep, the 0-4 club. But let’s ignore that for a second – just a brief one.

    When Melbourne was at their competition beating best it wasn’t because of their attack but instead their defence. Led by Steven May and Jake Lever, the Demons were as solid down back as any other side – providing room for their sometimes sputtering attack to…well, sputter. Between their defence and the weight of ball they could win from stoppages, the Demons could grind sides into submission.

    This year their defence has struggled to find its rhythm through personnel issues and what seems to be broader communication problems.

    Here’s an example from last week’s game.

    This is ugly stuff. There’s at least five errors in the clip above – from not denying space for the lead, to not communicating who should be marking who, and even the poor kick at the start. Despite all of this Melbourne still spoil the kick (partially due to Stengle cutting the lead), but don’t have effective support at ground level to stop Dangerfield.

    Again – how do you leave PATRICK DANGERFIELD so open in the forward 50?

    The Demons are struggling in stopping both raw volumes of opposition scoring shots, and allowing high quality shots against them. Melbourne is bottom four in both these measures – usually a sign of a very, very, very bad defence.

    At times Melbourne seems stuck between a more zone based defence – protecting space instead of players – and a man defence with spares utilised for protection. At times – from the comfort of the couch – it appears that exact roles and responsibilities aren’t getting communicated on the field effectively.

    To be fair to Mebourne they have struggled with availability. However, with Jake Lever out for up to two months, this may not get better any time soon.

    Melbourne are running out of time – if something doesn’t change soon, their season will be over early.


    Around the Grounds

    Here’s some more stuff that isn’t from here but is good to take in about footy

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