Monday 9 September 2024

Mid-Morning Misery

In the days when a national women's competition was as fanciful as Melbourne winning flags, I thought our regular 1.10pm games weren't early enough. All it took to finally get our AM test case was the AFL losing interest in this competition after a week when the men came back from their break, but as it obviously wasn't done for the right reasons I'll wait for more evidence before bringing down a verdict.

The process of jamming games in anywhere they fit landed us with the ultimate in "you're not really taking this seriously are you?" fixture of recent premiers at 11.05am Saturday morning. I'm not suggesting going head to head with finals, but scheduling a game at this time was severe extraction of piss. There were five games on Sunday but none in prime time, and if the CBA allows it how about an emergency Monday night game. Anything that looks more professional than the spot usually reserved for Auskick games.

Speaking of presenting your product in a way that makes it look credible, the only upside to the (presumed) end of the Fortress Casey era is that people can stop pretending it's good just because we win there. Maybe I'm just anti because Cranbourne is about as far from my house as Shepparton, but just in case Brad Green asserts his newfound Presidential authority by revoking my membership, this is a good time to remind you that the views expressed on this page are not representative of the Melbourne Football Club. My view is that they should clear civilians then attack with helicopters like Apocalypse Now. When one of the benches displayed a petrol can sign I thought it might be the not-so-subtle secret code to do an insurance job.

The club is desperate to get the name 'Field of Dreams' over, but that's only valid if you're a player, or dream about being trapped in a windy outer suburban park with a Chemist Warehouse truck in the forward pocket. Nobody official will admit these are rotten places to play but well done to the Hawthorn player who went delightfully off-script and basically said "stuff Frankston, giz stadiums". Nobody wants to put money in Carlton's pocket, but the Victorian match of the round should be played at Princes Park. Or Punt Road, or Victoria Park. Anywhere central that has at least one end protected from the wind.

Anti-Casey sentiment is one thing, but I doubt we'd have won this game at any venue in Australia. Regardless of Brisbane stinking it up last week, our depth has gone from 'fish pond' to 'Kalahari Desert' and things are looking a bit dire. On top of everyone who did a runner in the off-season and Purcell's pre-season injury, it's goodbye Tayla Harris for the year with a shoulder injury we knew about, and Lauren Pearce for what sounds like a long time after nuking her wrist at training.

Harris blazed the trail for Harris(on Petty) by playing forward all last year for just three goals, but in this case I'll accept she's more benefit to the structure than any available alternatives. This was best demonstrated by them bringing in Georgia Campbell as a replacement, even though we still had (at the time) Pearce and Watt as rucks. Campbell is the new Spencil, athletic and enthusiastic but miles off the pace. Let's see if the story is followed faithfully and she finally looks like making it just as future multiple-time All-Australian storms past and takes over. 

No matter how long Pearce is out for, that's a massive loss. There are a lot of worse teams than Brisbane to test ourselves against, but despite the good vibes from last week I'm nearly ready to write us off as a serious premiership chance and start thinking about the Ms. Bradbury Plan just to get into the top eight. Going off the injury reports I think we're down to four available players (Gall, Johnson, Madigan and D. Taylor), so when they cut to Zanker on the bench looking wrecked I thought we were on the verge of dialling Rent-A-Player for the first time since the Tex Perkins era.

Team selection chaos opened the door for our top draft pick Alyssia Pisano to debut. Giving top prospects experience and trying a different type of player to our spluttering attack were both good things, but parachuting an emerging forward into this side is like sending yachting's Rising Star nominees to Outer Mongolia. She helped set up and kick the same goal but otherwise it was pretty much just one big development opportunity, because even the regular forwards couldn't get near it. Brisbane made sure Kate Hore couldn't single-handedly rescue the side this time and down we went.

There was much fanfare about Bannan becoming the youngest player to 50 games but this is two games in a row where she's done sod all. Young player, plenty of upside, no other options etc... so happy to play her and hope for the best but since the start of last year her goalkicking is 3, 3, 0, 1, 0, 0, 5, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0 - and the five was against a practically invisible West Coast. She's not alone, our scoring has coming to a screaming halt since the glory days of tonking rotten teams last year. In a situation familiar to fans of the male game, I'll punch on to protect the reputation of the backline but they can only do so much if we're not scoring at the other end.

This was a great day for fans of our defenders, because they spent 95% of the game stopping Brisbane from kicking a massive score. The rest of the side could barely get their hands on it early, while the only similarity to beating Brisbane in a Grand Final was Gillard doing a fantastic, unheralded job of keeping them out. If I wait long enough to publish this the coaches' votes will show whether I'm barking up the wrong tree (if we get any), but her not even getting a mention in our best players on the AFL website is a triumph for judging them on disposal count alone.

The early minutes looked just like last week, grim defensive struggle and complete inability to convincingly move the ball beyond halfway. This time there wasn't even the token presence of Harris, and Hore had an opponent hanging off her all day, leaving us no chance of kicking a goal. Zanker is just kind of there without being particularly dangerous, and with the delivery reduced to panicky quick kicks, Brisbane played in extended training drill mode. 

Our first decent build-up of the quarter fell apart on the last kick, then went the other way for a goal. Double farce rewards points for it coming from a speculative long shot that bounced over everybody's head. This led to the only entertaining bit of the opening half, as my kid walked past and shrieked in delight thinking the Lions had a player called Taylor Swift. I had to make her stay until the post-goal graphic to confirm it was actually Taylor Smith. After that brief outbreak of joy, it was back to watching us trailing around behind the opposition in an ironic flashback to all the times we were the bigger and better team taking advantage of the misfortune of others.

Everything was going against us, including Brisbane players successfully hoodwinking the umpires by signalling their own free kicks like it was the 1870s. One was for a last touch that I'm sure - and god knows no review will be done to check - came off one of their players, but the same people who couldn't spot a holding the ball if their lives depended on it said "well, that's good enough for me". What would we have done with the ball anyway?

Maybe Christian Petracca saw the bit last week where I said he wouldn't get another mention during AFLW season and thought he'd stitch me up by making a cameo appearance. Either that or he and Tayla Harris were holding a 'building your brand' workshop that just happened to coincide with the game. Or they were discussing a class action for Melbourne players who kept going after injury before discovering something was seriously wrong with them.      

Considering Brisbane's early domination, there's some credit in keeping the final margin to 18 points. We've done so well over the years that we've only ever lost four games by more. But keeping that part of the damage down is one thing, there's no point losing by that much after kicking 0.1. When we finished the opening quarter with that much, I was straight to the record books for our all-time lowest score. The 'winner' is 1.2.8 against Adelaide in 2019, and I had no faith in matching it by adding the required 1. to our quarter time score of .2. 

We've previously won four times after scoring nowt in the first term but there was no obvious path to recovery here. Then things got a bit weird, as we held the opposition scoreless but reached half time looking no more likely to win due to only adding a point of our own - and even that was right at the end. Everyone was having a good old fashioned crack but it's probably a good thing that only the most enthusiastic enthusiasts were watching. It was a good defensive effort on our behalf, but ultimately about as useful as keeping one of their players to zero disposals while another was on her way to an all-time record of 43. 

There was a temporary outbreak of fun and frivolity in the third quarter when Pisano kicked her first goal, but otherwise the only thing to look forward to was reaching the final siren without anyone else getting hurt. Cut to Eden Zanker on the bench looking like she'd seriously hurt her arm and I was about to join the other 99.99% of the community and go do something else. Zanker randomly appeared again in the last quarter so I assume all is well, but what's another player who comes back after being hurt before never being seen again? If all goes wrong she could be #3 in the Petracca-Harris vs MFC lawsuit. I'm sure there was a game against Richmond where President Green was carried off on a stretcher before returning to the field but can't find any mention of it in the archives so maybe not. There goes the "yeah, but look at how well I've done?" legal option.

And really, what else is there to say? It's hard to describe a game in any detail when most of it was just the opposition doing what they liked. The effort from our side was there but they were collectively so far behind the Lions that the final margin could be considered some sort of triumph. I'm settling in for a big year of enjoying my favourite defenders keeping us afloat. I'd say more of the good stuff, less of the bad stuff but it might be a case of 'more of the shit teams, less of the good teams'. Here's to our first ever 18 team version of AFLW look at mid-table mediocrity.

2024 Daisy Pearce Medal for Player of the Year
5 - Tahlia Gillard
4 - Blaithin Mackin
3 - Kate Hore
2 - Sarah Lampard
1 - Maeve Chaplin

Apologies to Beasley, Goldrick, Hanks and McNamara

Leaderboard
8 - Kate Hore, Blaithin Mackin
5 - Tahlia Gillard (LEADER: Defender of the Year)
3 - Lauren Pearce (LEADER: Ruck of the Year)
2 - Shelley Heath, Sarah Lampard
1 - Maeve Chaplin, Sinead Goldrick

Goal of the Week
It's Hore by default, but the goal wasn't as good as last week so that one is still in the lead.

Next Week
If you strictly follow Footy Maths, North massacred Brisbane who comfortably beat us, so all signs point to a dead-set tonking. Then again, they just drew with a Geelong side we matched up well against, so god knows what's going to happen. A better guide might be last year's final, where we made kicking goals look like finding the cure for Smallpox. They haven't gotten any worse, while we've been stripped bare from multiple angles. It's back to Casey again, so here's to either a great backs to the wall victory, or the Mt. Variable Weather conditions helpfully completely stuffing North up. On recent evidence this could be the first time we kick zero goals, but I'll be watching through my fingers and hoping for the best.    

Final thoughts
Turns out this league isn't as much fun when you go from bullies to bullied. There's a life lesson for all of us in that.

Tuesday 3 September 2024

I'd buy that for a dollar

Our AFL and AFLW teams are both called Melbourne, recently won a flag, bombed out of their last finals campaign in straight sets, and have seen players flee like they were escaping an exploding volcano. The similarities end when they visit Kardinia Park, where this version has won twice in a row instead of treating the trip to Geelong like it's got a higher degree of difficulty than Christopher Columbus finding passage to India. 

Even when multiple W premiership players bolted after our disappointing end to last season, there were no histrionics and various parties leaking against each other. That may be because the wider community don't care about Casey Sherriff's career motivations, but that's part of this competition's appeal to me. Supporter life is a lot calmer without 51 weeks of trade speculation, rolling news updates whenever a player rolls out of bed, and clickbait appealing to lowest common denominator dickheads. 

Say what you like about AFLW, but the longer it goes without deviant gamblers whinging about blown multis and goal umpires being assassinated with plastic bottles the better. After six months of the cameras cutting to adults doing their block like children, there's a level of purity in seeing actual children having fun in the stands because they've got room to pissfart around without the usual threat of some drunk beating them with a rolled-up Footy Record. 

The pitch of crowd frenzy is noticeably higher, and the crowd atmosphere at games is less combative, but fretting about MFC results is my thing so I was still on the verge of tipping my couch if we lost in the last 30 seconds. It turned out ok, in a week where any variety of win was welcome, we survived near administrative free kick disaster in the last minute and held on for a fighting win. It wasn't perfect, but it was what was needed at the time. Mind you, I said the same thing about the men several times before the year ended in players (probably) threatening to poke each other in the eye with a fork.

This is the least confident I've been going into an AFLW season since being scared into writing off 2020 because the previous season ended in a thumping. We turned that into playing and winning finals for the first time, then they cancelled the season a day later. This time I'm expecting this year to end somewhere in a narrow window between fringe top four and comfortably in the lower part of the eight. Now that the foundation club advantage is wearing off and even the newest expansion sides are catching up, this could be the year we drift back to the pack. Can't say we didn't get good value from starting in year one, other original teams have already done the full peak 'n plummet while we've been afloat for eight seasons and counting.

Now, after replacing a shitload of experience with draftees and gap-fillers from other clubs, the already suspect depth looks even shallower, and we arguably haven't added/uncovered a top player for a couple of years. It's hard to make informed ladder predictions when teams only play 10/17 opponents, but the draw did us no favours. In order, we play the team that knocked us out of finals, then the grand finalists. A loss here may have been had us sitting on a razor-thin margin of error at the end of the year. It could still go that way, but four points are banked in a competition where it's important to get them as quickly as possible.

The game started just after the big reveal of Christian Petracca staying, presumably having nuked all hope of a trade by giving clubs every reason to doubt he'll be worth selling the farm for. So instead of six weeks of mad speculation we now get 12 months of it before he inevitably does a runner. But that will be the last mention of Christian for the calendar year 2024 because he's had more than enough coverage recently. May everyone enjoy a full off-season of speculation/dread (delete as applicable) before we even work out if he's right to play again.

I've still got NFI who was telling the truth about what in that saga, but you wonder how some of the early W players who basically did it for the love of the game feel about it. They would have got more money working at Red Rooster than playing in the early days of the competition but all the focus is on somebody already making bulk wonga to pretend he loves Woolworths the Fresh Food People (allegedly) not thinking he's got a high enough profile. Seems like I'm in the minority who'd rather gouge their eyes out than follow celebrity social media accounts, but as entitled as anyone is to go for the game show style grab for as much cash as possible feel free to slice a percentage off for players who didn't get the chance to cash in.

Channel 7's commitment to the competition will last about a week before games are understandably punted into lesser timeslots because of the men's finals, then replaced by the 207th repeat of Home Alone until the cricket starts, but for now their gift to AFLW is a broadcast team that goes as close as you'll ever see to a buffoon rating of zero. It's a reminder that Jason Bennett and the other Al Nicholson are even better when not sharing time with shrieking simpletons, but I'm very keen on Dale (never 'Daisy') Thomas as a host, and even our beloved Nathan Jones had a new lease of life when removed from certain bad influences. It's also flat-out insanity that they don't use Nat Edwards more when she is the ultimate blend of competence and effortless natural cheer. They should all be on the AFL coverage next year instead of Kane Cornes playing Channel 7's new Chief Misery Officer. 

Luke Hodge was not involved, but we were introduced to his latest acting masterclass during the commercial breaks. I don't mind him on special comments, especially as it's obvious that he hates working with BT, but how did anyone see his solid oak performances flogging high interest loans to morons and think he's the perfect spokesman. This time it's 'Hodgey' against hayfever, confusingly opening with a similar line to the loan ads before stilted dialogue with the alleged photographer in front of an unconvincing 'stadium' green screen background.

It wasn't all good news for Channel 7, because I must have missed the explanation as to why commentators were sitting outside despite being at an actual AFL venue. This coincided with a night so windy that during the second quarter it looked like they were broadcasting the 1906 San Francisco earthquake. Considering the turf looked like it had been sprayed with Agent Orange, I suppose this is all part of a swizz to get several million more taxpayers dollars into the place.  

There was a fair turnover of players from that odd finals loss to the Cats. Birch, Gay, Sherriff and West have been traded, Ivey delisted, Aimee Mackin did her knee in Ireland, and Purcell nearly back before literally breaking her face in the final practice game. They're various levels of loss but it's a lot to replace when we only drafted five players - one who they knew was out for the season. Teams in this competition are already one injury crisis away from disaster, but it feels like we're pre-teetering on the brink so hooray for getting wins on the board early. We've got #5 pick Alyssia Pisano in reserve, and the sentimental Jemma Rigoni debut, but unless somebody comes from the cloud we seem short of previously unseen impact players.

In place of the seven absentees, the new faces were an ex-Brisbane training session fill-in, a college basketballer, and a fringe GWS player across two seasons when they were rubbish, so you couldn't expect miracles. And that's exactly the angle I was heading towards when the opening minutes featured that all-too-familiar any-gender-you-like MFC experience of nobody being able to hold the ball up in attack and the other side eventually taking advantage. And the forward line is the bit where we do have some stability. The problem is that all of Bannan, Harris and Zanker can do damage but it's not so much they run hot and cold that the temperature comes out completely at random. 

In this case they complemented the conditions by being ice-cold to the point of hypothermia, which didn't do much for Ryleigh Wotherspoon in her first game. After surprisingly acting as the entire forward line in pre-season, Wotherspoon (which is uncomfortably close to 'wooden spoon') didn't score anything here but you can see she knows what she's doing and will improve with experience. 

For the sake of the 2024 season we don't have time to wait for development, so like so many times in both competitions recently it was a case of 'everyone clear out and let the stars take over'. And Kate Hore is the best we've got. Paxy has the historical legacy and Tyla Hanks the mass acquisition of disposals, but I think after eight seasons and one game in it's safe to say Hore's versatility makes her our reigning greatest ever player. It's a mark of how good you are when a team could do with multiples, and in Hore's case we could comfortably fit Kate I into the middle, Kate II into the forward line, and Kate III to mop up in defence. 

This time we needed option I to help get us out of jail, after Geelong kicked the first two and missed a shot for a third while we struggled to get the ball across halfway, then gave it straight back again when it got there. Her first goal was from a set shot, and considering the conditions the finish was a million years on from her early years where people standing 10 metres around from the forward pocket were likely to be brained by the footy if not paying attention. The second was the real team lifter, dashing around a hapless defender to goal on the run and all but wipe out Geelong's early dominance.

It was nice to be back on level terms, even if nobody - even the people calling the game from outside - could decide which end the wind advantage was to. The problem was still that while we'd had two great moments, Geelong looked far more likely to score. In our first Birch-less backline for a while, I liked Chaplin and Gillard but the ball was getting down there too easily. I'm generally biased towards them because every time Chaplin is on screen it reminds me of her BOG Grand Final celebrations, and every time Gillard is on it reminds me that she was rorted out of actual Grand Final BOG honours due to not being a midfielder. 

Not a cracker was sorted out in the second quarter, as both teams battled shithouse conditions. I think the wind blew north, east, south, and west at different times and it's a miracle that the ball stayed in the field of play as long as it did. By now our forward line wasn't just struggling to get the ball, Harris was going around with one arm after doing sod all before the injury. After speculation about her playing in defence, this was not a great advertisement for staying forward for any reason other than lack of alternatives. Sure she missed the pre-season games due to some brand (there's that word again) building excursion to the Olympics, but Blaithin Mackin only just turned up and probably played her best game yet.

So we were looking like a reasonable side, but not one likely to master the conditions and run down the home side for an important win. And the quality of that prediction was shown when we were in front by three quarter time. The undisputed highlight for stats wankers like me was Sinead Goldrick's first goal. Shifted into the midfield, she'd had an earlier shot before turning up for a crucial one here. Kicking your first after 44 games would have you top 10 in the combined VFL/AFL/AFLW history of the club, and is well ahead of previous record holder Lily Mithen about 90 seconds before the 2020 season was cancelled. From the exclusions and caveats department, Libby Birch's 55 games for zero goals is still the club record and if it comes to that, Gillard is about three seasons from catching her.

On the hardly-definitive evidence of one game, Goldrick's midfield conversion was good. Less successful, Paxy on the last line of defence. No dramas exiting 50, but there was a holding the ball in the square that made me use a popular Anglo-Saxon word starting with f.

The best of the new players was Grace Beasley, who started slow but quickly got into the inside midfield lifestyle. For somebody who has played a couple of games since doing years on the college basketball circuit she got better as the game went on and looked to run it out well. Purcell is still a step-up for experience, but hopefully they can get as many games into Beasley as possible this year. Whenever she's mentioned you may think of Kim (unless you're young and have NFI who that was), but I'm reminded of Joe and his Cheeky Monkey.

By three quarter time we'd come to terms with the wind, diseased turf, opposition full of our ex-players, and the malfunctioning forward line to be in front. By now Harris was out of the game with her dicky shoulder, after it looked like she'd been taken out by an even more severe injury, left with a twitching leg that implied stretchers, green whistles, and never being seen again. Turned out to be the footy version of kicking your foot on the couch and reacting as if shot before the shock wears off. She departed as a precaution but it coincided with Bannan and Zanker rejoining society so maybe you don't know if you need all of them. At her best Harris is a good link player and can take a contested mark, but post-flag they'd have been paying her shitloads more than what's coming back the other way.

Considering how this game started it's odd that we found ourselves more than a goal ahead and threatening to put the game away in the dying minutes. But we didn't, and with a minute to go Paxy suffered the old Collingwood-style 'not giving the ball back to the umpire' free kick, leading to a goal and several nervy seconds waiting for Geelong to pull off the miracle comeback that we so nearly did to them in the finals. But after a massive performance in the ruck all night, Lauren Pearce saved the day by winning in the middle and hoofing the ball as far away from the opposition goal as humanely possible. Time expired, we won, and I love this shit.  

2024 Daisy Pearce Medal for Player of the Year
There was nothing weird about naming the medal after an active player, and I won't let the small matter of coaching against us change that. In the style of Norm Smith refining his game at Fitzroy for a couple of years then coming back and winning everything, here's to Daisy doing her apprenticeship at West Coast then rolling back into town when Mick Stinear has had enough. 

5 - Kate Hore
4 - Blaithin Mackin
3 - Lauren Pearce
2 - Shelley Heath
1 - Sinead Goldrick

Apologies to Beasley, Chaplin, Goldrick, Hanks, McNamara

Goal of the Week
Hore on the run in the first quarter sets the standard for the rest of the year to match.

Next Week
It's the first half of the doomsday double against last year's Grand Finalists. First Brisbane, unfortunately back at Casey Fields, at the comical time of 11.05am. Remember how the league has to hit certain metrics for more games to be added to the season? Good luck with fixtures like this. Hopefully the opposition stay at the Cranbourne Motor Inn and are kept awake by over-stimulated locals fighting in the car park. They desperately need to bounce back after taking a savage home ground beating from North, so this promises to be as hot a contest as you'll get before midday on a Saturday.

Final thoughts
More of the same please.

Tuesday 27 August 2024

Once more without feeling

The new certainties in life are death, taxes, and Melbourne fans incorrectly believing they'll get one over Collingwood. Even with their final chances reduced to a probability of *, anyone expecting a Mortal Kombat-style 'Finish Him!' ending was either being wildly optimistic or desperately trying to manifest a satisfying exit from a long, unsuccessful season where cups of hot piss were regularly thrown in and out of the tent. Bring a raincoat, the supply doesn't look like drying up.

Strangely, the team that might have benefited from a thumping win brought in players who could do with the exposure, while we only reluctantly let Bailey Laurie play because Sparrow was injured, then made him the sub anyway. Casey has been tits on a bull useless recently, but this was the biggest commitment to martyrdom since Reverend Jim Jones visited Guyana. For all we know Kynan Brown's AFL career might have peaked with that one ripping tackle, but any harm in giving him one measly start? He may have had more luck getting into the same orbit as a Daicos brother than anyone else. Maybe not, but some indication they didn't think thrashing hot garbage Gold Coast was a great leap forward would have been nice. Instead, our all-important crack at stability in the 25th and last week of the season turned into Witches' Hat Appreciation Night and it's a modern miracle that the margin was under 50 points.

Who can blame the players for being over it by this point, especially after another week of speculation about who pinched Petracca's lunch from the Casey Fields fridge. Nobody knew that saga existed a couple of weeks ago, now it keeps on giving in the style of repeated blows to the head with a cricket bat. When Channel 7 promoted his pre-match interview I expected something more like Jack Viney's carefully chosen words at Carrara than the sequel to I Have A Dream, but after a season where we've been dead weight on their billion dollar investment, there was one final double middle finger to 7 when he pulled out and left Steven May to politely go through the motions instead. They got something back by taking up half Ben Brown's lap of honour with banal questions just above the level of awkward chats with Auskick kids.

This left the door open for more speculation, and the chance that he'd turn on us halfway through the game like Hulk Hogan joining the New World Order, but regardless of what happens between now and the final day of trade period, it's his right to choose who he speaks to and when. If replacing Dustin Martin as the league's #1 anti-media recluse is best for him then he should do it, regardless of the views of sooky journos who think the world revolves around them getting content. Regardless of what's been leaked (so far), my preference is for Petracca to come back and play the rest of a great career with us, but whatever is happening out of the public eye I hope he's being supported by people with more interest in his welfare than their cut of the next yoghurt endorsement.

All conspiracy theories are shit except the ones you believe in, so while the natural reaction to this article would be to say "well stuff him then", I'm pretty sure we're being played like a fiddle through the media. It could be his side looking for an excuse to create the classic 'untenable situation', the club softening up the ground for cashing in on him, other teams throwing hand grenades so they can take advantage of the chaos, or a combination of the three. I'd bet options B) or C), but let's see if I can hit publish before option A) comes back with a vengeance with conveniently timed reports about the club being awful and memories of that time we nearly drowned him. 

I'm suss about the stuff that goes out of its way to make him look like a diva. Anyone would prefer training full-time around the city rather than Cranbourne, and it would be nice to play blockbusters galore, but what's changed on either of those fronts since he signed a goldenballs contract extension? Reading between the lines and coming up with my own story, I gather that he's no longer fond of Oliver. That's fine, but please note Mick Jagger and Keith Richards fell out for about 15 years too but look how much money they've made since.

I'm definitely getting too old for this shit, because come or go I can't work get into a frenzy unless we're spooked into letting him go for peanuts. Here's to enforcing his contract, even if it makes the club go even more Fawlty Towers, and he can choose to get paid next year by us or Colgate. Kane Cornes was upset that Neal-Bullen didn't consider delicate family scenarios when signing a new deal, so he'll either treat this like war crimes or have a clickbait-friendly change of heart and decide Petracca should get freedom of movement because United Nations or something.

Distractions are welcome when not involved in finals, but this is a bit extreme. Set your time machine for early 2020 and see what reaction you'd get to Petracca and ANB both requesting trades and the Bullet possibly leaving as the more beloved figure. Thrown in what happened at the end of 2021 and you'll be put to death for witchcraft.

Also withdrawing late, but without the same 'Harold Holt goes to Portsea' style rumours attached, Jake Lever. He became the latest player to go down ill before a game, and it's worth checking there's not a dead pigeon in the Casey Fields water supply before that's cited as a reason for players to leave too. I was expecting a disappointing night long before he dropped out, and with our VFL key position stocks down to one untried kid at least it meant a full game for Woewodin after a record-breaking half a year as sub. His reward was a night of torment, but that's ok because there's only two things anyone will remember about this game with an optional third if it decides the Brownlow result.

The good news for a defence with cavernous Lever and May-shaped holes is that we had a qualified, premiership-winning backman at the other end who could easily return to his natural habitat after a season that's been the equivalent of trying to strike a match underwater. That didn't happen, and in what may be his last game for us Adam Tomlinson was handed a leaking box of shite for a going away present. He'd visibly lost the will to live before half time as the ball came towards him at the warpiest possible speed, while at the other end our reincarnation of Victoria's 1989 State of Origin forward line scored fewer points than there were minutes in the final quarter. 

I was all for honouring the 1964 premiership players (and if you want to know more about that season, *hint hint*), but if I felt there wasn't enough time left to watch the final 10 minutes, any of them who stayed through the lightning delay deserve a second life membership. The unsaid bit of that presentation was they were the final chapter in a glorious era before the whole operation collapsed into dust, back to a wooden spoon within five years, and no further finals until 1987. That was just coach fighting with committee, in 2024 you need an IMAX-size flowchart to understand who's cranky at who, incorporating upset family members, and court cases involving both former and aspiring administrators.

As we were doing everything to guide Collingwood towards goal except turn on airport-style ground lights, it might not have helped if we had Petty, Turner, or the USS Ticonderoga down there, but when it looked like our season was going end in a sad, disgrunted heap I wondered how long it would take before they tried something to plug the gap. Maybe the real farewell gift was for Greg Stafford, leaving his forward dream together one last time before he departed under an unprecedented level of anti-assistant coach vitriol as if most of us have any idea what assistants are actually responsible for. 

With injury excuses out the wazoo and absolutely nothing to play for, I'm not broken-hearted about losing. Strangely, we played worse than I expected but lost by less. The most important thing was avoiding humiliation. The actual margin has already been forgotten but a perverse, triple-figure slaughter might have blown the place to bits. What is annoying is how often we lost games like this when the season was still alive. This was just a lo-fi version of King's Birthday, where Lever was the only serious absence and Petracca went down trying to conjure something from a forward line on their way to 0.4 at quarter time. Getting all the stars back next year will be a positive, but they've got heaps of gap-plugging work to do on the list.  

Flogging the ultimate dead horse last week was welcome proof of life but not much guide to the future. It was the first time anyone's ever said "they played their Grand Final against Gold Coast" but that's as close as we're getting this year, and depending on off-season carnage perhaps several more after. We did our bit for tradition by clocking off after 22 games, and I could have comfortably bet a kidney on Collingwood well before we replaced the last part of the Great Wall of Melbourne with thin air. They'd be disappointed at not winning by a lot more, if not only slightly less over it than us by the end.

The brief summary is that the team with a fanging midfield and average forward line comfortably beat one running on fumes and reverting to barely functioning respectively. There's something in the "it's the midfield stupid" philosophy, but I'm certain you can make up for a lot of that by retaining the ball when it goes forward, or at least slowing it down so the opposition can't just launch like the bloody space shuttle right over the heads of said midfield. In one extra game we only kicked about 10 less goals than the 2021 home and away season (and conceded about 40 more), but the toil to get them was like the Paul Roos rebuild years without a 'just happy to be alive' free hit atmosphere. 

It's been the sort of year where you can have three games where somebody kicks five goals and lose two of them. Several years ago I'd have, in the style of Martha and the Motels, sold my soul for 41 goals but it still feels like Fritsch underperformed. Pickett was a steady enough, and a welcome cameo midfielder, Chandler does things but not as often or as importantly as last year, and all of Petty, Turner and van Rooyen had moments, but you could tell the structure wasn't working midway through the year and we boldly persisted while the season burned down around us. If it pays off in the future I'll send a card to say thanks, but didn't do us any good this year.

Now that we know Wayne Harmes kept the ball in, footy's greatest unsolved mystery is Harrison Petty's 2024 season. It was a good idea to try and recapture his form from last year pre-foot burst, and I was willing to be patient after he missed pre-season, but stretching that patience across goal tallies of 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 1, 0, 0, 1, 1, 0 and 0 without a break wasn't in anyone's best interest unless they've got a binary code fetish. 

I'm pleased that he bumped his tally up by 33% in the second last game of the season, but how does a key position forward kick six goals in his first 18 games and not get rotated out of the side once? Credit to his resilience for playing through a difficult year where he must have known things weren't going well, but I'd understand if players well down the food chain from Petracca were annoyed watching him get picked every week while they were being madly rotated in and out of the side. Only his foot could do what the coaches refused to, causing his only two substitutions and only absence from the side after Round 2. Just one token dropping in the middle of the year would have confirmed they had some standards.

My only hesitation in declaring this an all-time dreadful selection policy is that a) I don't want to be cited as a hater so he can carpool to Adelaide with Neal-Bullen and anchor their defence for the next decade, and b) Petty did some good stuff up the ground. It's just that whenever he entered 50 it was like one of those shopping trollies wired to slam the brakes on if you take them too far. In another environment, with different players around him I can see how it could work but this wasn't meant to be an experimental season where we could sacrifice wins to force-feed players with experience like human Fois Gras. And if it was, a few probably want a word about how long they spent ankle-deep in sludge on VFL grounds. 

NFI if we'd have got any benefit from throwing Schache, Jefferson, late season Brown, or McDonald down there instead, but not even trying it once with the season on the line is stubborn to the point of insanity. 50% of those names are not our future, one has already been express delisted, and the other is an unknown quantity but until a few weeks ago we were hanging on in a competitive finals race and the only change of policy was making Turner the sub for a fortnight after he'd kicked eight goals in five games. Asked before the game if we were looking for a key forward in the off-season Goodwin gave the usual diplomatic "we want anybody who'll improve us", but sounded like he genuinely believed everything was going well, without even a slightly conciliatory "it hasn't worked exactly as we've liked but they're improving" blah blah blah, so we've got that going for us.

But surely if you're not going to fill a defensive hole with a defender, the next best option in a nothing game was to use Petty as second ruckman. Give JVR a full game doing his actual job and hopefully not thinking about Armaguard truck style offers from home, enjoy the additional benefits of a natural defender floating through an understrength backline as required etc... Nah, we just stuck with what got us here, as if tonking the Washington Generals last week solved everything. It's all just a bit weird, and if the media's going to tee off on us non-stop can we have a break from the sexy macro-level topics and get into some of this enthusiast-only stuff?

If you turned up with dreams of another stirring victory that would send us into the off-season on Cloud 9, disappointment can't have been far behind. The opening moments showed there was only one team in it, and refer previous amazement that we weren't left identifiable only by dental records. It feels like the opening quarter was just the ball going towards the Collingwood goal like an endlessly looping GIF - except for the bits where they'd stop to have a shot.

I only arrived at the tail end of Peter Daicos' career, so my top memory of him was taking the focus off Jako's famous 11 goal haul in 1991 by plundering Brisbane for 13 a few hours later. Turns out he's actually a genetic jackhammer who delivered his old club the Father/Son lotto jackpot. Playing against a light breeze, they both racked up 40 disposals in the easiest final round accumulation since Carlton stood back and let Travis Johnstone do as he liked. This time there was two of them, neither will get traded immediately after, and the opposition was competing to the best of their abilities.

Our midfield was less good. Gawn continued to do his Nathan Jones tribute act by trying to lift teammates onto his weary shoulders but could only do so much when we were being obliterated at ground level. If anyone deserves to squeeze a few extra dollars out of it's Viney, but nothing says Melbourne 2024 like successfully pulling off Operation Contract Extension then being tagged into the ground by somebody who's played about 380 games. Once all was lost we gave McVee a turn, and he had a few good minutes before it became an extended learning experience. Remember not too far back when Salem was going to become a midfielder? That didn't take, and here he was getting plenty of the ball at half-back but never threatening to launch end-to-end moves that end with somebody trotting into an empty goalsquare. Didn't have much to work with ahead of him though.

You wouldn't have known it watching this procession, but we arrived with as many wins as losses. That's not worth getting excited about, and the 23rd game was a bridge too far. You'll never convince me that Gather Round's Gold Coast vs North at A. Local Park blockbusters are worth an extra game, and Carlton nearly missing finals in epic/tragic/hilarious fashion (delete as applicable) helped covered up how for the second year in a row what looked like a thrilling finals race was all but decided before the last round.

We did get the first goal of the game, absurdly against the run of play. If you thought that was the start of something big I've got a pyramid scheme you may be interested in. And once Collingwood got in front even the Pakistani cricket team would have struggled to make a loss look convincing. Our players were having what go they could still muster, but were basically just objects to be navigated around. The best comparison is our last home game of 2019 when all was long lost and everyone just wanted the season to be over. That night we kicked three goals in the first quarter, two in the last, and STUFF ALL in the middle, so in some obscure ways this was a better performance. That was Marty Hore's 13th career game, this was his 20th, and he must feel a bit cheated participating in that pair of slopfests after missing The Good Years.

Things can get very bad, very quickly, but reaching quarter time 'just' four goals behind made an unmerciful beating less likely. Collingwood players were conceding before the game that their season was over, but reducing if they'd had a sniff of what Geelong did to West Coast in the first half there would have been no reason to slow down. Fortunately we held it together long enough that once that was off the cards they were happy to get to the end as quickly as possible (weather permitting) and crack on with their September Plan B too.

It would have saved a lot of trouble if the captains had been permitted to shake hands and go home right then. We got the smallest of potential revival buzzes when Chandler got an early goal and tried to do the impossible and lift spirits with an enthusiastic celebration. That just cancelled out the one we'd already conceded, but there was a slight buzz when JVR got the next. Didn't last long, but this was our best part of the game. It was still mostly get ball > do nothing with ball > watch other team go past with ball, but well ahead of the bit where we were 10-0 behind for inside 50 marks.

As all fell apart before him, I appreciated Tom McDonald taking on all comers to stop the margin getting unsavoury. He didn't win every time (because how could you with the ball arriving like that?), but helped us avoid being blown away by a forward line that only looked marginally less bootleg than ours. We were only narrowly outscored for the quarter, which sounds like a terrible thing to be satisfied about, but the way it was going early I was happy with anything that took apocalyptic battery off the table.   

And on the topic of battery, it looks like our new end of season tradition is a Kysaiah Pickett suspension. Last year it was striking, this time it was illegal bumping, so god knows what he'll do next year but I wouldn't mind a return to 2021's popular 'wearing a premiership medal' ending. Pending a legal miracle he's out for the first three games of 2025, and extra fuel has been chucked on the bonfire for two fanbases who were already upset with each other. With a level of respect for Darcy Moore not often afforded to Angus Brayshaw, I'd prefer if we spiced things up by winning more than once every five years rather than by trading concussions.

Before mocking 100% self-confidence, 0% self-awareness opposition fans, I'd like to reiterate my unpopular minority opinion that still carrying on about Maynard makes us look minor league. It also plays right into their deranged 'everyone is against us' identity, and most importantly sets a moral highground bar that can't be maintained forever. Kindly exclude me from 'what about XYZ?' comparisons between the incidents, because while Maynard was lucky to avoid suspension via the influential club/"you can't miss a Grand Final for that" double, the real villains are classless nutbags on the other side of the fence. It's not all Collingwood fans, just the ones who use either "dog", "flog", or both in every sentence and go on jubilant, sweaty laps of a restaurant when their players are found not liable for causing a brain injury. We've all got them, but these people are so highly strung that Russia should study them for ways to up their election interference game.

This is where I get involved, making an immediate post-bump prediction that based on historical precedent we were about to see the 'Days since a Collingwood racism scandal' counter reset to zero. That went down about as well as Drag Queen Storytime for the Taliban, causing human victim impact statements to come from all angles like they'd been personally wronged, starting replies to the suggestion that a player might be vilified with "but... ", offering unsolicited opinions about how Craig Kelly is innocent, and all sorts of other generic vitriol that confirmed they've replaced Essendon fans as the fish who jump on the hook for you. 

I regret not taking the easy way out and saying he'd be on the end of general foul abuse from deros, because in a partial win for human decency the dog 'n flog connection pulled up short and just called Pickett every other dehumanising name under the sun. Well done for confounding expectations, maybe consider why everyone else's first thought was "yeah, I can see that happening". After the mileage they got out of Ed Langdon's throwaway duck talk, the WWF-style 'pretending to be upset to get fans excited' will be off the chart the next time we play them - which I can confidently say won't be in the first three rounds if the suspension holds. 

As for the incident itself, I wasn't surprised that he was rubbed out. You can go down the list of mitigating factors from credible to ludicrous, but in a week where Dan Houston (appearing in back-to-back posts after never being mentioned once before) got five weeks for doing something not worthy of a free kick you're cactus if a bump catches somebody in the head. Rightly or wrongly, there's no consideration given to how the other player ended up there. Regardless of who's at fault, Moore was unlucky to be in the path of one of the few times our forwards have made body contact with a defender all season.

A split second earlier they'd have clattered off each other, the commentators would have had a brief orgasm, and we'd go back to politely losing before the game was never mentioned again. Now our best hope is to get the penalty reduced with the biggest legal heist since the OJ Simpson trial. Can't see it happening, but if the "I wasn't looking" defence somehow gets him off it'll cause the usual suspects to melt down as if Chernobyl merged with Fukushima, so no matter how frivolous the appeals are I'm all the way in. Go for a three-in-one Supreme Court deal with Glenn Bartlett and Peter Lawrence if that's what it takes to annoy these clods.

Assuming we don't get the ultimate comedy result of the AFL necking their own case with legal errors, that's our only lively forward gone for the first few weeks of next season. Remember when he was suspended for the inaugural Round Bugger All, and I thought his return meant we'd never go hungry again? In defence of that failed projection, I didn't think we'd react to the inevitable Ben Brown breakdown by sticking with a malfunctioning forward line well beyond the point of silliness. 

Any serious interest in the game was dead after the big bump, but there was still time for one last slapstick routine. Bowey and Fritsch had both departed for medical attention during the second quarter, and as he walked off the ground before the restart Goodwin said they were "good to go", just as the camera cut with perfect comic timing to Bowey walking off the ground, shaking his head. About two minutes later he was subbed out, and somewhere Christian Petracca was doing his own version of Leonardo DiCaprio pointing at the TV. I guess he had initially been cleared but realised he wasn't right and self-excluded (now there's an idea), but to anyone else who wants to unfairly malign our medical staff it made us look like we were making decisions like this:

There was a third quarter, and like a complete goose I sat through it. In some horrible years one last force 10 gale of shit would tide you over for a few months (e.g. James Sellar nearly kicking what I choose to believe would have been goal of the century after coming in as a late replacement in 2013. And if you're suspect of my commitment for not attending this week, I rushed to get to that game on time and round out a season with our lowest percentage since 1919, so FO, my conscience is translucently clear), this was hard to even enjoy ironically because everyone knows it's the warm-up act for off-season shenanigans. Like everything pre-2021 (and, by the looks of it, after) it'll make sense if it accidentally sets us on course for something better.

I'm against playing all the final round games at the same time (though I wonder if putting games in Ballarat and Tasmania was so they could keep the idea open), but waiting until a few weeks out to fixture them for perceived maximum drama is nearly as bad. When this was put on Friday night they would have hoped for a drama-filled Elimination Final atmosphere, but once we declined the invite they still had the idea of Collingwood planting themselves into the eight and waiting all weekend to be knocked out. Once that passes this was just a waste of human energy.

BT doesn't need a decomposing rubber to do stupid things, misinterpreting the fun fact about defending premiers missing finals since 2000 as being all-time, and not reacting with the slightest surprise that it hadn't happened more since 1897. Matthew Richardson continues to involve himself in this nonsense with good grace and humility, but Luke Hodge sounded like he wanted to batter Taylor with his own microphone before crouching down and whispering "Brian, what are your goals?" 

Who knows if they'd have given Ray (never Razor) Chamberlain a primetime farewell this game if this game did have serious implications. I have no complaints about him because people who get upset about individual umpires are often a little bit weird, but after blowing the lid on the Houston (him again) bump not being worth a free kick, I'm surprised Ray didn't get banished to a suburban reserves game. It was a memorable finish for nothing to do with umpiring decisions, but there was also a spot of wackiness when he thought Billings marked the ball on the line and the goal umpire thought it hit the post but on a night of varying levels of going away present they only reviewed what Ray wanted to see. It helped that the ball wasn't anywhere near the post, so wasting time on any further reviews would have been cruel to everyone involved.

Contrary to Cameron Ling getting upset that there was a tribute to ANB on the banner (what has this guy done to annoy all the crusty veterans?), he departs with more goodwill than anyone else whose trade request has ever been made public before the end of the season. I'd have needed a tear gas blast directly in my eyes to get emotional about this game, but came closest when the cameras focused on him talking to the huddle before the third quarter. Depending on what happens this year I'll still want Jordon or Hogan to win a flag before him, but he goes out right at the top of the list of ex-players I wish well. Even in the best season of his career there was still time for a tribute act to the past when he flubbed a kick that led to us conceding a goal.

I've got so many issues with our forward play that it will need an airing of grievances a'la Frank Costanza at Festivus to get through them all, but I think there's something about Turner. He doesn't need to be the man, but could be a nice compliment to JVR if they can find a third wheel to make contests and/or take contested marks within scoring range. Bet you we recruit a key forward and Turner's the one who ends up back in defence. He's still learning how to get it, but kicks a nice set shot when he does. Remember when he didn't in the two games that may have (but probably not) saved our season, because he was on the bench for three quarters?

We'd successfully sandbagged against a belting, but a five goal lead may as well have been 15 for what it mattered at the time. It left us with one quarter of this cursed season to say goodbye to ANB, avoiding further bumping disasters at all costs, and try to score 50. The sudden arrival of pouring rain would have been about as welcome to players as acid rain, but one side took a cheerful approach to running the season out, while ours looked like they were representing Hussein-era Iraq and would be forced to kick a concrete footy as punishment.

It got to within a few minutes of being over when fork lightning caused a bigger crowd reaction than our recent home games combined. I had to get up at 4.30am so also said "fork lightning", because I wasn't hanging around for play to resume. After a few minutes of officials consulting the rules/ringing the BOM/waiting for players to be nuked by a direct hit, the game was paused with just under 10 minutes to go. Off went players who just wanted to put on silly costumes, sink bulk piss, and possibly belt each other again. Unlike me they had to come back.

The scoreboard said it was due to 'approaching weather', which isn't nearly dramatic enough. Weather is always approaching, that's what it does. Do they think 'due to lightning' is going to set off a deadly stampede amongst people who stayed in their seats for five minutes after the initial hit? This reminds me, to wrap up a storyline from earlier in the season, the MCC never responded to my complaint about closing the top level of the Ponsford Stand (not even to blame it on 'approaching weather') but it's not called The People's Ground for nothing, because they did add my email address to their marketing list. That's not how it's supposed to work.

In recent years we've had one previous stoppage for lightning, and one for lack of lighting. The first time we conceded a shitload of goals after resuming and won, the second time we kicked a shitload of goals after resuming and lost. I expected to wake up and find that we'd taken the worst parts of each and spent the last few minutes conceding at 186 pace amidst soggy misery. It seems to have been played out like a match simulation session, and nobody suffered a critical injury or was reported so zero further harm done. Tholstrup kicked another goal, which is good, and I understand Billings was handed one on a platter and hit the post from 10 metres out, so just a nice, normal way to wind the season up.

And thank god that's all. It's been a weird year and we're not even close to knowing what sort of NQR action has been going on behind the scenes yet. Usually I'd save the thanks for sticking with me for another year until the final thoughts, but that spot is reserved for a bit that is unlikely to translate as well as it sounds in my head. So, before tying up administrative loose ends and turning my focus to all things W, let me say how much I appreciate everyone's support and interest, especially the hardy few who read this deep into posts. For 20 years (!!!) I've been doing this for my own amusement and continue to be staggered that anyone else comes along for the ride. Players, coaches, CEOs and Presidents will come and go, but I'll keep doing this until the club or I cark it. 

2024 Allen Jakovich Medal votes
5 - Tom McDonald
4 - Kysaiah Pickett
3 - Max Gawn
2 - Kade Chandler
1 - Christian Salem

Apologies to Billings and Langdon in a blanket finish of people who might have got a vote just to fill the available spots.

Final standings
With everything else sorted out in advance, the last item of business was whether Turner could win the Rising Star outright. He could not, but being half of the first joint winning pair since Hunt/Petracca 2016 was a great effort considering where he started the year.

The all-time leaderboard has been updated. Since Round 1, 2005 there have now been 6705 votes handed out to 139 players. Notable changes this year - rare good news for Oliver as he went past Nathan Jones for the all-time lead (381 votes), there is now a 134 vote gap between Petracca in fifth and Brad Green in sixth, Alex Neal-Bullen doubled his career tally on the way out, and I feel older than the sun seeing Alistair Nicholson and Guy Rigoni on the list.

51 - Max Gawn (WINNER: Allen Jakovich Medal for Player of the Year, WINNER: Jim Stynes Medal for Ruckman of the Year)
29 - Jack Viney
27 - Steven May (WINNER: Marcus Seecamp Medal for Defender of the Year)
26 - Alex Neal-Bullen
24 - Christian Petracca
22 - Kysaiah Pickett
19 - Ed Langdon
18 - Jake Lever, Trent Rivers
16 - Clayton Oliver, Jacob van Rooyen
15 - Judd McVee
14 - Tom McDonald
7 - Christian Salem
6 - Harrison Petty, Daniel Turner (JOINT WINNER: Rising Star Award), Caleb Windsor (JOINT WINNER: Rising Star Award)
4 - Jack Billings, Kade Chandler, Bayley Fritsch, Tom Sparrow, Adam Tomlinson
3 - Jake Melksham
1 - Jake Bowey, Blake Howes

Ad Chat
James Frawley for McDonalds, asked for his career highlights - "At Melbourne? Not many". Jesus Christ, I know it's the intellectual lightweight segment with Campbell Brown but any chance of faking something up for a segment that's being played BEFORE A MELBOURNE MATCH. Of course, winning a flag at Hawthorn was his greatest moment (thanks to the brave decision to do a runner from the Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald to the defending premier) but the question wasn't "what percentage of memories from your time at Melbourne were good?" so pluck something out for fans who could only muster up the barest animosity to you after leaving. 

This throwaway moment unnecessarily made me more upset than the game that followed, but while there's admittedly not a lot to work with that isn't just him trying to hold back an unstoppable tide, here's a brief shortlist:

- Dicking Collingwood on QB 2007 (featuring somebody lobbing a bottle at Russell Robertson as he lined up for #7)
- The mega comeback against Freo in 2008 + a mention of Austin Wonaeamirri so they can show the picture of him celebrating
- Chasing Lewis Jetta like the final of the Olympic 100m in 2010
- Being an All-Australian team in 2010 (now really, how did this not get a mention?) 
- [Fair enough leaving out the Neeld years]
- Another mega comeback against Essendon in 2014

Still better viewing than Petracca acting as a cheerful stepladder to promote toothpaste.

Aaron Davey Medal for Goal of the Year
As it makes not a cracker of difference to the final result I'll assume the post-lightning Tholstrup one I didn't see was a ripper. Congratulations to Bayley Fritsch for winning the season, with a goal that sits up there in our all-time classics but is less exciting now that you know about the terminal spiral that followed. May next year bring lots of boring goals from 10 metres out directly in front. 

1st - Bayley Fritsch (Q4) vs Geelong
2nd - Kysaiah Pickett (Q4) vs Footscray
3rd - Kysaiah Pickett (Q4) vs Geelong

Next year
In 2007 we followed three finals seasons with a much worse year, and even when all the evidence pointed to a crop of cherished veterans coming towards the end, without nearly enough exciting young players to replace them, I expected to bounce back based on who was returning from injury. Then we lost our first two games by nearly 200 points combined and took off down some weird, dark roads before it all paid off on 25/09/2021. 

We're not in a completely different spot now, except with a little more of the emerging and less of the 'about to irrevocably fall apart'. There's still time to heed the pull up warnings but if we're having the same discussion in 12 months a massive stack could be just around the corner.

Even if everything goes well with Oliver, Petracca etc... there will be room for manoeuvre on the list - Schache and Farris-White having already been chopped, Brayshaw and B. Brown are retired, Neal-Bullen will be traded and Smith departs for 'administrative reasons'. The only other senior player I can see them potentially cashing in on is Salem, which will be famous last words when half the list wants to leave. Then it's down to who survives from the uncontracted players (per this list) - if he's interested Tom McSizzle is a certainty, as well as Moniz-Wakefield and K. Brown, and I don't see the harm in having Hore, Melksham and Tomlinson in reserve for depth. Hunter has survived the initial cull but I can't see how he'll be there next year unless we lose so many senior players that the average age resembles GWS 2012.

Verrall will get re-signed under the 'ruckmen take longer' clause, and even if Kentfield didn't do much in half a season getting rid of him now would be a reminder of skipping over all the experienced mid-season draft options that might have helped us win senior games. Casey fanatics can tell me if there's mitigating circumstances to Sestan averaging less than a goal a game over two Reserves seasons that would prevent him from getting the chop.

Within the next couple of weeks we'll be linked with everyone in the league - but the biggest names so far are Houston, who I still wouldn't pay five cents in foreign currency for if he has to be begged to come, Harry McKay in the most fantastically fictional way, and Tom Lynch for a Ben Brown style squeezing of the last drop. Not the worst idea, but who's he replacing in the forward line we dedicated our season to? Then it's off to the draft where our short and medium term are probably defenders, midfielders, ruckmen and forwards, so no pressure there. Remember when Delist > Trade > Draft used to be the happiest time of the year? This time I'm approaching it in fear.

Final thoughts
And mercifully, in conclusion please welcome the great seer, soothsayer, and sage, Deenac the Magnificent. I hold in my hand an envelope containing the final words on this season, and in his mystical and borderline psychic way, Deenac will ascertain the answer, never having heard the question.

Over to you Deenac:

'It Ends With Us'.

And the answer...


My interest in the 2024 AFL Men's Premiership season.

Monday 26 August 2024

Standard 'post delayed' notification


There is a post coming, and while I've technically got until about February to publish, I've got to finish it before the AFLW opener or everything will be out of order. The good news is that it's almost certainly going to set a record for the longest post with the least discussion of the game itself. Hopefully it's up by Tuesday night. And if you don't like that, may your life support machine be powered by Harrison Petty goals.   

Keep an eye on Twitter or Facebook for a link. Send any thoughts on the game via the usual channels and I'll incorporate/shamelessly steal them.

Monday 19 August 2024

Stone gold

Last week's post took me so long to write that it was able to cover the early stages of the Petracca Affair, but after finally publishing and returning to normal life I didn't expect any more bad news until the teams came out on Thursday. It only took about 60 minutes for the next stitch up, with the latest leak from an increasingly porous club revealing that ANB had requested a trade to SA for FR. No way the club intended for this news to come out in the media, but it seems appropriate in a season where we've had more dramatic storylines than several of the #fistedforever years combined.  

I'll miss baffling outsiders and casual readers by calling him the Bullet, but cannot/will not argue about him going home for family reasons after a decade of service. It's none of my business why he needs to go, but it's obviously not so he can see his nephew's school play so I don't know how anyone could be upset about it. Unless you're Kane Cornes and hold him at fault for not factoring complex personal situations into last year's contract negotiations. And anybody who is genuinely angry is probably the same sort offering to drive him to the airport a few years ago, so I think most of us wish him well in any game not against us. Should be an interesting reunion at Adelaide with the guy who he bounced off the ground like a basketball in 2020.

The rest of the week was spent with the rest of the league picking over the bones of our premiership team like an episode of Antiques Roadshow. Collingwood stuck their nose into the Petracca issue to the point where I reckon they're deliberately keeping the story alive Russian Twitter bot style to stir up discontent and try to recruit him. Meanwhile, North publicly did everything but offer Jack Viney a contract, and Clayton Oliver was being traded to everyone from Geelong to Woodville-West Torrens. Clay Clay ended the week in metaphorical traction, packed away with a litany of injuries and our best wishes for a happy and healthy break.

Last week's suggestion that things had gone by a bit Thick Of It was nearly the cue for Malcolm Tucker to turn up and declare the place an omnishambles. Even Paul Gardner got a run on the news, and was still referred to as 'former Melbourne president' in an unrelated story about a derelict building burning down, which must have reminded him of his time at our helm. All we needed was another pissweak expose from the Glenn Bartlett scrapbook and to have our dignity stripped by a team nobody gives a rats about, and it would have been a perfect Melbourne week.

I know that trade speculation in the media is usually just some combination of agents, clubs, and journalists conspiring to feather their own nest, but the least concerning story of the week was that Dan Houston is allegedly spooked about joining us due to the current turmoil. If true, then send him a plate of fishheads and a note reading "far cough", then go looking for people who want to be the difference maker. On the other hand, he will be fresh after several weeks off for vigorously stopping the Rankin' Wankin' phenomenon.

When the season still had a squeeze of life left I thought we'd benefit from a return to siege mentality, but thought we might have the reverse effect after several days of having our corpse kicked from every angle. Still not sure we needed to be so conservative with selection after the season died, but I feel a lot better about not wheeling the fringe players in after winning by nine goals. There's an alternative reality where we pull the shutters down, play an 'experimental' team and are none-the-wiser about what could have been. I'll take it, especially when our VFL team let the Suns kick 27 goals.

In a year where we've been accused of everything except people smuggling, our commitment to playing it out in the right spirit should earn us some sort of rebate on the fine for tanking in 2009. Still, picking our best available team left open the nightmare scenario of still being ruthlessly humped, then getting home to find Oliver and Petracca both gone, and the club being set back years like 186 all over again. We got away with it, and hopefully it's the Kumbaya moment everyone needs to come together and prepare for a substantial crack at next year. 

There's still no rest for Gawn and his giftwrapped leg, and that's clearly how he likes it. I'll take their word that playing out the season won't cause his bones to grind into dust before December 31. Hopefully his mystery contract extension happened after he walked into the rooms full of joy after leading his team to victory and demanded to be re-signed immediately. Maybe he signed it in the blood from his forehead? We're not going to get the desired Hollywood ending, but if this year is made into a TV series (and please, if you're into TV or movies please contact me for quality footy related ideas) that would be a great shot to end the season. 

Whatever the merits of playing safe were vs doing weird shit, we got a good result that I'm not going to argue about. I felt differently pre-game while waiting for something gruesome to happen. I've got sympathy for people who do club social media and have to put up with unreasonable dickheads addressing them like they're talking directly to the CEO, but still thought it was a bit risky including the word 'slop' in anything after the run we've had. They love avant-garde match preview graphics, and this one turned out a lot better than when a giant ice cream drifted away from the shore because Jake Bowey had seized its anchor. 

Nobody went into this game with great enthusiasm, and Kayo wouldn't have seen viewing figures this low since the World Excel Championships, but the good news is that when you're alone and life is making you lonely you can always play Gold Coast. After 11 straight wins against them ranging from the sublime (the game that started it all in 2021) to the ridiculous (the 2019 heist), I thought this was where the fun was going to end. This didn't take into account the Suns bursting into flames at the end of every season, and their traditional turning of a promising start into dust came just in time to give us a win that meant sod all in the context of the season, but was fun in isolation. Everyone involved got to write off several shit weeks with a positive performance and I'm happy for them. And may any critics who don't identify as Melbourne fans catch a sexually transmitted disease in the ear.

As for the Suns, I'm sure hiring Damien Hardwick will be a positive (and he got a nice apartment out of it), but their end of season flake outs make Essendon and Port Adelaide look stable. They'll never do better than turning 3-1 into 3-19 and a priority pick in 2019, but as you may have learned from the 900 times it was mentioned on commentary, they've still never won more than 10 games in a season. They're probably still blaming being a comically fragile side on having to pick a snake off the training shed roof a decade ago, but continue to disappoint after being announced as arriving more times than the Orient Express. My heart struggles to ache for them, but the sooner they push the other Victorian teams out of finals the better, because if I don't get to be happy nobody I know should be either.

Remember a few weeks ago when people were frothing over the closest finals battle in years? That didn't last, and on a day of season-defining games this a curtain raiser between two deflated balloons was like when you couldn't watch The Undertaker vs Shawn Michaels until Funaki and Val Venis finished. Which suited me, I'd rather hatewatch my own club in decline than see premiership contenders do anything.

It took 23 weeks for me to realise, but Carrara has been rebranded as 'People First Stadium'. Regrettably, that's an obscure bank and not, as the name suggests, a shadowy sex cult or fringe political party. If you're thinking about transferring your life savings, their website is full of stock images, except for one unnecessarily zoomed-in shot of Footscray players and coach looking uncomfortable.

Appropriately for a game I didn't really want to watch, you couldn't see half of it. The shadows covering the camera-side wing provided the best opportunity yet for somebody to do a Colonel Mustard and finish their opponent off with a lead pipe. Or as Brayden Maynard would put it, "a plumbing accident". There was a bit of murder in the dark later, but at first the bright, sunshiney bits shone a literal light on the locals doing pretty much as they liked. Once we'd conceded the two goals on either side of attacking play that would have been laughed at in the 19th century, I was sure the trailing side would suffer a fate more like Fremantle V2 than Fremantle V1. It landed somewhere in the middle, where we caught up and won comfortably but without raining biblical fire on the opposition until they begged for mercy. 

When it looked like we were up for another four quarters of offensive offence I was ready to march down Brunton Avenue in protest over two knees in the grave Ben Brown kicking as many goals in a thumping Reserves loss as Harrison Petty in 18 senior games. I know you can't take everything that happens in the VFL seriously (ask Kynan Brown, still waiting for his 21 tackle game to be acknowledged) but regardless of the positive steps in the main game, I still think that if he's fit enough to play in the seconds, then somebody with years of forward experience might have come in handy while the season was still on the line. 

Sick fantasies of Brown hanging out on the list as a 'just in case' option next year were dashed when he retired, citing physical breakdown. There's no doubting the character of a man who cites helping to coach an AFLW premiership on the same level as winning one himself during the retirement speech, and if 45 games/73 goals over four seasons looks like a better-than-average bit-part contribution on paper, his contribution to the greatest night in human history can never been diminished. I think about that game several times a day, and one of the big 'what ifs' is how I'd have gone if we'd come back from the dead, unloaded the Mad Minute, then imploded in the final quarter. Not saying I'd have ended up floating in the river, but you may recall the random stress-related nosebleed at half time and assume medical attention would have been required. When he kicked the first goal the Dogs players went "oh shit" and you know the rest. If they do a presentation to the departing 2021 Grand Final heroes on Friday night I hope Lachie Hunter and Josh Schache are included.

Now that it's too late for BBB and his mega-run up to save us, I'm happy to acknowledge that after suffering various degrees of malignment this year, the van Rooyen/Turner/Petty combination had their most productive afternoon yet. I just hope it's not the ultimate pyrrhic victory where the club thinks they've finally cracked the formula and run a red line through any tall forward recruiting targets. They all had their moments while kicking a combined 10 goals but let's keep a little in reserve considering the opposition visibly lost their will to live by the final siren.

van Rooyen kicked goals is good, but the idea of playing him as second ruck all next year offends me greatly. People who take interest in other clubs, is there a realistic trade target who can competently play forward and fill in for Gawn as required (including for long stretches if he's injured again)? I didn't like seeing JVR getting torpedoed at a centre bounce by Jarrod Witts and would prefer that he's left to develop as a human snag machine instead of playing emergency understudy to Gawn. Probably not Peter Wright, but somebody like him. In this scenario Petty goes back, but if they're really sold that he's going to find goalkicking form then I'd rather he do the 5% fill-in job so we get the odd moment of "I told you so" vindication as he rolls back into defence to take a solid mark. Either way, I'd feel a lot more comfortable if there was an experienced ruckman parked on our list somewhere who can play bulk games if Gawn is unavailable. And apologies to POTF but this time make sure the product works as intended before purchase.

van Rooyen is the future franchise player/heartbreaking home state returnee, but for the second time this year Daniel Turner looked capable of doing serious damage in the future. His three goals against Richmond had the element of surprise (and as it turns out, the advantage of playing against wooden spoon opposition), and after flapping around a bit in the middle of the year he looked to be on the rise again against Essendon before we wasted everyone's time by making him the sub for a couple of weeks. Against Port he looked about as threatening as everyone else, but this was a very good performance. He missed his first set shot, but just taking a mark inside 50 is an achievement for us this season. Then he kicked two, set van Rooyen up for another, and I'm comfortable that the science is settled and his place is forward. Send the other one literally back to where he played a key role in a flag and proceed directly towards next year.

It didn't feel totally mad that we were in front, until then it had only been failure to convert that set the sides apart. The third goal came after the always popular Jack Viney Shoulder Injury False Alarm, back after a few weeks off. For the third or fourth time this year he looked to have lost the use of one arm, only to bounce back seconds later like nothing was wrong. He should introduce a Mel Gibson in Lethal Weapon element and smash it back in on a goalpost.

After a week of speculation that he's going to run out the clock with North Melbourne as their Daniel Cross-style placeholder mega-professional, Viney had his best game all year. This time there was both manic collection of ball and effective disposal, against players including the guy that eats grass. There was concern that he didn't do a passionate Wolf Of Wall Street "I'm staying" speech when asked if after the match if he was staying, but this is a guy who once responded to winning a best on ground award by talking about Australia being grouse is so I don't need him to talk me into believing. I prefer the past evidence when there were rumours about him going to Geelong shortly before signing a contract extension. And we're going to be hornswoggled into delivering one last big deal for somebody who may burst at any moment I'm happy for it to be someone who has given his all for years, in often rotten circumstances. Besides, we might have a bit of money to throw around after this season so consider it a superannuation payout.

Considering how dire things had looked early, we'd done very well to ride the Disco Revolution back into the game. So the obvious reaction to this was cracking like an egg in the dying seconds and letting a player kick his first goal of the season after the siren. Even after already mentally checking out before the game started, this gave me the shits. Fortunately it was only a blip, and even if the Suns hung around like swirling nuggets for another two quarters they never seriously looked like winning again.

For a game so obscure that Fox Footy probably taped over the master copy with an episode of Bounce, there was a significant highlight at the start of the second quarter. Finally, after 18.25 games Petty pulled down a contested mark against multiple opponents in front of goal. I was legitimately happy for him, but also worried that this might somehow vindicate a season where he came in averaging one goal every three games. This time he got three in one game, surely becoming the first key position forward in the history to double his season tally in game 18.

We conceded a goal to a mystifying ruck free, then had Gawn go off with what looked like a prison tattoo of a particularly objectionable political symbol on his forehead. Dermott Brereton used the opportunity to talk about professional wrestlers cutting their own heads, but lacked the subject expertise to crack an Abdullah The Butcher reference (tw: enormous man boobs) that sickos like me would have loved. Also on the call, chief commentary dingbat Dwayne Russell promoting the idea of wildcard games. There's something wrong when David King has to be the voice of reason, but of course Mr. Spectacle wants artificial excitement pumped into games, even if it turns the league into the adult equivalent of every child getting a medal. Let's hear more about livening the game up from people calling the game out of a South Melbourne studio.       

Things really started going our way when Viney goalled straight over the hat of a goal umpire wearing sunglasses and a giant moustache that made it look like he was in disguise. If you're thinking of entering the witness protection program there are worse places to hide than our forward line. The bad news for Donnie Brasco was that we kept him surprisingly busy, including another goal to Langdon soon after. He is one of the few players who got better as the season got worse, and this was another solid afternoon of legging it up and down the wing. The only problem with his goal was that it caused Gold Coast to instantly respond with two, costing us the lead again.      

I've got NFI why we carted Melksham halfway up the country just to make him sub again, but he got to play most of the game after Sparrow hurt his foot. It looked innocuous, and even though he was on crutches at the end we haven't had any tragic announcements about amputation so hopefully he gets a week head-start on Mad Monday and can start pre-season on time. I'm not happy that it took this to get Melk on the ground, but he was again very helpful to our structure. As he didn't get a two-for-one going away party with Brown I hope it means another season. He might not play every week, and the situation has 'mid-season retirement' written all over it, but we'd be nuts to chop him if he's willing.

Last week's Mac Andrew extravaganza helped us reflect on a) how we were rorted out of drafting him, and b) why it's 10x funnier when Essendon lose after the siren, but he showed due respect to the club that did so much for him (with whatever Next Gen acadamies do) by offering close to bugger all here. Despite the comedown from last week's heroics I'm sure his career will pan out well, and there was a moment where he leapt over Gawn at a centre bounce contest like an Atlantic Salmon that made you wonder what a post-Maximum future would have looked like with him and Jackson. I reserve the right to be bitter about losing him on a draft whim, but that's still no excuse to be risking van Rooyen as a second ruckman when we've had multiple chances to find somebody qualified for the job.

We had a bit of good luck later in the quarter when somebody called Jed kicked into the mark from 15 metres out. How in 2024 are there two people called 'Jed' in Australia, let alone on AFL lists. With our recent history of charitably keeping teams in games I was still watching the clock and waiting for things to turn sour, especially on the warmest day of the season, against a team who usually win at home and lose everywhere else. Lucky they turned things around last week and were free to return to traditional Gold Coast values of falling to bits late in the season. Our fixture requests for next year should be no Saturday night home games against interstate teams and playing the Suns home and away in the last two rounds.

Old Jed had another go late in the quarter, but just when they'd have had two goals in a row and all the momentum going into half time his second effort was just as bad. Instead, they became the first team this year to let Petty kick multiple goals, and we were six points up with a better score than in four quarters the week before. I still wouldn't have believed it was enough, but even all sorts of advantages the Suns rolled over so quickly that they should change branding from lifesaving flag to white flag. It helped that they gifted us the first goal with a calamitous attempt at running the ball from defence, but when two followed soon after you could have been excused for thinking this was going to be easy. 

It was, but not just yet. They got the only other goal before three quarter time, and you could easily imagine us tiring and blowing a 17 point lead. Less easy to imagine, a romping seven goal to one final term, as Gold Coast brought all the effort and enthusiasm as the time they were made to fly to Melbourne on a few hours' notice and be thrashed in front of an empty stadium. The highlight was Judd McVee's first career goal, saving him from the list of most games without one, and landing him equal seventh for longest streak before saluting. He is a lot of fun, and regardless of who else does a bunk in strange circumstances I'm hoping he'll be around for years to come.

With Gold Coast begging for the sweet release of death, the rest of the game was morally junk time for everyone but Melbourne fans. A nine goal win was unexpectedly savage, and even adjusted for the opposition packing up at three quarter time I'm not even remotely angry that our highest score of the season came just as it was officially over. With some of the bin juice that's been served up recently, and off-field drama likely to ruin summer, I was happy to take any sort of comfortable win.       

For whatever reason there was a big group photo at the end. Maybe for Neal-Bullen to take with him just in case nobody's in the mood next week due to a return to blood-dripping butchery. Mr Wildcard Spectacle tried to claim it was 'the whole list', as if it was some proof of life picture for the critics, even without some of the keyest players present. Charlie Spargo was there again, still hobbling on crutches while dressed like Raygun, but demonstrating admirable commitment to the cause just by being there. I sense even without seeking outrage that people were crying about this, but even though 2024 has been a miserable experience I don't begrudge players a moment of joy before returning to Miseryville.

You can argue the merits of playing kids (yes), maximising the draft haul (nah), or losing to try and get an easier fixture next year (fuck off), but this was a good result for me. On Saturday morning I was one step from going to the Calmwood Mental Hospital like Ned Flanders, so a bit of pressure-free footy fun staved off insanity for a bit longer. It's been as grim a season as you can get while still winning nearly half the time, but even if this proves to be worth nothing in the grand scheme of things I'm glad it happened.  

2024 Allen Jakovich Medal votes
5 - Jack Viney
4 - Ed Langdon
3 - Daniel Turner
2 - Alex Neal-Bullen
1 - Max Gawn

Apologies to Petty, Howes, Rivers, Salem and others.

Leaderboard
The main event was already over, and this week confirmed Steven May as our Defender of the Year in absentia. That leaves one award to fill, and with a late surge from Turner the four games or less eligibility criteria for the Rising Star has finally come into play. He can now do no worse than share the title with Windsor (and Howes if he gets five and Turner fails to score) or preferably win it outright by doing something wild next week. Otherwise it's good and bad news for ANB, who continues to score votes on his way out but has been overtaken by Viney in the race for a podium finish.

48 - Max Gawn (WINNER: Allen Jakovich Medal for Player of the Year, WINNER: Jim Stynes Medal for Ruckman of the Year)
29 - Jack Viney
27 - Steven May (WINNER: Marcus Seecamp Medal for Defender of the Year)
26 - Alex Neal-Bullen
24 - Christian Petracca
19 - Ed Langdon
18 - Jake Lever, Kysaiah Pickett, Trent Rivers
16 - Clayton Oliver, Jacob van Rooyen
15 - Judd McVee
9 - Tom McDonald
6 - Harrison Petty, Christian Salem, Daniel Turner (JOINT LEADER: Rising Star Award), Caleb Windsor (JOINT LEADER: Rising Star Award)
4 - Jack Billings, Bayley Fritsch, Tom Sparrow, Adam Tomlinson
3 - Jake Melksham
2 - Kade Chandler
1 - Jake Bowey, Blake Howes

Aaron Davey Medal for Goal of the Year
The Petty one that swung wildly on the breeze provided an appealing visual spectacle, but how could you go beyond Viney from the boundary line? No change to the leaderboard, even if I can't remember what #2 or #3 looked like.

1st - Bayley Fritsch (Q4) vs Geelong
2nd - Kysaiah Pickett (Q4) vs Footscray
3rd - Kysaiah Pickett (Q4) vs Geelong

Next week
Thank god it's nearly over, but not before having to spend the whole week pretending that knocking Collingwood out of the finals somehow vindicates our failed season. Results elsewhere mean they're practically dead anyway, but they're an outside chance of making it if they win, Carlton lose to St Kilda, and there's about a 200 point combined margin. Unlikely but not impossible, and now we've got to put up with a week of the world's least self-aware people speculating about unleashing a world record margin on us.

It didn't need to be this way, when the Pies were practically dead against Brisbane we were set for a night where fans of both persuasions could gather to find common ground over failed premiership defences. Then the Lions went full flange, only for an injury-riddled Carlton to play the unlikely hero and stick the boots into a West Coast side who are finished showing of promise and just want the season to end.

Sadly there's still enough in this to vindicate the AFL and Channel 7 setting us up as sacrificial lambs to get Collingwood in the eight at the start of the round and profit from everyone trying to knock them out. It'll be funny if we knock them out - or they win by such a derisory margin that it will need Ross Lyon to unleash the insane attack plan he's had hidden for 20 years - but that's not consistent with years of desperately trying to be Collingwood's rivals and usually coming out looking like clowns. I'll play along by gently winding back on my 'pick randos' demands, but otherwise decline to participate in overt big loser energy style excitement about putting them out while our future is still questionable.

Unfortunately for Ben Brown, the belated arrival of our tall forwards means he won't get a farewell game. I'd say just pick him anyway and who cares, but I know that's not going to happen. They're more likely to drop Tomlinson and unnecessarily rush May back. Shane McAdam kicked four and is more chance of being there next year, but if we're going to pick a forward out of thin air I'll blow up if he's chosen in front of a premiership hero. Instead, may all your Brown requirements be provided by Kynan, who should get a chance at starting once in his first season. Otherwise, AMW seems to have done well in Casey's last disappointing loss of the year so I'll have him as well. Out with the crocked Sparrow is Billings because no matter how good his stats were we've got no need for him in a game with bugger all on the line. Chandler goes too because he's been there all year and hasn't done a lot wrong but we can do without him for a week.

Anyway, here's to ending a flat season in an amusing way instead of copping one final knee to the knackers on the way out.

IN: K. Brown, Moniz-Wakefield, Melksham (starts)
OUT: Billings (omit), Sparrow (inj)
LUCKY: Nil
UNLUCKY: B. Brown, Laurie, Woewodin

AFLW Watch
I half-watched the practice game against Port Adelaide, but couldn't focus closely enough to even convincingly fake a review. We lost, which is fine because it's pre-season and surely teams aren't yet at the point of regularly kicking 114 point aggregate scores in the real games, but I'm still expecting us to come back to the pack this year. We've lost a lot of experience (and Liv Purcell has a broken face, which can't be good), but my main concern is that the rest of the competition is catching up. Good for football, bad for teams that have been up for the best part of eight seasons. The tone will be set with a brutal start against all the top sides, but we've survived that sort of rigged fixturing before so there's still everything to play for. Full coverage of the season proper (with bonus guest reporters if I run out of juice) on these pages.

Final thoughts
I've got a shortlist of post headline ideas and this one has been at the top of it for years, so I'm glad it finally got a run because all the other gold related puns had been done. Sadly, you may never see some of the other rippers on the list because they need an unlikely combination of opposition, result, venue, day of week, weather etc... to be valid, but I assure you they're piss funny.