I don't buy the idea that everything would be ok if we had a coach who yelled at players more, but our struggles over the last fortnight bring to mind that great motivational speech, "You climb obstacles like old people fuck!" Now we're in a giant mess, accompanied by the sound-barrier shattering noise of Melbourne FC's relevance to 2025 going out the window. Where else would you rather be? Other than an explosively decompressing jumbo jet over the Atlantic Ocean.
Remember when we used to win games with scores like 8.14.62? There are a few posts in the 2022-2024 region with the theme of 'happy to get the points, not sure this is sustainable', and indeed it wasn't. Things started falling apart after the memorable last stand against Geelong, not even pausing at the miserable on-field ending of the season before various big names were only held back from scaling the wall to freedom by long-term contracts. Which, and sorry if this comes as a surprise to any players, is sort of the point.
Despite everything that went wrong last year, 2025 offered good prospects for a reboot. If you cynically focused on the narrow losses last year instead of multiple high-profile implosions we weren't that bad. Now good players were back from injury, failed positional switches had been corrected, and multiple top draft picks had arrived. Even with the sour end of the GWS game, there was a strong enough combination of good signs and excuses to make you think things might just turn out alright.
So anyway, two weeks later the guy who once kicked six blessed goals in a Grand Final dropped a simple mark that would have at best kept us within range at three quarter time, then scrambled for a loose ball on the ground like an old man whose shopping bag had just burst, before said ball rocketed down the other end for a goal. It lacks the 'picture that defines an era' quality of this classic, but says everything you need to know about the direction we're headed in this year.
For all the scorn poured on the AFL, giving us consecutive home games against teams with no fans was an accurate prediction of Melbourne's trajectory. I don't know what it does for the game to deliberately have two empty looking stadiums in a row. Maybe tell the MCC to open the upper deck that can seen on TV instead of the hidden one? Maybe neither party gives a rats because games like this are there to be endured until lucrative meetings between popular sides come along.
Given the intensity of our collapse against North, I'm surprised this game had a bigger crowd than Round 1. As no self-respecting neutral would be seen dead at either, it means we've got a lot of Grand Prix fanatics, or Riverdance: The Post Goal Musical wasn't the draw they thought it was. Fair to say a lot less people were in attendance at the final siren this time. Relegation to the all-new graveyard slot of 1.20pm Saturday meant it was over early, but anyone who stayed to the end of this grim, miserable, slopfest without publicly disgracing themselves should get a personalised thank you from the club.
No handwritten apology for me, as I was unavoidably occupied by [none of your business]. Won't pretend to feel guilty, consider it moral payback for all the live excitement I've missed in recent years. It's got nothing to do with expecting a five goal loss, if I'm going to suffer I'd rather it be in person. What if my presence had somehow affected the atmosphere, changing the cause of history and leading us to a thumping win that set us on the road to glory? Sorry about that. Can I instead offer you a disappointing thrashing from a side we hadn't lost to in 11 years (admittedly, with near-misses in 2016, 2019, and 2023)?
More lifeless defeat was an appropriate end to another wacky week of following Melbourne. The fun started with Simon Goodwin's all-time classic press conference after the North disaster, responding to a question about Gawn's performance with an answer that will live in infamy. In launching a defence that wasn't required or wanted, the coach made it sound like some sort of deep dark secret was about to be revealed, kicking off a brief but memorable media frenzy.
Just when you were worried that our captain had taken an idea from [deleted on legal advice, but it's still on his Wikipedia page all these years later] and flopped his chop outside Elsternwick Post Office, the matter was revealed to be a long-term illness affecting somebody close to him. That's no good for anyone involved (and also none of our business), but had also been a thing the previous week when Gawn was our best player. God knows why it needed to be raised then, other than as a panic reaction to facing the music after our worst loss in years.
The 'loose lips sink premierships' incident might have been relegated to a weird footnote in history if that loss shocked us back to life. Instead, for the second week in a row we were blown to strands of DNA by a team who - on paper - should not have been allowed to win that easily. Farewell to our longest unbeaten streak, and unless you think University can still avenge nine consecutive losses to us, the new unbeaten streak leader is eight wins and a draw in a row against Hawthorn. And fat chance of that surviving beyond Round 9.
Speaking of Hawthorn, for all the internal pain of watching our season crash out on the first corner I've got a perverse fascination in their evolution from what looked like rank amateurs against us to premiership contenders. I guess they refined the 'chip, chip, chip, chip, kick into a nothing happening forward line, watch it go the other way' style we've now adopted with the religious fervour of the mad bastards who crucify themselves for Easter.
One of these clubs is now the glamour side of the competition. The other is Melbourne, who have entered a backwards race with Carlton to see who can annoy their fans the most. Thank god we got something out of our brief time at the top, because I bet Blues fans who were snippy about us winning a flag in offbeat circumstances would self-mutilate for a bit of that action now. Now the race is on to see which board will crack first.
We've got recent success going for us, but they haven't lost back-to-back games by 10 goals to emerging (e.g. haven't done anything for years) teams, but obviously Carlton will sack their coach first. Firstly, he's never won anything, and more importantly they live for bloodlust. If he does get the boot Michael Voss may be the lucky one. Obvious wounded pride and definitive end to senior coaching career aside, he'll bank a generous payout and head directly back to the media. On the other hand, I fear our only living premiership coach will be forced to put an increasingly strained brave face on things while he's dragged through toxic waste for the rest of the season.
As bad as the last two weeks have been, I don't know what you're going to gain from upending everything now. At the same time, you can't go on like this forever so keep your Coaching Chaos bingo card nearby. I predict journalists will start with phrases like "the club will wrap their arms around him", before switching to saying "untenable" a few weeks later when there's blood in the water.
We could always come back from the dead and make this gloomy post look absurd. If you're reading in the future I'd like it known that compared to the way many people were carrying on, my tone is positively inspirational. I stop at indulging any comparison to Brisbane winning the flag from 0-3 last year. What about the 999 other teams to do bugger all from the same position? Yes, we made finals from this spot in 2006, but the third of those losses was by five points and involved goal umpiring scandal. With 20 games left anything could happen, but if this year ends with us even close to finals my jaw will drop so far I'll be mistaken for a pelican.
Despite clear signals of an impending tits-up shambles in the second half of 2024, I emotionally invested in a revival. Not just for selfish reasons, but because I really wanted the coach to pull back from (what wasn't yet) the brink and stuff success elbow-deep down the throat of his critics. That's looking unlikely, and if things do end badly I want to focus on the time we unleashed 40 minutes of power on the grandest stage, not spiralling to our doom as the pound-for-pound most boring team ever to breathe air.
I don't expect anyone else to be this romantic about the coach, and as long as you can express yourself with basic human decency and respect I'm happy to stand together and silently shake our heads in dismay at how it's all gone wrong. Goodwin also comes across as somebody who'd do better in the club environment than sitting on the couch, so maybe we've got some bullshit Bez-style ceremonial job for him instead of everyone patiently waiting for the footy equivalent of putting the family dog down.
It's getting a bit Daniher '07, hopefully without the club hideously botching the transition and encouraging the coach to quit by making him reapply for his job. Strangely, Neale won nothing and went out to a hero's reception, while the guy who if nothing else kept things together enough to make 2021 possible will depart with people being tremendously rude about him.
This might be because some of us had gone through an early dump-Daniher phase in 2003, and four years later you could tell the place was burning like buggery with no possible escape. There's still a feeling now that we should be doing better, not helped by the tripe served up in the last two losses, and plenty of time for the situation to either stabilise or completely spiral out of control before there's a change.
After incorrectly predicting 'Yze by Anzac Day' in 2021, it would be ironic if the only undefeated MFC men's senior coach of all time is the one to pull the plug on his old boss.
Having said all that, for god's sake no more please about how much players and coaches love each other. The Full Metal Jacket coaching methods of Barassi etc... are never coming back, so if they're happy behind the scenes so am I, but the ongoing effort to point out how happy everyone is doesn't compute with players who seem to have the enjoyment level of that Iraqi soccer team who were forced to kick a concrete ball as punishment for losing.
They seem to perk up after a goal. Maybe a little too much, because as one correspondent who knows exactly what gets me going pointed out, the scoreworm shows that of the eight times we did what's necessary to win games of Australian Rules, six were followed by the opposition almost immediately responding. That's partly why this was such a slog to watch, but as wasn't as much of a problem in the first half when we were kicking a measly 2.9.
The less said about the game itself the better. If you're a Gold Coast fan we wish you well (and vigorously hope for a Grand Final against GWS that will torment fans of big Victorian clubs), but in-depth details will be at a minimum. The TL:DR is that we were unsteady from the start, the collapse started during the third quarter, and by the final term the only thing left was a pile of rubble that even looters wouldn't want to touch.
The old possessions galore build-up nearly had an early win, with the ball transferred securely from defence, and after a nice mark Henderson... rolled the last kick along the ground and out of bounds. Our forward line needs work, but John Coleman wouldn't have known how to deal with that. There was another alleged attack that died when Oliver dinked the ball straight to an opponent and you could tell this was going to be a difficult afternoon.
I'm happy we don't have a first round pick this year (yet...) because it will encourage playing out the season properly instead of strategically folding the tent. Besides, it got us the already impressive Lindsay and oh look he's just done his knee.
This kid might be The Chosen One, because he somehow sidestepped our walk under ladders/smash mirrors/punch gypsy fortune tellers in the face style luck and escaped with only minor damage. But when he was walking off like so many others who weren't seen again for a year I was about to curl into a ball. Now watch him slip on banana mid-rehab and break everything.
With all this going on, conceding the first goal to a needless 50 metre penalty was only a minor disappointment. It kicked off a Mayday May Day, perhaps the worst game he's ever played for us. It didn't help that Lever disappeared from the selected side, but let's be kind and say our best modern defender was rusty after a few weeks off. Like Gawn last week, there's no need to make a big deal of it (even if, in this case he has been fairly/unfairly implicated in legal drama), because he's got years of credit in the bank but lucky the Suns were still not good enough to take full advantage, and Max King kicks set shots like Earl Spalding.
Their second goal also came from a 50, which is how you can tell a team is losing the plot. The first didn't need to happen but was at least adjacent to the play, this was Oliver kicking the ball along the ground after a free because (?). Even in our Kamp Kumbaya atmosphere you'd think he'd be asked to explain this during the review. Maybe Clayts is still upset about Brad Green blabbing to the paper about how he was in tears during their post-saga trade call? How about we set a club goal of not exposing other people's personal business in the media?
Somewhere around here we actually had a shot. There were plenty more during the first half, but at the time it felt we best get one goal or it might never happen. A set shot also meant a few seconds not worrying about the ball teleporting down the other end where the defence has finally had enough of years after propping everyone else up. I know Foxtel/Kayo has to find four sets of callers on a Saturday now, but saying Kade Chandler is having a "breakout year" after one BOG performance was a bit over the top. He was good last week, and far from the worst in a crowded field here, but this was a Dwayne Russell level of mad hyperbole.
He missed, the Suns were two goals up and well on top, and you could start preparing footage of that F1 car's wheels randomly falling off. It wasn't a big margin, but with energy levels flatlining on and off-field it felt like (and was) only a matter of time before the Suns pulled away.
It's not all what was left of the forward line's fault, the ball barely ever got down there in the first place. The structure is still completely rooted, and I don't understand dumping Turner after one game. He wasn't very good last week, but any chance of letting the kid settle for a bit?
Various people assured me that this wasn't a mad abandoning of van Rooyen to Gold Coast's entire defence because Johnson was returning from suspension. I've got no expectations for Evil Nathan Jones other than having a crack and hopefully contributing, but did he impact a single forward contest in this game? This was just a case of looking at somebody's physical attributes and hoping for the best. But, in his defence he, Turner, or anyone else would've struggle to make anything of the way we were going forward.
As we looked more likely to build a grand Egyptian pyramid than craft a goal inside 50, the alternative was for Bowey to casually rip one from long distance. Which was good, but goals like that have to be complimentary to traditional ones or you'll only get eight per week and by the end of the year the member seats will be full of skeletons wearing Melbourne scarves.
It was unsafe swings and terrifying roundabouts with the Lindsay injury, because it did allow Melksham to overcome the wishy-wash decision to make him sub and introduce some forward comptency to our team.
I was prepared to cop the balance between trying to win and regenerate in Round 1, but after two losses you've got to pick a 'trying to win' or 'rebuilding' lane. He's obviously not the future, but can help prop things up while we work out where to go next. You can't tell me he wouldn't have contributed more from the first bounce than Henderson (who, like Johnson, I'm happy to have around but let's have some selection tension for last minute additions to the list) or Fritsch, who hasn't looked less likely to get involved in goals since the year we played him in defence.
We should know better than anyone that a game can miraculously change course at any time, but I couldn't have argued a decent case for us coming back to win this if you put a gun to my head. A missed shot at the end kept the damage down to three goals at quarter time but everything felt off this felt off. Even the Melbourne fan in the DoorDash ad burnt his chicken nuggets.
Whatever was said at quarter time didn't do much for the mood of players who trudged back out there like they were working on a slave labour project (and a couple of them probably do feel like that, albeit the first one ever with a million dollar salary attached) and went on like nothing needed to changed.
After the Lindsay tragedy/scare I was on hyper alert for Langford to suffer some dreadful injury as well. He survived and was (relatively) good, so what was the point of not just giving him a full game last week? Because there was a bunch of players who'd spent so much time in the VFL that there was no point sending them back there again?
After a quarter and a half without one goal kicked from inside 50, the Bizarre Sub Club combined when Langford set up Melksham with a lovely kick. The latter knew exactly where to run, and aimed true from the set shot, but would still have been scratching his knackers on the bench if not for injury. I don't pretend to understand the deep, inner tactical workings of this game but during an election campaign where the phrase "doesn't pass the pub test" will be worn out, this is my equivalent.
That's as good as it got before half time, by which point half our side looked ready to hand in their notice and go home rather then be yelled at over the fence by emotionally stunted slobbering losers after the final siren. The solution to low morale is never to hurl abuse into a player's face - unless each of them gets to swat one fan for free per season - but as much as I'd like to provide encouragement through the votes, this is the second week in a row where I couldn't seriously find five players who deserved them. There wasn't even a Chandler style standout this time, so please consider that whoever eventually gets five (and for once I didn't do the votes first then write the rest of the post) was roughly on par with the half of those who scored nil.
For the second time we were saved on video evidence as a Suns goal was reversed for hitting the post. It lacked the same flavour as when it happens to a Victorian team and they cut to some anti-social freak doing their rag in the face of undeniable technological evidence. Our lunatic fringe were probably warming up a spot of final siren feedback by now, and while we need all the members we can get I'm prepared to make some exceptions. The club should park someone down there with an EFTPOS machine offering membership refunds in exchange for signing legal documents promising not to come back for the rest of the season.
2025 Allen Jakovich Medal
5 - Harvey Langford
4 - Jake Bowey
3 - Ed Langdon
2 - Clayton Oliver
1 - Harry Sharp
Apologies to nil
Leaderboard
Take a screenshot of this, you'll never see a wackier leaderboard again. I don't know if Oliver deserves to be one vote off the lead, but if this was done on merit there would only be about five players listed. Bowey floats to the top amongst the defenders, Langford jumps into the Rising Star race with what's hopefully the least memorable of his career BOGs, and let's see if we can get some really odd players onto this list by the end of the year.
7 - Xavier Lindsay (LEADER: Rising Star Award)
6 - Clayton Oliver
5 - Jake Bowey (LEADER: Marcus Seecamp Medal for Defender of the Year), Kade Chandler, Max Gawn (LEADER: Jim Stynes Medal for Ruckman of the Year), Harvey Langford
3 - Christian Petracca
2 - Jake Lever, Christian Salem
1 - Harry Sharp, Tom Sparrow
Aaron Davey Medal for Goal of the Year
Bowey in the first quarter because it came when we looked like never kicking another one again. If Windsor hasn't yet been consumed by whatever flesh-eating virus he got from Round 1, let him know he's still the overall leader.
Just when you think things can't get any worse, it's off to a ground we're always putrid at, to play a side that will not just do the polite thing and piss off to the bottom of the ladder for a few years. It's the 10th anniversary of when we won after I tipped us to lose by 102, let's have some more of that. Geelong has also lost their last two games, but at a standard light years ahead of the twin-turds we've punched out recently.
In 2019, I deluded myself that various wins in the first half of the season were a turning point but you've got to have the wins first. The idea of plucking out a rare win at Kardinia Park is so ridiculous that I can't even force myself to imagine how it might happen. You never know. But you sort of do. I predict a mind-alteringly bad result and will be extremely happy just to escape with our dignity intact.
The first change speaks for itself, Pickett is unsuspended (for as long as that lasts), and I'd play him this week even if he comes down with the plague. He can't be expected to save us single-handedly, but will add much-needed zing to a side playing like they're under heavy sedation. If fit, Lever is also an automatic selection, as we try to squeeze the last bit out of air from his great partnership with May.
Dropping Turner after one game then not rewarding VFL form is just the sort of stupid thing we'd do, but even if I don't think he'll be the difference between losing by a little and a lot, I'll blow up if he's not selected. Perhaps controversially, I'm making way for him and for Melksham to start, by giving Fritsch the week off. No need for the humiliation of playing a Reserves game against Watsonia on a gravel field, just have a week off, put your hair up, and let's see if we can work out how to recapture the old magic again after that?
And assuming Windsor is still hooked up to a drip and/or in an iron lung, I'll also have Laurie for Billings because, unlike Melksham, in this case the experienced player isn't adding much so you may as well have another crack at getting the kid going. Maybe the last crack, but I don't see much in the VFL stats to excite. Whether he deserves it or not Kynan Brown must get one full AFL game to make up for playing as sub twice, and otherwise you've got Adams if a defender is needed. And Poor Old Tom Fullarton watch fans will be pleased to see that he kicked three, so the comeback of the century could be on there.
Geelong by plenty.
IN: Laurie, Lever, Melksham, Pickett, Turner
OUT: Billings, Fritsch, Howes (omit), Henderson (to sub), Lindsay (inj)
LUCKY: Billings, Johnson, Rivers, Viney
UNLUCKY: Adams, Fullarton
Final thoughts
I'm getting ready for the big test of what it will take me to get genuinely angry post-premiership. At the moment I'm just sadly watching it all go wrong. Thank god I was only willing to buy into us being a fringe finals team, people who tried to manifest a top four finish with good feelings must be in therapy.