Enjoy Every Sandwich wrote:
Obviously the match commitee rate "Butter Fingers" Deluca higher than we TCers.
I am flabbergasted that Bryan couldnt make that NAB Cup side before Deluca
Can Bryan play CHF? Can he play CHB? Has he ever done so before?
Deluca is primarily a CHF or 3rd forward. Dylan McLaren has the ability to play in defence on 195+cm defenders. French thrives on hardwork and will benefit from having the lion's share of the ruckwork in the preseason games.
Complaining about Deluca being picked ahead of Bryan is no more sensible than complaining about Wiggins or Teague being picked ahead of Bryan. At the moment, they aren't direct competitors for the same role. McLaren and Bryan are competing for the No. 2 ruck position. Bryan needs to establish that he can play another position successfully at AFL level. McLaren has the advantage with greater mobility and flexibility at the moment.
A fair complaint could be that he won't be able to demonstrate an ability to play as a forward unless he is played ahead of someone like Deluca. But Deluca has shown he can play as a forward, and has the pace and agility of forwards 6 cm shorter than himself. But Bryan wasn't able to demonstrate potential as a forward in 11 games last year, and I doubt he has the pace or agility to do so effectively.
The days of the lumbering second ruck playing in a forward pocket are gone. Gardiner has not set the world on fire in that position despite being an elite player. Good ruckmen/forwards are rare. JLo, Salmon and Alessio, Darcy and Kozzie stand out, and Ottens, Bandy and Simmonds have shown a bit at various stages.
The logic is so obvious - someone who is around 200cm should be able to outmark most defenders. Don't think that recruiters wouldn't kill for such a prize. But unless they are truly exceptional, they are exploited by faster opponents who leave them for dead running upfield.
Why don't we give Bryan the opportunity to dominate in the forward line at VFL level. At his height, he should be able to do so. If he can't do that, then forget about it.