JuzzCarlton wrote:
TheGame wrote:
Ball was a forward for the first half of his career and Primus was finished 4 years ago. There is more to footy than stats.
Like showing they played more than four to six seasons!
You've missed the point again Juzz. It's not about showing a player can play for more than 6 seasons, it's playing at the elite level for more than 6 seasons.
I asked a question as to which ruckmen (Everett aside) in the last 10 years have played more than 6 years at the elite level. You gave me Ball and Primus. As TheGame rightly says, Ball was a forward for the first 4 or 5 years he played (and not a grewat one at that). Once he moved into the ruck, he struggled for a bit (1998-2001, average over those years was about 11 possessions, 4 marks and 8 hit outs per game), missed 2002 entirely, then was solid in 2003-05 (averaged 11 possessions, 4 marks and 15 hit outs per game). Nothing to write home about there, and certainly NOT an example of a ruckman playing elite football for more than 6 years.
Primus...was good from 96-98 (ave 13 possessions, 3 marks, 15 hit outs per game), missed 99, similar averages in 2000, then had great years in 01-02 (avergaing 21 hit outs a game), 2003 was poor by his standards (7 possessions, 2 marks, 12 hit outs per game), missed 04, and 05 was good, but nothing spectacular (9 possessions, 5 marks, 16 hit outs per game). So, 2 great years, 4 good years, the rest either injured or average. Again, certainly not playing elite level football for 6 years or more.
Contrast that with Hird, Voss, Buckley, Williams, Bradley, Kelly etc etc, loads and loads of midfieldres (and a fair few KPPs) who played 10+ years at the elite level.
Verbs wrote:
What about Matthew Clarke who played about 250 games?
Clarke Keating debuted in 1996, and has played about 150 games (plus 3 premierships).
Josh Fraser has played seven years straight.
King has played almost 200 games since 1996.
The list goes on.
What is the issue?
Clarke has played about 235 games, I'll give you that, although I would never call him an elite ruckman or an elite talent. Keating's example actually supports what I (and Teddy and TheGame) am saying 150 games in 11 years...if I was to tell you that we'd get 150 games in 11 seasons from our number 1 pick this year, would you be happy with that?
Fraser has never dominated the ruck for anything more than a week or two.
King was the dominant ruckman for 2-3 years, then faded.
What's the issue? The issue is that there are several people here who are thinking that what we want from our number 1 pick this year is someone who is likely (cause nothing is guaranteed, but you want to maximise your chances) to play 250+ games for CFC at the elite level. History shows us that ruckmen just don't do that anymore. Not consistently over 10+ years at the top level of performance.
So, for me, when I think about who I want with my number 1 pick, I am thinking who is the most likely player, given that there are a bunch who are rated fairly evenly in terms of talent, to give CFC that return, 250+ games of elite level football? The answer that I come up with is that it is unlikely to be a ruckman (of course it doesn't rule it out, but the odds, as history shows, are stacked against it).
It is more likely to come from a KPP than a ruckman.
It is MUCH more likely to come from a midfielder.
We have the blessing of the number 1 pick, we need to make sure that we maximise the benefits of that player for CFC for as many years as we can.