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View Full Version : Jarrad Grant is thriving in his new role on the wing



bornadog
25-06-2015, 09:16 AM
Link (http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/jarrad-grant-is-thriving-in-his-new-role-on-the-wing-at-western-bulldogs/story-fnp04d70-1227413267620)

http://resources3.news.com.au/images/2015/06/24/1227413/266343-ebfbcf3c-1a2e-11e5-b2ba-726e89a2ffb1.jpg



A CHANGE of role has reinvigorated the career of Western Bulldogs midfielder Liam Picken, and may do the same for the enigmatic Jarrad Grant.

Under new coach Luke Beveridge, the at-times inconsistent forward has shifted to the wing, producing three solid games since coming back into the Dogs’ line-up in Round 9.

Against Brisbane last Saturday he racked up 22 disposals, the second-highest tally of his 69-game career.

Assistant coach Daniel Giansiracusa, who spent six seasons playing alongside Grant in the Bulldogs forward line, said the switch had given Grant “a new lease on life’’.

“Playing exclusively as a forward you can get a bit stale,’’ Giansiracusa said. “Luke saw that he could play in that position (wing), not just as a lead-up forward and I think he likes to free guys’ minds up a bit and play them in different positions.

“As a new coach, he looked at his list and looked at ways to find out more about the players. A bit like Liam Picken, he didn’t pigeon-hole him into a role or position. Luke’s done that with a few of the guys and some of those moves have really come off.’’


Grant agreed: “I guess it frees you up from having a defender follow you around all day and I’m relishing being able to run over the whole ground. It breathes a bit of fresh air into life.

“Luke’s big on versatility and players being able to play multiple positions. That sits perfectly with me. I can still get a little bit of time up forward, maybe 75-25 (per cent) between wing and forward.’’

Giansiracusa said the switch had brought an intensity and an added defensive dimension to Grant’s game.

“Jarrad would agree that he lacked urgency at times. With the change of role, being closer to footy and in and around the action more often, his urgency has to be at a really high level. He has to be right in amongst it offensively and defensively.

“You’re at the coalface and if you’re not urgent you get brushed aside.’’

Grant said his past three matches had “probably been my best few weeks for the club’’ but felt he still had considerable work to do.

“I want to be a consistent AFL player. If I continue to play the way I have in the past few weeks, then hopefully I can end the year having had a pretty consistent few months on the wing.

“Just joining in, getting involved, helping out with team defence. There are a lot of aspects of the game that I just need to do on a consistent basis.’’

He said midfield coaches Joel Corey and Steven King had helped fast-track his understanding of how to play the new role.

“They have helped us improve our work at stoppages and also helped me personally with my running patterns and my set-ups,’’ Grant said.

“Honing down on getting to the right positions and spreading away from there, whether it’s offensively or defensively. Just learning how to stay involved in the game.’’

Giansiracusa, who spent a fair chunk of his 14-season career going through the midfield, says Grant has the raw ingredients to thrive as a wingman.

“He’s got extreme pace — when he takes off not many can go with him — and he can be an architect who gets the footy going our way,’’ he said.

“Jarrad reads the play really well, he’s got a smart footy brain and he’s reached the point where he’s actually one of our more experienced players.

“He can help his younger teammates out a bit and he’s good in that regard. Before now, he’d probably never seen himself in that light, but I think he’s really enjoying that aspect of his footy and its coming out in his game.

“Murph (captain Bob Murphy) has really encouraged him to grow in that leadership area. Granty does it in his own way, but he’s really good in that side of things out on the ground. He’s matured a bit.

“He understands that it gets to a point in your career where people make calls on you. He’s had potential and plenty of talent, but he’s got really fit and looks like he’s ready to take the next step in his career.’’

bulldogtragic
25-06-2015, 09:21 AM
That's our man.

azabob
25-06-2015, 09:26 AM
AFL journos have the easiest job in the world.

SlimPickens
25-06-2015, 01:54 PM
What's his contract status?

boydogs
25-06-2015, 02:05 PM
What's his contract status?

2 year deal ends this year

Murphy'sLore
25-06-2015, 02:22 PM
We should never, ever, give Jarrad more than a one year contract. He always plays so much better when his contract is coming up.

bulldogtragic
25-06-2015, 02:27 PM
We should never, ever, give Jarrad more than a one year contract. He always plays so much better when his contract is coming up.

Yeah and nah :) But I think the opposite. I think we should reward him with a new 2 year deal and invest in his confidence. What I would then do is put high KPIs on him for the balance of the year for a third year. In effect rewarding him, investing in his confidence and then holding out a carrot to work towards by making him not just best 22, but top 15.

bornadog
25-06-2015, 02:31 PM
We should never, ever, give Jarrad more than a one year contract. He always plays so much better when his contract is coming up.

If he is valuable to the team then we need to lock him in and show confidence in his ability and he will also be confident when playing. We can't keep getting rid of players in the 23 to 28 age bracket.

BornInDroopSt'54
25-06-2015, 03:14 PM
Grant has a lot to offer and I think he will finish the year off well. I think he will grow as a footballer. It amazes me how much cynicism there is about him but some people are undeveloped in the human attribute of faith and intuition and just go on their thinking alone. I'm talking about the cynics, not Grant. He has underperformed and lacked consistency sure but blind Freddie can see that he has a lot to offer and people can turn things around. Watch this space.

LostDoggy
25-06-2015, 03:31 PM
The was a player profile on the website and Murphy said that Grant was one of the most talented players he'd seen, and he is confident he is starting to pull it all together and will terrorize opposition. That is a good enough endorsement for me.

A lot of his problems are effort based and as such I agree, 1 year deals are the way to go with him, with performance incentives next year to unlock an extension.

Bulldog4life
25-06-2015, 03:34 PM
I think that if Jarrad maintains his form towards the end of the year it would be appropriate to offer him a 2 year deal. We wouldn't want him to look elsewhere now he has found his true position in the side.

jeemak
25-06-2015, 04:23 PM
I would think Grant still has a bit of work to do to earn another contract with us.

Nothing outrageous, just prove he can be consistent across a prolonged period. Within this contract period we've seen about a dozen games of quality, and while I agree that due to injury last year he was at a disadvantage, he needs to give more than that before sign him up for two or three more years.

Cyberdoggie
25-06-2015, 04:37 PM
Two or three good games don't make a season, or a career.

Let's see if he can keep it up when we play the better opposition. If Grant is going to play that wing role he need to eventually be lethal in an Isaac Smith type fashion. Someone who can be damaging when on the loose and who regularly gets in the top 6 disposal count for the side each week. One of the main contributors in the team, not just someone who can did a couple of good things.

I really hope it works and I think it's another example of how our coach is just making good decisions and transforming this club.

Ghost Dog
25-06-2015, 05:10 PM
This is a bloke who was 'renditioned' by Brendan MacCartney for four weeks to the gym. If he can string together one solid season I will be thrilled. Not even too much flashy stuff, just consistent footy.
Still hate the way he drops the ball on to his foot.

ratsmac
25-06-2015, 05:55 PM
Definitely consistency is the key for Spindles. If he can bring the game like he played against Brisbane on the weekend, we are a better team for it. Like Jeemak said!

Maddog37
25-06-2015, 06:22 PM
Love to watch him play. The opposite of Dale Morris who I also love to watch play.

BornInDroopSt'54
25-06-2015, 06:53 PM
I would think Grant still has a bit of work to do to earn another contract with us.

Nothing outrageous, just prove he can be consistent across a prolonged period. Within this contract period we've seen about a dozen games of quality, and while I agree that due to injury last year he was at a disadvantage, he needs to give more than that before sign him up for two or three more years.

Do you think he will do the work? Do you think he will get a contract or do you think we will finish him off at the end of the year?

jeemak
25-06-2015, 09:52 PM
Do you think he will do the work? Do you think he will get a contract or do you think we will finish him off at the end of the year?

His test will come over the next five or six weeks now there's two or three weeks worth of tapes for opposition analysts to scrutinise. If he can keep his work rate up and produce at the same time more opposition attention comes at him he's a better than even money chance to get another two years.

If he can't then I think he'll be cut loose. There's not many options left with him, and I think he and everyone else knows it.

Torpedo
25-06-2015, 10:15 PM
Help me out here. I'm struggling with what this means. How would you describe/explain appropriate "running patterns" for JG while he is playing as winger, for example? How complex is this stuff for the players?

Remi Moses
25-06-2015, 10:19 PM
I think ( and hope ) the penny may have dropped .
You need more than God gifted talents to get there, and if Jarryd keeps going it's a massive tick for himself and the coach.
Two coaches couldn't unlock the key

bulldogtragic
25-06-2015, 10:24 PM
Help me out here. I'm struggling with what this means. How would you describe/explain appropriate "running patterns" for JG while he is playing as winger, for example? How complex is this stuff for the players?

Zoning, structures, game plan, end to end running along lines etc I think.

jeemak
25-06-2015, 10:38 PM
Help me out here. I'm struggling with what this means. How would you describe/explain appropriate "running patterns" for JG while he is playing as winger, for example? How complex is this stuff for the players?

The big one is running a certain way to clear space but also be a relevant option if you need to be. Or get to the next spot defencively or offencively.

As a forward you generally have space to run towards, and leave behind you. Or space to run back into and leave in front of you. You either chase or you don't, and finding a spot in a zone is easy.

On the wing/middle of the ground you've got more lateral space to worry about. Where you run at certain times determines the next role in the structure you can perform. Go too far one way and you've cooked the team defensively, go too far the other and on the break your team mates might be faced with no viable forward option and nobody to kick wide to in order to buy some time.

Torpedo
26-06-2015, 10:53 AM
Thanks for that. Who would be a good example of a winger who does this really well?
Wouldn't mind going to watch someone do this to get a better understanding.

Happy Days
26-06-2015, 10:57 AM
Thanks for that. Who would be a good example of a winger who does this really well?
Wouldn't mind going to watch someone do this to get a better understanding.

Pearce Hanley is far and away the best at this when he is up and going. Gaff from West Coast is also very good.

Twodogs
26-06-2015, 12:18 PM
Thanks for that. Who would be a good example of a winger who does this really well?
Wouldn't mind going to watch someone do this to get a better understanding.

The thing is that just as you think "oh, I get it" then it all changes.