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bornadog
21-01-2017, 03:06 PM
Link (http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/beware-of-the-western-bulldogs-20170119-gtuti7.html)

http://www.theage.com.au/content/dam/images/g/t/u/t/m/a/image.related.articleLeadwide.620x349.gtuti7.png/1484873640323.jpg

I am grateful to have been asked to write a book about the Bulldogs' grand final win of last year. I am grateful because it takes my mind off the fear and uncertainty surrounding the historical clock that has started ticking with the inauguration of Donald Trump.


The Bulldogs' flag was good news, good news not just for the Bulldogs, but for anyone who wants to believe that causes which appear lost – and have appeared lost for decades – can suddenly come from nowhere and win. A club that famously had no luck suddenly found luck on its side. What does the 2016 grand final tell us? If the Dogs can do it, maybe we can too.

One fear I have with the book is that no one will believe what I write. Listen to the tone of footy discussions in this town. That tone is nothing like the tone of the conversations I have been having at the Bulldogs over the last couple of months with the 22 players in the grand final team. They proceed from a different platform, from a different set of understandings. They are positive, upbeat.


The last time I conducted an inquiry as comprehensive as this into a football club was in 1992 when I wrote my book about a year with the Dogs titled Southern Sky, Western Oval. I was shocked then by the toll this game takes on the bodies of those who play it. I am shocked anew.


When I met Tory Dickson at the club on Tuesday morning, he had just ridden 50 kilometres on a bike. That's because he's still not running. He played last year with groin injuries, nearly missing each of the last six games including the grand final. He battled loss of speed, loss of agility, had his hips strapped before every game and was still a crucial player. Post-season, he had an operation which replaced an eroded hip joint with gell and took shrapnel bone out of tendon. Only four Bulldogs played all 26 games last year.


It's also easy to overlook the fact that AFL players not only compete against players at other clubs, they compete against one another for a place in the team. Yet the Bulldog players talk with genuine feeling for their teammates who "missed" – that is, who missed the big ride, the top-of-the-mountain experience, that was the grand final victory. It's a competitive environment but it's not meanly so. It's not dog-eat-dog. There are other values at work in the club culture and these have not appeared by accident – a network of people at the club, including the players' leadership group, have worked very hard to create and maintain them.


My respect for AFL footballers has been refreshed and expanded – they deserve every cent they get paid. The game demands so much now – eight hour days (longer on camps), strategy meetings, group meetings, weight sessions, training sessions, handball alone sessions, all manner of physical tests ...


Dickson is a mature footballer. He's 29 and a man who fully appreciates what it takes to get to where he is. When I asked Dickson about drinking alcohol during the week, he replied: "I'd ask myself is this going to get the best out of me?"


His rules are – when the Dogs have a six-day break between games, no alcohol; a seven-day break, maybe one drink; an eight-day break, maybe a couple. But no more than that, not if you want to be in peak condition, which is where you have to be because this is a game of fine competitive edges. Everywhere, the standards are rising and the effort, just to compete, demands enormous energy.


Yet compete they do and more than one has said it's the best job he could possibly have. That's not just because they are young men who enjoy playing physical games. When you think about the old jobs that are disappearing from the workforce, particularly for unskilled males, and the nature of the new semi-permanent ones being created, I can see why, with all its risks and disappointments and demands, these young men view AFL football as they do.


What happened at the Bulldogs in 2015-16 can be likened to what happened at Geelong with the Leading Teams program in that a whole group of players bought into a common understanding about what being in a team means and then zealously pursued it. What differs in the two cases are the personalities involved and the methods they employed.


If I were to make a preliminary report to other clubs on the basis of what I've learnt so far from my inquiries at the Kennel, I'd say: "Beware. The energy is still there." That's what the Bulldogs have got – a special energy. I cannot say whether that will be sufficient to win them another premiership given: (1) the enormous part luck plays and (2) I have no idea what the morale is at any of the other clubs. But there's a buzz at the Dogs. What I'm trying to work out is how that buzz was created. Who did what?


I know I will never get the whole truth, that I will never be able to give due credit to everyone involved. There are all the people at the club from president Peter Gordon down to the supporters who travelled to Sydney in buses for the preliminary final against Greater Western Sydney. I'm here to tell those supporters that they played a part in that victory. I know because player after player has told me. It sounds like a cliche. Dare to believe it's true.


In 2016, the Dogs dared to believe. How many people outside the actual group of players believed they could win the flag? Very few, if any. The fact that virtually no one else believed didn't bother the Dogs one bit. That's the moral of the Bulldog victory to me. Get across, help your teammate. When our beliefs meet and merge, we are both stronger.

bornadog
21-01-2017, 03:06 PM
One of my favourite writers, can't wait for the book.

Murphy'sLore
21-01-2017, 09:51 PM
My dream come true! An insider's account by Martin Flanagan... Perfect.

BornInDroopSt'54
23-01-2017, 11:24 AM
Martin Flanagan is a great writer and reading this brought up a couple of things.

"What does the 2016 grand final tell us? If the Dogs can do it, maybe we can too."
This may well be the sentiment behind others' support of us. However there is something in it that short sells us a bit in that I think our team and their 'early' rise to a premiership is exceptional. I don't know about everyone here but many of us felt a couple of years ago that this was the best Bulldogs team that we had seen and that it wasn't just about the talent but also the character of the individuals. McCartney blooding the youngsters with the cracking in helped to galvanise that character. Now if our premiership is to give hope to all others then this needs to be replicated and good luck with that. We had a demographic of a lack of players of a certain age and a surfeit of very young players with a few older players. Try replicating that as The Suns and GWS have. Yeah all they needed was AFL sanction, approval to get all the best young talent over several years and to poach the rest of the comp for some talented experience. No team is going to get those sanctions again...
As Flanagan says " "Beware. The energy is still there." That's what the Bulldogs have got – a special energy. I cannot say whether that will be sufficient to win them another premiership given: (1) the enormous part luck plays and (2) I have no idea what the morale is at any of the other clubs. But there's a buzz at the Dogs. What I'm trying to work out is how that buzz was created. Who did what?" Yes the job is to get the buzz and we got it through Dalrymple and the sons of the 'Scray, especially Libba and Wallis with a drive that goes beyond one generation, giving the team culture a sanction if you like. Then there's Beveridge....
Anyhow I'm not so sure other teams can easily learn over one summer, less replicate, our path . Great to read though that the buzz is still there.

Topdog
23-01-2017, 01:31 PM
Martin Flanagan is a great writer and reading this brought up a couple of things.


This may well be the sentiment behind others' support of us. However there is something in it that short sells us a bit in that I think our team and their 'early' rise to a premiership is exceptional.

Yeah I agree it sells us short a bit but I'm also happy that people/teams are doing that. It's purely because we finished 7th, no one looks into the reasons that we finished 7th nor the fact that we were 1 game off 3rd and had an absolute horror run with injuries during the season.

As far as I'm concerned we were easily in the top 4 teams in the league and it wasn't a shock to see us win when you strip the season back and go through it. We were excellent all year

LostDoggy
24-01-2017, 10:39 AM
This could explain Dicko's poor kicking for goal at times during the finals series?

BornInDroopSt'54
24-01-2017, 10:58 AM
... no one looks into the reasons that we finished 7th nor the fact that we were 1 game off 3rd and had an absolute horror run with injuries during the season...

Yeh, plus the horror finals draw, two interstate both against arguably the best performed teams at the time, although this probably is acknowledged by others.

Ozza
24-01-2017, 11:14 AM
This could explain Dicko's poor kicking for goal at times during the finals series?

I heard him interviewed late in the season, and he was saying that due to having to spend more time managing his body during 2016 due to injuries and niggles, he had spent far less time practicing goal kicking than in the years previous.

Although - I'd be happy for him to kick 40.17 again next year (including 10.6 in the finals!) !!

As a side note, Dickson remains the most accurate kick at goal in the history of the game for all players who have had 100 shots or more. (For min. 50 shots, he is 3rd).

BornInDroopSt'54
24-01-2017, 11:17 AM
This could explain Dicko's poor kicking for goal at times during the finals series?

Especially the Hawthorn final. You'd think "..an eroded hip joint with gell and took shrapnel bone out of tendon..." would affect things. Maybe the sound of bone fragments grinding in his joint put him off a bit.

LostDoggy
24-01-2017, 09:48 PM
I heard him interviewed late in the season, and he was saying that due to having to spend more time managing his body during 2016 due to injuries and niggles, he had spent far less time practicing goal kicking than in the years previous.

Although - I'd be happy for him to kick 40.17 again next year (including 10.6 in the finals!) !!

As a side note, Dickson remains the most accurate kick at goal in the history of the game for all players who have had 100 shots or more. (For min. 50 shots, he is 3rd).

That is a very cool stat, where is that posted?

westdog54
25-01-2017, 11:09 AM
That is a very cool stat, where is that posted?

http://afltables.com/afl/stats/accuracy.html

Ozza
25-01-2017, 01:57 PM
Dickson's finals series probably went under the radar a bit - for a bloke who had 16 shots at goal.

v WCE, kicked 2.2 and was pretty busy with 18 possessions, 7 marks and 5 tackles.
v Haw, we'll probably always remember the early, uncharacteristic misses. 1 goal, 3 behinds from his 12 possessions.
v GWS, torched Heath Shaw really. 4 goals 1 behind, and the one miss, I dare say he wouldn't have missed it if the siren hadn't gone - he looked unsure whether to kick the ball or celebrate!
v Syd - 3 goals straight in the grand final - one in each of the first 3 quarters - before we broke the game open. Also had 5 tackles.

After 5 straight v Adelaide in the 2016 finals - he is building a reputation as a reliable finals performer with 15 goals in 5 finals. I'd imagine 3 goals a game in finals would stack up very well with other forwards in this era.

Mofra
25-01-2017, 02:44 PM
After 5 straight v Adelaide in the 2016 finals - he is building a reputation as a reliable finals performer with 15 goals in 5 finals. I'd imagine 3 goals a game in finals would stack up very well with other forwards in this era.
Just higher than Nick Riewoldt I believe - although Tom Boyd took more contested marks and kicked the same number of goals in one grand final as Nick did in all three of his combined.

The Pie Man
25-01-2017, 02:54 PM
Just higher than Nick Riewoldt I believe - although Tom Boyd took more contested marks and kicked the same number of goals in one grand final as Nick did in all three of his combined.

:) That's almost as funny as the 'Z Cordy is a premiership CHF....' line

LostDoggy
25-01-2017, 11:05 PM
http://afltables.com/afl/stats/accuracy.html

Many thanks, quite a good effort by Tory. Locket with some astounding mentions, 16.0 one game in 95.

jeemak
25-01-2017, 11:25 PM
Dickson's finals series probably went under the radar a bit - for a bloke who had 16 shots at goal.

v WCE, kicked 2.2 and was pretty busy with 18 possessions, 7 marks and 5 tackles.
v Haw, we'll probably always remember the early, uncharacteristic misses. 1 goal, 3 behinds from his 12 possessions.
v GWS, torched Heath Shaw really. 4 goals 1 behind, and the one miss, I dare say he wouldn't have missed it if the siren hadn't gone - he looked unsure whether to kick the ball or celebrate!
v Syd - 3 goals straight in the grand final - one in each of the first 3 quarters - before we broke the game open. Also had 5 tackles.

After 5 straight v Adelaide in the 2016 finals - he is building a reputation as a reliable finals performer with 15 goals in 5 finals. I'd imagine 3 goals a game in finals would stack up very well with other forwards in this era.

They're almost as good as it gets from his type of small to medium sized forward.

I can tell by watching his work rate, leading patterns and his ball use within 70m from goal he's the consummate forward, there's not many of his type around these days.

Hotdog60
26-01-2017, 01:42 PM
I think we need to thank Shannon Grant, Dicko could have be a very sad player for the Bumbers.
I would think Dickson is very happy how things have turned out.