Hit and Run - Demon Days

31st July 2011 Category: Hit and Run

Image: Slattery Media Group

Hit and Run is a weekly post of short statements - this week foussing on Melbourne's dark day against Geelong.

  • Melbourne’s number one possession getter Brent Moloney didn’t have a touch in the first half, supporting the theory that he’s the most inconsistent player in the league.

  • It wasn’t until late in the fourth quarter - with the threat of a record breaking margin on the line - that Melbourne applied the pressure required to compete.

  • A couple of years ago Steve Johnson and Cam Mooney had a competition to see who could get the most goal assists in a season. Johnson had 9 assists against Melbourne including a 15 metre handball assist to Mooney in the 2nd quarter.

  • Should team goals be considered for the Goal of the Year award? If so, Geelong put up a contender late in the 3rd quarter. Starting with Bartel and Enright, the Cats moved the ball, untouched, from the back pocket - through 9 different players - into their own fifty, where Steve Johnson finished off the move with a check-side shot from twenty metres out.

  • Melbourne captain Brad Green spoke in the post match press conference about the pain that the club would feel as result of the loss. Perhaps more painful for the supporters, was Melbourne’s clear lack of support for teammates. Lynden Dunn was shoved to the ground and man-handled by Paul Chapman on two separate occasions without a response from a Melbourne player.

  • Beyond the clear lack of endeavor shown by his players, there were a number of tactical errors made by Dean Bailey in the first half of the game. Among the worst; starting Liam Jurrah on the wing against Jimmy Bartel. 

  • The culture of the Melbourne Football Club has been questioned for years, by the media and by players, past and present. It's a shocking indictment on of a clubs culture when second and third year players (McKenzie, Tapscott, Howe and Strauss) look like the ones most likely to make a stand.

  • Melbourne legend Garry Lyon commentated the Bulldogs v West Coast game from Etihad stadium yesterday for Triple M, but watched part of Melbourne's performance from the box. Lyon expressed his anger and disappointment during the broadcast, saying:

"That's not a loss... that's a destruction of a club."

"The laughing stock of the AFL right now is the Melbourne Football Club, and that is a situation no one should accept!"

  • In terms of easing the pain of Round 19. One image would warm the hearts of Melbourne supporters. An emotional Todd Viney leading the Melbourne Football Club into battle next week.

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