Author Topic: Dustin Martin [merged]  (Read 904204 times)

Offline the claw

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Re: Dustin Martin plays his 250th this week
« Reply #5160 on: April 19, 2021, 12:27:49 PM »
Reckon every yr from 2010 to 2017 he improved incrementally and for a first yr player in 2010 he had a very good season. Maybe 2012 he plateued a little.If he performed at 2010 level all his career he would still have had a good career.

Best midfielder i have seen at our club and right up there with any mid that has played the game. just an awesome player.

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Dustin Martin plays his 250th this week
« Reply #5161 on: April 19, 2021, 02:43:45 PM »
Does anyone know exactly how many games he has missed through non-selection, injury, suspension since round 1 2010. I know it’s something ridiculously small.
8

R6, 2010 .......... soreness.
R15-16, 2012 .... suspended for 2 weeks over Dan Connors/sleeping tablets/missed training incident.
R22, 2014 ......... hammy.
R12, 2018 ......... calf.
R4, 2019 .......... suspended for 1 week for off the ball hit on GWS's Adam Kennedy.
R21, 2019 ........ soreness.
R3, 2020 .......... rib bruising.

Offline one-eyed

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Could Richmond superstar Dustin Martin play 400 games? (SEN)
« Reply #5162 on: April 20, 2021, 09:50:32 PM »
COULD RICHMOND SUPERSTAR MARTIN PLAY 400 GAMES?

Alex Zaia
SEN
20 April 2021


Richmond superstar Dustin Martin is preparing to play his 250th game against Melbourne on Saturday night – but could he get to 400?

Martin’s incredible durability has seen him miss just eight games since debuting in 2010, allowing him to win three premierships and a swag of individual awards.

The three-time Norm Smith Medallist turns 30 in June and doesn’t look to be slowing down anytime soon – a scary proposition for the other 17 AFL clubs.

SEN host Andy Maher described Martin as “bulletproof” and has backed the Brownlow Medallist to become just the second Richmond player after Kevin Bartlett to play 400 games.

“The only way he’s going to get injured is spraining his wrist or breaking his elbow from fending off,” Maher told SEN’s Bob and Andy.

“He plays a game of footy that’s incredibly physical and robust, but the way he plays is seemingly bulletproof.

“The danger is tearing a hamstring or popping a calf. He'll play 400 games. If he wants to, he’ll play 400 games.”

Richmond great Wayne Campbell thinks Martin cracking the magical 400-game mark is not beyond the realm of possibility.

“It’s not a silly statement,” Campbell said.

“He’s at 250 (games) and he’s turning 30, apart from the six weeks post-season, he looks after himself incredibly well.

“I’ve thought the same thing. He almost looks like he’s untouched but then you look at his contested numbers, they’re through the roof.

“He’s got some good genes, hasn’t he? He’s got those really strong quads.”

Just five VFL/AFL players have played 400 games - Brent Harvey (432), Michael Tuck (426), Bartlett (403) and Dustin Fletcher (400).

Martin is in ominous form heading into his 250th game, averaging 27.2 disposals, four clearances and a goal a game in 2021.

https://www.sen.com.au/news/2021/04/20/could-richmond-superstar-martin-play-400-games/

Online lamington

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Re: Dustin Martin plays his 250th this week
« Reply #5163 on: April 20, 2021, 10:26:49 PM »
Knock wood he keeps this up. To be honest unlike boomer Harvey who played bruised free footy on the outside, Martin actually plays a lot in the contest so I don’t think he will make 400. Still it’s quality over quantity and he’s done more in his 250 than say kade Simpson in 300

Offline Diocletian

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Re: Dustin Martin plays his 250th this week
« Reply #5164 on: April 20, 2021, 11:36:26 PM »
he’s done more in his 250 than say kade Simpson in 300

...by about a factor of 10... :shh
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Offline Rampsation

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Re: Dustin Martin plays his 250th this week
« Reply #5165 on: April 21, 2021, 02:49:01 AM »
He'll definately get to 360. Thats 5 seasons away. Do 400 isnt out of the question.

Offline Tigeritis™©®

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Re: Dustin Martin plays his 250th this week
« Reply #5166 on: April 21, 2021, 12:23:15 PM »
What a champion this bloke is.

We must thank Melbourne on Saturday night for missing one of the best players of all time.  :shh

I reckon he will be pumped on the big stage to entertain us with another awesome display of some of his best work.  :rollin
The club that keeps giving.

Offline one-eyed

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Unpacking Dusty: The enduring genius of footy's private superstar (afl site)
« Reply #5167 on: April 21, 2021, 02:53:06 PM »
Unpacking Dusty: The enduring genius of footy's private superstar

Ahead of Dustin Martin's 250th game, Callum Twomey looks at what makes the champion Tiger so great - and why 400 games isn't out of the question

By Callum Twomey
afl.com.au
21 April 2021


THE PARADOX of Dustin Martin is that we simultaneously know everything and nothing about him. The AFL's best footballer is both iconic and reclusive, imitable and completely inimitable, in the orbit of the public on Punt Road yet truly out of reach.

The competition's greatest entertainer and most well-known player remains a private figure off the field, rarely giving interviews and forgoing the spotlight for others. And yet he already has a record even the most vague football supporters can reel off at the drop of a 'don't argue': three premierships, three Norm Smith Medals and a Brownlow Medal. And possibly more to come.

This week he will play his 250th game for Richmond when the Tigers tackle Melbourne on Saturday night. He has reached the milestone with incredible speed, leaving those close to him to believe he could join the 400 club in years to come.

"I certainly believe given some luck Dustin could play to 36 years of age," said his long-time manager Ralph Carr. "Maybe he can defy all odds as only Dustin does and play longer. He comes out of contract in 2024 at the age of 33. He could potentially [reach 400 games] if he plays as long as we hope."

WHAT MAKES DUSTY SO DURABLE?

Martin has played 249 of Richmond's 257 games since he joined the club as its No.3 pick at the 2009 NAB AFL Draft. It is a remarkable record for a player renowned for his power, explosiveness and combative approach. "For a guy who is so competitive and plays like a beast, he never seems to cop heavy or bad injuries," said former teammate Brett Deledio.

Martin's training ethic is the stuff of folklore at Richmond. Few who have been around football for long enough can recall many players training at his consistently high level for so long. Even at 29, heading into his 12th season this year after three flags in four years, he put an emphasis on improving his running, blowing away coach Damien Hardwick with his pre-season. Averaging 27 disposals and a goal so far in 2021, it has worked.

Where other players commit to the gym and lifting weights, Martin has gone off-site to engage a boxing guru away from the club in previous years to maintain his fitness.

"He's obviously a great preparer. He actually trains really hard. That's probably his strength area: on the training track he doesn't go half-paced. Everything is at full tilt so in that sense that's why he plays with the intensity that he does," former Richmond assistant Justin Leppitsch said.

"He loves training, he loves playing. It's not like he's an exceptional runner or a monster in the gym or any of that sort of stuff. He still does all that other stuff but his fascination is with the game and how good he can be. That's why he's so good."

Carr said his client had invested in ways to ensure he was making the most of his career.

"[Things like] research on how the game is changing, diet, durability, other options on off-season training, psychology and additional mindfulness resources," he said.

That much has been evident at Richmond, where even when he has suffered a niggle, he has worked and returned at his own pace. A calf strain, several years ago, didn't keep him out for a game as he backed his body to recover in time between matches.

His most recent injury of significance was in the 2018 finals series, when he carried a 'significant' corkie in his thigh that spread to his knee into the Tigers' shock preliminary final loss to Collingwood.

"He's almost his own doctor," said Deledio. "He's pretty diligent with his own body and own career. He's really invested in that."

HOW DOES HE DO IT?

Martin's brilliance is, by now, well acknowledged. His history-making effort in last year's Grand Final win over Geelong – a four-goal best-afield performance made him the first three-time winner of the Norm Smith – cemented his place in football immortality and there is one skill central to everything else: his kicking.

"It's magnificent and it has the capacity to free up his attention to do other things because he's got it mastered," said the AFL's Damian Farrow, who is the League's umpires coaching and innovation manager, and also a professor of skill acquisition. 

"There's no resource of effort allocated to his kicking because he doesn't need to. He has an ability to see targets and bring players into the game as a consequence and I think that's one of his real strengths. The core strengths give him the capacity to have vision."

Like Mike Tyson's uppercut, Steph Curry's long-range jump shot or Shane Warne's wild spin, Martin's kicking is his weapon. It comes from his thighs, Farrow says, and allows him to set up the play with penetration. Think of Martin with the ball and his kicks don't linger in the air nor allow an opponent time to spoil. They pierce space like the Millennium Falcon in overdrive. 

An academic study published nearly two decades ago concluded that global soccer star David Beckham was the 'Einstein of football physics', saying he had mastered carrying out a multitude of distance and speed calculations inside his head when passing the ball or shooting for goal. Martin, in his capacity to nearly flawlessly make the right call with the Sherrin in his hands, is equally as genius.

"He's not time-stressed because he already knows where he's likely to be distributing the ball when he comes out of the contest," Farrow said. "His temperament is so even and he's got a calmness and composure to him."

But, as four All-Australian jumpers and two best and fairests would prove, there's more than that to Martin. There's the stoppage prowess, the centre-square dominance, the brilliance around goal. There's the standing up in tackles, the speed and strength to break through and the one-on-one contests that see the best of combatants reduced to castaways.

"He's not aloof at all given his standing in the game. He's very down to earth. There are things he doesn't love doing that his fame brings: he doesn't tend to love speaking a lot and the adulation at times that comes with it, but he takes it in his stride," Leppitsch said.

Martin is doubtless football's biggest rock star, but carries more the mystery of Prince than the showmanship of Mick Jagger. Along the way he has popularised fend-offs in the same way Steve Jobs did computers, turning them from a luxury to an essential. Buzzcuts (see every third kid's hair at Auskick clinics) and sleeve tattoos (although maybe not neck ones) have also manifested since Martin's emergence, with Bonds, Jeep and Kennedy watches some of the lucrative commercial partners enjoying his success. Over summer an ex-AFL player was spotted watching Tigers training behind the fence on Punt Road. His kids, not Richmond fans, wanted a glimpse of Dusty.

"He is a great ambassador for the AFL code," Carr said. "Dustin is a quiet, humble person with an incredible love for his father, family, teammates and Richmond. I feel honoured to have shared the journey so far. I am so proud of Dustin."

WHAT'S NEXT?

There are no signs Martin is slowing down. His $9 million, seven-year contract with Richmond has another three years to run after this season, and with his 30th birthday in June, he remains the AFL's best player by some distance.

Martin's life cycle at the top level saw him begin as a full-time midfielder. "That's where he wanted to play and he worked his backside off to be fit," Deledio said.

A second evolution saw him become a back-half accumulator, where he played well but didn't maximise his damage on the game. The Tigers' stocktake of roles at the end of their 2016 season saw Hardwick and his coaching troupe reassign Martin to be a centre-forward dynamo. He booted 37 goals in their breakthrough 2017 campaign, and has followed it with 31, 32 and 22 in the past three seasons.

The statistics highlight his impact. Since the start of 2017, Champion Data shows an average of 80 per cent of his possessions have been won in the midfield, 2.5 per cent in defence and 17.5 per cent in the forward line. In the previous seven years nearly 15 per cent of his touches were in the backline.

The role has itself spawned imitations, as rival clubs weigh up the forward-50 time of players such as Patrick Dangerfield, Marcus Bontempelli, Jordan De Goey, Christian Petracca and Jake Stringer.

The transformation also saw him change into more of an inside player as Richmond ignored a possession game style. From 2010-16, 36.5 per cent of Martin's possessions were contested. Since the start of 2017, that rate has risen to 47 per cent. In the 2010-16 period he averaged 6.6 score involvements, but in the block since it has jumped to 7.8 – ranked second of all players in that time (behind Lance Franklin at 8.4). Martin has been involved in 31.4 per cent of Richmond's scores in the Tigers' past four-and-a-bit seasons, ranking him No.1 in the AFL.

"The current system, where he plays centre square and in the front half, is the best for him," Leppitsch said. "'Dimma' really adapted the players' strengths to the game plan itself."

Richmond's Dustin Martin and coach Damien Hardwick embrace after the Tigers' 2020 Grand Final victory. Picture: AFL Photos
With 43-year-old NFL legend Tom Brady's seventh Super Bowl victory this year providing inspiration, a fourth evolution could be on the way for Martin in the next phase of his career.

Deledio, now in player management with Mac's Sports, sees Martin playing as a deep forward more as his career goes on, citing Adelaide great Mark Ricciuto's end to his career in attack. Hawthorn champion Leigh Matthews did the same in his playing days. Leppitsch, too, believes being a "forward 50" player could extend Martin's career by two or three seasons.

Martin himself is unlikely to engage in much of the hysteria this week about his milestone, nor about future plans. But with Richmond priming itself for the first premiership three-peat in club history, and Martin aiming for his fourth premiership medallion, its hopes will again largely centre on their seminal superstar in September. 

"It's not that he plays better in big games, it's just normally a lot of guys drop off in big games. And his evenness of performance, what he delivers week to week, he just does again," Farrow said. "His stats don't look very different but that's the whole secret of it. It's what you see in the Olympics. There's very few world record times set at the Olympics – it's just the athlete who performs closest to their best tends to win. He's a good example of that."

https://www.afl.com.au/news/598610/dustin-martin-250-games-what-makes-the-tigers-superstar-so-great

Offline Gracie

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Re: Dustin Martin plays his 250th this week
« Reply #5168 on: April 21, 2021, 04:51:39 PM »
Very hard for him to get to 400 games. Would need to play to 36/37 and have a dream run of no injuries, no suspensions and no "managed". Richmond would need to continue to play finals over that period.

Then there is the question of whether he would want to.

Provided he plays the rest of the season and we play finals he could be on 267/270 games at the end of the year. 3 years to run on his contract after this year could give him somewhere between 332 and 348. Then he would need another three years averaging 20 games per year.

Dusty hasn't been one for individual goals so would think Richmond would need to remain a top 4 side for him to continue past the end of his current contract

Online lamington

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Re: Dustin Martin plays his 250th this week
« Reply #5169 on: April 21, 2021, 08:28:17 PM »
The AFL article got one thing wrong. He does play better in big games! He lifts for finals! He averages more goals!

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Dustin Martin plays his 250th this week
« Reply #5170 on: April 22, 2021, 03:52:46 AM »
It was mentioned on Fox Footy that Dusty is 2nd for nailing hardest kicks in the comp. this year.

Offline Rodgerramjet

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Re: Dustin Martin plays his 250th this week
« Reply #5171 on: April 22, 2021, 07:24:46 PM »
If he stays fit, he will get to 400 easily.
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Offline Diocletian

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"Much of the social history of the Western world, over the past three decades, has been a history of replacing what worked with what sounded good...."

- Thomas Sowell


FJ is the only one that makes sense.

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Dustin Martin plays his 250th this week
« Reply #5173 on: April 23, 2021, 02:37:29 PM »
Dusty 'don't argue' compilation:

Watch here: https://twitter.com/AFL/status/1385424635743723521

Offline one-eyed

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CRACKING THE DUSTIN MARTIN CODE

Andrew Slevison
SEN
23 April 2021


We all know the player.

The class, the power, the deft touch, the brute force, the tattoos, the medals, the success.

But we’re all trying to crack the code of what sort of bloke he is.

There is a perverse desire (among some of us) to truly understand what makes Dustin Martin tick.

What drives him? What influences him? What does he strive for?

Former Richmond assistant coach Justin Lepptisch has more clues to cracking the ‘Dusty’ code than the rest of us after spending years getting to know the man.

“He’s one of the most respectful people I’ve ever met,” Leppitsch told SEN.com.au.

“He’s not aloof at all. He might come across that way publicly.

“I live down in Mt Eliza and he’s always wanting to bring players over, come for dinner, he’ll kick the ball with the kids in the backyard, he’s that sort of guy.

“He doesn’t say a lot, and he doesn’t say a lot even behind the scenes as well, but he loves winning, he loves the team environment. That’s his life - his mates and the club and the team.

“I think that really is his family.”

On Saturday night when Richmond graces the hallowed turf of the MCG, Martin will join elite company.

At the age of 29, Martin becomes the 25th youngest player and the 11th fastest in the history of the game to reach the 250-game milestone.

It has taken him a little over 11 seasons to join the likes of Andrew McLeod, Chris Judd, Michael Voss, Matthew Pavlich, Gary Ablett Junior, Scott Pendlenury and Mark Ricciuto as one of the youngest to 250, missing only eight games over the journey.

With this feat in tow, Martin could easily have his head in the clouds, but the Tigers superstar possesses a down-to-earth humility that has him seemingly on the same level as his peers.

An example of this is that he is fiercely loyal to those closest to him.

“The people close to him he cares a lot about and he cares what they think,” Leppitsch added.

“The people outside of that, he doesn’t care at all. So if he was getting public pressure for a certain person he should or should not be hanging out with, he couldn’t care less.

“That’s his mate, they’re loyal to him and he’s loyal to them. He’s a very loyal person like that.”

As long as enjoyment is a motivating factor, Martin will continue to flourish.

He loves a joke. In fact, he lives for it. He endures the mundane side of the game just to get a taste of it.

“One thing about Dustin is he loves the fun of the game,” Leppitsch said.

“Whenever there’s a team meeting and we go through all the ‘boring’ stuff, at the end there’s a bit of fun. It could be a gag or some funny footage, that’s his favourite part.

“At the end of each meeting, ‘Dimma’ (coach Damien Hardwick) would have some of those moments on the screen. It was like the only reason Dustin would turn up to that meeting was to wait for that part of it.

“That’s when he stands up to attention and he’s rubbing his hands together. He’s always waiting for those moments.

“Whilst he loves being a professional athlete and the combative part of it, he loves the fun just as much.”

Richmond captain Trent Cotchin even attempted to crack the code back in the early days before simply embracing his perceived differences with Dusty.

There were some instances when the now superstar perhaps played up or was slightly out of line, but he is now a model citizen in his skipper’s eyes.

“Seeing his highlights even before he trained his first session we knew he was a pretty impressive and unique player,” Cotchin said.

“I have written about my first impressions of him and that you should never judge a book by its cover, but I probably did.

“Since that moment I’ve learnt so much about him and even though from afar we look like two totally different people, we’re very similar in many ways.

“We continue to learn and grow our friendship and I’ve just been really impressed with his journey since being at the footy club.”

There is further intrigue to the Martin story. He came to Melbourne from Castlemaine after he was drafted in 2009.

His first stay with a host family didn’t quite go to plan but he soon found refuge at the home of former president Gary March.

It is that recurring theme of family, with his father Shane first interstate and now in New Zealand, that Martin always clung to.

“We really bonded well with him,” March said on SEN Breakfast.

“We still see him quite regularly. We’re hoping to have a family dinner in the next couple of weeks.

“He was really misunderstood. With his shyness, people maybe felt he was aloof, but that couldn’t be further from the truth.

“He was just a young boy that needed some stability around him. His dad was living interstate at the time. We were able to provide that for him.

“It’s been fantastic to see him evolve as a person.”

As for the fun side of Dusty, it was clearly evident, particularly in the early days.

“It was probably more a problem when he bought home the likes of Jake King and the late Shane Tuck,” March added.

“They could run riot at our place occasionally."

After an indifferent beginning, the intrigue surrounding the real Martin has grown immensely over the past decade.

So too has his reputation as a big-game player who is now at the peak of his powers and sitting firmly in the top echelon of Tigers.

“I didn’t quite expect him to get to the heights that he has,” March said further.

“We always knew he would be a 200-plus game player, but I didn’t think he would be quite the player he has become.

“I’ve followed Richmond for 50 years and for me now, he’s clearly our greatest ever player.”

https://www.sen.com.au/news/2021/04/23/cracking-the-dustin-martin-code/