Buckley askes in his Age article today to rate your own side's (Richmond's) midfielders to assess how your team will perform in the next few years.
So who would belongs in our A, B and C team midfielders? Do we have them at all?
A-team?
B-team?
C-team?
nb: 3 mids per "team"------------------------
From ... Being benched is not a drag
Nathan Buckley | April 5, 2008 | The Age
... last year's Geelong side, which proved that the way to success in today's game is an even spread of contributions from the players who are rotated on and off the field and around the ground.
Geelong's "A" team, in my opinion, is Jimmy Bartel as the centreman, Cameron Ling as the ruck rover/defensive midfielder and Gary Ablett as the rover. (By the way, how archaic does the use of traditional position names sound now in our game?)
That leaves players of the calibre of James Kelly, Joel Corey and Paul Chapman as the "B" team and Joel Selwood, Mathew Stokes and Steve Johnson as the "C" team.
I've left out Corey Enright, who after many years in the rotations has become a solid half-back flanker who picks up midfield stats, and Max Rooke, who the Cats rate as the catalyst for their aggressive, defensive mindset.
When you break a list up like that, it's easy to understand how the Cats have been so dominant and why in this age of increased rotation they will continue to be until other teams catch up in the "B" and "C" team areas, no matter how good their best onball division might stack up.
If you want to assess how your team will perform in the next few years, try that formula on your list and see what you come to. No team in this era will succeed without the depth necessary to constantly rotate without losing either offensive or defensive intensity around the contest.
http://www.realfooty.com.au/news/news/benched-aint-a-drag/2008/04/04/1207249463489.html?page=fullpage