So back to the matter at hand, the mythical plan B. It is often mentioned as critique that hardwick lacks, but which clubs have a plan B and how does it differ from their plan A?
and/or
If you dont want the club to play players in different positions so they can be more versatile, what do you expect the coach to do game day when their starting plan doesnt work?
Al are you saying an alternate game plan is limited to swapping players into different positions?
What are your thoughts on say:-
1) Spatial line up (half ground presses, defensive presses, forward presses etc) and counter attacking vs man on man, and combinations depending on whether the ball is in or not in possession.
2) Spatial delivery of the ball - corridor vs stuff vs boundary movement in attack, combinations of these, and the defensive switch across the ground.
3) Disposal method - handball to kick ratio, run and carry to breakdown defensive presses. Long kick short kick. High possession low possession etc
4) Dictating/avoiding stoppages if you are winning/losing out at stoppages
It's clear most teams have various plans, some are more noticeable than others. North are a good example in their attacking style. Sometimes they'll take the game on with run and carry. Others they are more precise and slow the ball down, with short kicks to cut through the oppositions defence. This changes from quarter to quarter.
Sydney is another obvious one. Depending on the state of the opposition strenghts they'll either bomb it long into the forward line or kick it shorter/handball through the midfield. This also changes within the game, depending on various factors.
Changes to the game style of teams like Hawthorn, Geelong, Port and Freo are also evident. Other teams do it too but it's less obvious because when it doesn't work, from a viewing perspective, the method gets lost to the outcome and some players don't stick to instructions.
My knock on Richmond is that when we have a run of goals kicked against us, usually NOTHING changes. Very little in anything. Not even rotating a stronger/better defender onto an opposition fed who is having a good day. And if it does (slightly), it's after the damage is done.
We are also reasonably predictable with the way we move the ball.
I think there are issues in the limited versatility of our game plan, as well as on field leadership and communication. And our players are a lot more one dimensional position wise than most other average to good teams.