Author Topic: Who will be our challengers in 2021?  (Read 22966 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Who will be our challengers in 2021?
« Reply #60 on: March 13, 2021, 06:26:40 PM »
RENDELL NAMES RICHMOND'S GREATEST CHALLENGER IN 2021

BY SEN
13 March 2021


Matt Rendell has named Port Adelaide as the biggest challenger who stands in the way of Richmond's quest to make it three premierships in a row.

The Power fell just short of making the Grand Final last season, bowing out to the Tigers by six points in last year's preliminary final.

Rendell said even though Port Adelaide squared off against last year's wooden spooners Adelaide in both of their pre-season matches, he was convinced they’d pose the biggest threat to Richmond’s recent premiership dominance.

“Port Adelaide look the most impressive, but I know they were playing Adelaide (in two pre-season matches in the last fortnight),” he said on SEN's Dwayne's World.

“(New recruit Orazio) Fantasia, wow. We know he was a good player but if you throw him in that team … and Aliir Aliir was best on ground (against Adelaide as well).

“Their trading and recruiting in the last five years has been the best in the competition by a million miles, Jason Cripps and his team have (done a great job) and they’ve put Port Adelaide in contention to win a flag.

“They just look fantastic, I reckon right now they’re the biggest challenger alongside Brisbane and Geelong.”

The Power begins their 2021 premiership season with a clash against North Melbourne at Marvel Stadium next Sunday.

https://www.sen.com.au/news/2021/03/13/rendell-names-richmonds-greatest-challenger-in-2021/

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Who will be our challengers in 2021?
« Reply #61 on: March 14, 2021, 03:16:57 PM »
Who can derail the Tiger train in 2021?

Justin Chadwick
AAP
March 14, 2021


Could this be the year the Tiger train is finally derailed and Dustin Martin loses the 'S' on his chest?

Richmond's premiership credentials were heavily questioned last year after enduring a series of off-field dramas during hub life.

Skipper Trent Cotchin briefly contemplated leaving the Tigers' hub after his wife's infamous spa trip that broke the AFL's COVID protocols.

Richmond were fined $100,000 when Callum Coleman-Jones and Sydney Stack flagrantly exited the bubble for a boozy night out that included a strip club visit and ended with an early-morning fight outside a kebab shop.

Richmond's on-field dynasty looked set to crumble, especially away from their MCG fortress.

But by the end of grand final day - October 24 - normal order had been resumed at the Gabba, with the Tigers snaring their third premiership from the past four years.

Martin created history in the 31-point grand final win over Geelong by becoming the first player to win three North Smith medals.

It further cemented his reputation as the best big-game player of all time.

The 2017 Brownlow medallist is approaching his 30th birthday, but his four-goal effort in the grand final was proof that his star is still burning strong.

And his teammates don't show any obvious signs of slowing down either, with Richmond the early favourites to take home the flag again this year.

But the Tigers will face a stiff challenge from the young and the old.

Geelong, who some fans are already labelling Dad's Army, should have at least one more year in their premiership window after adding former GWS spearhead Jeremy Cameron to their ranks.

West Coast, whose list is also ageing at a worrying rate, will fancy their chances if ruckman Nic Naitanui stays fit and Elliot Yeo can overcome a worrying case of osteitis pubis.

Brisbane and Port Adelaide represent the changing of the guard.

The Lions have threatened for the past two years, and the addition of former Bombers forward Joe Daniher could prove to be the final piece of the puzzle that drives them towards premiership success.

The youthful Power spent all of last season on top of the ladder, and will still be stewing over their heartbreaking six-point loss to Richmond in the preliminary final.

The Tigers were able to overcome their off-field woes last year to take home the grand prize, but will the accumulation of dramas derail them in 2021?

Troubled 20-year-old Stack spent time in a Perth prison over summer after breaking WA's COVID laws. He will face court on March 25 for his sentencing.

And coach Damien Hardwick's split with wife Danielle - and subsequent new relationship with a member of the club's commercial sales team - has intensified the spotlight glare at Richmond.

As for the coaches in 2021 - as usual the odds are high at least one won't see out the season.

With Eddie McGuire no longer Collingwood president, the heat will be on Nathan Buckley to produce the goods in the final year of his current contract.

That will be no easy feat following Collingwood's disastrous fire sale that saw Adam Treloar, Jaidyn Stephenson and Tom Phillips exit on bargain terms.

Carlton coach David Teague has only been at the helm for one-and-a-half seasons, but the pressure is already on him to end the club's seven-year finals drought.

And Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin, who led the Demons to the preliminary final in 2018, may face the axe if the club misses the finals for a third straight year.

As for the wooden spoon - North Melbourne and Adelaide appear to be the early 'favourites' following their diabolical 2020 campaigns.

Fans, players, and the league will be hoping for a season without hubs, but that could prove to be wishful thinking given the recent spate of minor COVID-19 outbreaks that have been difficult to avoid for any great length of time.

https://www.perthnow.com.au/sport/afl/who-can-derail-the-tiger-train-in-2021-ng-s-2053345

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Who will be our challengers in 2021?
« Reply #62 on: March 15, 2021, 01:12:01 PM »
Garry Lyon’s Top 8

Geelong
Port Adelaide
Richmond
Brisbane
West Coast
Western Bulldogs
St Kilda
Collingwood

Lyon added: “Port and Geelong to play off in the Grand Final, that’s the way I’m reading it.

“I’m leaving the Tigers out only because I just want to be a bit different.

“History tells me that it is near on impossible to do. I’m going with history. Winning three in a row is rare.

Tim Watson’s Top 8

Richmond
Port Adelaide
Geelong
St Kilda
Brisbane
West Coast
Western Bulldogs
Carlton

“I’ve looked at Richmond. The only thing that will stop them is the desire and an injury to Dustin Martin,” he said.

“Heaven forbid, I do no want this to happen, but if something were to happen to him and he were to be ruled out for the season, that changes them completely in terms of their favouritism to win the flag.

“I’ve got Richmond winning it.

https://www.sen.com.au/news/2021/03/14/lyon-and-watson-explain-their-top-8-selections-for-2021/

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Who will be our challengers in 2021?
« Reply #63 on: March 16, 2021, 04:30:56 AM »
Jonathan Brown & Nick Riewoldt on Fox Footy last night:

As Richmond seeks to emulate the 2001-2003 Brisbane team by winning a third consecutive flag this season (and four premierships in five seasons), Brown said that hunger would not be an issue, based on his experiences with that Lions team.

“When you taste success, it’s amazing. People talk about hangovers - I reckon it’s the opposite. When you’ve tasted success, you know how good it is, you want to experience it more. That’s what we felt [at Brisbane] ... and I think that’s how Richmond feels,” Brown said.

“Richmond will know that they’re on the cusp of history.”

Brown nominated Port Adelaide as the side best-placed to challenge Richmond for the premiership.

“I think Port Adelaide can do it. I’d probably have Port Adelaide and Richmond at the top level at the moment,” said Brown.

“I think they’re rounded out nicely. I think Aliir Aliir’s a good addition, just helps their intercept marking game ... I think [Orazio] Fantasia’s a really good pick-up.

“I think, at his best, [Charlie] Dixon if he’s healthy, is the most dominant presence in the competition. So I think they’ve got a lot of elements.”

However, Brown’s Fox Footy colleague and contemporary key forward champion Nick Riewoldt felt differently.

Riewoldt nominated the Cats as the team to rival Richmond.

“I think Geelong will be thereabouts again. I love what they’ve done in terms of doubling down [in recruiting senior players], I admire it. I think it’s brave, I think it’s bold,” he said.

But while Riewoldt said he had “jumped around a little bit” on the question of who would take the 2021 premiership, he said a team still had to take the crown from the Tigers and beat their system.

“No one’s been able to take their system down,” he said.

Source: The Age

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Who will be our challengers in 2021?
« Reply #64 on: March 17, 2021, 04:10:09 PM »
The seven AFL teams that can win the premiership in 2021

Rohan Connolly
ESPN
17 March 2021


I can hear you already. "You've got to be kidding," and "what are you talking about, Connolly".

Sorry, folks, it's water off a duck's back these days. One, because I get that regularly from my own loved ones. Two, because I've done a lot of these things now. And three, because I defy a single person to attempt the exercise of putting together a predicted AFL ladder and not have a few miscalculations.

Particularly this year. I like to think I'm a pretty conservative tipster. In virtually every season I can recall, I've never felt there were more than three, or at tops, four sides legitimately capable of winning the premiership.

But in 2021, I have seven who I firmly believe all have realistic flag claims. That says enough about how tight this competition is now.

"Okay, smart guy. Who are they?" you snap, cynically.

Well thanks for asking. They are...

RICHMOND

Anyone who expects the Tigers to have had their fill in 2021, after three premierships in four years, might be sorely disappointed. This is a club which has acquired a taste for winning after nearly 40 years in the wilderness, is still very much in the sweet spot in terms of age and experience demographics (only the fourth-oldest list and the fourth-most seasoned), and perhaps, most importantly, gets it done more on the basis of a very successful and as yet unsurpassed style of game rather than on simple individual talent. Not that there isn't a heap of that - some of which still isn't appreciated fully beyond names like Dustin Martin, Trent Cotchin, Jack Riewoldt and Tom Lynch. Richmond's capacity to introduce lesser lights into the mix and have them comfortably fulfill their roles has been outstanding. And the likes of Sydney Stack, Jake Aarts, Mabior Chol and Jack Ross, still to get their premiership fill, should keep selection pressure on the incumbents high.

WESTERN BULLDOGS
I've got the Dogs at least reaching the Grand Final this year, and who knows from there? It's hardly a big call, either, given they've been finalists the past two seasons, but now I think they clearly have the competition's best and deepest midfield group, a very underrated and creative defence, and a star in Adam Treloar. But that's not all. There's also important ruck back-up in Stefan Martin, another handy forward in Mitch Hannan and a hugely-rated key forward in Jamarra Ugle-Hagan, capable of offering immediate support to Aaron Naughton and Josh Bruce on the goalkicking front. Marcus Bontempelli, Jack Macrae, Treloar, Bailey Smith, Lachie Hunter, Tim Liberatore and Josh Dunkley represents some sort of on-ball division, and that's just the leads. In terms of pure talent, this is a markedly more complete lineup than the one which won the 2016 premiership.

GEELONG
The Cats just keep loading up on established talent in trying to nab that elusive flag, and in 2021, Jeremy Cameron, Shaun Higgins and Isaac Smith are as good a trio as any club has landed in one hit in the modern era. Will it make the difference? Every chance. Yes, Geelong will soon have a dozen players aged 30 or older, but that will comprise -- in Tom Hawkins, Mark Blicavs, Patrick Dangerfield, Mitch Duncan and Sam Menegola -- five of the top six in last year's best and fairest, so their veterans are hardly on the slide. This is a team which led last year's Grand Final by 22 points a tick before half time, was the highest-scoring team, the most efficient, and had the fourth-best defence. Perhaps pace is an issue, but Smith and a couple of the Cats' kids can help fix that easily enough. As always, they're a big chance.

WEST COAST
Some observers are a little concerned by the Eagles' age and durability. I'm not one of them. Both St Kilda and Geelong have older lists, for starters. As this season starts, West Coast will have only five players older than 30. One of them, Nic Naitanui, just won a best and fairest. Another, Josh Kennedy, won the club goalkicking for a seventh occasion. Another, Luke Shuey, is a Norm Smith medallist and probably West Coast's second-best player behind Nic Nat. Where does the improvement come? I like the addition of former Giant Zac Langdon to an already potent forward mix. Beyond that, it's as much about (fingers crossed) not having to endure hubs again, and avoiding the odd mental lapse which has seen the Eagles surrender a top four berth in both the past two years, which significantly dented their flag chances.

PORT ADELAIDE
Power fans might rightfully look at this and ask: "Why do you have us slipping?" The answer is that while I might superficially, I won't be at all surprised if Port wins its second AFL title. So tight is this year's flag race it might well be a handful of points which spell the difference between a flag or Grand Final berth, and a finish in the bottom half of the eight. After all, the Power did spend an entire season on top of the AFL ladder and lost a preliminary final last year to the eventual premier by just six points. I like their additions, too. Aliir Aliir gives Port that extra big defensive body to help combat the key forward tandems of the likes of Richmond and West Coast. Orazio Fantasia, provided he can stay on the park, kicks goals and is all class. The only "if" I have is can veterans like Travis Boak, Charlie Dixon and Tom Rockliff deliver the same sorts of quality seasons they did in 2020?

ST KILDA
This flag fancy might surprise a few. It certainly banks on a few "ifs" on the durability front, and it could be a bumpy start for the Saints given fitness concerns over Rowan Marshall, Dan Hannebery, James Frawley and Jarryn Geary, Max King's tangle with an errant golf ball, Ben Paton's loss for the year, with Paddy Ryder on leave. That said, this is a marathon, not a sprint. The success of last year's five senior imports indicated this is a group that has a buzz around it, and to that end, I think the latest inclusions in Brad Crouch and Jack Higgins could fit in similarly well. St Kilda took the game on admirably last year, and after 12 months now under Brett Ratten's tutelage, you'd expect game style to be down pat now. They also knocked over two top four teams in Richmond and Port Adelaide last season, and lost to another, in Brisbane, by just two points. Don't sell the Saints' chances short.

BRISBANE
Yes, the Lions blew an opportunity to win a premiership in their own backyard last October. But they also became only the second team to beat Richmond in a final in a dozen attempts over the last four years, pretty emphatic evidence they can win when the heat is on. As Geelong has proved, you simply need to keep knocking on the door, and despite a couple of finals flops, the Lions have nonetheless won 30 of 39 regular season games in the past two years and have a coach in Chris Fagan the players clearly love. Sure, they've taken a calculated punt on injury-prone Joe Daniher, but the thought of him fit and firing alongside Eric Hipwood, with Charlie Cameron at both their feet, does make an already effective enough forward mix look even more potent. The Lions have done their apprenticeship. there's no reason they can't frank that graduation in 2021 with a flag.

https://www.espn.com/afl/story/_/id/31071898/afl-rohan-connolly-seven-teams-win-premiership-2021

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Richmond must rise above recruiting arms race to create history

By Ronny Lerner
Independent Australia
17 March 2021


Despite rampant recruiting by last year's AFL finalists, it’s going to take a huge effort to prevent the Tigers from winning four flags in five years, writes Ronny Lerner.

For the third time in four years, we head into a new Australian Football League (AFL) season asking the question: “Can Richmond be stopped?”

To think that since the start of 2017 the only thing that has come between the Tigers and the premiership cup has been a freakish individual performance by a 211-centimetre-tall Texan by the name of Mason Cox, is sobering, to say the least.

The planets certainly aligned on the preliminary final night in 2018 when Richmond happened to produce arguably the worst performance of their current golden run to ensure Collingwood safe passage to the grand final that year.

But outside of that blip on the radar, finals time has largely belonged to Richmond coach Damien Hardwick’s men. Even when Brisbane landed one on their chin in last year’s qualifying final, Richmond dusted themselves off and overcame St Kilda, Port Adelaide and Geelong in consecutive weeks to make it back-to-back flags for the club for the first time in 46 years.

In fact, never in the Tigers’ 114-year association with the VFL/AFL have they ever won three premierships in four years. This is certainly a special time in the club’s history and this is certainly a special team.

Richmond still has a large core of players (17 all up) who featured in the 2017 grand final. These players are not only still part of its best 22, or thereabouts, but they also contribute at a high level — including one of the greatest players of the modern era, Dustin Martin, who claimed an unprecedented third Norm Smith Medal last year for best afield in the grand final against the Cats.

The Tigers will be hard to stop this season purely by virtue of the fact that their superstar No. 4 is still running around at the peak of his powers.

So, who are the contenders that might be able to stop Richmond from claiming an historic "three-peat" in 2021?

The obvious one that stands out is Geelong.

The Cats have pushed all their chips into the middle of the table after recruiting former Greater Western Sydney (GWS) Coleman medallist Jeremy Cameron, along with silky veterans Shaun Higgins and Isaac Smith from North Melbourne and Hawthorn respectively.

Chris Scott’s men looked to be on the verge of winning the 2020 flag when they led Richmond by 21 points late in the second quarter, but just as they did in the 2019 preliminary final after trailing by the exact same margin, the Tigers ran over the top of the Cats.

As good as Geelong is, the one thing that has got in the way of the team winning its first premiership since 2011 has been Richmond in recent times.

The Tigers have become the Cats’ arch-nemesis, beating them in six of their last seven meetings, including three-from-three in finals. But there’s no doubt that the inclusions of Cameron, Higgins and Smith give Geelong a different look and a huge opportunity to finally get over the yellow-and-black hump.

The Brisbane Lions certainly can’t be discounted from this discussion either. Since making consecutive top-two finishes – after the home-and-away season at least – and reaching their first preliminary final last year since 2004, coach Chris Fagan has this team primed and right in the sweet spot of premiership contention.

With a star-studded midfield led by reigning Brownlow medallist Lachie Neale, a rock-solid backline spearheaded by All-Australian defender Harris Andrews and now a forward line that features former Essendon star Joe Daniher – and potentially talented ex-Cat Nakia Cockatoo – the Lions are locked, loaded and ready for a genuine tilt at the flag.

And then there’s Port Adelaide, who fell six agonising points short of a grand final appearance last year following their thrilling loss to Richmond in the penultimate weekend of the season.

Like the Lions, the Power’s list was already brimming with talent heading into the off-season and then they went and added gun ex-Sydney defender Aliir Aliir as well as classy goalsneak Orazio Fantasia from Essendon.

Finalists St Kilda and the Western Bulldogs (Doggies) have also loaded up on talent since the 2020 season finished. St Kilda picked up former Adelaide ball magnet Brad Crouch, ex-Richmond goalsneak Jack Higgins and Mason Wood from North Melbourne, as well as veteran key position players James Frawley and Shaun McKernan from Hawthorn and Essendon respectively.

Meanwhile, the Doggies added gun former Collingwood midfielder Adam Treloar and ex-Brisbane ruckman Stefan Martin to their engine room. They now boast arguably the best on-ball brigade in the competition, which also features Marcus Bontempelli, Jack Macrae, Tom Liberatore, Lachie Hunter, Bailey Smith and Josh Dunkley.

West Coast Eagles can’t be dismissed either. With a large chunk of their 2018 premiership side still on the list, 12 games at Optus Stadium and the recruitment of Alex Witherden (ex-Brisbane) and Zac Langdon (ex-GWS), they look as though they still have at least one more genuine crack at a flag left in them.

Interestingly, while most of last year’s finalists have got themselves involved in an arms race by adding players from other clubs to their list in a desperate bid to catch up to the Tigers, the reigning premiers have done no such thing.

In fact, Richmond was rather quiet on the recruiting front. So, will it be a case of them standing still and being overtaken by their replenished rivals? Or are the Tigers just that good that they are going to back in their current crop and get extra improvement from within by way of unheralded youngsters?

Time will tell. But one thing is for certain, with the man they call "Dusty" showing no signs of slowing down, it’s going to take a hell of an effort to prevent the Tigers from making it four flags in five years and joining the pantheon of the greatest ever VFL/AFL teams.

https://independentaustralia.net/life/life-display/richmond-must-rise-above-recruiting-arms-race-to-create-history,14900

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Who will be our challengers in 2021?
« Reply #66 on: March 24, 2021, 11:58:41 PM »
In fact, just four teams have won premierships after a 0-2 start in the entire history of AFL/VFL football, with North Melbourne's side of 1999 the only team to do so in the past 45 years.

https://www.afl.com.au/news/568731/the-dire-predicament-facing-four-finals-contenders-in-round-two

Odds against the loser of Geelong vs Brisbane.

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Who will be our challengers in 2021?
« Reply #67 on: March 28, 2021, 10:30:25 PM »
We're 2nd on the ladder  :thumbsup.


Offline Andyy

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Re: Who will be our challengers in 2021?
« Reply #68 on: March 28, 2021, 11:19:11 PM »
Port going hard at the blunt end as usual...

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Who will be our challengers in 2021?
« Reply #69 on: April 05, 2021, 09:23:05 PM »
Ladder after Round 3. We're currently 6th.


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Re: Who will be our challengers in 2021?
« Reply #70 on: April 07, 2021, 02:15:12 AM »
AFL 2021: Power Rankings, after Round 3, AFL analysis, stats, every team ranked, flag contenders, ladder, top eight, news

Max laughton
Fox Sports
April 7th, 2021


1. WESTERN BULLDOGS (3-0, 181.6%) ............ Last week: 3 (up two)
2. WEST COAST EAGLES (2-1, 124%) .............. Last week: 5 (up three)

3. RICHMOND (2-1, 103.7%) .......................... Last week: 1 (down two)

The Tigers will be just fine. As Damien Hardwick said post-match, they always have a stumble or two like this - see the Hawthorn game last year, the St Kilda game in 2017, or really the first half of the 2019 season. And this was a bad time to catch Sydney because coaches haven’t had the chance to figure them out yet; it takes time to work out what the season’s big bolter is doing, never mind how to stop it. We suspect if you played that game again in Round 17, it would look very different. We’re also not going to be worried if Richmond loses in Adelaide on Friday night; as we saw last year, the Power know how to play them close, or even beat them.

4. PORT ADELAIDE (2-1, 129%) ....................... Last week: 2 (down two)
5. SYDNEY SWANS (3-0, 142.9%) .................... Last week: 9 (up four)
6. MELBOURNE (3-0, 137.2%) ......................... Last week: 6
7. GEELONG CATS (2-1, 97.6%) ...................... Last week: 4 (down three)
8. BRISBANE LIONS (1-2, 88.8%) ................... Last week: 8

Full article: https://www.foxsports.com.au/afl/afl-2021-power-rankings-after-round-3-afl-analysis-stats-every-team-ranked-flag-contenders-ladder-top-eight-news/news-story/bc716e9d41ed129710538b58e07fc720

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Who will be our challengers in 2021?
« Reply #71 on: April 11, 2021, 07:54:04 PM »

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Re: Who will be our challengers in 2021?
« Reply #72 on: April 11, 2021, 11:16:13 PM »
And we’d currently be getting pick 9 from Geelong.....

Offline Diocletian

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Re: Who will be our challengers in 2021?
« Reply #73 on: April 12, 2021, 01:50:44 AM »
By my reckoning our current draft picks are:

9, 11, 26, 29, 42, 47

 :shh
"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.

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Re: Who will be our challengers in 2021?
« Reply #74 on: April 12, 2021, 04:43:56 AM »
We’re four rounds in, but Leigh Montagna believes six sides are ‘already a lock to play finals’

Ben Waterworth
Fox Sports
April 12th, 2021[/i]

It’s only Round 4, but St Kilda champion Leigh Montagna believes six teams that occupy top-eight spots after four weeks “are a lock” to play finals in 2021.

The undefeated and in-form Western Bulldogs sit on top of the ladder with a healthy percentage of 171.1 per cent, followed by fellow 4-0 teams Melbourne and Sydney.

Port Adelaide and Adelaide sit fourth and fifth respectively having had just one loss so far this season, while West Coast, Carlton and Richmond round out the top eight on percentage as three of six teams with a 2-2 record.

Only one 4-0 team has missed the finals in the past decade: Essendon in 2012 (and technically in 2013, when the Bombers were excluded due to the supplements saga). On average over the past five years, 5.8 teams that were in the top eight after four rounds ended up playing finals.

Speaking on Fox Footy’s First Crack on Sunday night, Montagna believes from what he’s seen so far this season, 75 per cent of the current top eight teams will still be there by premiership season’s end.

“I think we can only go by what we’re seeing with our eyes, not our perceptions,” Montagna told First Crack.

“I believe in most of them. I think the top eight is starting to take shape and six of those eight teams will play finals.”

Montagna declared the Bulldogs, Demons, Swans and Power would hold onto top-eight spots, while West Coast and Richmond would also make finals.

The dual All-Australian said the Blues and Crows “aren’t locked” for finals yet before adding: “I think those other six teams are already a lock to play finals.”

But dual premiership Kangaroo David King believes the top eight is far from secured.

“We keep saying that after six to eight weeks, it’s pretty much locked in for the end of season. Maybe one change, maybe not, but that’s what history tells us,” King told Fox Footy’s First Crack.

“Right now I think the ladder lies.”

King’s biggest query was Sydney, which has been the darlings of the competition to date with four straight wins over Brisbane, Adelaide, Richmond and Essendon.

With one of the youngest lists in the competition, King questioned whether the Swans had the stamina to play at such a high standard for a whole season.

“There are a lot of kids in that team that are going to get to a point at the end of the year when they’re going to fatigue,” King told Fox Footy.

But both Montagna and former Hawthorn sharpshooter Ben Dixon said they’d seen enough to suggest the Swans had the personnel and game plan to reach finals in 2021.

“They reset with the kids that have come through and you’ve got to remember they finished 15th on the ladder (in 2020) and had a percentage of 95 – no team’s done that,” Dixon said.

“The key indicator for me is their turnover game. They’re the best in the comp.”

Montagna added: “We talk a lot about their kids, but they’ve got a lot of players in their sweet spot – (Callum) Mills, (Tom) Papley, (Dane) Rampe, George Hewett – as well as the veterans who are still playing really good footy. I think the combination of all three sets them up to play finals.”

Of the teams outside the top eight, Montagna said he still had faith in Geelong, despite its early 2-2 record.

“I think Geelong are playing for a marathon not a sprint,” he said.

“I know they’ve started wobbly and a bit slow to get out of the blocks, but for them it was a slow start to the pre-season because of the year they had last year, an ageing group – I think they’ll be peaking at the back-end of the year.

“I’m still pretty confident Geelong play finals.”

https://www.foxsports.com.au/afl/afl-ladder-2021-finals-predictions-leigh-montagna-tips-six-of-current-top-eight-can-play-finals-geelong-cats/news-story/ea5ea4d4ee07c2757bb47f27de930285