Craig the villain in tactics turmoil
Chip Le Grand
The Australian
May 23, 2006
FOR two days Terry Wallace has been hailed as either a tactical genius or vilified as the Grinch who stole football. In truth, he is simply a winning coach who can't believe his luck.
If there is a villain from Saturday's extraordinary match between Richmond and Adelaide - a match that has created all manner of weird and wonderful benchmarks for how football should never be played - it is Adelaide coach Neil Craig.
AFL coaches, as a rule, are reluctant to criticise the tactics of their opposite numbers, as they understand the fine line that separates guru from dunce. Yet those contacted yesterday by The Australian were staggered that Craig, for the best part of 45 minutes, indulged Richmond in a tedious game of piggy in the middle.
As one put it: "I can't believe the media has been all over Terry Wallace. Get all over Neil Craig."
The AFL media has been all over Craig for most of the season and this paper is no exception. He has been lauded for the way he has transformed Adelaide into a premiership contender and admired for the discipline and organisation he has instilled within his team. In round one against Collingwood, he was said to have turned football on its head.
Yet against Richmond, Craig coached a clanger.
Midway through the second quarter, Wallace enacted a plan to slow the game to a trickle, starve Adelaide of the ball and break down the structure that underpins the best defensive team in the competition.
The way the Adelaide defence operates, half-forwards push back to the wing and wingman into the backline, giving the Crows extra numbers in their own half. When they win the ball, this allows Andrew McLeod and Graham Johncock to rebound through the midfield.
Richmond's response was for all six defenders to stay in their own half and keep possession at all costs. So long as Adelaide continued to push back, Richmond would chip the ball to loose players.
"To use the basketball vernacular, they were playing a zone defence and we just kept chucking it around the perimeter until they came out of their zone and took us on man-on-man," Wallace explained. "But they didn't come out so it became a Mexican stand-off."
So what should Adelaide have done? The answer was obvious to any under-10 coach sitting in the stands: push forward, pick up the loose players and win the ball.
"The bottom line is that you have to worry about your defensive strategy as much as your offensive strategy," Western Bulldogs coach Rodney Eade explained. "Richmond's offensive strategy was to keep the ball off Adelaide. The defensive strategy in that case is to go and man them up.
"In basketball terms, you press them. Deny them time and space. Instead of running back in transition, go forward and man them up so, when Richmond has the ball on the half-back flank, they have got no one to kick it to."
The Crows' dilemma was when to abandon the defensive structure that had served them so well to go get the ball. Adelaide did not man up until early in the final quarter, resulting in an immediate and belated change in fortune. Craig later admitted that he should have responded earlier.
Adelaide's problem was yesterday explained by assistant coach Don Pyke.
"At the end we did man up and probably we worked through a number of different scenarios before we got to that point," Pyke said. "In fairness to our players, sometimes you can react too early and too quickly and change the entire balance of your side."
What has been lost in the debate over tactics and aesthetics is other things Richmond did well to put itself in a winning position early in the match. Richmond thrashed the Crows in the clearances and beat them to the contested ball. The Tigers began the match in conventional fashion and kicked the first three goals of the opening quarter.
Had Adelaide got the early jump, it would have served Richmond no purpose to retain possession and slow the game down.
The most perplexing aspect of Adelaide's failure to combat Richmond's tactics is the fact that Craig employed the same tactics to great effect in the opening round of the season. When Craig was asked to defend those tactics at the time, he said Collingwood needed only to man up.
Just as all teams have developed counter-tactics for flooding, teams should now be prepared to deal with tempo control strategies.
"It is all about education and training," Wallace said. "Most teams would have trained for different situations. If a team floods or a team plays possession footy, you should have options there. Players should be able to have that in their minds."
Eade believes coaches have never had a greater impact on the game. "All these issues are coach-driven and the solution is going to be coach-driven," he said.
It is a timely point, given the Richmond-Adelaide game has prompted calls for rule changes and another week of introspection about the evolution of the game. So, if you don't like what you saw on Saturday, blame the coach. But not the one who won.
Additional reporting: Andrew McGarry
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,19224350-36035,00.html