Risk management has alot to do with the negative tactics we see. The game now is so professional that we've probably outsmarted outselves with tactics.
I think professionalism explains a lot about the direction of the competition and the major concern I see is that the game has become way too clinical for its own good. A professional competition is great, but where does it say anywhere that professionalism and natural flair are mutually exclusive? Surely we can so easily have both.
As things are, each Club tries to outdo, or at least keep up with the other and we finish up with something completely different to what we started with. And a lot of it stems from the fact that many results can be dictated and influenced more by pre planning, rather than the ability of the players on any list. Because so much emphasis is placed on planning through the week, any spontaneity in the game becomes mostly accidental or coincidental. That’s the feeling I get anyway.
Regardless of what rules are changed, whether it’s to speed up the game, or whatever, it doesn’t alter the fact that the game has become clinical, purely because of the level of preparation and pre-planning that goes on. That whole process would seem to discourage players from using too much initiative out on a footy field. Instead, at any given time, it seems that coaches press a button and this player will do this; press another button and that player will do that. And if they don’t then Plan E.1.3.6 comes into play. Maybe that’s being over the top about it, but it does seem that any spontaneity in the game is being lost, which is probably as much a concern as anything else, because people lose their passion for the game, without really knowing why.
Occasionally we see glimpses of a spark, like in the last few minutes of a game when it’s crunch time and someone provides something to lift an otherwise dull affair, or certain players have special permission ‘to do their thing’ and afterwards everyone says ‘how unreal was that’. But what about the rest of the game, what was the purpose of that?
Why kick the ball to a contest like in the old days where the chances of your team keeping possession is 50/50 (give or take a few % for strength and skill of the players involved), when you can play a uncontested style of footy that increases your team's chances of maintaining possession to as much as 100%?!
I think what attracts people to Aussie Rules in the first place is the lack of rules regarding the style of play; i.e. no off-side rule, or nothing like in rugby or grid iron where one team attacks for a time and the other defends. Aussie Rules is pretty much open slather – attack at any time and defend at any time, plus all the other facets that make it different to anything else.
Yet we’re now making the game more and more unlike footy. And what you describe with the formations and players waiting for the right moment or best opportunity to kick the ball sounds more like chess. Everything combined serves to inhibit and stifle any human element in the game and some of the features that make footy so unique.
Why set up in a traditional 6-6-6 formation (backline, midfield, forward) when the other side has the footy when you can reduce the chances of the other team scoring by flooding with say a 15-3-0 style?! You don't necessarily have to worry about your midfielders tiring from runnning up and down the field all day because a good side will have about 12 of them rotating on and off the bench.
The reason you’d do that is for the good of players and the game. By nature, any ‘elite’ competition challenges those involved and forces them to do things out of their comfort zone.
But who is the game geared towards now; players or coaches? Coaching in the way the game is played now, to me, says that coaches don’t put enough faith in their players and instead rely more on ‘planning’ to bring them results. A lot of that has to do with the professionalism of the game, but this is supposed to be the best competition this game can provide. That almost seems a nonsense when you consider that professionalism is taking away the opportunity a competition such as this should provide to players to get the best out of themselves. And any system that stifles that natural process needs to be re-assessed.
If the competition isn’t at the stage where it needs a major re-think then it seems to be headed down that track because, in many ways, the pre-planning and pre-preparation that goes into games potentially hides and stifles some of the individual strengths of players and the game itself. Where’s the human element in the game and the exciting uncertainty that individual flair provides? What’s the purpose of an elite competition that doesn’t promote that possibility as a priority?
Effectively, the game is being changed by coaches to suit coaches and to also eliminate or minimise the potential for a loss, or the degree of a loss. What’s in it for the players (apart from the financial rewards) and those who watch the game?