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3-2-1 v Titans

Manu Vatuvei

Coach
Messages
17,950
I was thinking that during the game but then I saw Clark’s post match interview - he said that Jacko shouldering so much workload elevates all the other guys who don’t have such freakishly huge motors and lets them go at 100% when they’re on the field. Hes actually a big part of why we’re not getting any drop in forward intensity with the interchange.

I still reckon there's a very fine balance here if the argument is it's all about maximising effectiveness: because even if everyone else performs slightly better if e.g. they play 40 minutes instead of 45 or 50 minutes, you're still weighing that against a comparative, errr, "plodder" playing 80 minutes. And he's not merely out there for 80 minutes, he's taking 5,000 hit ups and making 75,000 tackles which could be being made by more damaging runners and harder tacklers.

But to be clear, at the moment this is a 99% hypothetical concern even for me, because Ford is getting over the advantage line and making his tackles and "winning the contact" pretty well.
 

Meth

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
37,737
I was thinking that during the game but then I saw Clark’s post match interview - he said that Jacko shouldering so much workload elevates all the other guys who don’t have such freakishly huge motors and lets them go at 100% when they’re on the field. Hes actually a big part of why we’re not getting any drop in forward intensity with the interchange.

yeah he is playing Barnett’s role
 

Matua

First Grade
Messages
6,185
I was thinking that during the game but then I saw Clark’s post match interview - he said that Jacko shouldering so much workload elevates all the other guys who don’t have such freakishly huge motors and lets them go at 100% when they’re on the field. Hes actually a big part of why we’re not getting any drop in forward intensity with the interchange.
I hope it's not like 2023/24 and our little man bench where everything revolves around it as a game plan, so if it stops working (if Ford returns to his previous error ridden ways), we have nothing else. It is interesting that the more minutes he plays the less errors he seems to make.

Anyway, let us celebrate the greatest most improved player award of all time. I reckon Chad Townsend was the previous holder, sadly he had to leave the Warriors to show his improvement, but while he was a Warrior I genuinely thought that I had a hope of playing first grade despite being at the time old, overweight, and unfit. That he went on to become a regular first grader with a premiership still astounds me.
 
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ozenzud

Juniors
Messages
848
I also cannot get, why you wouldn't support a player, playing over his perceived abilities. If we were getting flogged by 30 points and a player wasn't up to it, criticize away. But a bloke topping the running metres (a pure performance stat these days, almost as important as the scoreboard) and the tackle count, plus being lorded by team mates for doing 1 percenters, AND WE ARE WINNING, surely, surely, that's celebrated? Fair enough Ford used to get fatigued and make errors. Ruben Wiki, Steve Price, Jerry Seuseu all used to make errors and do half as many runs and people would cre#m themselves over their performances! His errors are low atm. Celebrate!
 

ozenzud

Juniors
Messages
848
I hope it's not like 2023/24 and our little man bench where everything revolves around it as a game plan, so if it stops working (if Ford returns to his previous error ridden ways), we have nothing else. It is interesting that the more minutes he plays the less errors he seems to make.

Anyway, let us celebrate the greatest most improved player award of all time. I reckon Chad Townsend was the previous holder, sadly he had to leave the Warriors to show his improvement, but while he was a Warrior I genuinely thought that I had a hope of playing first grade despite being at the time old, overweight, and unfit. That he went on to become a regular first grader with a premiership still astounds me.
We crossed over comments. Sort of saying the same thing.....spooky
 

Matua

First Grade
Messages
6,185
I also cannot get, why you wouldn't support a player, playing over his perceived abilities. If we were getting flogged by 30 points and a player wasn't up to it, criticize away. But a bloke topping the running metres (a pure performance stat these days, almost as important as the scoreboard) and the tackle count, plus being lorded by team mates for doing 1 percenters, AND WE ARE WINNING, surely, surely, that's celebrated? Fair enough Ford used to get fatigued and make errors. Ruben Wiki, Steve Price, Jerry Seuseu all used to make errors and do half as many runs and people would cre#m themselves over their performances! His errors are low atm. Celebrate!
Oh yeah, I was his biggest critic in previous years, and would have barney's with people who thought he didn't have one of the worst error rates in the whole comp.

Funnily enough some of them are trying to "I told you so" me, despite the fact we were discussing then, not now.

I'm fully happy to admit he's playing outstandingly at the moment.
 

Manu Vatuvei

Coach
Messages
17,950
But a bloke topping the running metres (a pure performance stat these days, almost as important as the scoreboard)

I mean, this is a pretty bold statement which I tend to disagree with. Like, an absolutely useless fullback or winger can top the run metres in the modern game. The usefulness of these metrics is pretty key to whatever "debate" is being had here.

Fair enough Ford used to get fatigued and make errors. Ruben Wiki, Steve Price, Jerry Seuseu all used to make errors and do half as many runs and people would cre#m themselves over their performances!

My philosophy has always been I'll cream myself (yes I have a personal philosophy about when I ejaculate while watching the Warriors) if someone's runs are, well....good. Like, if people can't differentiate a good run from a bad run using their eyes then there's very little point even discussing any of this.

I was thinking earlier how Steve Price circa 2006-2008 was a great example of a guy who racked up big numbers via an outstanding quality of work. But there are also guys who'd rack up impressive numbers while being more of a handbrake (some would put our own CNK in this category).

All of this is really just to say that the numbers by themselves don't do a whole lot for me but I recognise that a lot of people do read a lot into them.
 

marlins2.0

Juniors
Messages
349
I mean, this is a pretty bold statement which I tend to disagree with. Like, an absolutely useless fullback or winger can top the run metres in the modern game. The usefulness of these metrics is pretty key to whatever "debate" is being had here.



My philosophy has always been I'll cream myself (yes I have a personal philosophy about when I ejaculate while watching the Warriors) if someone's runs are, well....good. Like, if people can't differentiate a good run from a bad run using their eyes then there's very little point even discussing any of this.

I was thinking earlier how Steve Price circa 2006-2008 was a great example of a guy who racked up big numbers via an outstanding quality of work. But there are also guys who'd rack up impressive numbers while being more of a handbrake (some would put our own CNK in this category).

All of this is really just to say that the numbers by themselves don't do a whole lot for me but I recognise that a lot of people do read a lot into them.
Price was a big fish in a small pond at that time though.

What Ford has accomplished, in not only in a short space of time ,but with the pack he plays in...it's quite remarkable.
 

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