Talking to people much more experienced in tactics than me, suggest that the real issue is that we play a compressed defence wherever we are on the field.
The compressed defence played in their half works as it makes the opposition have to try and go wide to get distance. Then the tactic is to fan out wider as you move back into your own half, if you continue to play compressed then quick shifts wide can get the defence caught in an overlap problem. Seems to me it’s probably not that simple, but if your defence coach preaches compressed wherever you are, then it makes sense that you can get caught out wide more often than you should.
No doubt there are other opinions, but I tend to trust the coaches that have pointed it out.
Thats a fair point
When we tried to go around Manly it looked like they had 3 on 2 on the edges, so the play went nowhere. We did try a lot of inside ball trying to catch them out , id say maybe 10 inside balls in the match, to runners inside Manlys 20, all got read and tackled easily
Sitting behind the goal posts, our compressed defense stands out like a sore thumb. Manly didnt attack the edges on tackle one or two like we probably would have done, they went up the middle with a power game first few tackles, suckered defenders in on an already compressed defense, then away they went to their left , with breaks at ease with an over lap each time
As a few have already mentioned on here, it was better coaching