I can't recall who I was discussing with or what thread it was in but seemed most pertinent here regarding the low ruck scoring or, more importantly, the low amount of stoppages through the preseason. Kudos to whoever it was and sorry for forgetting because the point was very astute.
With the 9 games in the bag we've had an average of 62.33 hitouts per game, if that seems low it is because it is!
In 2020 preseason we had an average of 75.94 hitouts and in 2019 we had an average of 73.44. Now while we might say it's preseason, etc etc, the reality is that in 2020 the average hitouts per game, scaled up for shortened quarters was 74.00 per game or 59.20 without scaling up. In 2019 the average hitouts per game was 77.12
Basically the lack of polish in preseason games statistically cancels out for the extra physicality in the real games.
Now this is a potentially huge issue for rucks and also for contested clearance beasts, the guys who score most of their points at the coal face. Essentially the stats are saying we should expect 15% less stoppages, that's 15% less clearances, hit outs to advantage and prime tackling and contested possession opportunities per game.
Now I'm not certain this plays out but it certainly would have massive ramifications and it's definitely a clear trend in the preseason, we had only one game in the entire preseason that had more hitouts than the average last year. The 9 preseason games produced the 3 lowest and 5 of the 7 lowest hitout games of the 45 game sample. If it's not a trend it's a hell of a coincidence.
My explanation for this has a few possible reasons.
1. Teams are playing the corridor more, stoppages in the corridor aren't as likely to be repeat stoppages as boundary side stoppages.
2. Space to execute is meaning less kicks to contests, with no challenge from the man on the mark the kickers have a much wider kicking angle availability.
3. Faster ball movement inside 50 is meaning more scoring shots, less stoppages. Also more corridor kicking means less forward 50 stoppages also.
4. Deeper defensive 50 exits are meaning teams don't need to create repeat stoppages to set up their structures and teams are defending more overall space, meaning more gaps to kick into instead of having to go deep down the line.
There are probably other factors but overall it's the trend that's concerning.
I'm not sure there is an easy answer either. You could shade Gawn/Grundy but if it's league wide basically you're hunting for anyone who is underpriced and hoping they make some cash, the ideal scenario would be a Meek, Flynn and Treacy/Fullarton/Hunter combination all looking good at round one. I think Gawn and Grundy probably hold up better than most as well given they both score from other ways. Might even make someone like English, who probably loses points by attending ruck contests, have a bit of extra value.