Good point... But there's also the new man on the mark rule and resulting change in style of play this year to take into account, Where we have seen that the ball is ping ponging back and forward over the rucks heads in most games. They are struggling to have the same impact as previous seasons. Ruck contests per game also seem to be down.
If this fast paced game style persists... Then we might not see Gawn & Grundy bounce back as expected.
Worth noting that in that 2019 season you had Nank 127, Phillips 98, Sinclair 110, Witts 87, Goldstein 102, Stanley 108, Jacobs 86, McEvoy 102, Martin 82 and Dawson Simpson 85. Basically Gawn and Grundy had crap games (the Gawn game had 61 stoppages, roughly the average this round in 2021 but well below the average in 2019).
I feel like the concept of playing your best players in their best positions is somthing AFL coaches should get... but maybe im over estimating them.
It's actually amazing how they struggle with it, even more of a conundrum how they value lower value positions over the most important when doing it. I think it's the Dusty Martin effect, he's so good that even playing out of position he manages to turn games and so everyone thinks their best midfielders will do the same as forwards...
The thing I expect we see more of is the Hawkins type scenario where a forward takes the ruck contests and the ruck stays zoned behind. Gawn was clearly getting stuck in no mans land with the speed the ball was moving. The negative of this is F50 stoppages are a great source of points but the positive is more intercept mark chances.
The stats are confirming that we've got a significant reduction in stoppages, the preseason suggested it and round 1 has backed it up.
Average stoppages this round were 63.2, for comparison last year the average was 59.2 and that's with the reduced quarters. Taking out the rain impacted game that sticks out like a sore thumb the average was 60.5. For reference last year scaled up for full quarters was 74 and the four years prior were 77.12, 77.77, 79.75 and 79.35. The weekend was an 18.5% reduction on the 5 year average for stoppages and is in line with the preseason numbers.
Whether that changes is a genuine question but it's hard to see how if the rules are causing it, even the kick-in rule is impacting things as a lot more teams felt confident kicking into the corridor this weekend than I've seen in years. I didn't notice any team religiously kicking to touch like years past.
The real question is how to react? Meek was very solid and I think he scores well this weekend when not effectively tagging Gawn. Flynn got banged up and everyone had him regardless. Hunter at least got the card out for stamping of his exit and gets a date with Gawn this week as his best case. Hickey and Martin both had good scores compared to their starting prices and would be at least worth considering if they repeated it at least to assess the ruck situation.
Personally I have Grundy and will give him a week and hope he bounces back somewhat, I think if you've got both Grundy and Gawn you've got the decision of whether they're still the clear top 2 rucks and if the answer is yes, then are they worth holding through a price drop. Effectively if you're committing trades to getting rid of them you still need the trades to make the kind of return you always would. There's definitely a case for trading or keeping. They may well bounce back, Gawn did work things out to an extent in the 2nd half and was doing a better job getting behind the ball, his ruck share was the bigger issue from that game for me by the end of it, Grundy just looked terrible but getting Sidey back will certainly help and I think they need to use JDG in the middle more, no point parking your best players forward if you can't get the ball there. Guys like Elliott or Thomas or several others are actually good enough forwards that Pendles, Sidey or De Goey can make them look very good with top tier delivery, much better than De Goey will ever look with no delivery as those same guys lose the midfield battle...