by bickle » Thu May 05, 2011 9:16 am
by Mad Mat » Thu May 05, 2011 9:21 am
bickle wrote:why does the junior sides out at centrals lose or get flogged yet the senior side is so competative & successful?
by CENTURION » Thu May 05, 2011 9:36 am
by stampy » Thu May 05, 2011 10:10 am
by CENTURION » Thu May 05, 2011 10:11 am
by HeartBeatsTrue » Thu May 05, 2011 10:13 am
by whufc » Thu May 05, 2011 10:40 am
by sjt » Thu May 05, 2011 10:53 am
by HeartBeatsTrue » Thu May 05, 2011 10:58 am
by Grahaml » Thu May 05, 2011 1:45 pm
HeartBeatsTrue wrote:Success have didly sqaut to do with how junior sides go.
Consider the career span of a league player being 10 years, and say a league squad has 40 players. If 15 in your squad are imports (didnt come thru your juniors) that leaves 25. So over a 10 year period 25 players came thru your juniors. Thats just 2.5 per year. So in any given U18 team you may get 3 or 4 players that will go on to play league. The ability of just 3 or 4 players is not enough to determine whether you win or lose.
by whufc » Thu May 05, 2011 1:52 pm
Grahaml wrote:HeartBeatsTrue wrote:Success have didly sqaut to do with how junior sides go.
Consider the career span of a league player being 10 years, and say a league squad has 40 players. If 15 in your squad are imports (didnt come thru your juniors) that leaves 25. So over a 10 year period 25 players came thru your juniors. Thats just 2.5 per year. So in any given U18 team you may get 3 or 4 players that will go on to play league. The ability of just 3 or 4 players is not enough to determine whether you win or lose.
How many 10 year players are there around the league? I think you'll find an average span for a player to play SANFL is more like 5 years.
The biggest reason is Centrals don't have too many senior players playing reserves. They have a few for depth of course, but the rest are mainly project players who might play league in the future. That means a fair proportion of the reserves are under 18s, so the under 18s are comprised of the weaker under 18s and younger players. Other clubs have different philosophies regarding how they run their juniors, and fair enough. But I'd go out on a limb and say the players Central produce themselves are overall the best around the comp.
by HeartBeatsTrue » Thu May 05, 2011 2:08 pm
I see you point. My point was more about you should never compare junior sides performances with league performances.Grahaml wrote:HeartBeatsTrue wrote:Success have didly sqaut to do with how junior sides go.
Consider the career span of a league player being 10 years, and say a league squad has 40 players. If 15 in your squad are imports (didnt come thru your juniors) that leaves 25. So over a 10 year period 25 players came thru your juniors. Thats just 2.5 per year. So in any given U18 team you may get 3 or 4 players that will go on to play league. The ability of just 3 or 4 players is not enough to determine whether you win or lose.
How many 10 year players are there around the league? I think you'll find an average span for a player to play SANFL is more like 5 years.
The biggest reason is Centrals don't have too many senior players playing reserves. They have a few for depth of course, but the rest are mainly project players who might play league in the future. That means a fair proportion of the reserves are under 18s, so the under 18s are comprised of the weaker under 18s and younger players. Other clubs have different philosophies regarding how they run their juniors, and fair enough. But I'd go out on a limb and say the players Central produce themselves are overall the best around the comp.
by whufc » Thu May 05, 2011 2:20 pm
HeartBeatsTrue wrote:I see you point. My point was more about you should never compare junior sides performances with league performances.Grahaml wrote:HeartBeatsTrue wrote:Success have didly sqaut to do with how junior sides go.
Consider the career span of a league player being 10 years, and say a league squad has 40 players. If 15 in your squad are imports (didnt come thru your juniors) that leaves 25. So over a 10 year period 25 players came thru your juniors. Thats just 2.5 per year. So in any given U18 team you may get 3 or 4 players that will go on to play league. The ability of just 3 or 4 players is not enough to determine whether you win or lose.
How many 10 year players are there around the league? I think you'll find an average span for a player to play SANFL is more like 5 years.
The biggest reason is Centrals don't have too many senior players playing reserves. They have a few for depth of course, but the rest are mainly project players who might play league in the future. That means a fair proportion of the reserves are under 18s, so the under 18s are comprised of the weaker under 18s and younger players. Other clubs have different philosophies regarding how they run their juniors, and fair enough. But I'd go out on a limb and say the players Central produce themselves are overall the best around the comp.
On your statement re Central producing the best around the comp. I agree the best players currently in the SANFL, but i reckon its just plain luck (or bad luck) that most of your best get overlooked in AFL drafts.
I dont believe that Central do it on purpose to produce players not quite up to AFL standard but enought to be SANFL stars. Dont think thats possible
by Grahaml » Thu May 05, 2011 2:36 pm
HeartBeatsTrue wrote:I see you point. My point was more about you should never compare junior sides performances with league performances.Grahaml wrote:HeartBeatsTrue wrote:Success have didly sqaut to do with how junior sides go.
Consider the career span of a league player being 10 years, and say a league squad has 40 players. If 15 in your squad are imports (didnt come thru your juniors) that leaves 25. So over a 10 year period 25 players came thru your juniors. Thats just 2.5 per year. So in any given U18 team you may get 3 or 4 players that will go on to play league. The ability of just 3 or 4 players is not enough to determine whether you win or lose.
How many 10 year players are there around the league? I think you'll find an average span for a player to play SANFL is more like 5 years.
The biggest reason is Centrals don't have too many senior players playing reserves. They have a few for depth of course, but the rest are mainly project players who might play league in the future. That means a fair proportion of the reserves are under 18s, so the under 18s are comprised of the weaker under 18s and younger players. Other clubs have different philosophies regarding how they run their juniors, and fair enough. But I'd go out on a limb and say the players Central produce themselves are overall the best around the comp.
On your statement re Central producing the best around the comp. I agree the best players currently in the SANFL, but i reckon its just plain luck (or bad luck) that most of your best get overlooked in AFL drafts.
I dont believe that Central do it on purpose to produce players not quite up to AFL standard but enought to be SANFL stars. Dont think thats possible
by daysofourlives » Thu May 05, 2011 9:20 pm
by CENTURION » Thu May 05, 2011 9:54 pm
whufc wrote:HeartBeatsTrue wrote:I see you point. My point was more about you should never compare junior sides performances with league performances.Grahaml wrote:HeartBeatsTrue wrote:Success have didly sqaut to do with how junior sides go.
Consider the career span of a league player being 10 years, and say a league squad has 40 players. If 15 in your squad are imports (didnt come thru your juniors) that leaves 25. So over a 10 year period 25 players came thru your juniors. Thats just 2.5 per year. So in any given U18 team you may get 3 or 4 players that will go on to play league. The ability of just 3 or 4 players is not enough to determine whether you win or lose.
How many 10 year players are there around the league? I think you'll find an average span for a player to play SANFL is more like 5 years.
The biggest reason is Centrals don't have too many senior players playing reserves. They have a few for depth of course, but the rest are mainly project players who might play league in the future. That means a fair proportion of the reserves are under 18s, so the under 18s are comprised of the weaker under 18s and younger players. Other clubs have different philosophies regarding how they run their juniors, and fair enough. But I'd go out on a limb and say the players Central produce themselves are overall the best around the comp.
On your statement re Central producing the best around the comp. I agree the best players currently in the SANFL, but i reckon its just plain luck (or bad luck) that most of your best get overlooked in AFL drafts.
I dont believe that Central do it on purpose to produce players not quite up to AFL standard but enought to be SANFL stars. Dont think thats possible
I think that may change the next couple of years, especially with Ian Callinan going to Crows and them stating his fitness levels were extrmely high from day 1 there, they were very surprised at how fit he was. At Centrals Wingnut is not even in their elite running group so this will show to a few AFL scouts that Central players will come over with a good base to start from.
by Dog_ger » Fri May 06, 2011 5:59 pm
bickle wrote:why does the junior sides out at centrals lose or get flogged yet the senior side is so competative & successful?
by andyw » Fri May 06, 2011 8:47 pm
Dog_ger wrote:bickle wrote:why does the junior sides out at centrals lose or get flogged yet the senior side is so competative & successful?
We pay the umps well.![]()
And if it's close in the last 1/4 and when we get in front,
We pay the 4.45pm train driver to blow his his train whistle.
Game Over with all Centrals supporters laughing...
by sjt » Mon May 09, 2011 12:31 pm
by has been » Mon May 09, 2011 3:52 pm
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