![]() ![]() The gap between their worst and their best is the distance between Adelaide and Ballarat.īoth the Bulldogs and Adelaide managed to successfully count the number of interchanges they had. That doesn’t change the fact this was terrible stuff from the Crows. It’s probably the Crows worse half of the year, but it’s not the worst half of the year, in fact it wasn’t even the worse half of the round, the Eagles made sure of that. In the first half the Bulldogs kicked 5.13, which could have been a problem, except Matthew Nicks said his side’s first half was the "worst of the year". ![]() That’s Adelaide this year, up and down like my uncle off his meds.įor a team that started poorly, the Bulldogs have now won seven of their past eight games. The Bulldogs couldn’t kick accurately, but it didn’t matter because Adelaide seemed to bring a level of enthusiasm to Ballarat that a group of year tens sent there to learn about the Eureka Stockade would. Sydney managed to successfully count the number of interchanges they had. They’ve gone from competing for a premiership to being relieved they just managed to beat North Melbourne and needing them to be mathematically illiterate to do so. While things were bad for North, things were worse for the Swans. I mean, you don’t need to even be able to count to one hundred to do that job. Perhaps North could hire anyone with an education above the third grade to count the interchanges. It’s hard to know how to fix this so it doesn’t happen again. Kangaroos’ fans may be the most loyal fans in the world to live through all this. The second was they then managed to go over the limit for interchanges, resulting in a free kick and a 50-meter penalty to Sydney giving away the game. The first was that North Melbourne were leading with 40-seconds to go. Two strange things happened in this game. Not as a rocket scientist or anything, but as a cleaner or similar. Maths is hardly the most exciting of subjects, I remember going to enormous effort to not do maths at school, to the point that if I’d put that effort into actually doing maths, I could be working at NASA right now. ![]() Team that can’t do basic maths (90) v Sydney (93) I’d offer him my hamstring, but it goes every time I stand up, which my doctor says isn’t meant to happen.īoth Melbourne and Port managed to successfully count the number of interchanges they had. You could see it by how they decided to not show up until the third quarter, where, thanks to six consecutive goals and some poor goalkicking from the Power, they actually got in front.īut one quarter out of four is never an equation that equals success, and Port would be thrilled with how they got the game back on their terms.Įven worse for Demons fans is there’s a chance Clayton Oliver could miss a month with a hamstring. In fact, except for the third quarter, the Dees seemed fairly resigned to the idea that this was not going to be their night. The ease at which he did what he liked in the pouring rain was astounding he finished with 41 disposals, two goals and nine clearances.Īt no point did Melbourne seem to consider trying to do something about the bad man hurting them. Zak Butters looked like an uncle smashing his nieces and nephews during a family pick-up game of football on Friday. What you really want is idiotic hysteria. On a Monday, you want irrational reaction. Footy is a passion, not some cold hearted, spread sheet dominated rational exercise. ![]()
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