Thursday, March 31, 2016

Round 2: The Team

Round 2
COLLINGWOOD
RICHMOND
Friday April 1, 7:50pm
MCG
7mate 7:30pm Fox Footy 7:30pm
Weather
Min 13 Max 25
Chance of rain 70%: < 1mm
Wind: NNW 32kph
Betting
Collingwood $2.30
Richmond $1.62
FB: Jack Frost, Nathan Brown, Tom Langdon
HB: Jackson Ramsay, Ben Reid, Marley Williams
C: James Aish, Adam Treloar, Levi Greenwood
HF: Jarryd Blair, Darcy Moore, Jordan De Goey
FF: Alex Fasolo, Travis Cloke, Corey Gault
Foll: Brodie Grundy, Scott Pendlebury, Taylor Adams
Int: Brent Macaffer, Jack Crisp, Ben Sinclair, Adam Oxley
Emg: Matthew Goodyear, Alan Toovey, Jeremy Howe

IN: James Aish, Brodie Grundy, Adam Oxley, Ben Reid
OUT: Dane Swan (foot), Jarrod Witts (hand), Steele Sidebottom (suspension), Brayden Maynard (omitted)
NEW: James Aish (20, Brisbane)






James Aish will become the 1120th man to pull on a Collingwood jumper when he makes his Magpies debut on Friday night at the MCG.
Aish is one of four inclusions named to take on the Tigers. Brodie Grundy will replace the injured Jarrod Witts, while Ben Reid and Adam Oxley have been named to play their first games of the season.
Dane Swan's will begin a long stint on the sidelines after breaking bones in his right foot, while Witts appears to be facing a much shorter period on the sidelines.
Steele Sidebottom has been suspended and will miss the next two games, while Brayden Maynard has been omitted.
Aish is also the second of Nathan Buckley's traded-in players to debut in the opening two weeks of the season.
If he follows the lead of the first, 22-year-old Adam Treloar, he will make the Magpie Army extremely happy.
Treloar had 34 disposals and kicked a fine third-quarter goal in his Black and White debut against Sydney in round one.
The former GWS Giant will be closely watched again this week, given the public toing and froing involving both Collingwood and Richmond following his decision to land at the Holden Centre.
After conceding 18 goals from 43 shoring shots against the Swans, the addition of Reid will no doubt strengthen the Magpies' defence.
He joins Nathan Brown and Marley Williams, who both proved their fitness during a light training session on Thursday morning.
Brown showed no discomfort after a hamstring complaint kept him out of the final stages of last week's game, while Williams has overcome a knock to the knee.
Despite playing as a swingman in the latter stages of 2015, Reid played exclusively in defence during Collingwood's VFL practice match against Coburg at the Holden Centre last Saturday.
Grundy shared the ruckman with Mason Cox in the same match, while Aish impressed on a wing and kicked three second half goals.
Oxley is the only man of the four inclusions to enter the game without match practice after being the travelling emergency in Sydney last weekend.
The 22-year-old rebounding defender is coming off a fine 2015 season and will help combat Richmond's tall forward line.
The Tigers will be without a number of key players as it looks to extend its record to two wins and zero losses.
Brett Deledio and Ivan Maric have been ruled out by coach Damien Hardwick, while Shane Edwards will exit a side which beat Carlton by eight points.

Preview Round 2: Collingwood v Richmond

Collingwood News - David Natoli

Round 2
COLLINGWOOD
v
RICHMOND
Friday April 1, 7:50pm
MCG
7mate 7:30pm Fox Footy 7:30pm
Weather
Min 13 Max 25
Chance of rain 70%: < 1mm
Wind: NNW 32kph
Betting
Collingwood $2.30
Richmond $1.62
For the Magpies, round one did not provide the start of the season we were all hoping for. An 80-point thumping at the hands of the Sydney Swans was compounded by a very serious ankle injury to Dane Swan and a two week suspension to Steele Sidebottom. Sidebottom will return in a fortnight, however Swan looks set to miss the majority of the season.
It was a disappointing night, and was completely unexpected after such a strong pre-season. Credit must be given to the Swans for the way they played, but Nathan Buckley summed up the result in his weekly press conference when he stated it was simply a different Collingwood side which took the field last Saturday night.
While it is easy to write the Magpies off after such a big loss, the ultimate truth is that it was only round one, and the Magpies can quickly turn the tide and get back to a winning record. I tend to reserve my judgement on a side after a big loss, as I think the way a team responds the following week gives a better insight. If Collingwood puts in another poor performance, then there might be cause for concern. However, I'm expecting a fired up Collingwood outfit that will be out to silence a lot of critics.
Turning attention to Richmond, and there would have no doubt been a massive sigh of relief after the final siren last week. No one expected Carlton to get as close as it did, and at three quarter time an upset was brewing.
Nonetheless, The Tigers dug deep and were able to click into gear in the last quarter to snatch the victory. Richmond will need to improve dramatically on that performance if it is to push for a top-four berth this season, however it is a sign of a maturing club to win a pressure game where the opposition was on top for large parts of the night.
Having said that, the Tigers cannot rest on their laurels and will need to address a number of key areas if they are going to compete against the best sides in the competition. Richmond will fancy itself this week and will look to start the game really well.  A win will mean the Tigers are 2-0 to start the season with a number of key players still to return. After disappointing starts in the previous two seasons, it's a huge opportunity for them to get a head start and really settle into the season.

Recent History
Up until last season, Collingwood have had the wood over Richmond. This all changed in 2015, with the Tigers winning both encounters. The last time these sides met was in round 21 where the Tigers were emphatic 91-point winners. I don't read a lot into the result as Collingwood's finals hopes were already dashed, whereas Richmond still had a lot to play for. Nonetheless, it will have given the Tigers a lot of confidence.
Tyrone Vickery was the standout performer, booting six goals and polling three Brownlow votes. Brandon Ellis had the ball on a string with 31 disposals and 10 marks and polled the two votes. Dustin Martin was the third standout for the Tigers with 32 disposals and 11 marks and a goal.
The other meeting between the two sides was in round seven, which was an absolute thriller, with the Tigers holding on by five points. The win was important for Richmond as it was struggling for form at the time. Following this match, the Tigers were able to really kick start their year. Trent Cotchin and Brett Deledio were the standouts for Richmond, with 32 and 30 disposals respectively, whilst Dane Swan was at his absolute best with 32 disposals and two goals. Travis Cloke also booted three majors.

At the Selection Table
Whilst much of the emphasis will be on Collingwood's injury list this week, the truth is that both sides will be quite undermanned.
The Magpies will have to make at least two forced changes with Swan injured and Sidebottom suspended. Jarrod Witts will also likely miss after he split the webbing in his hand, which should forge the way for Brodie Grundy to return to the side. Nathan Brown, Marley Williams and Alex Fasolo will all face fitness tests but Neil Balme has stated during the week that they are expected to play.
In positive news, Ben Reid, Jeremy Howe and Tyson Goldsack all got through a VFL practice match last week and will put their hands up for selection. Reid in particular should help to sure up the defence, while Howe could replace Swan up forward. The question will just be whether Howe has done enough work to be fit for senior selection. Others pushing for selection include Tom Phillips who has really impressed in his first season at the club and James Aish who booted three goals in the VFL game. Jonathan Marsh and Alan Toovey are also available for selection and look handy replacements if required. Travis Varcoe should come into contention next week as he recovers from his hamstring injury.
Brodie Grundy appears likely to take the spot of Jarrod Witts who split the webbing in his hand during the Magpies round one loss.
At Tigerland, three players have been ruled out of Friday night's clash. Tigers coach Damien Hardwick confirmed on Thursday morning that Brett Deledio and Ivan Maric will remain on the sidelines after missing round one, while Shane Edwards has also been ruled out.
"The problem is when he's kicking, he's still got some acute pain so we've just got to make sure we don't push him and when he comes back he's right," Hardwick said of Deledio.
The exclusions from Richmond's 22 mean both sides will be below full strength.

Focus on Collingwood
Defensively the Magpies were split apart against the Swans and also struggled to clear the ball from the backline. Up forward, Collingwood selected three key talls and a ruckman, yet in combination they took six marks between them and could only manage one goal. Buckley is likely to stick with this structure, but it will need to deliver much more than last week.
However, for all these issues, the biggest problem ultimately lay in the midfield. Sydney had just under 100 more possessions, 31 more contested possessions, 31 more inside 50's and 76 more uncontested possessions. It's hard to be critical of a backline under siege, and a forward line getting such limited supply. The contested possession count was the particularly alarming stat as Collingwood has always prided itself in this area. In fact, it was ranked second in 2015 for contested possession.
Therefore, I think Buckley will keep his message quite simple this week. He'll instruct his midfielders to put their noses over the ball and win the hard stuff. If the midfielders can win at the coal face, then it will give the tall targets up forward a chance to get in the game, and also protect the defence.

Adam Treloar will enter round two's clash with Richmond in good form after collecting 34 disposals in round one's loss to Sydney.
Player Focus – Collingwood
Adam Treloar – The new recruit was probably the one positive the Magpies took out of last week's loss. He accumulated 34 disposals and booted his first goal for the club. Treloar's ability to break the line and win his own footy makes him such an asset. I wasn't sure how he would go in his first game considering he had a limited pre-season, but he showed no signs of fatigue and ran the game out very well. Treloar was very heavily targeted by Richmond in last year's trade period, so it is an opportunity for him to show exactly what the Tigers are missing. Expect Richmond to pay him very close attention.
Travis Cloke – Cloke has been under fire this week after he failed to register a possession in the first half last week. He was not the only player to struggle, but he's a leader of the club and his lack of form was something addressed publically by Nathan Buckley during the week. Nonetheless, Richmond has always been one of Cloke's favourite sides to play, and he has a terrific record against them. He'll be viewing this week as a real opportunity to boot a few goals, but he'll face a difficult opponent in Alex Rance.
Jackson Ramsay – Ramsay had just about cemented his position in defence in 2015 before injury struck. He looks to have re-solidified his spot after a strong pre-season. The Magpies like the ball in his hands because he is a reliable user and also is willing to take the game on. He was one of the few players who could hold his head up after last week, with 19 disposals and a good efficiency rate.

Focus on Richmond
Despite Richmond's win against Carlton, a number of areas need addressing. Carlton dominated most statistics, winning 44 more disposals, having 11 more inside 50's, 29 more marks and 51 more uncontested possessions. The Blues also took six more marks inside 50's than the Tigers. Based on these statistics, Richmond were quite lucky to scrape away with a win, and it was perhaps Carlton's lack of firepower up forward which cost the Blues the win.

Player Focus – Richmond
Alex Rance –
The All-Australian backman was superb last week and was a major reason the Tigers were able to hold on to win. Rance has historically struggled on Travis Cloke, and this match-up could be a decisive one. I think Cloke will look to lead high up the field to try and drag Rance with him. However the Tigers defender is such a weapon as he takes intercept marks and turns defence into offence.
Sam Lloyd – Lloyd was the unexpected last quarter hero in round one, kicking two of the most amazing goals to really kick-start the Tigers' comeback. Richmond's criticism in recent years has been a lack of quality small forwards to compliment the likes of Jack Riewoldt, so Lloyd has a real opportunity to cement this spot. He is a quality ball-user and knows where the goals are, so the Magpies will need to be cautious of him this week.
Trent Cotchin – The Tigers skipper took a half to get going last week and only finished with 21 disposals. Collingwood has had success in the past tagging Cotchin with Brent Macaffer, but Levi Greenwood is also available to take this match-up. It is not like Cotchin to play quiet games back-to-back, so expect the Tigers skipper to lead from the front this week.

The Wrap Up
Although it is early stages of the year, this result is really important for both to gain momentum at the beginning of the season. Collingwood needs a win to get over all the negativity surrounding the side right now. It's an opportunity to put last week into the past and get the season back on track. On the other hand, Richmond doesn't want to start the season slowly like it has in recent years, and the opportunity to win the first two games despite some significant injuries would be a huge boost.
The loss of Sidebottom and Swan is going to be very difficult for the Magpies to cover. However, it is an opportunity to display the depth which the club has been bragging about all summer. There is enough quality in the midfield to win this game, but it's going to require a much bigger effort than was shown last week.

Collingwood v Richmond: A History

Collingwood Forever - Glenn McFarlane, Herald Sun journalist and Collingwood historian

Old enemies become friends: Lou Richards and Jack Dyer enjoy a lap of the MCG in 1999.
Old enemies become friends: Lou Richards and Jack Dyer enjoy a lap of the MCG in 1999.
Jack Dyer called it "a blind, unreasoning hatred" and it's no stretch to say that the feeling is most definitely mutual.
Collingwood and Richmond do not like one another. One of the few things they have in common is the dislike for another one.
It hasn't always been that way.
Collingwood initiated the motion that allowed Richmond entry into the VFL in 1908. But the defection of a Magpie star after his return from World War One drove a wedge between the two clubs – forever.
There have been fierce battles on the field and almost as many off it; a frenzied poaching of players that drove both clubs almost to the point of bankruptcy in the 1980s; and even fights on the suburban streets.
Collingwood's boom recruit Adam Treloar further fuelled one of the game's most intense rivalries over summer when he said he chose the Magpies over the Tigers because Collingwood's playing list was closer to winning a flag.
Ire for the Tigers hasn't diminished. And here are eight reminders why:

1. DAN'S DEFECTION
Collingwood had plans for a Smith Street parade for its former captain Dan Minogue on his return from war in 1919. Those plans were abandoned the moment he told them he wanted to transfer to Richmond.
According to Collingwood coach Jock McHale, Minogue's decision bordered on treachery, and the club strongly opposed the transfer. They even refused to pay out his entitlements from a retirement fund, such was the anger.
Minogue was forced to stand out of football for the rest of the year as Collingwood went on to win the 1919 'peace' premiership, beating Richmond in a Grand Final result that seemed fitting for Magpies' fans.
But that wasn't the end of the story. Minogue, and Richmond, exacted their revenge a year later. He became the Tigers' captain-coach and led his new team to victory over the Magpies in the 1920 Grand Final.
Richmond president Jack Archer's pre-game speech lashed out at Collingwood for turning Minogue's photo to "obscurity with its face to the wall" at Victoria Park. "Is that sportsmanship?," Archer declared as he urged the Tigers' players to come out and knock the Magpies off their perch, which they did.
It was a sweet victory for Minogue and a painful loss for Collingwood. A bitter rivalry had been born.

2. ROCKIN' THE SUBURBS
Collingwood defeated Richmond in three successive Grand Finals (1927-29), but even through that time the Tigers still managed to get under the Magpies' skin.
On the eve of one of those Grand Finals local police were called out to break-up groups of supporters of both sides engaged in a brawl. History, or local police records, fails to recall which team's fans won the fight.
One thing that Pies fans of the 1920s would never forget was the manner in which Richmond "beat up" on Collingwood in one final in 1929. The Magpies had been unbeatable that season, and looked certain to become the first team to go through a VFL season undefeated.
But Richmond coach 'Checker' Hughes had other ideas. Before that semi-final he told his players: "Give them all you have got, and they will crack."
From the outset, two of the Magpies' most influential players, Syd Coventry and George Clayden, were flattened in "a reprehensible spirit that marred play all day," according to one journalist.
One Magpie player, watching from the outer, said Richmond "tried to take out the Coventrys and Colliers", and in doing so, was able to end Collingwood's winning streak, with a bruising 62-point thrashing.
The loss deeply affected some fans, with the Herald saying: "several (female supporters) the ground sobbing … the male escort of one sobbing sister clumsily tried to console her … she turned on him like a tiger cat, and, as she stamped her feet on the footpath, shrieked: 'We didn't come here to see Richmond play, but to see Collingwood win.'"
Battered and bruised, the Magpies got one back on the Tigers a fortnight later, scoring a hat-trick of Grand Final wins.
160330_richmond04
Paul Licuria introduces himself to Wayne Campbell in round 16, 2002.
3. MEDAL MUDDLE
Three VFL players tied for the sixth Brownlow Medal, including Collingwood young gun Harry Collier, in 1930.
He had tied with Richmond's Stan Judkins and Footscray's Allan Hopkins, but Collier was unlucky not to have won the award outright, as one vote had been allocated to 'Collier' without referencing whether it was for Harry or his brother Albert. When pressed for more information later, the umpire said it was meant for "the little rover fella" (Harry). But the vote was deemed invalid.
The VFL initially announced there would be no winner. Enter Richmond's VFL delegate, H. L. Roberts, who claimed the rules stated that "the player attaining the largest percentage of votes to games played (was) to receive the medal." That was Judkins, who had actually been dropped from the Tigers' team during that 1930 season.
The league then announced Judkins as the winner, to the disgust of Collier, and Collingwood. They felt an injustice had been done and it would take almost 60 years for that to be undone.
Always frustrated by Richmond's intervention, Collier fought for years for retrospective medals to be struck for him, Hopkins, and other tied winners who missed out.
"Not meaning anything against Judkins, but comparing him to Hopkins and myself was ridiculous," a candid Collier said late in his life. He finally got his rewards, a retrospective Brownlow Medal, in 1989.
160330_richmond01
Harry Collier played 253 games in a Black and White jumper.
4. BOILING POINT
Tensions between Collingwood and Richmond reached boiling point in 1936 when a clash between genial goalkicker Gordon Coventry and Richmond defender Joe Murdoch drove another wedge between the two clubs.
Uncharacteristically, Coventry threw a punch at Murdoch. He was reported, chose not to reveal the reason for his retaliation and was cruelly suspended for eight weeks – for his first offence.
When the penalty was projected on the screens at the local Collingwood picture theatres, there were chants of disapproval from Magpie supporters.
The ban ruled Coventry out for the rest of the season, and not even some alleged post-game offers of inducements to Murdoch from John Wren or his associates could change the Tiger defender's story.
"It nearly provoked a suburban war," one Collingwood administrator said. "Wren was furious … (Jock) McHale thought it was a set-up. (But) he (Coventry) didn't believe in squealing."
Coventry had boils on the back of his neck, which Murdoch was said to have targeted. The administrator said: "Murdoch knew he had the boils. They belted him until he exploded, and he got eight weeks – for retaliating."
Collingwood won the Grand Final that season, but had to do so without a shattered Coventry. The dislike of Richmond rolled on.

5. IN THE NAME OF THE FATHER
Jack Dyer hated Collingwood, and he saw the embodiment of the club as its coach Jock McHale.
He wished he could have played against McHale, and knocked his block off. But the biggest name in Collingwood's history had long since retired when Dyer terrorised the suburban ovals of Melbourne.
But when McHale's son, John, known as Jock Jr., came on the scene as a player during the 1940s, it gave Dyer his chance to upset the Collingwood coach, and to further infuriate the Magpie faithful in a game in 1944.
He would explain years later: ""My dream, and I dreamed it often, was to crush McHale. But it was an impossible dream. Then lo and behold!! One day Jock McHale did line up on me … in a Collingwood jumper and for four premiership points. At last … So it wasn't the old boy … so what? It was the fruit of his loins."
It would be the only time in Dyer's career he would be suspended – for four weeks. But young Jock Jr., perhaps emboldened by having a few drinks at a wedding he had attended earlier in the day, gave back as good as he got. He threw a punch back at the Richmond strongman and copped four weeks as well. He probably figured it was worth it.

6. HART ACHE
The Magpies appeared well placed to finally shrug off those dreaded 'Colliwobbles' in 1973 when the club finished on top of the ladder.
But a loss to Carlton in the second semi-final dented the confidence and it meant Collingwood had to meet Richmond in a sudden-death Preliminary Final to advance to the Grand Final.
That looked a near certainty at half-time when the Magpies led by six goals, and with Richmond's most damaging player, Royce Hart, sitting on the bench as the 19th man, under a serious fitness cloud.
At one stage during the second term the difference had even bloated out to 45 points.
The Tigers figured Hart could not play in the Preliminary Final and the Grand Final a week later due to knee issues, but club powerbroker Graeme Richmond insisted there would be no next week if Hart didn't come on.
So the Tigers introduced him and he kicked a team-lifting goal early in the third term as the Tigers booted six goals to two for the quarter. It was a sign of things to come as they overcame Collingwood to win by seven points.
Collingwood had been unceremoniously dumped from the finals in straight sets with coach Neil Mann saying: "Once again we walk away from the MCG disappointed." Hart had inspired his team; and Richmond fans wouldn't let Collingwood supporters forget it.

7. THE FLOGGING
Collingwood was never expected to defeat Richmond in the 1980 Grand Final, having risen from fifth position at the end of the home-and-away season on the back of some old-fashioned grit and Tom Hafey magic.
But no one expected the nature of the loss.
It would be a then record Grand Final defeat of 81 points, a humiliation of epic proportions. Six goals to two in the first term set the tone for the Tigers and a 43-point margin was in place at half-time.
Kevin Bartlett was dominant with seven goals, David Cloke kicked six, and Collingwood's seventh loss in a Grand Final since 1958 was a fait accompli early in the third term as a host of frustrated supporters left the MCG.
It was the sixth straight loss that Collingwood had suffered at the hands of Richmond in a final since 1969. Deflated Magpie fans wished the Tigers had the same sort of curse on them as Collingwood seemed to have, and so many years on, Richmond hasn't won another flag.

8. POACHING WARS
The enmity between Collingwood and Richmond had a Cold War feel to it in the 1980s. It wasn't quite the USA versus USSR – no one fortunately had fingers on the red button – but the hatred was as intense as it could be.
A poaching war in the early 1980s pushed both clubs almost to the point of distraction and financial ruin.
Collingwood fixed its sights on David Cloke, who had just turned 28, heading into 1983, and while Richmond resisted, the VFL Appeals Board granted the big man a pathway to Vic Park.
But it turned to full-scale war when Geoff Raines sought a release to join the Magpies after a contract standoff. There were legal jabs and a showdown between the two clubs, but Raines was granted leave for Collingwood.
The Magpies beat the Tigers twice that season. On one of those occasions the club's banner provocatively read: "Out in the Woods, without a Cloke, and it Raines".
But Richmond – the club and its football administrator Graeme Richmond – plotted revenge. They made a play for one of Collingwood's favourite sons, Peter Daicos, and for a time the star Magpie gave it plenty of consideration before rejecting it.
But Phillip Walsh, Collingwood's best first year player in 1983, was poached from under Collingwood's nose. It was said Richmond "bluntly told the football world that cost was no obstacle" and Walsh and later Jon Annear were prepared to head to the Federal Court before ending up at Punt Road.
The Magpies hit back again in 1985 when it managed to secure Tigers forward Brian Taylor, who would eventually go onto kick a century of goals a year later. But for all the changes, what hurt the most was the financial bottom line. It was just another sign that these two great clubs –and their supporters – don't like one another, and that hasn't changed to this day.
160330_richmond02
David Cloke was at the centre of the poaching wars between Collingwood and Richmond during the 1980s.

Wednesday, March 30, 2016

Preview Round 2: Collingwood v Richmond

SportsMatt


Round 2
COLLINGWOOD
v
RICHMOND

Friday April 1, 7:50pm
MCG
7mate 7:30pm Fox Footy 7:30pm
Weather
Min 13 Max 25
Chance of rain 70%: < 1mm
Wind: NNW 32kph
Betting
Collingwood $2.30
Richmond $1.62
203 days, that's how long Collingwood supporters had waited to see their team play a game for premiership points. The wait had been long, but leading into round 1 of the 2016 AFL season the hopes were high for the Magpie army as they headed to Sydney to play the Swans. Just minutes into the game though and it was clear that something wasn't right, as the Swans ran rampant over the lethargic looking Magpie team. By half time the margin had blown out to 62 points and all those pre season hopes and dreams had been shattered in 60 minutes of football. Something had to be wrong, surely? There was no way that this talented young Collingwood team would simply perform this poorly in the first game of a home and away season. There were off field distractions leading into the game, including a damaging illicit drugs story published on Thursday, but to see the Magpies perform at such a low level was a shock to all.
Luckily though for Collingwood, there is a second chance. In fact they'll get plenty of other chances to make up for that mess in Sydney. It starts on Friday night, at the Pies home ground, the Melbourne Cricket Ground (M.C.G.), when a huge crowd will be in attendance to see Collingwood host Richmond in what is more than just your normal round 2 matchup. The Tigers came into the season hoping to improve on a decent 2015 where they finished fifth on the ladder but were then beaten by North Melbourne in the first elimination final. They started the season on a bright enough note with a 9 point win over Carlton but they too will believe they can improve significantly.
The two sides met twice last season, with Richmond coming away winners on both occasions. In round seven the Tigers won a thriller by 5 points, and in the second meeting later in the season the Tigers ended any faint Magpies hopes of playing finals with a 91 point thrashing at the M.C.G.

COLLINGWOOD PREVIEW PiesTigers111 The only way is up from here, surely that's the approach that Collingwood has to take leading into this game. They have to write off round 1 and start again because there were oh so few positives out of that performance. One positive was Adam Treloar though, with the Pies star recruit showing why they went after him so hard with a club best effort that resulted in 34 possessions and a goal. That was about it though, in fact things would only get worse for the Pies as the night went on. First aging superstar Dane Swan went down with a major leg injury in the first quarter, one that he requires surgery and it's unlikely we will see the tattooed star again in 2016, if ever. Then in the third term vice captain and up to then the Pies best player, Steele Sidebottom, laid a heavy bump to the head of Sydney's Dan Hanneberry, that has resulted in a 2 week suspension for the Pies midfielder. Also in doubt out of the Swans game are Jarrod Witts (hand), Nathan Brown (hamstring) and Marley Williams (knee).
That means there will be changes to the 22 that faced off against Sydney, even if coach Nathan Buckley said he would like to back the players in for this game. The good news is there's some depth at Collingwood for a change. In a VFL practice match on Saturday at Olympic Park several Pies players put their hand up for selection. James Aish was the standout, with a strong performance from the middle which included several classy goals. Also impressive were Ben Reid, Brodie Grundy, Jonathan Marsh and Jeremy Howe. It would make no sense not to include at least 4 of those mentioned players in the side to face Richmond.
Howe and Aish are the interesting ones here, new recruits to the club who had injury setbacks in the off season but look raring to go now. Howe would provide cover for the missing Elliott and Swan while Aish is almost a spitting image of the suspended Steele Sidebottom, at least in the way he plays his football. Add in All Australian centre half back Ben Reid and the most perplexing omission from round 1, Brodie Grundy and this Magpies team doesn't look so bad after all.
The effort has to improve though or else it won't matter how much talent the Magpies have out on the field on Friday night. That effort in Sydney simply wasn't good enough, and despite any off field issues that may be effecting the player group it's time to put up or shut up as they say.

RICHMOND PREVIEW Tigers111 The Richmond Football Club are always one of the more intriguing stories during an AFL season and this version is no different. After finishing 5th at the end of the home and away rounds last season, the Tigers were expected to win their first final with many even talking about a premiership tilt. Alas they fell at the first hurdle against North Melbourne and the rest is history. The Tigers started season 2016 with high expectations with reaching a top four spot a realistic aim. The opening round win over Carlton wasn't pretty but eventually they got the job done, and with that 9 point win Richmond will look to improve upon that against the Pies.
Richmond's defense is one of the most under rated in the AFL. In season 2015 it was in that group at the top of the ladder that conceded less than 1600 total points for the season. Only 5 sides managed that and coincidentally they were the top 5 on the ladder leading into the finals. The Tigers backline is led by Alex Rance who is ably assisted in the key position defender roles by David Astbury and Dylan Grimes. Rance is undoubtedly one of the best rebounding key defenders in the AFL although he has had trouble with Pies key forward Travis Cloke over the years. Richmond also have the ability to create scoring opportunities out of their defense with Houli, Vlastuin and Rance creating drive that can turn defense into attack very quickly.Tigers111
The Richmond midfield is full of big names yet at times doesn't perform to a level that it should. Last season they only ranked middle of the road for clearances and pressure differential, two of the more important statistical categories for midfields. With names like Martin, Cotchin, Deledio, Edwards, Ellis, Miles and Lambert they really should be better than that. The ruck area has been one they have struggled in over recent seasons. They were down in the bottom third of the competition in terms of total hitouts in 2015, although of course the Magpies were down there too. You can see why the Tigers wanted Adam Treloar so badly, but for now they will have to do with the addition of Connor Menadue who was impressive versus the Blues and looks to have taken that next step.
The Tigers forward line has had a heavy reliance on one man for a number of years now, that man being Jack Riewoldt. While Jack has held up his end of the bargain only Tyrone Vickery is really starting to give him solid support. No one else at the club managed to break the 30 goal barrier in season 2015. Richmond will try different players up forward as the season goes on but this week are likely to give Lloyd, Rioli and Griffiths the role of assisting Riewoldt and Vickery. The Magpies backline actually held up okay against a barrage of inside 50's last week so they will be confident of restricting Richmond if they do dominate through the middle.
The Tigers list isn't much healthier than the Pies really going into this round 2 matchup. They will go in without Deledio, Edwards, Conca and Yarran who all would be playing if they were fit. Edwards is one who can't take a trick, looking on his game early versus the Blues before suffering a hand injury that may keep him out for a few weeks. The Tigers though will expect to win this game against a weakened and under pressure Magpies outfit.

TIP
Richmond will start this game as favourites but with the injuries (and suspensions) to both teams this game is by no means a forgone conclusion. I expect it to be similar to the first time these two met in 2015 when the Tigers came away with a narrow 5 point win. Surely this talented young Magpies team won't lay down and die like they did against the Swans once again.
From a Richmond perspective they will believe they have significant improvement in them after a less than impressive win over Carlton in round 1. Most will tip the Tigers to win this game based on the probable selected 22's but I've got a feeling, and that's about there is at the moment, that Collingwood will bounce back and produce a fighting win over one of their biggest rivals. Either way I expect it to be a thriller.

MAGPIES BY 4 POINTS.

Preview Round 2: Collingwood v Richmond

AFL

SUMMARY
Round 2
COLLINGWOOD
v
RICHMOND

Friday April 1, 7:50pm
MCG
7mate 7:30pm Fox Footy 7:30pm

Weather
Min 13 Max 25
Chance of rain 70%: < 1mm
Wind: NNW 32kph

Betting
Collingwood $2.30
Richmond $1.62
Little more than a week ago this April Fools' Day clash loomed as one of the showpiece games in the early part of the season. It's still a huge Friday night clash, however some of the gloss has been taken off because of the unexpectedly poor round-one showings and personnel issues of both clubs, but particularly the Pies, who will need a major form reversal to notch their first win of the season. The Tigers have a golden opportunity to post their first hat-trick of wins over Collingwood since 2001-02, and consign the Pies to an 0-2 record for the first time since 2005.

LAST FIVE TIMES
  1. R21, 2015, Richmond 23.9 (147) d Collingwood 7.14 (56) at the MCG
  2. R7, 2015, Richmond 16.9 (105) d Collingwood 15.10 (100) at the MCG
  3. R4, 2014, Collingwood 16.14 (110) d Richmond 10.12 (72) at the MCG
  4. R4, 2013, Collingwood 16.17 (113) d Richmond 11.13 (79) at the MCG
  5. R2, 2012, Collingwood 12.13 (85) d Richmond 8.16 (64) at the MCG
THE SIX POINTS
  1. In round 21 last year Richmond belted Collingwood by 91 points – its biggest win over the Pies since 1976 – despite having nine fewer inside 50s. Ty Vickery bagged a career-high six goals.
  2. In round one the Magpies were smashed all over the field: 334-429 disposals, 69-81 marks, 18-43 scoring shots and 45-76 inside 50s.
  3. Despite defeating Carlton in round one, the Tigers finished with fewer disposals, took 26 fewer marks, had one fewer scoring shot and 11 fewer inside 50s.
  4. Richmond defeated Collingwood twice last year, ending a seven-game losing streak against the Magpies that stretched back to 2008.
  5. The two clubs will clash for the 204th time, with the Magpies holding a clear advantage with 116 wins to 86. (There has been one draw.) 
  6. Kane Lambert's prospects continue to rise. In his past two games, the Tigers midfielder has risen in the Schick AFL Player Ratings from No. 489 overall to No.443.
IT'S A BIG WEEK FOR Travis Cloke. The Magpie spearhead had scant opportunity to have an impact in attack last week due to the Swans' absolute dominance, and out of sheer desperation was given a rare run in the ruck after half-time in an effort to get him involved. The 234-gamer doesn't need to kick a bag of goals, but he needs to provide a strong target and show leadership for young cohorts Darcy Moore and Corey Gault.

PREDICTION: Richmond by 12 points

Injury List

Injury Update Tuesday, March 29, 2016
Round 2
COLLINGWOOD
v
RICHMOND

Friday April 1, 7:50pm
MCG
7mate 7:30pm Fox Footy 7:30pm

Weather:
Min 13 Max 25
Chance of rain 50%: < 1mm
Wind: NW 31kph

Betting:
Collingwood $2.30
Richmond $1.64
Player
Injury
Status
Tim Broomhead Shoulder Test
Nathan Brown Hamstring Test
Jamie Elliott Back Indefinite
Matt Scharenberg Knee Season
Steele Sidebottom Suspended Available round 4
Josh Smith Ankle Test
Dane Swan Broken leg/foot 15-20 weeks
Travis Varcoe Hamstring 2-3 weeks
Marley Williams Knee Test


Collingwood superstar Dane Swan's season is probably over but the outlook is not as grim for his career, according to leading sports medico Dr Rohan White.
Swan suffered significant foot and leg injuries on Saturday night against Sydney at the SCG when he landed awkwardly after a marking contest.
The Brownlow medallist sustained a broken fibula, a broken foot and a ruptured Lisfranc ligament in the incident.
But White said that with the correct surgery and rehabilitation, there was nothing stopping the 32-year-old from playing again next season.
"He will take months to recuperate from this but the other thing with Swanny is the only way he gets fit is by running and for him to get football fit again it will be several weeks after the ligament actually starts weight-bearing and running and getting some work into his legs before his fitness will allow for him to play another game of football," White said.
"First and foremost the surgery needs to take place to get all of the bones and the ligaments back together around his ankle joint and his mid-foot which is where the Lisfranc ligament is. Get that right, get it to heal, which will take three months plus, and then for him to get football fit would be weeks on top of that to get in the condition he requires to play footy.
"If he's got the will to keep on playing there's no reason why he can't put in a big pre-season for 2017."
Although Swan said earlier this month that he would be a "50-50" proposition to extend his career beyond this season, White said he would be surprised if the premiership star has played his last game.
"I think despite his persona, deep down he's a very competitive beast. The other thing is, it's his dominant foot, some people put that as a bit of a negative, it's his kicking foot blah blah blah, but if it's treated correctly, rehabilitated well, there's usually no ongoing complications and he'll be right next year," he said.
Coach Nathan Buckley said on Tuesday he thought Swan would already have "an idea" about his immediate future - but it was too early to publicly speculate.
"He is still waiting for the swelling to come down. He is getting a bit of couch time and making sure he can get that down before they work out what they exactly need to do," Buckley said.
"It's too early to speculate. I am sure he will have an idea on what his future is and an idea what he wants to do about it but I think even he needs to get more information before he can make that judgement."
Swan was to have played a new role this season, where his time would have been spent more inside 50 than on the ball.
"He was going to play in a different role. He was always going to play his time through the midfield and get forward a little bit more but we have a deep squad and we have the opportunity to replace that (Swan) with someone else who has the opportunity to stand up and play the role," Buckley said.
White explained that the Lisfranc ligament injury was uncommon in sport and that the ligament itself was "very important" because it was critical to the integrity of the foot structure.
"The Lisfranc ligament is the ligament between the base of the first and second toes, it's very important because it's responsible for the structure of the whole mid-foot and the forefoot," he said.
"If it's not repaired it can lead to chronic pain, arthritis and dysfunction of the foot.
"It usually reflects a high impact injury on the mid-foot with someone who has stomped on the foot or whether the foot was put into a position which put a lot of stress and strain on the ligament like Swanny's did on the weekend.
"So often what happens is that ligament tears and it sometimes pulls off a bit of bone at the base of the long bone of the toes called the metatarsals and it's extremely important to repair, so once the diagnosis is made it's usually repaired with screws to bring the bones back together so the ligaments can heal and usually it's a three-month injury as a minimum to get over that - sometimes up to six months to get all the integrity back into the mid-foot.
"The Lisfranc injury means a rupture of that ligament that can also fracture through the base of the first and second bones where the Lisfranc ligament attaches."
The Lisfranc ligament is named after French surgeon Jacques Lisfranc de St Martin who treated soldiers in the Napoleonic wars who dropped cannon balls onto, and had cannon wheels roll over, their feet.

Sidebottom
Meanwhile, Collingwood has accepted the two match suspension handed to Steele Sidebottom from the Match Review Panel, according to Collingwood News.
Sidebottom was reported by umpire Jordan Bannister during the third quarter of the Magpies' eventful 80-point loss to Sydney at the SCG on Saturday night.
His high bump on Swans midfielder Dan Hannebery was classed as rough conduct which was careless, with medium contact to the head.
Match Review Panel member and host of Collingwood Media's 'The Agenda' Michael Christian provided an insight into the incident on Monday.
"If a player elects to bump, and bumps an opposition player in the head then there's obviously an issue," Christian told co-host Jay Clark.
"Hannebery didn't go back on the ground, so that will all be taken into account."
This is not the first time Sidebottom has come under the eye of the Match Review Panel.
The midfielder has a total of three matches suspended in the last two years and was suspended for three matches for a similar bump on St Kilda's Maverick Weller in 2014.
The result of his past history means Sidebottom could have risked a three-match ban if the club opted to challenge the suspension.
Instead, he will remain on the sidelines for the Magpies' next two matches against Richmond and St Kilda.

Sunday, March 27, 2016

Round 1: Sydney Swans 133 Collingwood 53

SYDNEY SWANS    3.9.27   10.12.72   14.21.105   18.25.133
COLLINGWOOD       1.1.7       1.4.10        5.6.36      7.11.53

GOALS - Collingwood: Greenwood, Crisp, De Goey, Moore, Fasolo, Treloar, Maynard

BEST
- Collingwood: Treloar, Adams, Sidebottom, Blair, Greenwood

INJURIES - Collingwood: Dane Swan (ankle)

REPORTS - Collingwood: Steele Sidebottom for rough conduct on Dan Hannebery in the third quarter

OFFICIAL CROWD: 33, 857 at the SCG



1. Buddy bursts back into the spotlight
The superstar kicked a goal 39 seconds into the game to have the crowd on their feet, and his second took him to number 20 on the list of greatest goalkickers in VFL/AFL history. Buddy ended the first half the way he started with another major and had four at the main break. Not even a shoulder knock could slow the champ down as he reminded us all why he's the best big forward in the game.
2. Did Travis Cloke miss the plane to Sydney?
While Franklin dominated his forward 50, Cloke's influence on the game was non-existent, and he finished the first half with Easter eggs on the stats sheet after being blanketed by Heath Grundy. Coach Nathan Buckley was so desperate to get his power forward into the game that Cloke started the second-half in the ruck. He's a much-maligned player – sometimes unfairly - but he's hardly got a case to complain after a woeful start to 2016.
3. Swans first-gamers on fire
The Swans haven't started three debutants in 26 years, but Callum Mills, George Hewett and rookie upgrade Tom Papley well and truly repaid the faith shown in them by coach John Longmire. Mills had 18 possessions and was cool across half-back, Hewett slotted straight into the midfield and looked right at home, while Papley played his crumbing forward role to perfection. The Swans' depth has been questioned but they still have co-captain Jarrad McVeigh, Sam Reid, Ted Richards, Ben McGlynn and Gary Rohan to return.
4. Where does Collingwood get best value for money from their skipper?
Scott Pendlebury is a star of the competition but he struggled to give the Pies any drive on a dark night in Sydney. He spent time in the midfield, at half-back and playing as a loose man in defence, but never got going against the Swans. Collingwood looked lost coming out of the back 50 so Pendlebury's skills could definitely help that area, but his ball-winning ability through the middle of the ground has been his greatest strength. It could be a week-to-week decision for Nathan Buckley.
5. Do the Swans need leg speed?
The question marks over the Swans' pace have been there for a couple of seasons and the departure of Lewis Jetta and injuries to Gary Rohan and Ben McGlynn haven't helped them go away. Speed didn't look to be an issue against the Pies however, with the way the home side moved the ball often making the opposition look slow. The addition of Papley has added bite, and with Harry Cunningham and Zak Jones also complementing inside players like Luke Parker, Josh Kennedy and Tom Mitchell, the Swans looked the quicker team.

... Cloke's influence on the game was non-existent, and he finished the first half with Easter eggs on the stats sheet ...

THE MEDIA

LANCE Franklin has made a triumphant return as Sydney monstered Collingwood by 80 points in a horror start to the Pies' season.
Franklin finished with four goals and the Swans piled on 10 straight between the first and third quarters, on their way to a 18.25 (133) to 7.11 (53) win on Saturday night at the SCG.
Compounding the Pies' woes was an ankle injury to champion midfielder Dane Swan in the first five minutes, which could sideline him for several weeks.
And their misery might last beyond Saturday after another of their prime movers after Steele Sidebottom was reported for a bump on Dan Hannebery.
Franklin, who missed Sydney's 2015 finals campaign because of a mental health issue, kicked a goal inside the first 40 seconds and nailed three long-distance shots in the second quarter.
One of the senior figures in a youthful Swans side, 29-year-old Franklin had a fifth major goal scrubbed for an off-the-ball incident involving a teammate.
But he moved into 20th on the leading goal-kickers list with his second for the night and finished the evening on 710, which is the most by any current player.
He had plenty of support with Luke Parker, Tom Mitchell, Jake Lloyd and Kieren Jack running riot, and their three AFL debutants contributing, with lively small forward Tom Papley kicking three goals.
The Swans led by as much as 90 points in the final quarter and would surely have won by a three-figure margin had they kicked more accurately.
Collingwood were so inept in the first half that Franklin had outscored them 25-10 by half-time, and two other Swans, Mitchell and Papley, had also contributed more than the entire Collingwood outfit.
The Pies' service to their forwards was so poor that spearhead Travis Cloke didn't record a disposal in the first half.
One of the few bright spots for Collingwood was from former Giants midfielder Adam Treloar.
Pies coach Nathan Buckley said Swan had a cracked fibula and foot fractures and would require surgery.
"I assume once that's done we'll have a better idea of what it means for him for the rest of the year," Buckley said.
He rated Collingwood on Saturday as a shadow of the side that performed so impressively through the NAB Challenge.
"It was poor, there wasn't anything that was redeeming in that performance at all," said Buckley, who added Cloke was given a spell in the ruck to try and spark him up.
He reported Marley Williams came off late with a knee issue and Nathan Brown was taken off as a precautionary measure after feeling hamstring tightness.
Sydney Swans coach John Longmire described Franklin's effort as terrific and praised him for his work with the younger Swans forwards.
"His shoulder was a bit sore, I think he got a knock in a contest just after he kicked a goal in the first quarter," Longmire said.
"But he's come back on and played pretty well after that."
Longmire praised his bevy of youngsters and said he had told them to play to their strengths.
"Under that real pressure early in that game, round one when it's right on the whips are cracking, the kids were pretty good," Longmire said.
Collingwood will be sweating on the scans from Swan's ankle injury, but the way he hobbled from the ground in pain, he looks set for some time on the sidelines. Franklin's shoulder looked to bother him at various stages after quarter-time but he should be fine to play next week. .
                                

REAL FOOTY

The Swans' blueprint to remain a competition power in the post-Adam Goodes era has been devastatingly laid out in an extraordinary 80-point defeat of a shell-shocked Collingwood.
Sporting 11 players with under 50 games' experience, including three debutants, and missing injured regular starters Jarrad McVeigh, Sam Reid and Ted Richards, Sydney began with a stirring goal inside the first 40 seconds to Lance Franklin and never looked back.
The champion forward headed the Swans' charge in an unforgettable celebration of his return after mental health issues forced him to stand down from the team late last season.
In a match scheduled to have been played at ANZ Stadium until the club's deal with the ground was ended a year early, Sydney returned 'home' for their 350th match at the SCG and put the cleaners through one of the form teams of the pre-season challenge in front of 33,857 fans
Certainly, questions will be asked as to whether Collingwood's inept display was at least partly due to an emotional toll from the leaking of information about a number of their players testing positive to illicit drugs in the off-season.
The Magpies' woeful night was compounded by what appeared to be a serious injury to Dane Swan, who hyper-extended his ankle in a challenge with Zak Jones in the first quarter and did not return. And even though former GWS Giants star Adam Treloar topped Collingwood's list of possession gatherers, the boom midfielder will not look back on his first game in the famous black and white fondly.
In contrast to the Magpies' troubles, Sydney for most of the game ran like a well-oiled machine, controlling all areas of the ground for long periods. Their dominance was reflected statistically, particularly in contested possessions, which they won by nearly 50. Had they been a bit more accurate in front of goal they would have inflicted considerably more damage.
A fit and determined Franklin kicked four goals and appeared to love every minute. Tom Mitchell kicked three and Harry Cunningham two. Luke Parker gathered a career-high 40 touches, teaming with Jake Lloyd, Kieren Jack (35 each) and Dan Hannebery to strangle Collingwood's much celebrated midfield, while Heath Grundy kept Travis Cloke scoreless.
Additionally - and encouragingly after the departures of Goodes, Rhyce Shaw, Mike Pyke, Lewis Jetta and Craig Bird - first-gamers Callum Mills, Tom Papley and George Hewett looked right at home. Small forward Papley scored three goals and laid five tackles, No.3 draft pick Mills was in the action with 18 disposals and Hewett had 15 touches and made seven tackles.
New signings ruckman Callum Sinclair and defender Michael Talia also seemed to be singing from the right sheet, tuning in well to coach John Longmire's game plan.
The Swans led by 20 at the first break and opened up a gap of 10.12.72 to 1.4.10 at halftime, keeping Collingwood to just three points in the second quarter. The Magpies' best showing came in the third term when they managed 4.2 to Sydney's 4.9, leaving the score at 105 to 36. Sydney scored a further 28 to 15 in the last quarter to seal a huge win.

"It was poor, there wasn't anything that was redeeming in that performance at all. We were a shadow of what we've seen in the NAB Challenge and a long way away from where we see ourselves."
                                                    Nathan Buckley

A NIGHTMARE week has turned into a horror show for Collingwood.
After enormous question marks were raised about their off-field behaviour with revelations of alleged illicit drug use their on-field looked even worse.
The 80-point flogging at the hands of the Sydney Swans was just the start of the woes for the Pies who looks to have lost star midfielder Dane Swan for possibly 8-10 weeks with a fractured fibula/foot and have Steele Sidebottom on report for a bump to Dan Hannebery's head.
Swan was taken to hospital after an awkward fall in a first quarter marking contest and Sidebottom is in danger of a suspension after Hannebery was examined for concussion.
While it was a night to forget for the Magpies it was one to remember for the Swans who registered their biggest win over the black and whites since 1987.
Lance Franklin kicked four goals in his return to football after taking a leave of absence from the game in September and missing the finals to deal with mental health issues.
He set the Swans underway in the opening seconds of the match with a mark and goal and had three more before the main break.
His fourth was a signature bomb from close to the boundary line from outside 50. The only concern for him and the Swans was a knock to his right shoulder which looked to have him in serious discomfort in the second quarter.
"It's all good," Franklin said after the game.
"It's just a little stinger and I'll be right next week."
Swans coach John Longmire couldn't be happier with the star forward's first up performance.
"He's fit and he's covering the ground really well," Longmire said.
"He was helping the younger kids in the forward line. Whether it was him hitting the scoreboard or giving goals off or chasing or just steering the kids around I thought he was terrific."
While Franklin was back to his powerful best it was another absentee from last year's finals campaign Luke Parker who provided the biggest reminder of what they missed in September.
The midfield gun finished with 40 disposals, eight marks and a goal in a best on ground display.
He has plenty of mates as the Swans engine room dominated from the outset winning contested possession 174-141. Tom Mitchell (30), Kieren Jack (35) and Jake Lloyd (35) all made big contributions.
Sydney's well known stars were at their best but it was the performance of Sydney's three first gamers which will stay in the memory.
It was the first time in 26 years that the Swans had three first game players in one team. Tom Papley, Callum Mills and George Hewett made impressive starts to what could be long careers for all of them. Rookie list elevation Papley was the pick with three goals.
Both his grandfathers Max Papley and the late Jeff Bray played for South Melbourne in the 1960s.
"We wouldn't have thought when we recruited Tom he would come out and kick three goals in round one," Longmire said.
"But he's had a good pre-season and the coaches have worked hard with him and he's worked on the areas he needed to. He's that small pressure forward who can also hit the scoreboard."
For Nathan Buckley Adam Treloar's outstanding debut was the only thing to salvage out of the wreckage. Treloar picked up 34 possessions (14 contested), won six centre clearances and kicked a goal. Scott Pendlebury, Taylor Adams and Sidebottom all battled on.

Swan
Scott Pendlebury concedes Dane Swan's loss was sorely felt in Collingwood's 80-point loss to Sydney after the star midfielder suffered a fractured fibula and fractured foot.
Swan – who was felled with the injury after just eight minutes – failed to notch a disposal for the first time in his career and will require surgery, but coach Nathan Buckley was unable to put a time frame on any potential return.
"I don't know what it's going to mean as far as time out. I'm told he'll need surgery and I presume once that's done we'll have a better idea of what it means for him for the rest of the year," Buckley said.
Pendlebury said Swan's absence in the midfield "definitely hurt us".
"It's not great to see a champion player go down so early and break his foot."
Adding to the Magpies' misery was Steele Sidebottom's report for a head-high bump on Sydney midfielder Dan Hannebery.
Hannebery sat out the last quarter as a precaution and Sidebottom's fate could rest with the Swans' medical report.
Alex Fasolo sent shockwaves through the Collingwood camp when he fell on his head in a marking contest in the first quarter, with Buckley saying the shock of how close he came to serious injury would have been a lot to overcome.
"The fact that he finished the game was a plus for us and I thought he kept plugging away given the shock he would have felt after believing he was in a lot of trouble there for a period," he said.
Nathan Brown had minor hamstring tightness and was rested for the last quarter, and Marley Williams copped a knock to the knee.
                             

AFL

COLLINGWOOD coach Nathan Buckley says his players have been 'betrayed' by reports claiming up to 11 Magpies had tested positive to illicit substances after being hair-tested in the off-season.
News Corp stunned the footy world on Thursday night when it named the Magpies – but no other club in the league – as failing the tests.
The results of the program – which was signed off by the AFLPA - are supposed to remain confidential, and Buckley was disappointed that his club has been the only one dragged into the controversy.
"I don't know what the facts are and I don't know if many people know what the facts are," Buckley said after his side's disappointing 80-point loss to the Sydney Swans on Saturday night.
"The AFL do; in regards to the off-season testing.
"One thing I do know is that our players, along with the rest of the players in the competition, were prepared to put their hand up to be tested under the guise of anonymity, and our players are the only ones that seem to no longer enjoy that cloak of anonymity.
"They've been betrayed in some sense and it wouldn't surprise me if they felt that a little bit."
Buckley refused to give the players an out for their ordinary performance against the Swans, but admitted that it was impossible to tell just how the events of the past few days have affected his men.
"I've got no idea, but we were a very different group," he said.
"We didn't harp on it, we didn't dwell on it, we spoke about it briefly but to mine, we're human, our boys are human.
"I hate making excuses, but in some shape or form we were different tonight, and we don't want to be there in six days time.
"There's plenty that we're not in control of but the things that we were in control of, we didn't look after, and that's the things that we'll keep going back too."
The Pies now have a six-day break before facing archrivals Richmond at the MCG next Friday night, and Buckley said it's going to be a challenge to turn his side's form around.
"It was poor, there wasn't anything that was redeeming in that performance at all," he said.
"We were a shadow of what we've seen in the NAB Challenge and a long way away from where we see ourselves."

Thursday, March 24, 2016

Round 1: The Team

Round 1
COLLINGWOOD v SWANS

Saturday March 26, 7:25pm
SCG
7mate 7:00pm Fox Footy 7:20pm

Weather:
Min 19 Max 25
Chance of rain 40%: < 1mm
Wind: ENE 22kph

Betting:
Collingwood $2.30
Swans $1.62
B: Jackson Ramsay, Nathan Brown, Tom Langdon

HB: Ben Sinclair, Jack Frost, Marley Williams

C: Steele Sidebottom, Adam Treloar, Levi Greenwood

HF: Dane Swan, Darcy Moore, Jordan De Goey

F: Alex Fasolo, Travis Cloke, Corey Gault

Foll: Jarrod Witts, Scott Pendlebury, Taylor Adams

Int: Brent Macaffer, Jarryd Blair, Jack Crisp, Brayden Maynard

Emg: Brodie Grundy, Alan Toovey, Adam Oxley

New: Adam Treloar (23, Greater Western Sydney)



The wait is finally over.
After a long, hot summer, Collingwood has named its home and away team for the 2016 season.
It contains 21 names we've seen before and one we've been hanging out to watch in the Black and White.
After a VFL practice match and a NAB Challenge teaser, Adam Treloar will debut for Collingwood against Sydney at the SCG.
The 23-year-old has been named in the centre in his first game for a new club.
Playing for Collingwood may be foreign, but taking the field in Sydney certainly isn't for the hard-running and highly skilful Treloar.
After growing up in Melbourne, Treloar quickly made a name for himself as a young star for the Greater Western Sydney Giants.
He returns to his home state determined to achieve even more success for Collingwood.
Nathan Buckley's 22-man team is stacked with midfielders.
Treloar will join Scott Pendlebury, Taylor Adams, Steele Sidebottom and Levi Greenwood behind the ball, while Jordan De Goey, Dane Swan, Jack Crisp, Jarryd Blair and Brent Macaffer all have the capacity to play in the midfield.
The story of Macaffer is an inspiring one.
Similar to Treloar, the 28-year-old played his last AFL game in New South Wales. But unlike Treloar, it ended in misery and took place over a year ago.
Macaffer has been on the road to recovery from a knee reconstruction since August 2014.
He played five games in the VFL last season and has displayed enough form in the NAB Challenge to cement his place in Collingwood's starting 22.
Macaffer is invigorated, a newly appointed leader and ready to add x-factor and versatility against the Swans.
Another man who has spent his fair share of time with the VFL Magpies is tall forward Corey Gault.
Gault began the pre-season in rehab and on the rookie list.
After three games and eight goals in the NAB Challenge, he adds another avenue to goal in a Magpies' side who was the second highest scoring team in the pre-season.
Gault has played four games for Collingwood, yet has never ventured outside the MCG in an AFL game.
Collingwood's sole Sydneysider Jarrod Witts will also be Collingwood's sole ruckman on Saturday night.
Brodie Grundy is in line to add to a host of fellow AFL-listed players to play in a VFL practice match against Coburg at the Holden Centre on Saturday afternoon.
Hours later, Witts will enlist in the help of 200cm Darcy Moore to take on Sydney's Callum Sinclair and Kurt Tippett at the SCG.
It's been 16 years since the Magpies last won at the Sydney Cricket Ground.
With a young, emerging group ready for action, Nathan Buckley hopes this could be the year to break the long-held drought.

Preview Round 1: Collingwood v Swans

Collingwood News - David Natoli

Jordan De Goey appears ready to build on his debut season in 2016.
After what seemed like an endless off-season, the 2016 home and away campaign finally kicks off this Easter weekend. I return for another year to provide my weekly match previews for all Collingwood games, so here's hoping for an exciting year ahead!
My first edition this season relates to the clash between Sydney and Collingwood at the SCG this Saturday night. The game was recently moved from ANZ stadium, where Collingwood has a dominant record over Sydney. However, these sides last met at the SCG in round twenty last year and the match was very even. Nathan Buckley said during the week that his side won't hold any fear playing at the SCG, and I for one believe him.
It's always dangerous to read too much into pre-season form, but there is no doubt the Magpies looked really sharp throughout the NAB Challenge, winning all three matches. Sydney on the other hand were a bit up and down in the pre-season tournament, but finished with a good win over Carlton which would have boosted confidence. Both sides were able to introduce new players into the side and would be pleased with what achieved in the NAB Challenge series.
It's always a great game when these two sides meet, so let's delve into this week's preview!

The last meeting
As alluded to earlier, the last meeting between Collingwood and Sydney was in round 20, 2015, where the Magpies were gallant but were eventually overrun by Sydney to the tune of 11 points. It was the final nail in the coffin for the Magpies in 2015, with all finals hopes fading after the loss. Quite frankly, the Pies looked the better side for large parts of the night, but just couldn't capitalise on opportunities and momentum, kicking 10 goals, 16 behinds on the night.
Tom Mitchell and Josh Kennedy dominated through the middle with 41 and 35 disposals respectively. For the Magpies, a rampant Dane Swan turned back the clock and picked up 39 touches to poll one Brownlow vote, whilst Scott Pendlebury, Steele Sidebottom and Taylor Adams had 31 touches each.
Whilst both sides will look markedly different on Saturday night, the overall contest is again likely to be determined through the middle, where Mitchell and Kennedy could again prove the difference.
The games two leading possession getters, Dane Swan and Tom Mitchell, clash in round 20 at the SCG.








At the Selection Table
Round 1
COLLINGWOOD v SWANS

Saturday March 26, 7:25pm
SCG
7mate 7:00pm Fox Footy 7:20pm

Weather:
Min 19 Max 25
Chance of rain 40%: < 1mm
Wind: ENE 22kph

Betting:
Collingwood $2.30
Swans $1.62
Both sides have some injury concerns ahead of round one.
Starting with the Magpies, a hamstring injury sustained by Travis Varcoe at Monday's training session was a massive blow after he was the standout performer over the NAB Challenge. I suspect he will miss the standard three to four weeks. Varcoe will join Jamie Elliott, Jeremy Howe and Tyson Goldsack who have all also been ruled out for round one.
In more positive news, Ben Reid seems to have overcome his niggling calf injury and is available for selection. The question for Buckley will simply be whether to risk him after playing no NAB Challenge games. The absence of his brother Sam Reid for the Swans may mean the Pies opt to go smaller in defence anyway with Jack Frost and Nathan Brown holding the key posts. Howe and Goldsack are also available for selection but will need to regain match fitness through the VFL before being considered for senior selection. Tim Broomhead is also still recovering from a shoulder injury and is unlikely to be available for selection this week.
Elliott, Varcoe and Matt Scharenberg remain the only real longer term injuries, which means the list is in pretty good health ahead of round one. However, the absence of these players may leave the forward line lacking a bit of spark, and may allow someone like Dane Swan to need to spend more time forward.
Turning the focus onto the Swans, and there are also significant injury concerns ahead of round one. Ben McGlynn and Ted Richards will be doubtful to play after very limited pre-seasons, whilst Jarrad McVeigh, Gary Rohan and Sam Reid have all been ruled out. The absence of these players is compounded by the off-season retirements of Rhyce Shaw, Adam Goodes and Mike Pyke, along with the departure of Lewis Jetta.
It could mean that as many as eight new faces are in line to be included into the side that lost in the Semi Final last year. It's unlike the Swans to field such an inexperienced side, but it will be an opportunity to see a few fresh faces, likely to be led by academy recruit Callum Mills. Michael Talia could be in line to replace Ted Richards if he is ruled out, whilst Tom Papley and Nic Newman may have done enough to earn their spots if elevated from the rookie list. George Hewett also showed some really good signs in the NAB Challenge as well.
The other big story at the selection table will be the return of Lance 'Buddy' Franklin after he was forced to sit out the finals series with personal issues. His return is a huge boost for the Swans, and his final NAB Challenge game against the Blues was dominant. Luke Parker also returns to the side after a knee injury sustained in the round 20 game against Collingwood ruled him out for the remainder of the 2015 season.

Focus on Collingwood
Whilst the Magpies are missing some big names, the midfield is in really good nick and is one of the deepest in the competition. The off-season additions of Adam Treloar and James Aish add to an already strong group. Combine this the continued development of players such as Jordan De Goey, Jack Crisp and Adams, and there is such a good core of players to take over from the likes of Swan, Pendlebury and Sidebottom who may be asked to play different roles this year.
An area for improvement in 2015 is Collingwood's capacity to play four-quarter football. In a number of games last season, the Magpies lapsed for periods of the game. The same issue arose during the NAB Challenge. In the games against Geelong and Western Bulldogs, the Magpies found themselves a long way behind before massive third quarter comebacks. Consistency across four quarters must be a huge focus.
However, it was good to see Collingwood hold on in three very close matches over the NAB Challenge series. In 2015, Collingwood's season was undone by some very narrow losses, so to see the Magpies scrape through in these games gives me a lot of confidence. It's a sign that the younger players are maturing.

Player Focus
Taylor Adams – Adams has really matured over the last two off-seasons, and was rewarded this year with elevation to the leadership group. It is clear from his NAB form that he has had a massive pre-season. He finished 2015 as a very good player, but I have no doubt that he will finish 2016 as one of the competition's best inside midfielders. He has become much more consistent, and has put a lot of work into his kicking skills which did let him down in his younger years. He'll be tested this week against the strong Sydney midfield.
Scott Pendlebury – The skipper also looks to have had a very solid pre-season and will be a vital player yet again in 2016. With so much depth through the midfield, Pendlebury is expected to spend more time across half back, as he did against Geelong in round twenty two last season. Throughout the NAB Challenge, Collingwood at times struggled to clear the ball outside of defensive 50, or made critical skill errors which led to goals. Pendlebury's experience and elite decision making will be used in defence to help steady the ship. His ability to play down back though will depend on the younger midfielders stepping up to fill the void.
Jordan De Goey – I tend to be very conservative with my analysis of second-year players as it is often the most difficult year of a player's career. However, De Goey is showing no early signs of the second year blues as he was one of Collingwood's best performed throughout the NAB Challenge series. He is so clean around the contests and reads the play beautifully from the ruckman's hands. He needs to clean up his disposal going inside 50, but in general his skill level is very high. De Goey was used as a sub a lot in 2015, and was also forced to spend a lot of time up forward. He looks set to be unleashed through the midfield this year, and the abolition of the substitute rule will work to his advantage.
Second-year midfielder Jordan De Goey has shown impressive form through the 2016 NAB Challenge.
New Faces
The Magpies have timed Adam Treloar's run into round one perfectly after off-season groin surgery threatened to delay his start. Treloar was brilliant against the Bulldogs in the last NAB Challenge match, and seems a certain starter for Saturday's game. He adds pace to the Collingwood midfield and a harder edge.
The injury to Varcoe may open the door for James Aish, although he may be forced to work his way into the senior team through the VFL. The other player of note is Corey Gault. Whilst Gault is not a new face to the Collingwood side, he has been promoted off the rookie list ahead of round one and looks to have cemented his spot after a strong NAB Challenge. Jeremy Howe should come into the side in the next week or two as well.
James Aish and Adam Treloar are two of Collingwood's new faces in 2016.







Focus on Sydney
The Swans still possess the number one ranked midfield in the competition according to Champion Data. The likes of Josh Kennedy, Tom Mitchell, Kieran Jack, Luke Parker and Dan Hannebery make up such a strong midfield with so much grunt around stoppages. However, the loss of Lewis Jetta and the injury to Gary Rohan means the Swans are missing a bit of pace and X-Factor. Nonetheless, with such a dominant midfield and a guy by the name of Buddy up forward, the Swans will still be a force to be reckoned with this season. After dropping out in straight sets in last year's finals series, the Swans will be keen to make an early statement.
It may be up to a few younger players though to step up to add some spark. Players such as Jake Lloyd, Zac Jones, Isaac Heeney, Brandan Jack and Callum Mills can really add to the depth of the side and add some spark. Otherwise, too much may be left to too few and it could be a difficult job to maintain a top four position.
The return of Buddy Franklin and Luke Parker will be a huge boost, whilst Kurt Tippett and Callum Sinclair should form a strong ruck division. The lack of run off half back may mean someone like Jack will need to go back into defence.

Player Focus
Kurt Tippett – I have been impressed by his pre-season and he will benefit from the return of Franklin and the addition of Sinclair. I'm expecting to see Tippett spend a lot more time in the ruck this season with the retirement of Pyke, which should add a new dimension to his game. He's looking really fit and will prove a handful for the Collingwood defence this weekend.
Josh Kennedy – Kennedy is one of the toughest and biggest midfielders in the competition and has a history of dominating against Collingwood. On the smaller SCG, winning the stoppages is vital and Kennedy is the master at this. I wouldn't be surprised to see Nathan Buckley lock down on Kennedy with someone like Levi Greenwood or Jack Crisp playing a tight tagging role. If Sydney is to win this game, Kennedy will likely play a pivotal role.
Luke Parker – Whilst Franklin's absence was a huge talking point last season, I think the injury to Luke Parker was just as significant to Sydney's fortunes in the finals. Parker is such a tough midfielder, but importantly kicks goals and takes strong marks. With such a deep midfield, I'm expecting Parker to spend a bit more time up forward to compliment the star talls. He is a difficult match-up wherever he plays, and his pre-season indicates that he is ready to take his game to yet another level.

New Faces
Callum Sinclair was a great recruit for the Swans last year as he can play in the ruck but is also a very competent forward. Given the removal of the sub rule, all ruckmen will now need to have the capacity to play forward, so Sinclair should prove highly valuable.
The other off-season recruit I am keen to see is Callum Mills. He didn't receive a lot of media hype leading into last year's draft because his destination was pretty much locked in months ahead of the draft. As a Sydney Swans Academy player, the Swans were always going to match any bid made on him. Mills has lived up to his promise in the NAB Challenge and has seemingly cemented his spot for round one. He looks a real player and is my early tip for the rising star.

The Wrap Up
As is often the case, this is a game that should be determined in the midfield. Both sides have really strong midfielders and it will be a case of some of the competition's best going head-to-head. The SCG is a very small ground with wide wings, which means run off half back can be really important. So I wouldn't be surprised to see the Magpies select a few smaller runners off half back to try and break the game open.
Sydney goes into the game favourites, but mainly because the game is at the SCG and the Swans have a terrific record at this venue. I think the game is basically a 50/50 bet though given the changes to the Sydney line-up. With the Swans' injury list, I think Collingwood's depth is a bit stronger, although the late injury to Varcoe was a huge blow.
It's hard to stop Sydney however if all the midfielders fire and Franklin gets a lot of opportunities. He always enjoys playing Collingwood! The Magpies will need to contain Kennedy and Hannebery though the middle, and contain Buddy Franklin. Up the other end, there is enough fire power with Moore, Gault and Cloke all looking in good nick.

Collingwood by 22 points.

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