Balta’s not a forward. The law of averages says he’ll kick some goals if left in the forward line long enough, but who wants average?
We have an unhealthy fascination with playing guys out of position, hoping they’ll somehow defy a lifetime of exposed form. We see Balta’s size, his agility, his ability to take a grab, that massive kick, and we think, hey, this guy has all the attributes. He could be our Hawkins. Or the next Richo. But there’s a problem.
He’s just not a forward. He doesn’t see the game the way forwards do. He doesn’t have the timing, the craftiness, the nous. And so we waste an opportunity to have a gun half back, roaming ruck, or even a tall winger, while he stagnates in the forward line wondering why it’s all so hard all of a sudden.
And it’s not just Balta. Take Caddy, for example. Caddy is a forward. Not a wing, not an onballer. He’s a forward. Leave him and Balta in the forward line for a season, and we all know who will kick more goals.
So much of our success has come from encouraging players to play to their strengths. We should abandon the experiments and stick with what works.
Great post about the broader "play to their strengths" mindset, it does seem they're gradually moving away from that important 2017 bottom-up approach. Caddy a perfect example. It's only a small thing, but I am looking for signs of a club on the march and I'm not seeing those signs in this move right now, as Balta up forward isn't playing to his strengths. It does help him develop, but would a developmental role suggest a hedge on our ambitions this year? Is it a shift back to the top-down approach of fitting players into pre-defined roles?