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Wednesday, November 12, 2025

AFLW FINALS GAME ANALYSIS - MELBOURNE/BRISBANE + ADELAIDE/ST KILDA

                               

Again no major upsets here with the Lions and Crows both getting up to advance.

Brisbane's back line stood up keeping the trio of Hore, Harris and Zanker to just 2 goals although the loss of Zanker really let them get the ascendancy there.

The Dees have always been a midfielder short after Purcell went down, then having to use Hore in the middle which takes away her league-leading forward craft - robbing Peter to pay Paul.

With Zanker unavailable this week then it will again leave either Allen or Biddell free to intercept and that's why I'll be tipping the Crows.

Speaking of the Crows this went the way we thought it probably would with the Saints giving up 67 and 72 points in the last 2 games of the regular season and then 60 in this one - it's hard to think they beat Carlton just 4 weeks ago while keeping them to 36 points.

Today we look at:

  • Brisbane at Center Bounce Clearance
  • Conway Wing Run
  • Melbourne Fat Side Line
  • Conway Losing Goal Side
  • Brisbane Transition Defense
  • Adelaide Off-Ball Defense into Offense
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Sunday, November 9, 2025

AFLW FINALS GAME ANALYSIS - NORTH MELBOURNE/HAWTHORN + CARLTON/WEST COAST

It's fair to say there wasn't any real surprises at the results from the weekend except for maybe how teams won.

North weren't at their best but the Hawks were playing VERY defensive and thus scored a measly 3 behinds and will take a huge turnaround for them to not go out in straight sets next week, as I alluded to last week.

I'm not on the we-need-more-scoring bandwagon, I know the reasons why it's difficult, but just 3 behinds from 28 inside 50's in a final is definitely alarming.

The Blues had 1 of the quarters of the year with 6 goals in the wet to game to bed v the Eagles  with only 6 other teams achieving a 6-goal quarter for the entire season - Sydney and Adelaide both in round 2 (Crows managed 7!) , North Melbourne twice in the same game in round 3, Melbourne and St Kilda in round 7 and Port Adelaide in round 12 - but none of those were in the wet in a final!

The Eagles are a season and half off really competing with the top tier teams but it's evident they have the cattle so we'll just time do its thing here.

Today we look at:

  • Hawthorn Defensive Mistake
  • North in Slow Play
  • Another Hawthorn Defensive Mistake
  • Roberts Pushing Forward
  • Eagles Handballing Instead of Kicking
  • Eagles Receiving Handball on Their Wrong Side
  • Guerin Blitz x 3
  • West Coast at Center Bounce Clearance
For full access to this game analysis, register for a level 1 membership from https://aussierulestraining.com/membership-account/membership-levels/.

Thursday, November 6, 2025

THE COACHES BLUEPRINT FOR 2026 - SAMPLE SESSION


Last week I challenged all coaches to sit down and find ways to turn their training drills (boring/zero learning) into training activities (high player engagement and involvement/high learning) in this post.

STEP #1 - SESSION THEME

Without a theme you're not really going to nail any real sustainable outcomes that carry into game day so you really need to start with this. The theme for this specific session is offense.

STEP #2 - THEME INTENTIONS

To break that down even further we also want to introduce some intentions around our them that will be the backbone of the entire session. For this session let's focus on communication, moving the ball into and through space and maintaining possession and control of play when in possession.

Players need to be made aware of these prior to the session via the group chat or at least in the coaches address at the start of the session but the earlier the better so players can clarify anything they need to before training.

STEP #3 - TRAINING ACTIVITY SELECTION

As you have themed the session then you've got to stick with it and avoid dual-themeing as much as you can, especially in this pre-xmas phase which also means keep your themes/intentions pretty simple for now.

STEP #4 - FEEDBACK

Contraints are used in training activities to shape the actions you wan to see but feedback is also a constraint because the players will play to what the coaches instruct them to/direct them towards. When you have a theme with clear intentions then that gives the players specific information to act on and the coaches specific information to coach towards. This means that during an offense-themed session, keep your feedback to the offense side of things, don't go ranting off about defensive principles and stoppage tactics.

After your movement warm up then try this:

TRAINING ACTIVITY #1...

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Wednesday, November 5, 2025

PLAYING STYLES OF AFL TEAMS IN 2025

                                               

Before the commencement of the 2o25 AFL season, a bunch of Twitter football stats accounts posted reviews of each team based-on the season previous which I did link to in this particular post back in February.

After the shit show that was AFL-media in 2025 and the just-passed trade period, if it's real game analysis you're after then you should be following these guys:

Ricky Mangidis, James Ives, Cody Atkinson, Emlyn Breese and One Percenters

There's a few others that popped up through the course of the year but for the sake of this post, I'll keep at this lot as this information mostly comes from them with some other bits from other sources like Fox Footy etc.

What you'll see is little tid-bits I've chosen from most AFL teams that describes how they play, why they play like that and the results they get from doing so posted prior and during the 2025 AFL season.

For community coaches, you might recognise a team's traits in your own team's and then gather some idea's on how to make it more effective for your won team.

ADELAIDE

  • Were 14th for clearances in 2024 (5th in 2025) so were having to defend and initiate their offense from deep in defense so then used a sling-shot style in an attempt to get the opposition on the move and to lose them in transition.
  • They were/are very compact on defense but very expansive on offense. 

BRISBANE

  • The stat to show the amount of control or chaos a team likes to use is the average marks per game divided by the average  groundball hard ball gets where the league average was 3.1(more groundballs than marks). Brisbane average 20 marks more than groundballs yet are still 2nd in groundball gets differential.
  • 1st for kicks.
  • Their medium forwards come up closer to the cntest then spread rapidly when the Lions win possession pulling the defense out of shape and allows for more handball out of congestion
  • They use quick release kicks (released in 3secs or less) to find uncontested marks

CARLTON

  • In 2024 they sacrificed a number at stoppage for an extra defender to generate more scores from turnover
  • They were 3rd last for inside 50's from defensive 50
  • Had the lowest score generated from defensive 50 so in their 2025 practice game they brought everyone up to run and carry through the mid 50 while disconnecting 1 of their tall forwards to maintain a longer/deeper target over the back
  • Often just needed 1 more handball through the mid 50 in 2025
  • In 2025 they moved the ball the fastest from an uncontested mark but then were 5th slowest from a contested mark. The first stats throws the game into chaos yet they don't maintain possession through play switches or 45 degree kicks as they had the 5th least uncontested marks per game
  • They take the 3rd most contested marks and win the aerial 50-50's better than most but then concede any advantage they gain by going so slow off the back of it.
  • They play transition footy the wrong way around where they kick to long and shallow inside 50's off of uncontested marks then go painfully slow after opening the ground up with contested marks

COLLINGWOOD 

  • They create pressure around the opposition ball carrier to force poor quality disposals and thus create interceptions then attack from those intercepts very quickly
  • Offensively they like slow play kicking to/along the boundary
  • On kick outs the skinny wing or high half forward stays boundary side and then is the first Pies player to rip through directly to goal
  • Skinny wing/midfielders may also be at the front of the contest doing their angled run in and make up the 2nd wave of runners when the ball is won
  • On Collingwood in close games, football is a game of skill and while there is variance game-to-game in how well skills are executed, you can control enough to tip the scales in your favor. Fly identified and drilled into them the effects of chaos/control in close game scenarios and how much variance to let into the game. When chasing a late lead they play as open/expansive as possible and as time is the enemy, congestion/stoppages are avoided at all costs, even if it means letting the ball spill out from them or the opposition as they're more likely to win a loose ball back then a contested ball. When defending a lead they reduce variance by restricting the amount of football that can actually happen so now with time again being the enemy but of a different kind, they search for congestion, stoppages and the boundary, often giving up 1st possession to pounce on the opposition that does get it and continue to slow the game down via stoppages or free kicks for holding the ball on the opposition
  • Love to use speed and numbers - speed to get past a defender before they’re set then numbers to be predictable to each other. What looks like reckless/aggressive corridor play is actually controlled chaos as they have speed and numbers through there when they do
  • On offense they prefer slow and wide so they can reorganise their defense behind the ball and play a forward half game and/or free up Moore as the spare interceptor. They are the best at holding shape around the ball and refuse to compromise even if they concede contested possession inside so they can apply frantic pressure when they do lose the contest and counter punch on turnovers and then once they win territory they don’t give it back. They kick down the line more than anyone but they also score next after a kick down the line more than anyone.

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

AFLW ROUND 12 GAME ANALYSIS

                               

North are North and the Hawks are in very weird position having played them last week (for a loss), this week in a 1st final and then even potentially in the Grand Final.

I'll start with the answer in that you can only beat North Melbourne once so then the question is do the Hawks want to beat them before the Granny, if they get that far?

They'll be planning and playing to win every game as normal but this must be the first time ever that 2 teams play each other 3 times in 5 weeks, if it works out so.

That being said, injuries are going to kill the Hawks chances with Bates 2 - 4 weeks away and Wales TBC which would be a miracle if that resulted in a return for this week or next week - I'm predicting  a straight set exits for the Hawks unfortunately if things go the way I think they will.

This puts the Demons on the path to a Granny with home ground advantage through the finals, yet I'll tip the Lions this week as they showed a level the Dees didn't have last weekend.

I'll also tip the Blues at home and Adelaide against another injury depleted team in the Saints.

Today we look at:

  • North Melbourne at Center Bounce
  • North Melbourne Forward of the Stand Player Handball
  • Rare North Melbourne Defensive Mistake
  • Poor Melbourne Team Defense
  • Collingwood Transition Offense
  • Brisbane Forward Press Defense
  • Bulldogs Outnumber Advantage Fail
  • Kenny Leading Patterns
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Sunday, November 2, 2025

WEST COAST v CARLTON AFLW GAME ANALYSIS

We've got some finals silliness going on where 2 games from round 12 will be ran back in week 1 of the finals - of which West Coast and Carlton is one (North/Hawks the other).

West Coast are young as a whole but also have adequate experience in the form of Swanston 76 games, Smith 74, Gibson 71, Hooker 66 and even relatively younger players in Lewis 62 and Thomas 53 but also have a forward line of Riggs, Dalgleish and Painter on 10 games each.

They're probably a year or 2 away from truly contending but to go from 6 wins for season 2020/21/22/23 and then 4 and 6 wins respectively in 2024/25 shows the Daisy effect has been huge.

The Blues have also been a big improver this year increasing their scoring from 266 in 2024 to 554 in 2025, their scores against from 532 to 474 and their % of 50 to 116.9.

They totaled 83 scoring shots last year and surpassed that round 5 this year on their way to 164,shoeing the remarkable offensive improvement from the Blues this year.

Via the eye test they have also expanded their use of the ground from the skinny side only to the entire ground which every team should be trying to do (but a few refuse too!)

I had the Blues by 4 goals on the weekend and they did just that and I'll roll with that again in next weekend's game.

Today we look at:

  • West Coast Needing 1 More Handball
  • Carlton Width
  • Lewis Running the Wrong Way Actually Helping the Eagles
  • West Coast Team Defensive Breakdowns
  • Fitzpatrick Run
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Friday, October 31, 2025

THE COACHES BLUEPRINT FOR 2026

                                           

It's almost 2026 but a lot of coaches still use drills (I'll get to that term later), from 1986 but it's clearly time to reinvent your coaching practices and look at what elite team sport coaches are doing right now.

WHAT WE CURRENTLY SEE

Kicking from this cone to that cone to this cone to that cone is the definition of a drill - a predetermined sequence of actions that cannot be deviated from.

They possess zero context to what occurs in games as there is no opposition, no consequence and no decision making taking place - all that a game has in abundance.

A training activity is something that is full of information that is representative of the a game consisting of interactions between teammates and opposition.

Decision's now need to be made constantly in regards to navigating the constraints of space and time on top of everything else.

Above all, skill is the ability to adapt to ever-changing conditions and all cone-to-cone kicking does is rehearse an already adequate foundational technique.

TRAINING AT THE MOMENT

Players get there, have a very casual kick with a teammate or 2, run a lap and then go into handball to kicking lanes or off the fence stuff with a player/coach out the front delivering the ball to them in a variety of ways.

Sure it's just the warm up portion of the session but it's still not representative of the game so as we only have 2 - 3hrs per week to train, why not make it as jam-packed with game information as we can.

This WILL require you as coach to shift from your current coaching habits and your players as well but change needs to come from the top and that's you.

At this point of the session you don't need ramp decision-making and complexity to its maximum but you at least want to start with it included in your "warm up" training activities (remember no drills!)

WHEN/HOW TO START?

When? My suggestion is your very 1st session of pre-season in the that's coming up in the next few weeks.

How? Try and gamify your current crop of drills to make them training activities.

Add decision-making into the activity via the use of opposition which doesn't mean 18v18 but having some opposition apply some pressure to what you're doing is what you're after.

This might be as simple as someone coming to stand the mark after each mark or running 4 players off 1 end and handballing through to the other end with opposition forcing them to make decisions, not necessarily lay them out with bone-crunching tackles.

PROGRESSION

As the session continues then ramp up complexity which means add more moving parts which now be adding more defenders to stand all marks, or as many as possible which forces the offensive team to search for more solutions as there will be less "obvious" options to take up.

You might alter the space that if opened up will provide more space and time for the ball carrier, or you might close it down to take both of those things away.

You might call play on after 8secs or after 5secs, depending on what you want to see happen.

There's so many ways to constrain the 1 training activity but the holy grail lies in the coach knowing what to manipulate and when, to keep challenging players if/as they solve the previous constraint consistently which may occur in the very first session or in take multiple sessions.

ACTION PLAN

1 - Challenge yourself to design your entire 1st pre-season training session around training activities, not drills.

2 - Get to work on altering your training drills into activities

3 - If you need any assistance doing this or would like me to look over what you've come up with then feel free to contact me through Facebook PM or Twitter PM.