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Kangas premiership ruckman Corey McKernan says Cats needed to back in ruckman eight weeks ago

Corey McKernan says too many senior coaches don’t understand the psychology of ruckmen, saying the Cats didn’t just make an error against Collingwood — but several weeks ago.

Rhys Stanley didn’t play at all at the weekend. Pic: AAP
Rhys Stanley didn’t play at all at the weekend. Pic: AAP

Premiership ruckman Corey McKernan says Geelong created its own ruck problem by failing to back in a finals ruckman eight weeks ago.

The North Melbourne premiership star believes history shows premiership teams have a single ruckman who thrives on big game time and the confidence of his coaching staff.

McKernan likes the analogy of ruckmen as Clydesdales who thrive on the work, but instead Geelong dropped ruckman Rhys Stanley as a last-minute out against Collingwood.

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Rhys Stanley celebrates a goal in round 23 against Carlton. Pic: AAP
Rhys Stanley celebrates a goal in round 23 against Carlton. Pic: AAP

Stanley admitted he was told at the club’s last training session he would be dropped despite the club’s failed attempt at subterfuge.

The Cats now must decide whether to bring Stanley back against West Coast’s in-form pairing of Tom Hickey and Nic Naitanui.

Not only did Stanley not play, he missed a Geelong-Collingwood scratch match on Friday afternoon which would have given him a chance to build his confidence.

McKernan said Scott was within his rights to back in any ruckman given he knew which one was more likely to perform.

But Geelong has five ruckmen on its list and played neither of them, chopping and changing in the final weeks leading into the qualifying final.

The Cats have gone through 11 ruckmen since the start of 2012 when Brad Ottens retired but haven’t been able to settle on any one ruckman or combination for any period of time.

Brodie Grundy battled part-time ruckmen against the Cats. Pic: Michael Klein.
Brodie Grundy battled part-time ruckmen against the Cats. Pic: Michael Klein.

“It baffles me that clubs don’t wake up to the model which is successful,” he said.

“The message from the final is whoever the ruckman was going to be, they needed to say to him ‘you are our No. 1 ruckman’.

“You have got to say six to eight weeks out going into a finals campaign he is our man and we back him in and play him because we need him.

“For mine who they play doesn’t matter. As a player if you have that backing, you love the fact you have been backed in by the coach and don’t want to let him down.

“Even if he plays this week, he will still feel a bit unsure about his spot.”

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Since the premiership era the rucks tried by the Cats include Hamish McIntosh, Orren Stephenson, Trent West, Dawson Simpson, Nathan Vardy, Mark Blicavs, Stanley, Zac Smith, Wylie Buzza, Darcy Fort and Ryan Abbott.

McKernan admits ruckmen are a unique beast given their skill set and challenges in rucking in tandem with another big man.

“I think they thrive on the responsibility and love the workload. If you looked at 90 per cent of the ruckmen who have been All Australian, they ruck alone. Nic Naitanui bucks the trend because they play him in such a different burst role.”

Originally published as Kangas premiership ruckman Corey McKernan says Cats needed to back in ruckman eight weeks ago

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Original URL: https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/sport/afl/more-news/kangas-premiership-ruckman-corey-mckernan-says-cats-needed-to-back-in-ruckman-eight-weeks-ago/news-story/5ef0eab1d6c4b8ef3f0f0e9c3b370966