Mercury (Hobart)

Wonky kicking at worst

Goal accuracy hits lowest point on record

- JON RALPH

AFL goal accuracy is at its lowest point this century, with only a single AFL side last year registerin­g an accuracy rating above 50 per cent.

Only West Coast (51.3 per cent) kicked more goals than behinds and total misses last year as goal accuracy dropped to 46.4 per cent, down from 50.1 per cent in 2016.

The shocking figures, which combine set shot and general shot accuracy, come despite players never having more advantages to nail their routines and on-the-run goals.

The league has cracked down on rushed behinds, players kicking on angles now have a 10m exclusion zone and players have 30 seconds before getting on the “runway” and starting set shot routines.

The league has even changed its rules to allow players to kick round-the-corner snaps after the siren without play on being called.

Yet St Kilda kicked 233.347 last year plus total misses, its 42.6 per cent accuracy coming from 49.8 per cent set shot accuracy and 35.8 per cent accuracy in general play.

The figure is the worst since Champion Data started recording total accuracy — including out-of-bounds misses — in 2002.

Clubs defended the volume of shots taken mid-week and say forwards now running 15km a game are more fatigued when they take shots.

But 1986 Coleman Medallist Brian Taylor, a noted exponent of set shot kicking, said yesterday despite their protestati­ons, players simply were not practising enough.

“I still don’t think they do enough work on it. We keep getting told they do but I am not so sure how many dedicated sessions there are at each club for that particular skill due to the fact mid-week is all about recovery. There is a big emphasis on recovery and not skill.

Brad Scott said last year Tasmanian Ben Brown took hundreds of set shots a week but the figures show accuracy has never been worse this century. GWS forward Harry Himmelberg was footy’s most accurate goalkicker last year (24.8 with no total misses), ahead of North Melbourne’s Nick Larkey (25.7 and three total misses), Fremantle’s Michael Walters (30.11, two misses) and Roo Cam Zurhaar (18.4 and five misses).

But Marcus Bontempell­i’s 15.27 stood out given his incredible skills, while Carlton’s Harry McKay kicked 26.30, Brisbane’s Cam Rayner 20.25, St Kilda’s Jack Lonie 13.19 and

Port Adelaide’s Sam PowellPepp­er 10.18.

St Kilda champion Steven Milne, who kicked 574 goals in his 275 games, is adamant players aren’t practising enough.

He also wonders if they are becoming obsessed with taking up the full 30 seconds for set shots to allow their teammates rest.

“You see the players now looking at the clock and they are worried about the clock and giving guys rest,” he said.

“I used to get in trouble for going back and quickly kicking the goal but more often than not I actually kicked the goal.”

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