Geelong’s gap year — how the Cats’ premiership defence unravelled

To become the best, you have to beat the best.

The path to the premiership cup usually runs through the reigning premiers. That’s where the attention of sides shifts to during the off-season, when planning how to win in the coming season.

Those opposition eyes were firmly focused on Geelong coming into the 2023 season. Most predicted that the Cats would feature heavily in the finals, or could even be favourites for the flag.

Instead, the Cats will be watching the finals unfold from home, knocked out with a round to spare. It’ll be just the second game Chris Scott has coached of his 280 in charge without being in contention for that season’s flag.

Geelong is the third premier in the past seven years that has failed to qualify for the finals the next season.

Like most stories of lost seasons, there isn’t just one cause or symptom. If success takes a lot of things going right, failure often needs a similar amount. Coming into the season, the Cats returned 22 of their 23 premiership players from last year. Usually that’s a recipe for a side being able to contend again.

The one that exited Kardinia was perhaps the most spiritually important — Joel Selwood. The local product had been a fixture in the side since being drafted in 2007, leading the Cats in more games than any other player in their long and illustrious history.

It wasn’t just Selwood’s leadership quality that was prized. Selwood also delivered on the field right until his last game, contributing at contests around the ground. One of the biggest drivers of the Cats’ furious run towards the flag last year was their transformed contest set-up from mid-season.

Once Tom Atkins and Mark Blicavs moved into more permanent midfield roles, the Cats not only thrived offensively but made it extremely hard for opposition sides to score. Selwood’s role was two-fold — to lay effective physical pressure and to effectively use disposal to get the ball to Geelong’s dangerous outside runners.

Over the off-season, the Cats recruited three young midfielders picked up in the hope of filling the legend-sized gap. Jack Bowes, Tanner Bruhn and Jhye Clarke all differed dramatically in their experience and potential, but presented decent swings to contribute over the long term and maybe immediately. Geelong also hoped further development of their own youngsters like Max Holmes might be able cover the back end of their rotations.

Author: Ivan Robinson