
Goodwin cracks code to fix Dees' goal-kicking woes
Melbourne coach Simon Goodwin figures his players' costly and contagious goal-kicking woes originate above the shoulders.
The fix, he says, comes down to believing in the process.
"Everyone's trying to crack the code in terms of goal-kicking," Goodwin said ahead of the King's Birthday blockbuster against Collingwood.
"There's certainly a skill to it and there's a mindset to it.
"We believe that we've done the work to get the skill-set.
"It's now making sure that mentally we believe that we're capable and we finish the plays."
Melbourne (5-7) blew the chance to square their season ledger when they kicked a woefully inaccurate 7.21 (63) in the 28-point loss to St Kilda last week.
The Demons had seven more scoring shots than their opponents, with only Christian Petracca bucking the trend by kicking 2.1.
"We're just not seeing the results that we need to see right now," Goodwin said.
"We're confident that we will get the change and it's one of those things that you only see over time.
"Right now we're in a process of change and we want to make sure that we give it the time to see the change that we need.
"We're confident we're going to get that."
Despite the obvious problems in front of goal, Goodwin identified more significant issues out of the surprise defeat to St Kilda.
The Demons' work in the contest and defensive shortcomings were of particular concern to the 2021 premiership coach.
"It was a regression in all phases of the game," Goodwin said, noting his side's previous six weeks had been largely positive.
"The Saints kicked 10.7 from the back half, so our defence was nowhere near the level that it was meant to be.
"And when we were able to get some momentum in the game, we weren't able to take our chances.
"So there were multiple areas in the game that were nowhere near the (required) level."
Significant improvement is required if Melbourne are to end a run of three straight losses to old rivals Collingwood, who sit half-a-game clear on top of the ladder.
"Everyone knows how well they're going. They're playing some outstanding footy," Goodwin said.
'But our biggest focus is going to be on us and how we can get our game going to the highest level possible.
"We know in this competition that anyone on any given day can get the result that they need."
Goodwin will weigh up whether to promote Matthew Jefferson or Jacob van Rooyen in place of key forward Aidan Johnson, who is suspended for the second time this year.
Both Jefferson (10 goals) and van Rooyen (four) have shown improved form at VFL level in affiliate side Casey's pair of comfortable wins over the past fortnight.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
AFL round 13: Adelaide Crows vs Brisbane Lions, live scores and SuperCoach points
It's being billed as the Crows' chance to show they deserve to be considered a genuine top-four threat. The City of Churches will come alive for Friday night footy when Adelaide welcomes Brisbane Lions in one of the most eagerly-anticipated clashes of 2025. Third-placed Adelaide enters the blockbuster clash with one win (GWS at home) and four losses (Geelong at home and Fremantle, Gold Coast and Collingwood away) against top-eight teams this year. 'We're dug into the process, so we can only do what we can do against the opposition every week,' coach Matthew Nicks said. 'Some of our tougher games are on the road – we played at the MCG against Collingwood – and we could get everything right and still not win those games. 'We're just locked in on what we need to do (Friday) night. 'And that (weekly focus) is on what we need to do to beat any side, but we'll need to do it for a lot longer to beat Brisbane.' Originally published as AFL round 13: Adelaide Crows vs Brisbane Lions, live scores and SuperCoach points

News.com.au
an hour ago
- News.com.au
Todd Payten unleashes mammoth half-time spray only for it to backfire badly
Cowboys coach Todd Payten unleashed an all-time spray on his troops after a dismal first half against the Storm on Thursday night. The coach reportedly named and shamed several of his stars, pointing out issues in their game and lapses of judgement as they went into the break down 18-4 against the storm. But it was the stats that told the story, North Queensland made 7 errors and missed a whopping 27 tackles despite having most of the possession. FOX LEAGUE, available on Kayo Sports, is the only place to watch every game of every round in the 2025 NRL Telstra Premiership, LIVE with no ad-breaks during play. New to Kayo? Get your first month for just $1. Limited-time offer. And so Payten decided to try and light a fire under his side going into the second half. But his hopes of a different outcome in the second period went up in smoke within 2 minutes. Inside 50 seconds, Cowboys fullback Scott Drinkwater dropped the ball in their first set of the half. And the very next set Melbourne crossed for their fourth try. After extending the lead to 20-points Fox Sports' Eloise Sohier revealed Payten gave reportedly the worst spray the Cowboys' bench had ever seen. 'The bench told me that they have never seen a spray as bad as he (Payten) delivered at half time,' Sohier told Fox Sports. 'He picked out players, he tore apart their game. He won't be happy with that start.' You can watch footage of the NRL coach's spray in the player above. In the end, the Cowboys were thoroughly beaten 38-14 by the Storm, who were far from their best themselves. And the NRL world empathised with the 46-year-old coach after a difficult evening. 'Todd Payten has every right to feed it to those Cowboys. A couple of those tries were very soft,' one fan wrote on X. 'Fox: 'Todd Payten gave them the Biggest spray they've ever seen', Cowboy Players: 'I didn't hear anything,' another joked. 'Obviously the spray Payten gave them at half time didn't work. Once again they were their own worst enemy,' a third added. After the game, Payten was still seething at what transpired, as he spoke freely about his disappointment in his players' performance. 'Pure disappointment,' Payten said in response to a question about what he made of the game. 'Didn't make a good team (Storm) earn anything and in the end when you crack so easily on your try line and give leg up after leg up … it probably should have been more.' Jahrome Hughes shines in Storm win Star halfback Jahrome Hughes was back to his Dally M winning form as the Storm proved too good for the Cowboys. Hughes and five-eighth Cameron Munster were playing for a 100th time together as a halves combination and they got the better of rising North Queensland duo Tom Dearden and Jaxon Purdue in an intriguing battle. It was the 77th time the Storm has won with a Hughes-Munster halves combo, an impressive 77 per cent. The Storm made it back-to-back wins for the first time since early April. Hughes had his fingerprints all over the victory. The 30-year-old scored two tries to go with two try assists and produced a tidy kicking game with 386 kick metres. Munster was a handful too, making 17 runs for a punishing 181 run metres. 'They are mesmerised by Hughes. Just dancing and weaving his way with ease,' Michael Ennis said.


The Advertiser
2 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Halfback Hughes runs amok as Storm thump Cowboys
Melbourne's Jahrome Hughes has stolen the spotlight from his North Queensland opposite Tom Dearden with the Storm halfback orchestrating a commanding 38-14 victory at AAMI Park. All eyes were on Dearden, who is favoured to usurp Daly Cherry-Evans as Queensland's State of Origin No.7 when teams for game two in Perth are announced. But reigning Dally M Medallist Hughes was the stand-out from both teams, scoring two tries and setting up two more as well as nine tackle-busts in one of his best performances of the season. Hughes embraced his running game to keep the Cowboys defence guessing, with Cameron Munster also up to the challenge as the superstar pair marked their 100th NRL game in the Storm halves. Hughes also pulled off a critical strip on Jeremiah Nanai close to the tryline to help his team winning consecutive matches for the first time since round six. Melbourne started with a bang with tries to Eli Katoa and Hughes setting up a 12-0 after 18 minutes. A pin-point cut-out pass from Dearden to winger Jaxson Paulo put the visitors on the scoreboard. But Melbourne went off the boil and only desperate defence kept them ahead, with North Queensland dominating territory 68 per cent to 32. Despite that statistic the Storm made them pay in the 39th minute when a Hughes bomb was dropped cold by fullback Scott Drinkwater. Hughes then collected the spoils in the next set, linking with the rest of the star Melbourne spine for an 18-4 halftime lead. Despite a massive spray by Cowboys coach Todd Payten, Nick Meaney crossed two minutes into the second half after the Melbourne centre ran onto a a Hughes grubber. The talented Cowboys attack finally kicked into gear and after Drinkwater saved a third Hughes try he scored one of his own after a Reece Robson dart from dummy-half. Robert Derby was in two minutes later to close the margin to 10 points but Storm prop Nelson Asofa-Solomona stalled the Cowboys' momentum when he used his size and strength to drag four defenders over the line. A Ryan Papenhuyzen penalty then put the game out of reach for the visitors before Tyran Wishart iced the win with Melbourne's sixth try of the night. Dearden did enough to impress Maroons coach Billy Slater while Robson showed no signs of any hamstring distress to put his hand up to retain the NSW hooker jersey. Melbourne's Jahrome Hughes has stolen the spotlight from his North Queensland opposite Tom Dearden with the Storm halfback orchestrating a commanding 38-14 victory at AAMI Park. All eyes were on Dearden, who is favoured to usurp Daly Cherry-Evans as Queensland's State of Origin No.7 when teams for game two in Perth are announced. But reigning Dally M Medallist Hughes was the stand-out from both teams, scoring two tries and setting up two more as well as nine tackle-busts in one of his best performances of the season. Hughes embraced his running game to keep the Cowboys defence guessing, with Cameron Munster also up to the challenge as the superstar pair marked their 100th NRL game in the Storm halves. Hughes also pulled off a critical strip on Jeremiah Nanai close to the tryline to help his team winning consecutive matches for the first time since round six. Melbourne started with a bang with tries to Eli Katoa and Hughes setting up a 12-0 after 18 minutes. A pin-point cut-out pass from Dearden to winger Jaxson Paulo put the visitors on the scoreboard. But Melbourne went off the boil and only desperate defence kept them ahead, with North Queensland dominating territory 68 per cent to 32. Despite that statistic the Storm made them pay in the 39th minute when a Hughes bomb was dropped cold by fullback Scott Drinkwater. Hughes then collected the spoils in the next set, linking with the rest of the star Melbourne spine for an 18-4 halftime lead. Despite a massive spray by Cowboys coach Todd Payten, Nick Meaney crossed two minutes into the second half after the Melbourne centre ran onto a a Hughes grubber. The talented Cowboys attack finally kicked into gear and after Drinkwater saved a third Hughes try he scored one of his own after a Reece Robson dart from dummy-half. Robert Derby was in two minutes later to close the margin to 10 points but Storm prop Nelson Asofa-Solomona stalled the Cowboys' momentum when he used his size and strength to drag four defenders over the line. A Ryan Papenhuyzen penalty then put the game out of reach for the visitors before Tyran Wishart iced the win with Melbourne's sixth try of the night. Dearden did enough to impress Maroons coach Billy Slater while Robson showed no signs of any hamstring distress to put his hand up to retain the NSW hooker jersey. Melbourne's Jahrome Hughes has stolen the spotlight from his North Queensland opposite Tom Dearden with the Storm halfback orchestrating a commanding 38-14 victory at AAMI Park. All eyes were on Dearden, who is favoured to usurp Daly Cherry-Evans as Queensland's State of Origin No.7 when teams for game two in Perth are announced. But reigning Dally M Medallist Hughes was the stand-out from both teams, scoring two tries and setting up two more as well as nine tackle-busts in one of his best performances of the season. Hughes embraced his running game to keep the Cowboys defence guessing, with Cameron Munster also up to the challenge as the superstar pair marked their 100th NRL game in the Storm halves. Hughes also pulled off a critical strip on Jeremiah Nanai close to the tryline to help his team winning consecutive matches for the first time since round six. Melbourne started with a bang with tries to Eli Katoa and Hughes setting up a 12-0 after 18 minutes. A pin-point cut-out pass from Dearden to winger Jaxson Paulo put the visitors on the scoreboard. But Melbourne went off the boil and only desperate defence kept them ahead, with North Queensland dominating territory 68 per cent to 32. Despite that statistic the Storm made them pay in the 39th minute when a Hughes bomb was dropped cold by fullback Scott Drinkwater. Hughes then collected the spoils in the next set, linking with the rest of the star Melbourne spine for an 18-4 halftime lead. Despite a massive spray by Cowboys coach Todd Payten, Nick Meaney crossed two minutes into the second half after the Melbourne centre ran onto a a Hughes grubber. The talented Cowboys attack finally kicked into gear and after Drinkwater saved a third Hughes try he scored one of his own after a Reece Robson dart from dummy-half. Robert Derby was in two minutes later to close the margin to 10 points but Storm prop Nelson Asofa-Solomona stalled the Cowboys' momentum when he used his size and strength to drag four defenders over the line. A Ryan Papenhuyzen penalty then put the game out of reach for the visitors before Tyran Wishart iced the win with Melbourne's sixth try of the night. Dearden did enough to impress Maroons coach Billy Slater while Robson showed no signs of any hamstring distress to put his hand up to retain the NSW hooker jersey.