100% this. Once you get those bigger forwards hustling back , you get chances of Sharpe catching them napping with his speed and footwork. As well as bringing more 6 agains into the game. Trying to knock the front door down with a much smaller pack in craziness. As we saw in the first half and many other games this year.Yep if you've got smaller forwards who move across the ground quicker, the only advantage you could possibly have physically is defensive line speed.
Manly have got bigger & stronger forwards, but ones who are lower on lateral mobility, and honestly some of their players are just really old now and they're going to struggle more if you force them to make more high speed efforts.
So if you want to get rolling - stretch the line first, go back the other way and force Brooks or especially DCE into making the first up contact on a back rower or centre. Quick play the ball, then see how committed the defensive line is to sliding the other way and preventing an overlap or mismatch on the other edge. Losing Lehi early in the game, which forced Ben Turbo to mark up on Gagai, gave us a constant mismatch to exploit... but honestly if we kept playing the way we did in the first half, we wouldn't have given Dane any chance to do so.
And then if you start making breaks those same bigger, slower middles have to hustle back in D to defend their line. More gas out of the tank. More disorganisation and disarray in the line. Opportunities.
It's not going to work against everyone, but if you want to know how the Dogs have been one of the better field position sides over the last couple of seasons with a pack full of smaller, lighter forwards (besides Max King & Suluka-Fifita, who only plays 15 minutes a game) and utilities, this is how. They get rolling by attacking the edges, by turning the game into a "track meet" as they say in basketball parlance. And then if you generate time and space and all of a sudden you've got the wrong defender on Stephen Crichton (which is half the defenders in the comp)... good things happen.
It's not a "win every game" cheat code (the Dogs just this year got neutralised by a good defensive game by Brisbane's big outside backs & Payne Haas gapping their little forwards through the middle)... but it's a style of play which aligns with the roster.
Not sure if anyone saw the 9 footy show last Sunday morning and Fittler was scathing of the Knights and Broncos lack of ball movement. He showed clips of the Tigers throwing it around in their comeback last week ( admittedly yhey didn't win but got close ) , and how well they attacked. Basically said Knights and Broncos you need to take note.
Cameron Smith was also saying in the commentary last night , they have to move it wider earlier , then go back the other way. Move some players around , wait for a gap to appear.
Second half , what happens.