Adam Blair, Bronco's invisible man

Broncos embrace their invisible man

http://www.nrl.com/broncos-embrace-their-invisible-man/tabid/10874/newsid/87386/default.aspx

He was branded as 'Teddy Blair' by his hometown newspaper but it's the numbers that you don't see that make Adam Blair such a treasured member of the table-topping Brisbane Broncos.

Derided for registering just a solitary hit-up against the Sharks in Round 2, Blair has been credited by teammates for helping to instil a defensive resolve that withstood 11 repeat sets by the Melbourne Storm last Sunday.
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With senior players Justin Hodges and Corey Parker both absent, Blair ran for 93 metres and made 41 tackles against the Storm, but they are not the statistics on which the two-time grand final winner prides himself on.

Ahead of the Broncos' clash with the Knights at Suncorp Stadium on Friday night, courtesy of Prozone NRL.com can reveal the statistics that prove Blair is contributing in ways often overlooked by those in the stands or watching at home on TV.

Blair leads the Broncos in hit-ups from a restart (15) where he averages 10.8 metres, runs an average of 5.3 decoys per game and also 3.5 support runs, the 'one per centers' so valued by coaches.

He ranks third among front-rowers with a propensity to pass by passing 35.7 per cent of the time and his 23 kick pressures rank seventh in the NRL in season 2015.

They don't win you many Dally M points but they are invaluable in earning the respect of your teammates.

"He does a lot of work that people probably don't notice, just with his kick pressure, his marker work, his speed off the line and getting our guys off the line," said Hodges, who returns against the Knights on Friday.

"A lot of that stuff goes unnoticed because they're not the fancy plays but to us he's a guy that works very hard on and off the field.

"Just his leadership and the way he works with the young guys in the locker room to help them, he's been great for us and I can't speak highly enough of what he's done for us this year."

Although he accepted the newspaper treatment in good grace – "I got used to that down in Sydney" – Blair said he is happy to contribute to a winning culture without ever receiving the plaudits outside of the football club.

Preparing for his 204th NRL game, the 29-year-old said he was indoctrinated in six years at the Storm to base his game on making the plays that other players often refuse to make.

"Throughout my career from down in Melbourne I make sure I do those one per centers that nobody really notices but your teammates," Blair said. "For me it is about going out there and doing those little things every week.

"Obviously I don’t make the most hit-ups in a team or the big special plays but I pride myself in turning up on the last tackle and putting some kick pressure or some inside pressure on when they’re trying to take the ball off the line.

"I’ve prided myself on those little things throughout my career and I just keep doing that week in and week out."

Four points clear alongside the Cowboys on the top of the table, Broncos coach Wayne Bennett has this week continued the rotation policy of his Origin stars to rest back-rower Sam Thaiday.
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Perhaps we didn't what he was doing with us at the Tigers?
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Being able to call on the experience of Kiwi international Blair during the Origin period helps to reduce the impact of losing their Queensland stars but Blair believes his role doesn't change from week to week.

"I see my role as just going out there and doing my job, it doesn’t change too much," he said.

"It’s good we can afford to rest those boys because we are in a good position (four points clear on the ladder). We’ve got boys stepping up on the bench playing some good footy who’ve stepped in for those guys and we’re really working good together.

"My role is just to get out there and do a good job.
 
Well he certainly was our invisible man for the first two years he was with us. No statistics were needed, he just simply played at 1% of his capability!
 
Hhhhmmmmmmmmmmm! Maybe my eye-sight is much worse than I thought. If these statistics are true, there WAS a reason that he lasted six years with Melbourne and there was a reason why Brisbane signed him. Maybe the good results of these two teams over the years is a result of their football management teams seeing things that were NOT obvious to Wests Tigers football management and some of the Wests Tigers forumers. Maybe?
 
It was pretty obvious to me why he got picked every week. The problem at the Tigers wasnt Blair, it was our culture/structure.

Brisbane will play in the GF this year, and most of the difference will be the purchase of Blair & Milford!

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It didn't help us to have good 1%s

Our 99% sucked and was the bit that needed focus

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@Tiger Watto said:
It was pretty obvious to me why he got picked every week. The problem at the Tigers wasnt Blair, it was our culture/structure.

Brisbane will play in the GF this year, and most of the difference will be the purchase of Blair & Milford!

_Posted using RoarFEED 4.2.0_

Could be said that players like Blair help create culture/structure.

Either way if Brisbane go deep this year on the back of Blair thats really going to burn some people.
 
A lot of those unseen stats are total rubbish. Only the kick chargers are relevant. Of course he passes the ball a lot, he doesn't run it!!!

He has experience, and his defence is ok. Worth no more than 250-300k, we paid much more than that, so he needed to go.

He's the sort of player that can only play well in a winning team. If the team isn't killing it he's totally ineffective. That's what playing for the Storm does to you.
 
Good on him. He's definitely having the last laugh on the people who bashed him mercilessly for 3 yrs
 
Not just getting away from the nay-sayers, but going from a bottom of the table team to a top of the table side.

I know who made the right decision there.
 
Blair is a good supporting actor… Not a leading man.

Bronco's have plenty of game winners and Blair fills the gaps well with the 1% plays.

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1%ers don't make an ordinary club a good one, they just help a good club be a top club.

This article would be way different if the rest of the Broncos team weren't performing so well. Blair would probably be contributing the same no matter their position on the table.

6 decoy runs a game are useless when your defence is rubbish and you are constantly returning the footy from your own quarter.
 
@Balmain Boy said:
A lot of those unseen stats are total rubbish. Only the kick chargers are relevant. Of course he passes the ball a lot, he doesn't run it!!!

He has experience, and his defence is ok. Worth no more than 250-300k, we paid much more than that, so he needed to go.

He's the sort of player that can only play well in a winning team. If the team isn't killing it he's totally ineffective. That's what playing for the Storm does to you.

I agree BB. Not a great loss. Glad his not at the WT anymore.
 
@simonthetiger said:
Decoys and support runs.

I laughed so hard i nearly choked on my coco pops.

For that Coin I would run a higher % of decoys for 1 game a day….
 
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