Jump to content

The Scott Lycett Thread


e25

Recommended Posts

At first I dismissed pick 12 as being too high for this kid, but I've been conviced otherwise.

He's 202cm, 95kg and is a very good mover for a kid his size, covers a lot of ground, good overhead, good tap ruckman, looks a very likely type to succeed at the next level.

The worry I had from watching him at the championships was his kicking, but I'm starting to think it isn't quite as bad as first thought.

There's good footage of him on youtube but I can't find the link right now.

http://www.afl.com.au/news/newsarticle/tabid/208/newsid/98174/default.aspx

The most interesting story among the seven talls belongs to Lycett. The strapping prospect is from Thevenard, near Ceduna on the Great Australian Bight, about eight hours’ drive from Adelaide. His original senior footy club is the Thevenard Magpies.

Lycett played a season of senior footy with Thevenard when he was 15. The Magpies played in the Far West league, which has only four teams. They lost every game during the home-and-away rounds but won in the first week of the finals after Lycett kicked seven at full-forward.

“I loved playing there,” Lycett said. “You build a special kind of bond in country clubs.”

Last year, at 16, Lycett moved to Adelaide with fellow Far West prospect Sam Gray (who shone for South Australia during this under-18 carnival as a rover). The pair play with the Port Adelaide Magpies. Lycett has played senior footy this season and is a strong chance to be drafted in the first round. His main quality, beside his ability to get his hands on the ball, is his competitive drive.

The most outstanding aspect of Lycett’s carnival had its origins in tragic circumstances. His best friend died in a car accident. Lycett played against Tasmania at Visy Park in Melbourne on a Saturday, flew back to Adelaide and drove to the Riverland town of Barmera, about three hours away, to speak at his friend’s funeral on the Monday.

Then he drove back to Adelaide, flew back to Melbourne and lined up with South Australia in the final match of the under-18 carnival on the Wednesday. It was against Vic Country at Geelong’s Skilled Stadium. Phillips took a gamble by starting Lycett in the ruck, whereas Lycett had played second ruck behind Gorringe for most of the carnival.

Lycett leapt at the challenge and was a key player in the Croweaters’ four-point win over the eventual champions despite the duress over his friend’s death.

“I thought he showed outstanding maturity,” Phillips said.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

http://www.afl.com.au/news/newsarticle/tabid/208/newsid/104728/default.aspx

Scott Lycett: Tall and strong, with a sound attitude as well as a competitive streak and a willingness to link up. Port Adelaide has pick 16 and desperately needs a young ruckman. Lycett fits the bill.

http://www.afl.com.au/news/newsarticle/tabid/208/newsid/102234/default.aspx

Which AFL player do you feel you resemble, and why?

Matthew Kreuzer. He knows where to go around the ground and also go forward and be dangerous.

What are your strengths as a footballer?

Competitiveness, will do anything for the benefit of the team, have a willingness to get better as a person and player, and I want to learn.

Kevin Sheehan says: Strong-marking ruckman who is agile and super competitive. Team-oriented player who impressed with South Australian in the under-18 championships.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'd draft him if there was a very high degree of certainty that he'd make it. But Meesen, Brookes, Spaanderman Pattison, Willits, Hansen, Laycock,Bradley, Wood or Lobbe (and I know the jury is still out on some of these blokes) show how hard it is to pick these sort of players at this level so I'd hesitate. All these blokes were taken early and failed. The failure rate of ruckmen taken at this spot in the draft is alarming.

Barry would have to be very sure.

In my opinion it might be better for us to go a safer option (like Billy Smedts, where it's pretty clear how his talents will translate to AFL level).

It we need to trade for a ruckman in the future, a pick 12 would net us a player like Jolly or Mumford. So if we trade a pick 12 for a senior ruckman we can guarantee ourselves a good ruckman, rather than trying to develop our own which could take 5+ years to develop.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Why would they take Hale?

Similar sort of question.

Of course he's not a seasoned AFL player, but he would be capable of playing the same role in a year or so.

Hale's coming into his prime at 26. We don't need another 18 year old project tall, unless it's for a much lower pick.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Why would a club with Untried, Untried and Unco McGee as developing talls want to add another with such a high draft pick. Not going to happen

Edited to reflect reality.

I wouldn't be adverse to the idea, as we arrn't exactly strong in the ruck department. If the FD see potential in him brilliant- we can't put all our eggs in the Gawn/Spencer/Fitzpatrick basket just yet, the ruck department is far from a "lock" if a good ruck prospect who can play forward presents itself we would be downright bloody negligent to let it pass.

It's all irrelevant anyways as the plastic Matel club will pick him up if hes any good. GC will take

Link to comment
Share on other sites

He's not solely a ruck prospect either, he can go forward and that's the whole point.

I see him as hopefully developing into a more coordinated and more aware Kosi.

Not such a bad thing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Trading in Hale was not a stop gap measure. Two years ago he was in NM top 5 B&F. He had a bad year last year. He can play which is why 3 clubs really chased him.

He will play for 4 years so could easily be part of a GF. He provides what we don't have now which is a mature back up for Jamar and he can play a key deep forward role which allows for structure and game plan to be honed.

Hale was both.

He can't be THAT good as we weren't exactly tripping over ourselves trying to get a deal done.

There are question marks over his rucking ability from North supporters. Two years ago he was in NM top 5 B&F doesn't say too much.

Hale and his 40 page thread are dead to us.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I disagree.

A Hale type who has only 4 years in him and could conceivably play in a premiership is a stop-gap and in my mind you only trade for them once the rest of the side is rock solid and you just need a nudge over the edge.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hale's coming into his prime at 26. We don't need another 18 year old project tall, unless it's for a much lower pick.

Agree- we have enough project players now-Gawn & Fitzpatrick whilst I still classify Spencer as one.Will take nearly a decade for Gawn to reach his top.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Demonland Forums  

  • Match Previews, Reports & Articles  

    GETAWAY by Meggs

    Calling all fit players. Expect every available Melbourne player to board the Virgin cross-continent flight to Perth for this Round 4 clash on Saturday afternoon at Fremantle Oval. It promises to be keenly contested, though Fremantle is the bookies clear favourite.  If we lose, finals could be remoter than Rottnest Island especially following on from the Dees 50-point dismantlement by North Melbourne last Sunday.  There are 8 remaining matches, over the next 7 weeks.  To Meggs’

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons

    DRUBBING by Meggs

    With Casey Fields basking in sunshine, an enthusiastic throng of young Demons fans formed a guard of honour for the evergreen and much admired 75-gamer Paxy Paxman. As the home team ran out to play, Paxy’s banner promised that the Demons would bounce back from last week’s loss to Brisbane and reign supreme.   Disappointingly, the Kangaroos dominated the match to win by 50 points, but our Paxy certainly did her bit.  She was clearly our best player, sweeping well in defence.

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons 4

    GARNER STRENGTH by Meggs

    In keeping with our tough draw theme, Week 3 sees Melbourne take on flag favourites, North Melbourne, at Casey Fields this Sunday at 1:05pm.  The weather forecast looks dry, a coolish 14 degrees and will be characteristically gusty.  Remember when Casey Fields was considered our fortress?  The Demons have lost two of their past three matches at the Field of Dreams, so opposition teams commute down the Princes Highway with more optimism these days.  The Dees held the highe

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons 1

    ALLY’S FIELDS by Meggs

    It was a sunny morning at Casey Fields, as Demon supporters young and old formed a guard of honour for fan favourite and 50-gamer Alyssa Bannan.  Banno’s banner stated the speedster was the ‘fastest 50 games’ by an AFLW player ever.   For Dees supporters, today was not our day and unfortunately not for Banno either. A couple of opportunities emerged for our number 6 but alas there was no sizzle.   Brisbane atoned for last week’s record loss to North Melbourne, comprehensively out

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons 1

    GOOD MORNING by Meggs

    If you are driving or training it to Cranbourne on Saturday, don’t forget to set your alarm clock. The Melbourne Demons play the reigning premiers Brisbane Lions at Casey Fields this Saturday, with the bounce of the ball at 11:05am.  Yes, that’s AM.   The AFLW fixture shows deference to the AFL men’s finals games.  So, for the men it’s good afternoon and good evening and for the women it’s good morning.     The Lions were wounded last week by 44 points, their highest ever los

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons 3

    HORE ON FIRE by Meggs

    The 40,000 seat $319 million redeveloped Kardinia Park Stadium was nowhere near capacity last night but the strong, noisy contingent of Melbourne supporters led by the DeeArmy journeyed to Geelong to witness a high-quality battle between two of the best teams in AFLW.   The Cats entered the arena to the blasting sounds of Zombie Nation and made a hot start kicking the first 2 goals. They brought tremendous forward half pressure, and our newly renovated defensive unit looked shaky.

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons 11

    REMATCH by Meggs

    The Mighty Demons take on the confident Cats this Saturday night at the recently completed $319 million redeveloped GMHBA Stadium, with the bounce of the ball at 7:15pm. Our last game of 2023 was an agonisingly close 5-point semi-final loss to Geelong, and we look forward to Melbourne turning the tables this week. Practice match form was scratchy for both teams with the Demons losing practice matches to Carlton and Port Adelaide, while the Cats beat Collingwood but then lost to Essendo

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons

    WELCOME 2024 by Meggs

    It’s been hard to miss the seismic global momentum happening in Women’s sport of late. The Matildas have been playing to record sell-out crowds across Australia and ‘Mary Fowler is God’ is chalked onto footpaths everywhere. WNBA basketball rookie sensation Caitlin Clark has almost single-handedly elevated her Indiana Fever team to unprecedented viewership, attendances and playoffs in the USA.   Our female Aussie Paris 2024 Olympians won 13 out of Australia’s all-time record 18 gol

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons 3

    EPILOGUE by Whispering Jack

    I sit huddled in near darkness, the only light coming through flickering embers in a damp fireplace, the room in total silence after the thunderstorm died. I wonder if they bothered to restart the game.  No point really. It was over before it started. The team’s five star generals in defence and midfield ruled out of the fray, a few others missing in action against superior enemy firepower and too few left to fly the flag for the field marshal defiantly leading his outnumbered army int

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Match Reports 6
  • Tell a friend

    Love Demonland? Tell a friend!
×
×
  • Create New...