Jump to content

Featured Replies

 

Imagine winning the premiership and picking up Harley Reid in the same year. 4% chance is good, bring the lottery in this year. 

 

I like it. Theres just too much benefit for bottom teams to finish lower…. as we did for years. Wont happen til Tassie are in and set though. 

I don't mind it, and you know the AFL will love it because it is another event for them to monetise.


Correct me if I'm wrong but doesn't the NBA only have the lottery for the bottom 5 or so teams? 

In my opinion the lottery should only apply for bottom 4 or at most, teams that miss the 8. 

You can't have sides like the Eagles or Norf being pushed back a handful of picks due to bad luck 

I'm not opposed to a draft lottery, but I think it should be capped to the very lower end of the ladder, such as the bottom 4. 

 
19 minutes ago, DistrACTION Jackson said:

I'm not opposed to a draft lottery, but I think it should be capped to the very lower end of the ladder, such as the bottom 4. 

Agree with this. 

31 minutes ago, DistrACTION Jackson said:

I'm not opposed to a draft lottery, but I think it should be capped to the very lower end of the ladder, such as the bottom 4. 

And Freemantle


In the NAB system the bottom 3 (they call them seeds) all have the same % chance of getting the No1 pick. So I like the idea, but maybe it could look somethin like this instead:

Team that finish 16th-18th get a 17% chance;

15th 14%;

14th 10%;

13th 8%;

12th 7%;

11th 5%

10th 3%

9th 2%

So there's little to no incentive to finish last, while even bottom 4 has no guarantee of getting pick 1. 

They then give better odds on the top 10 picks for those teams that finish lower on the ladder, so in this example pick 2 is more like to go to a team in 15th - 18th than 9th, but it remains a lottery for all the top 10 picks.

Edited by Red and Blue realist

8 minutes ago, Bimbo said:

And Freemantle

Yeah a draft lottery might kill off any chance of a deathriding thread thus we lose a year's worth of free entertainment.

I'm out. 

56 minutes ago, DistrACTION Jackson said:

I'm not opposed to a draft lottery, but I think it should be capped to the very lower end of the ladder, such as the bottom 4. 

Yep good call. 

Only concern is teams in that 12-14 bracket who are clearly out of finals contention might start eyeing off that % chance.

Whichever system it is, clubs will try find a way to get the results they want. 

 

 

I think the issue of tanking is largely dissolved by now. The anxiety about it was always a legacy of the priority pick system which rewarded having fewer than a specific number of wins and gave a massively disproportionate benefit.

Once upon a time a difference of one additional win would cost you an additional top-3 pick in the draft. It was ludicrous. Now that the 'incentive' is just the incremental progress of the pick you already have, tanking is a very limited offer.

The ex-public-servant in me also recoils at the eternal process of 'just one more tweak added to make it all work just right'. That way lies madness and we all see it.

If I was looking for a solution, I'd point to the same thing which would solve almost all of Australian football's problems - a serious investment in the second-tier competitions.

Anyway, I'd argue that any selection in the first handful of draft picks is as likely to match pick 1 as not. Consider some pick 1s vs their best top-5 peers.

2013: Boyd vs Kelly, Billings, Bontempelli

2014: McCartin vs Petracca, Brayshaw, De Goey

2015: Weitering vs Mills, Oliver, Parish

2016: McGrath vs Taranto, McCluggage,

2017: Rayner vs Brayshaw, Davies-Uniacke, Cerra

2018: Walsh vs Rankine, Rozee, 2xKing

2019: Rowell vs Anderson, Jackson, Ash

Pick 1 is almost certainly a very good player, but is no more likely to be the best of the draft than any other pick at the top.

1 hour ago, DistrACTION Jackson said:

I'm not opposed to a draft lottery, but I think it should be capped to the very lower end of the ladder, such as the bottom 4. 

I like the idea, I would add a 2nd pool of 4 for teams finishing 11 to 14 to avoid any risk of "additional tanking".

Edited by Jibroni


2 hours ago, layzie said:

Correct me if I'm wrong but doesn't the NBA only have the lottery for the bottom 5 or so teams? In my opinion the lottery should only apply for bottom 4 or at most, teams that miss the 8. 

The NBA lottery only applies for the sides missing the play-offs and then only for the Top 4 draft picks. For picks 5 onwards it's just reverse order like the AFL.

2 hours ago, DistrACTION Jackson said:

I'm not opposed to a draft lottery, but I think it should be capped to the very lower end of the ladder, such as the bottom 4. 

Why? Why is bottom 4 somehow indicative of a poor team whilst 5th bottom somehow means you are so much better than 4th bottom that you have no access to the lottery? The only reason to have a lottery is to stop tanking and, with reduced priority picks at the pointy end of the draft and increased AFL/media scrutiny, tanking is a thing of the past. In fact I would argue that having a lottery and limiting it to say the bottom 4 clubs encourages tanking as it'sa lot easier to tank for 4th bottom than for absolute bottom!

8 minutes ago, Sydney_Demon said:

 

Why? Why is bottom 4 somehow indicative of a poor team whilst 5th bottom somehow means you are so much better than 4th bottom that you have no access to the lottery? The only reason to have a lottery is to stop tanking and, with reduced priority picks at the pointy end of the draft and increased AFL/media scrutiny, tanking is a thing of the past. In fact I would argue that having a lottery and limiting it to say the bottom 4 clubs encourages tanking as it'sa lot easier to tank for 4th bottom than for absolute bottom!

That's the exact reason I think bottom 4 is a good compromise.

If you finish 5th last it is highly unlikely you are involved in any form of tanking, granted the same probably applied to 4th last but you have to draw a line somewhere.

Was just giving an opinion on an option as you wouldn't want 9th getting lucky and pulling the number 1 pick.

1 hour ago, Red and Blue realist said:

In the NAB system the bottom 3 (they call them seeds) all have the same % chance of getting the No1 pick. So I like the idea, but maybe it could look somethin like this instead:

Team that finish 16th-18th get a 17% chance;

15th 14%;

14th 10%;

13th 8%;

12th 7%;

11th 5%

10th 3%

9th 2%

So there's little to no incentive to finish last, while even bottom 4 has no guarantee of getting pick 1. 

They then give better odds on the top 10 picks for those teams that finish lower on the ladder, so in this example pick 2 is more like to go to a team in 15th - 18th than 9th, but it remains a lottery for all the top 10 picks.

The lottery is a proposed solution to a non-existent problem. The whole point of having reverse order draft is to even up the competition, so in conjunction with the salary cap, any team can win. This has largely worked. The AFL is such a better competition for fans than say the Premier League because of this. Having a lottery just diminishes the process. IMV tanking in AFL is not an issue and if it is there are much better processes to tackle that than a lottery that has unintended consequences.

5 minutes ago, DistrACTION Jackson said:

That's the exact reason I think bottom 4 is a good compromise.

If you finish 5th last it is highly unlikely you are involved in any form of tanking, granted the same probably applied to 4th last but you have to draw a line somewhere.

Was just giving an opinion on an option as you wouldn't want 9th getting lucky and pulling the number 1 pick.

Sorry DistrACTION but as I said tanking is not an issue in AFL IMV. So why have a lottery at all applying to the bottom 4, 5 or even all 18 teams? Having a sliding scale discourages tanking for a particular position as there is no major cut-off. Funnily enough, that's exactly what we have now. Unless the No. 1 draft pick is always superior to No. 2 there is no massive incentive to finish bottom in the AFL. What used to encourage tanking was the way priority picks were awarded but that has been tightened up, refer:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Priority_draft_pick


NFL doesn’t have the lottery because their games are almost events in and of themselves - you get 9 max home games and you want to win even when you’re awful.

Tanking isn’t an issue, it is an issue in the NBA and in the AFL. The lottery isn’t a panacea, but at least it will make people think twice before ‘putting your team into a position to lose’ as the season draws to a close as there is no guarantee that they’ll get that pick. 

One of the things in the NBA that has positively impacted tanking is the ‘play in’ tournament as it provides an opportunity for more teams to be ‘within reach’ of the finals and keep their season alive for longer. 

There is no panacea and bad teams should be rewarded for being terrible - welcome to a socialistic set up where those in need get help - what we want to do is not incentivise it and I think both the lottery and the play in can do that. 

i hate the idea of a lottery. finish 9th and get pick 1? no thanks.

id combine the ladders over a 2 or 3 year period. total wins etc. 
that way, north who have been no good for 3 years get pick one even if they win a couple more games this year. and you cant do a west coast 2007 and go finals, 2nd last, finals and get pick 2. 
would also provide more certainty around trading of future picks.

 

4 hours ago, layzie said:

Correct me if I'm wrong but doesn't the NBA only have the lottery for the bottom 5 or so teams? 

In my opinion the lottery should only apply for bottom 4 or at most, teams that miss the 8. 

I love the NBA lottery system. NBA is my second favorite sport and I love how its run (besides the excessive player movement)

So 14 teams miss playoffs and they all get lottery balls. The bottom 3 all have a 14% chance at pick 1 and the worst they can get is pick 5. (I have attached this years lottery odds)

This is what happened to Detroit this year, They had the worst record (17-65) and they slipped back to pick 5 in the lottery.
Spurs who had an equal % chance at pick 1 won it
Rockets also had equal % chance but slipped to 4th
Hornets come up and grabbed 2nd Trailblazers grabbed 3rd. 

Generally the poor teams still get decent draft picks but you won't get the first. 
This year 7"5 freak athlete Victor Wembanyama is probably the best prospect since Lebron in the draft and those 3 teams were all trying to give themselves the best chance to get him. 

There have been some miracles in drafting where teams with less than a 3% chance have won the lottery. 
https://www.nbcsports.com/chicago/chicago-bulls/top-5-nba-draft-lottery-miracles 

FwQ0SaCWAAIwEDN.jpg

IMG_1426.avif

 

And heres the results of the 2023 NBA lottery

Please note that the Chicago pick in the lottery odds picture became the Orlando Pick at 11 because it was a traded pick with Top 10 protection but it fell to 11 so Orlando get it. 

IMG_1426.avif

Edited by FritschyBusiness
Chicago

2 hours ago, rpfc said:

NFL doesn’t have the lottery because their games are almost events in and of themselves - you get 9 max home games and you want to win even when you’re awful.

Tanking isn’t an issue, it is an issue in the NBA and in the AFL. The lottery isn’t a panacea, but at least it will make people think twice before ‘putting your team into a position to lose’ as the season draws to a close as there is no guarantee that they’ll get that pick. 

One of the things in the NBA that has positively impacted tanking is the ‘play in’ tournament as it provides an opportunity for more teams to be ‘within reach’ of the finals and keep their season alive for longer. 

There is no panacea and bad teams should be rewarded for being terrible - welcome to a socialistic set up where those in need get help - what we want to do is not incentivise it and I think both the lottery and the play in can do that. 

I don't know about the NBA but do you have any evidence that tanking is an issue in the AFL? I think most of the stuff is made up by disgruntled supporters who don't like to see their competition having easy percentage-boosting wins against the bottom teams. 

Personally I hate the play-in tournament in the NBA and that it has been introduced in the VFL this year. I like basketball and obviously the standard in the NBA is elite. But you have a ridiculous situation where they play 82 games to eliminate 10 teams out of 30. Then, and let's forget the play-in tournament for a moment, you have an elimination tournament where the only advantage of finishing higher up the table is you get a marginal home court advantage of 4 games to 3. The NBA system is totally unfair to the top teams, and because they play so many games there are numerous games that have meaningless results, whole starting 5s are rested etc. etc. The play-in tournament IMO has nothing to do with stopping tanking and everything to do with maximising revenue. 

1 hour ago, biggestred said:

i hate the idea of a lottery. finish 9th and get pick 1? no thanks.

id combine the ladders over a 2 or 3 year period. total wins etc. 
that way, north who have been no good for 3 years get pick one even if they win a couple more games this year. and you cant do a west coast 2007 and go finals, 2nd last, finals and get pick 2. 
would also provide more certainty around trading of future picks.

This is what happens now. Priority picks are allocated based on performance over multiple years. This works in conjunction with the annual reverse-order draft. The system works and doesn't need changing IMO.

1 hour ago, FritschyBusiness said:

I love the NBA lottery system. NBA is my second favorite sport and I love how its run (besides the excessive player movement)

So 14 teams miss playoffs and they all get lottery balls. The bottom 3 all have a 14% chance at pick 1 and the worst they can get is pick 5. (I have attached this years lottery odds)

This is what happened to Detroit this year, They had the worst record (17-65) and they slipped back to pick 5 in the lottery.
Spurs who had an equal % chance at pick 1 won it
Rockets also had equal % chance but slipped to 4th
Hornets come up and grabbed 2nd Trailblazers grabbed 3rd. 

Generally the poor teams still get decent draft picks but you won't get the first. 
This year 7"5 freak athlete Victor Wembanyama is probably the best prospect since Lebron in the draft and those 3 teams were all trying to give themselves the best chance to get him. 

There have been some miracles in drafting where teams with less than a 3% chance have won the lottery. 

Why is this good? I'm sure Spurs fans are ecstatic and Detroit due to bad luck miss out on the top 4 picks despite having the worst record in the NBA. Why do they deserve this result? Did they actually tank more than San Antonio? What do you like about the way the NBA is run? You like lots of meaningless games, with only 1/3 of the teams eliminated. Miami finish 8th, lose to Atlanta (7th) in the play-in tournament, beat Chicage (10th), then go on a streak that could see them win the whole thing. They beat Milwaukee despite winning 14 less games during the season. Jimmy Butler only turns up when the finals start. This is all very exciting but any system when the entire pre-finals is largely irrelevant seems to be something we shouldn't be talking up. 

I do agree with you about excessive player movement, but this is the route people want to go down for the AFL. Of course none of the so-called experts provide any in-depth analysis supporting thir arguments.

Edited by Sydney_Demon
Accidentally posted before including my comments


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...

Featured Content

  • PREVIEW: Carlton

    Good evening, Demon fans and welcome back to the Demonland Podcast ... it’s time to discuss this week’s game against the Blues. Will the Demons celebrate Clayton Oliver’s 200th game with a victory? We have a number of callers waiting on line … Leopold Bloom: Carlton and Melbourne are both out of finals contention with six wins and eleven losses, and are undoubtedly the two most underwhelming and disappointing teams of 2025. Both had high expectations at the start of participating and advancing deep into the finals, but instead, they have consistently underperformed and disappointed themselves and their supporters throughout the year. However, I am inclined to give the Demons the benefit of the doubt, as they have made some progress in addressing their issues after a disastrous start. In contrast, the Blues are struggling across the board and do not appear to be making any notable improvements. They are regressing, and a significant loss is looming on Saturday night. Max Gawn in the ruck will be huge and the Demon midfield have a point to prove after lowering their colours in so many close calls.

    • 0 replies
  • REPORT: North Melbourne

    I suppose that I should apologise for the title of this piece, but the temptation to go with it was far too great. The memory of how North Melbourne tore Melbourne apart at the seams earlier in the season and the way in which it set the scene for the club’s demise so early in the piece has been weighing heavily upon all of us. This game was a must-win from the club’s perspective, and the team’s response was overwhelming. The 36 point win over Alastair Clarkson’s Kangaroos at the MCG on Sunday was indeed — roovenge of the highest order!

    • 4 replies
  • CASEY: Werribee

    The Casey Demons remain in contention for a VFL finals berth following a comprehensive 76-point victory over the Werribee Tigers at Whitten Oval last night. The caveat to the performance is that the once mighty Tigers have been raided of many key players and are now a shadow of the premiership-winning team from last season. The team suffered a blow before the game when veteran Tom McDonald was withdrawn for senior duty to cover for Steven May who is ill.  However, after conceding the first goal of the game, Casey was dominant from ten minutes in until the very end and despite some early errors and inaccuracy, they managed to warm to the task of dismantling the Tigers with precision, particularly after half time when the nominally home side provided them with minimal resistance.

    • 0 replies
  • PREGAME: Carlton

    The Demons return to the MCG as the the visiting team on Saturday night to take on the Blues who are under siege after 4 straight losses. Who comes in and who goes out?

      • Clap
      • Haha
      • Love
      • Like
    • 205 replies
  • PODCAST: North Melbourne

    The Demonland Podcast will air LIVE on Monday, 14th July @ 8:00pm. Join Binman & I as we dissect the Dees glorious win over the Kangaroos at the MCG.
    Your questions and comments are a huge part of our podcast so please post anything you want to ask or say below and we'll give you a shout out on the show.
    Listen LIVE: https://demonland.com/

    • 29 replies
  • POSTGAME: North Melbourne

    The Demons are finally back at the MCG and finally back on the winners list as they continually chipped away at a spirited Kangaroos side eventually breaking their backs and opening the floodgates to run out winners by 6 goals.

      • Haha
      • Like
    • 253 replies