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Featured Replies

 

The changes to the rules are substantial.

Under the new rules, the cultural background of the parent is paramount; a player must have at least one parent born overseas to qualify for multicultural status.

Clubs must spend more time with NGA prospects, have nominated them earlier, and proven that they have improved their football.

Pacific and Central and South American regions have been added to the cultural eligibility criteria while European countries have been removed.

With the inclusion of the Tassie Devils, North Melbourne loses its zone in the Apple Isle and the zones will be shifted around to accommodate them in Victoria.

Obviously, more details are required to assess the effect on the MFC. We need to see what the boundaries are of the amended zones and know more detail about the families of the potential NGA prospects.

It appears that there are no changes to 2025 draft eligibility criteria so on that basis, we can still get Toby SInnema but not Tairon Ah Mu, although we might have access to the latter’s younger brother who is also a talented young player.

afl.com.au
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AFL cracks down on player eligibility in NGA revamp

Clubs must spend more time with Next Generation Academy prospects and register their interest earlier in order to get priority draft access
  • Whispering_Jack changed the title to NEXT GENERATION ACADEMY: Rule Changes
 

One presumes the changes have been crafted scrupulously according to the AFL Changes Handbook, for compliance with established practice under the sections 'Treatment of Big Clubs' and 'Effects on Melbourne Football Club'.


31 minutes ago, Roost it far said:

Do we still get Prasad?

Are we selecting SInnema?

Re Marcus Prasad - See my comments above about the need for further information on any changes to our zone.

Re Toby SInnema - we still have access to him as the changes don’t appear to apply to the 2025 draft eligibility criteria.

41 minutes ago, Whispering_Jack said:

The changes to the rules are substantial.

Under the new rules, the cultural background of the parent is paramount; a player must have at least one parent born overseas to qualify for multicultural status.

Clubs must spend more time with NGA prospects, have nominated them earlier, and proven that they have improved their football.

Pacific and Central and South American regions have been added to the cultural eligibility criteria while European countries have been removed.

With the inclusion of the Tassie Devils, North Melbourne loses its zone in the Apple Isle and the zones will be shifted around to accommodate them in Victoria.

Obviously, more details are required to assess the effect on the MFC. We need to see what the boundaries are of the amended zones and know more detail about the families of the potential NGA prospects.

It appears that there are no changes to 2025 draft eligibility criteria so on that basis, we can still get Toby SInnema but not Tairon Ah Mu, although we might have access to the latter’s younger brother who is also a talented young player.

afl.com.au
No image preview

AFL cracks down on player eligibility in NGA revamp

Clubs must spend more time with Next Generation Academy prospects and register their interest earlier in order to get priority draft access

You'd hope (ha!) that clubs could 'nominate' prospects already in their systems as if they had been nominated at the required (earlier) stage, perhaps within a time window from the rule change.

  • 1 month later...

It appears we’ve been shafted again with academies. How is this fair?

Fox Sports
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Jamarra the Cat: AFL re-works controversial draft system....

Jamarra the Cat: AFL re-works controversial draft system... which would’ve changed a No.1 pick
 
1 hour ago, hillie said:

It appears we’ve been shafted again with academies. How is this fair?

Fox Sports
No image preview

Jamarra the Cat: AFL re-works controversial draft system....

Jamarra the Cat: AFL re-works controversial draft system... which would’ve changed a No.1 pick

Yep. Three clubs lost territory with nothing in return, being us, Hawks and Dogs. Geelong and St Kilda both got gifted extra territory without giving anything up. Gotta love the AFL's attempts at "fairness."

6 minutes ago, RalphiusMaximus said:

Yep. Three clubs lost territory with nothing in return, being us, Hawks and Dogs. Geelong and St Kilda both got gifted extra territory without giving anything up. Gotta love the AFL's attempts at "fairness."

Unbelievable the whole NGA & Academies are BS yet the northern clubs run on different rules! It compromises the draft .. top 10 should be pure


25 minutes ago, Demonsone said:

Unbelievable the whole NGA & Academies are BS yet the northern clubs run on different rules! It compromises the draft .. top 10 should be pure

The problem is that any move to fix the broken system will only hurt the clubs that haven't benefited from it. If they came out and said no academy picks in the first round, The Suns and Brisbane would be laughing. They have cashed in and nobody else gets the chance.

Of course, the AFL have a history of doing just this, waiting until the "chosen" clubs benefit, then changing the rules to prevent others from doing the same (see Mac Andrew, or Judd's Visy contract).

1 hour ago, RalphiusMaximus said:

The problem is that any move to fix the broken system will only hurt the clubs that haven't benefited from it. If they came out and said no academy picks in the first round, The Suns and Brisbane would be laughing. They have cashed in and nobody else gets the chance.

Of course, the AFL have a history of doing just this, waiting until the "chosen" clubs benefit, then changing the rules to prevent others from doing the same (see Mac Andrew, or Judd's Visy contract).

Damage is already done, keeping it going longer will only make it worse. Sure a few clubs got a massive benefit like Suns and Lions, likely why the AFL has only stepped in now that lions went back to back and suns look like they will have a period of dominance to but before everyone else gets the same benefit and nullifies it.

Academies work against one of the key pillars of equalisation ie the draft. AFL no longer cares about equalisation, they care about revenue and expansion. The game is cooked.

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