Everything posted by Whispering_Jack
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The 2019 Draft and Trade Targets Thread
Posters are assuming that this comment refers to the two clubs negotiating over Melbourneās draft pick #3. That may or may not be the case - they could have been negotiating around a possible swap of picks later in the draft which might have fallen over once the Frost/Langdon trades were finalised. Iām still convinced that at some point, the Demons and GWS will sit down and discuss a mutually beneficial trade for our pick 3.
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Jon Ralph says Demons are effectively a basket-case team
Herald Sun journalist Jon Ralph:- āFor all those people saying Tom Lynch has ruined free agency, we saw (Brandon) Ellis and (Adam) Tomlinson go from two teams in Grand Finals to effectively basket-case teams,ā he said on Fox Footyās Trading Day. The AFL free agents still on the market and available for cheap I know what heās trying to say but if that doesnāt give the Melbourne Football Club the ammunition to attack the coming season then nothing will.
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2019 Player Reviews: #12 Toby Bedford
One of the tests facing Melbourneās coaching panel is how it will bring on the development of the clubās as yet untried youngsters such as Bedford, Bradtke, Jordan and Nietschke as well as those like Chandler and Sparrow who has a brief taste at the highest level. If we can get a couple of top level footballers out of this group, it will be a major achievement on their part because none of them came together the club with the big reputations of the high draft picks.
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2019 AFL NATIONAL DRAFT ORDER AND SELECTIONS
INDICATIVE DRAFT ORDER (at end of first week of trades) ROUND ONE 1. Gold Coast 2. Gold Coast 3. Melbourne 4. Adelaide (received from Carlton) 5. Sydney 6. Greater Western Sydney (received from St Kilda) 7. Fremantle 8. North Melbourne 9. Carlton (received from Adelaide) 10. Port Adelaide 11. Hawthorn 12. St Kilda (received from Greater Western Sydney) (received from Essendon) 13. Western Bulldogs 14. Geelong (received from West Coast) 15. Gold Coast (received from Brisbane) 16. Brisbane (received from Collingwood) 17. Geelong 18. St Kilda (received from Greater Western Sydney) 19. Richmond ROUND TWO 20. Gold Coast 21. Brisbane (received from Gold Coast) 22. Fremantle (received from Melbourne) 23. Adelaide (received from Carlton) 24. Geelong (received from West Coast) (received from Sydney) 25. Sydney (received from St Kilda) 26. Melbourne (received from Fremantle) 27. North Melbourne 28. Adelaide 29. Port Adelaide 30. Hawthorn 31. Essendon 32. Western Bulldogs 33. Essendon (received from West Coast) 34. Brisbane 35. Collingwood 36. Geelong 37. Geelong (received from Essendon) (received from Greater Western Sydney) 38. Richmond 39. Richmond (Brandon Ellis concession) Greater Western Sydney (Adam Tomlinson concession) ROUND THREE 41. Richmond (received from Gold Coast) 42. Hawthorn (received from Melbourne) 43. Carlton 44. Sydney 45. Western Bulldogs (received from St Kilda) 46. West Coast (received from Brisbane) (received from Fremantle) 47. North Melbourne 48. Adelaide (Cameron Ellis-Yolmen concession) 49. Carlton (received from Adelaide) 50. Melbourne (received from Hawthorn) (received from Port Adelaide) 51. Western Bulldogs (received from Hawthorn) 52. Brisbane (received from West Coast)(received from Essendon) 53. Western Bulldogs 54. Sydney (received from West Coast) 55. Brisbane Brisbane (received from Collingwood) 57. Essendon (received from West Coast) (received from Geelong) 58. Gold Coast (received from Richmond) ROUND FOUR Greater Western Sydney (received from St Kilda) (received from Gold Coast) 60. Greater Western Sydney Hawthorn (received from Melbourne) 62. Sydney (received from Carlton) 63. Sydney 64. Brisbane (received from West Coast) (received from St Kilda) 65. Essendon (received from Fremantle) 66. Port Adelaide (received from North Melbourne) 67. Port Adelaide (received from Adelaide) 68. Port Adelaide 69. Collingwood (received from Hawthorn) 70. Essendon 71. Port Adelaide (received from Western Bulldogs) 72. West Coast 73. North Melbourne (received from Brisbane) 74. Collingwood 75. Richmond (received from Geelong) 76. Carlton (received from Greater Western Sydney) 77. Richmond ROUND FIVE 78. Gold Coast 79. Fremantle (received from Melbourne) 80. Greater Western Sydney (received from Carlton) 81. Sydney 82. St Kilda 83. Fremantle 84. North Melbourne 85. Carlton (received from Adelaide) 86. Port Adelaide 87. Hawthorn 88. Essendon 89. Western Bulldogs 90. Gold Coast (received from West Coast) 91. West Coast (received from Brisbane) 92. Hawthorn (received from Collingwood) 93. Geelong 94. Greater Western Sydney 95. Richmond
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THE TRADING CHRONICLES 2019
PART FIVE - THE ART OF THE DEAL The last person one would expect to enter onto the trade stage would have to be The Trumpster but that is exactly what transpired today when St Kilda traded its lynchpin draft selection number 6, expected to be crucial in helping it secure the Dockersā wantaway winger Bradley Hill. Fremantle was apparently asking for the pick and a lot more but, in a maneuver right out of the Donald āArt of the Dealā Trump rulebook, the Saints countered by āsplittingā that selection, throwing in pick 59 and, in return, they gained picks 12 and 18 from Greater Western Sydney. Now, if the Dockers want to continue with a trade for Hill, they will have to be content with 12 and some more for him - itās unlikely that they will finish with a top-10 selection as part of the deal. Whatever happens, this trade has all the hallmarks of one day being recognised as a mark of trading genius or a classic blunder. Time will tell. Another strange occurrence centred around Orazio Fantasia, who was set to return home amid interest from Port Adelaide. The Bomber forward reportedly engaged a South Australian agent yesterday to help him sort out the move, but by the end of the day, it was announced that he will remain a Bomber. Meanwhile, the Demons are getting closer to securing Freoās Ed Langdon. Reports suggest, the clubās second round pick will be involved in the exchange. That said, the day ended without a player trade to add to yesterdayās epic Tim Kelly move across the Nullarbor to the West Coast Eagles. The end of the day also saw the shutting of the free agency window with one final deal - the move of Hawthornās unrestricted free agent multiple premiership player, Grant Birchall, to the Brisbane Lions. This one wonāt involve any reward for his old club because is thereās no compensation available under the AFL scale. This left St Kilda's Jack Newnes as the highest-profile free agent on the shelf, along with Hawthorn premiership pair Ryan Schoenmakers and Paul Puopolo and a handful of others. With the weekend approaching, thereās a lot of work left to do and recruiters and player managers were seen scurrying into second hand bookshops seeking out the contents of the remainder bins and looking for copies of Trumpās classic tome about the art of dealing. DONE DEALS SATURDAY OCTOBER 5 ⢠Brandon Ellis joins the Gold Coast Suns as a restricted free agent. Richmond receives a second-round draft pick as compensation (at the time, #39). ⢠Cam Ellis-Yolmen joins Brisbane as an unrestricted free agent. Adelaide receives a third-round draft pick as compensation (at the time, #47). MONDAY OCTOBER 7 ⢠Adam Tomlinson joins Melbourne as an unrestricted free agent. GWS Giants receive a second-round draft pick as compensation (at the time, #40). WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 9 ⢠Tim Kelly joins the West Coast Eagles for picks 14, 24 and 37 in this yearās draft as well as the Eaglesā first-round pick in the 2020 AFL draft. The Eagles receive pick 57 and Geelongās third round pick in 2020. THURSDAY OCTOBER 10 ⢠St Kilda trade picks 6 and 59 to Greater Western Sydney and receive picks 12 and18. ⢠Hawthornās Grant Birchall leaves for the Brisbane Lions as an unrestricted free agent. Hawthorn will not receive any compensation.
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THE TRADING CHRONICLES 2019
PART FIVE - THE ART OF THE DEAL The last person one would expect to enter onto the trade stage would have to be The Trumpster but that is exactly what transpired today when St Kilda traded its lynchpin draft selection number 6, expected to be crucial in helping it secure the Dockersā wantaway winger Bradley Hill. Fremantle was apparently asking for the pick and a lot more but, in a maneuver right out of the Donald āArt of the Dealā Trump rulebook, the Saints countered by āsplittingā that selection, throwing in pick 59 and, in return, they gained picks 12 and 18 from Greater Western Sydney. Now, if the Dockers want to continue with a trade for Hill, they will have to be content with 12 and some more for him - itās unlikely that they will finish with a top-10 selection as part of the deal. Whatever happens, this trade has all the hallmarks of one day being recognised as a mark of trading genius or a classic blunder. Time will tell. Another strange occurrence centred around Orazio Fantasia, who was set to return home amid interest from Port Adelaide. The Bomber forward reportedly engaged a South Australian agent yesterday to help him sort out the move, but by the end of the day, it was announced that he will remain a Bomber. Meanwhile, the Demons are getting closer to securing Freoās Ed Langdon. Reports suggest, the clubās second round pick will be involved in the exchange. That said, the day ended without a player trade to add to yesterdayās epic Tim Kelly move across the Nullarbor to the West Coast Eagles. The end of the day also saw the shutting of the free agency window with one final deal - the move of Hawthornās unrestricted free agent multiple premiership player, Grant Birchall, to the Brisbane Lions. This one wonāt involve any reward for his old club because is thereās no compensation available under the AFL scale. This left St Kilda's Jack Newnes as the highest-profile free agent on the shelf, along with Hawthorn premiership pair Ryan Schoenmakers and Paul Puopolo and a handful of others. With the weekend approaching, thereās a lot of work left to do and recruiters and player managers were seen scurrying into second hand bookshops seeking out the contents of the remainder bins and looking for copies of Trumpās classic tome about the art of dealing. DONE DEALS SATURDAY OCTOBER 5 ⢠Brandon Ellis joins the Gold Coast Suns as a restricted free agent. Richmond receives a second-round draft pick as compensation (at the time, #39). ⢠Cam Ellis-Yolmen joins Brisbane as an unrestricted free agent. Adelaide receives a third-round draft pick as compensation (at the time, #47). MONDAY OCTOBER 7 ⢠Adam Tomlinson joins Melbourne as an unrestricted free agent. GWS Giants receive a second-round draft pick as compensation (at the time, #40). WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 9 ⢠Tim Kelly joins the West Coast Eagles for picks 14, 24 and 37 in this yearās draft as well as the Eaglesā first-round pick in the 2020 AFL draft. The Eagles receive pick 57 and Geelongās third round pick in 2020. THURSDAY OCTOBER 10 ⢠St Kilda trade picks 6 and 59 to Greater Western Sydney and receive picks 12 and18. ⢠Hawthornās Grant Birchall leaves for the Brisbane Lions as an unrestricted free agent. Hawthorn will not receive any compensation.
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Tom Green (Drafted by GWS Giants)
True, but it means that GWS are likely to deal with us for the pick at some stage, probably late in the trade period when itās clear as to aces theyāre holding to do a swap of picks/players.
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Tom Green (Drafted by GWS Giants)
Strange as it may seem, I was just reading this profile about him from respected draft watcher Knightmare and I like what Iām reading. Heās the grandson of Michael Green, former Tiger premiership ruckman who studied law with me at Melbourne Uni. AFL Draft Wrap: Shades of Patrick Cripps in GWS academy prospect Thomas Green āGreen possesses an imposing physical profile at 190cm, 88kg and provides a similar impact around the ball to Patrick Cripps.ā Just wondering if thereās any vision around because it would be tempting to have a crack at this bloke?
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Josh Jenkins
Bruce has pretty much committed himself to the Dogs. It would be a tough gig trying to extract him out of that commitment (and please don't raise J. Elliott because not everyone in the world is J Elliott).
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Splitting Draft Pick 3
If we can leave Bonar out of this and get someone of the type we need instead (or a suitable pick) it would be so much better.
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Josh Bruce
Hasnāt Bruce nominated the Bulldogs as his preferred team? What happens next? A tour of our facilities with cameras from every media outlet coincidentally at our doorstep?
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Splitting Draft Pick 3
It would be risky for GWS to take pick 4 if they wanted to stave off the necessity for giving too much away for Tom Green. We could nominate him with pick 3 and then they would have to use 4 if they want him. If they deal with us for pick 3 then they can use it for someone else and then take Green with later picks. That way they get two top 10s. However, 14 plus a second rounder and next yearās first rounder wouldnāt be all that attractive to us, I imagine.
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Andrew Gaff
Fake news.
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Sam Murray
Wonder if a dealās been done whereby the club will pick him up in early November as a delisted free agent?
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The calumny of the AFL's priority pick policy
Some snippets to add to the situation at Gold Coast. The stories about the Suns considering trading one or both of their top two draft selections are bad enough but now more information is emerging about the possibility that two of last yearās early draft picks will be flying the coop at the end of 2020. St Kilda is supremely confident that it will secure Ben King after he serves out the second year of his contract. Apparently, the King family are staunch supporters of the Saints and they want Ben and Max at the club. Now this - SEVERAL VICTORIAN CLUBS FEEL PRIZED SUN IS OBTAINABLE: TWOMEY This highlights the folly of the AFLās comprehensive draft concessions which fly in the face of previous policy and which are unlikely to help the club retain their prize recruits. I think the days of an AFL club on the Gold Coast are numbered.
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THE TRADING CHRONICLES 2019
PART FOUR - MAKING LIKE BUSHRANGERS Tim Kelly will join a stellar West Coast Eagles midfield in 2020 leaving pundits debating as to the extent of the cost to the club. The first done trade deal delivered picks 14, 24 and 37 in this yearās draft as well as their first pick in the 2020 AFL draft in return for Kelly, pick 57 and the Catsā third round pick in 2020. The Bombers got themselves involved in the deal using picks 37 and 52 to get picks 33 and 57 back because they wanted to āsharpen up their position in the 30s.ā The Cats drafted Kelly in the 2017 Draft with pick 24 so theyāve done pretty well out of him. In fact, it looks like theyāre making like the bushrangers of old in an earlier era involving another gentlemen named āKellyā. Oh, and by the way, the pick 24 that got Kelly to the Cats was a compensation pick for a restricted free agent Steve Motlop who left them to join Port Adelaide. Motlop anyone? Meanwhile, the Bombers are not only battling to retain two important forwards in Joe Daniher and Orazio Fantasia but also their credibility. They deny pursuing a surprise trade deal for Magpie ruckman Mason Cox but the Ageās Sam McClure, one of the reporters who broke the story, has declared the the conversation ā1000 per centā happened. The question is why theyāre denying it and why theyāre taking it personally? Those who have been following the trades and drafts over the years would be wondering why indeed? Has Dodoro or someone else at Bomberland overstepped the mark in pushing up the big Magpieās name? Apart from the Kelly deal, no other deals were made on the third day of trades and very little new information came to light other than that fringe GWS midfielder Aiden Bonar has a name to keep an eye on as the trade period unfolds. Multiple clubs are reported to have shown an interest in Bonar who has played just six games in two years at the Giants. Iām going outside to watch the grass grow. Itās more exciting! DONE DEALS SATURDAY OCTOBER 5 ⢠Brandon Ellis joins the Gold Coast Suns as a restricted free agent. Richmond receives a second-round draft pick as compensation (at the time, #39). ⢠Cam Ellis-Yolmen joins Brisbane as an unrestricted free agent. Adelaide receives a third-round draft pick as compensation (at the time, #47). MONDAY OCTOBER 7 ⢠Adam Tomlinson joins Melbourne as an unrestricted free agent. GWS Giants receive a second-round draft pick as compensation (at the time, #40). WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 9 ⢠Tim Kelly joins the West Coast Eagles for picks 14, 24 and 37 in this yearās draft as well as the Eaglesā first-round pick in the 2020 AFL draft. The Eagles receive pick 57 and Geelongā third round pick in 2020.
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THE TRADING CHRONICLES 2019
PART FOUR - MAKING LIKE BUSHRANGERS Tim Kelly will join a stellar West Coast Eagles midfield in 2020 leaving pundits debating as to the extent of the cost to the club. The first done trade deal delivered picks 14, 24 and 37 in this yearās draft as well as their first pick in the 2020 AFL draft in return for Kelly, pick 57 and the Catsā third round pick in 2020. The Bombers got themselves involved in the deal using picks 37 and 52 to get picks 33 and 57 back because they wanted to āsharpen up their position in the 30s.ā The Cats drafted Kelly in the 2017 Draft with pick 24 so theyāve done pretty well out of him. In fact, it looks like theyāre making like the bushrangers of old in an earlier era involving another gentlemen named āKellyā. Oh, and by the way, the pick 24 that got Kelly to the Cats was a compensation pick for a restricted free agent Steve Motlop who left them to join Port Adelaide. Motlop anyone? Meanwhile, the Bombers are not only battling to retain two important forwards in Joe Daniher and Orazio Fantasia but also their credibility. They deny pursuing a surprise trade deal for Magpie ruckman Mason Cox but the Ageās Sam McClure, one of the reporters who broke the story, has declared the the conversation ā1000 per centā happened. The question is why theyāre denying it and why theyāre taking it personally? Those who have been following the trades and drafts over the years would be wondering why indeed? Has Dodoro or someone else at Bomberland overstepped the mark in pushing up the big Magpieās name? Apart from the Kelly deal, no other deals were made on the third day of trades and very little new information came to light other than that fringe GWS midfielder Aiden Bonar has a name to keep an eye on as the trade period unfolds. Multiple clubs are reported to have shown an interest in Bonar who has played just six games in two years at the Giants. Iām going outside to watch the grass grow. Itās more exciting! DONE DEALS SATURDAY OCTOBER 5 ⢠Brandon Ellis joins the Gold Coast Suns as a restricted free agent. Richmond receives a second-round draft pick as compensation (at the time, #39). ⢠Cam Ellis-Yolmen joins Brisbane as an unrestricted free agent. Adelaide receives a third-round draft pick as compensation (at the time, #47). MONDAY OCTOBER 7 ⢠Adam Tomlinson joins Melbourne as an unrestricted free agent. GWS Giants receive a second-round draft pick as compensation (at the time, #40). WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 9 ⢠Tim Kelly joins the West Coast Eagles for picks 14, 24 and 37 in this yearās draft as well as the Eaglesā first-round pick in the 2020 AFL draft. The Eagles receive pick 57 and Geelongā third round pick in 2020.
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2019 AFL National Draft prospects: The next batch
If the next best candidate is a GWS Academy member who plays like Patrick Cripps then why wouldnāt Melbourne make a play for him?
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Aiden Bonar
You would have to be asking the question why he has played so few games at AFL level when the Giants had a poor run with injuries during the season?
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2019 AFL National Draft prospects: The next batch
With the the Suns virtually certain to select Rowell and Anderson with picks 1 & 2, Melbourne has the effective #1 selection remaining after them. Who will the club pick? Knightmareās latest draft power rankings could have the answer to that question. AFL Draft Power Rankings: Rowell back on top as AFL Draft nears
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Angus Brayshaw to Fremantle Rumours
Problem is that if you follow the machinations of the trade period it should become fairly obvious that in the language of the AFL, a binding contract isnāt worth the paper itās printed on to many players and their managers. In the case of Angus Brayshaw, weāre taking him as a person of higher quality and better standards than the pack and therefore moving this thread out of the trading and drafting board. And given that heās next cab off the rank for our 2019 player reviews, it will shortly be closed altogether.
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Jamie Elliott
There you go ... Pies star Elliott snubs Demons and Lions, opts to stay at Collingwood
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Phantom Drafts
AFL Phantom Draft: Who goes where in the first round?
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Phantom Drafts
From AFL Draft Central - Power Rankings: October 2019 #8 Dylan Stephens Norwood/South Australia | Balanced Midfielder 08/01/2001 | 182cm | 70kg Stephens is another lightly built midfielder who despite being just 70kg has forced his way into the SANFL League side for Norwood already in season 2019. Given the Redlegsā tendancy to restrict kids from being exposed at the top level ā see Luke Valente last year ā it is a credit to Stephens ā and teammate Taheny, to already earn their stripes. He has held his own too, admitedly playing a very outside game, but with many bigger bodies at the Redlegs, Stephens has terrific skills and moves well in transition, able to win the ball in midfield, take off and kick perfectly inside 50. He still has to add bulk to his frame, but he showed when taking on his peers he is capable of playing an inside role as well. Expect him to be the prime mover for South Australia at the Under 18 Championships and raise his stocks with a big couple of months. Last month: After his League side was eliminated from the SANFL premiership race, Stephens was brought into the Redlegsā Reserves Grand Final side where he had 26 disposals, three marks, five clearances, five tackles, two inside 50s and three rebounds on his way to a premiership medal. He also tested strongly across the board at the National Draft Combine.
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2019 AFL National Draft prospects: The next batch
Draft Central Power Rankings: October 2019