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Why the AFL’s father-son rules should change


To top it off they will get another priority selection – this time via their academy – in Daniel Annable at the end of this season.

The Lions will have added a player rated top five in the country to their list in three of the past four seasons – while competing in September. They will have paid for them via a bunch of late second-round selections, under the system that allows clubs to use later picks to match the points value of earlier selections.

The Lions have left most clubs in the dust since Chris Fagan arrived which has made their luck in acquiring the Ashcroft brothers tougher for less well run clubs.

The Lions have left most clubs in the dust since Chris Fagan arrived which has made their luck in acquiring the Ashcroft brothers tougher for less well run clubs. Credit: via Getty Images

The draft was designed as a mechanism to give clubs at the bottom of the ladder access to the best talent in the country each season.

Results say it’s not working that way.

In the 14 seasons since St Kilda played in the 2010 grand final, neither Essendon, the Saints nor the Suns have reached a preliminary final. Of the 46 preliminary final spots available, 30 have been claimed by Collingwood, Geelong, Hawthorn, Sydney and the Lions.

In the 11 seasons between 2000-10, every team made a preliminary final and the spread was more even.

These are raw measures, but ones the AFL uses to trumpet equalisation.

Yes, the Saints’ and the Bombers’ messes are of their own making over the past decade (and they may still stuff it up yet) but that doesn’t mean a club in their position shouldn’t have access to the country’s best young talent, not just some of the country’s best young talent.

The eligibility for men – 100 games played – reinforces the gap. Less successful clubs have fewer players reach the milestone.

On Saturday, Jack Sinclair became the ninth current Saint to reach 100 games.

The perennially successful Geelong have 13 current players with 100 games or more and Max Holmes is just three matches from reaching the mark.

St Kilda’s Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera needs to re-sign to reach 100 games.

Cody Walker at his dad, Andrew’s retirement announcement in 2016. He is on track to become a Blue.

Cody Walker at his dad, Andrew’s retirement announcement in 2016. He is on track to become a Blue. Credit: Vince Caligiuri

In their history, Geelong have had 174 players reach 100 games, the Saints just 138.

Five Saints who played in the 2009 grand final didn’t play 100 games with the club. Just one Cat, Mark Blake (99 games) – the third father-son in that team – didn’t.

Gold Coast and the Giants have academies but no hope of father-sons in this era and the Crows and Dockers have largely done without them.

The romance argument is shaky, too, because games are a raw measurement of romantic attachment.

Marlion Pickett is a life member at Richmond. His story is one of the most famous at Tigerland. He played just 91 matches at the club.

Joe Daniher won a flag with the Brisbane Lions but did not play 100 matches for the club. He played 108 at Essendon.

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Jack Silvagni is the latest in a line of father-sons to consider leaving the club their dad represented. People care, but they moved on in the cases of Heath Shaw, Josh Kennedy and Jarrad Waite.

Daicos is Collingwood. Kennedy was Hawthorn, Ablett was Geelong, Daniher was Essendon. Silvagni has been Carlton. All names remain synonymous with their clubs, but with an asterisk.

I don’t suggest scrapping father-sons. But clubs must pay the right price for romance.

Trade up to pick the player you desire and if you miss out on them, then chase them in a future trade period where the market determines the price.

The AFL Commission has kicked the hard decision down the road, but competitive balance must prevail.

Keep up to date with the best AFL coverage in the country. Sign up for the Real Footy newsletter.


To top it off they will get another priority selection – this time via their academy – in Daniel Annable at the end of this season.

The Lions will have added a player rated top five in the country to their list in three of the past four seasons – while competing in September. They will have paid for them via a bunch of late second-round selections, under the system that allows clubs to use later picks to match the points value of earlier selections.

The Lions have left most clubs in the dust since Chris Fagan arrived which has made their luck in acquiring the Ashcroft brothers tougher for less well run clubs.

The Lions have left most clubs in the dust since Chris Fagan arrived which has made their luck in acquiring the Ashcroft brothers tougher for less well run clubs. Credit: via Getty Images

The draft was designed as a mechanism to give clubs at the bottom of the ladder access to the best talent in the country each season.

Results say it’s not working that way.

In the 14 seasons since St Kilda played in the 2010 grand final, neither Essendon, the Saints nor the Suns have reached a preliminary final. Of the 46 preliminary final spots available, 30 have been claimed by Collingwood, Geelong, Hawthorn, Sydney and the Lions.

In the 11 seasons between 2000-10, every team made a preliminary final and the spread was more even.

These are raw measures, but ones the AFL uses to trumpet equalisation.

Yes, the Saints’ and the Bombers’ messes are of their own making over the past decade (and they may still stuff it up yet) but that doesn’t mean a club in their position shouldn’t have access to the country’s best young talent, not just some of the country’s best young talent.

The eligibility for men – 100 games played – reinforces the gap. Less successful clubs have fewer players reach the milestone.

On Saturday, Jack Sinclair became the ninth current Saint to reach 100 games.

The perennially successful Geelong have 13 current players with 100 games or more and Max Holmes is just three matches from reaching the mark.

St Kilda’s Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera needs to re-sign to reach 100 games.

Cody Walker at his dad, Andrew’s retirement announcement in 2016. He is on track to become a Blue.

Cody Walker at his dad, Andrew’s retirement announcement in 2016. He is on track to become a Blue. Credit: Vince Caligiuri

In their history, Geelong have had 174 players reach 100 games, the Saints just 138.

Five Saints who played in the 2009 grand final didn’t play 100 games with the club. Just one Cat, Mark Blake (99 games) – the third father-son in that team – didn’t.

Gold Coast and the Giants have academies but no hope of father-sons in this era and the Crows and Dockers have largely done without them.

The romance argument is shaky, too, because games are a raw measurement of romantic attachment.

Marlion Pickett is a life member at Richmond. His story is one of the most famous at Tigerland. He played just 91 matches at the club.

Joe Daniher won a flag with the Brisbane Lions but did not play 100 matches for the club. He played 108 at Essendon.

Loading

Jack Silvagni is the latest in a line of father-sons to consider leaving the club their dad represented. People care, but they moved on in the cases of Heath Shaw, Josh Kennedy and Jarrad Waite.

Daicos is Collingwood. Kennedy was Hawthorn, Ablett was Geelong, Daniher was Essendon. Silvagni has been Carlton. All names remain synonymous with their clubs, but with an asterisk.

I don’t suggest scrapping father-sons. But clubs must pay the right price for romance.

Trade up to pick the player you desire and if you miss out on them, then chase them in a future trade period where the market determines the price.

The AFL Commission has kicked the hard decision down the road, but competitive balance must prevail.

Keep up to date with the best AFL coverage in the country. Sign up for the Real Footy newsletter.

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