Are the 2013 debutantes going to be the best ever crop?

By Cameron Rose / Expert

The AFL’s Rising Star award for the most valuable rookie players was first introduced in 1993 and it’s easy to make the case that the crop of nominees that year were of a quality that has never been surpassed.

It’s amazing how many nominees from ’93 became undisputed superstars of the competition – Shane Crawford, Nathan Buckley, James Hird, Matthew Richardson and Mark Ricciuto.

The support cast isn’t too bad either – Peter Everitt, recent Hall of Fame inductee Scott West, David Neitz, Dustin Fletcher, Glenn Archer, Sav Rocca, Mark Mercuri and Leigh Colbert, all of whom at some point were in the two or three most important players at their club over celebrated careers.

Even the third tier players from that year became very good footballers – Ang Christou, Nathan Chapman, Joe Misiti, Duncan Kellaway and Rick Olarenshaw.

In 2013, twenty years later, are we seeing a group of players that might one day be comparable to that special bunch?

Jaeger O’Meara is the headline act of this year’s nominees, and you’d struggle to find someone who doesn’t think he’s the complete package. He’s got the skill and poise of Scott Pendlebury, the hardness of Andrew Swallow, the vision of Jobe Watson and looks made for the big stage like a Jimmy Bartel.

Oliver ‘Ollie’ Wines has looked at home since his debut against Melbourne in Round 1. He was in Port’s best that day with 24 hard-won disposals, seven marks, three tackles and a goal. The immediate comparison was with Joel Selwood, an observation not made lightly. He’s continued to thrive at AFL level since.

Nick Vlastuin impressed when he was first seen in the NAB Cup, but had to wait for a Round 5 debut against Fremantle. Everyone watching that night could see that he was something special. Blessed with sure hands and the ability to make the right decision every time, he possesses what used to be called ‘a good footy brain’. Tiger fans can’t believe he got through to pick nine in last years’ draft, but are grateful that he did.

Lachie Whitfield was the number one pick in in that draft, and GWS isn’t planning on handing him back. Has been doing his work off-Broadway in the struggling Giants outfit, which is no easy task (just ask Jack Watts), but he already looks to have a 250 game career ahead of him. With the smarts of a natural footballer and elite skills to match, he’s going to be a gun for a very long time.

Jack Viney, yet to earn a Rising Star nomination, debuted in the same match as his good mate Wines, and was the best player for the hapless Demons. It was an indictment on his football club that after one game he was already in the five most important players there. You get the impression he eats bricks for breakfast, and will be instrumental in helping his club rise from the ashes over the next decade.

Tom Mitchell was drafted in 2011 at pick 21 as a father-son selection, and came with the reputation of being a hard-as-nails ball magnet. He’s only three matches into his AFL career, and the wraps have proven justified. He’s already laid 23 tackles – some players will play every game this year and not lay that many! Sydney are a scary proposition indeed when a player of his ilk wasn’t able to get a game for so long.

It’s not a stretch to think each of the above will be captains of their respective clubs. All ooze leadership in the way they play their football

Of course, some people think the best of last year’s draftees is Joe Daniher, and few have had more hype surrounding them than the 201cm forward/ruckman. Despite only making two appearances so far, he’s shown glimpses enough to suggest the hype was justified. He moves well, has good hands and looks extremely agile for a player of his size.

Other debutants we’ve seen impress this year are Brad Crouch, Sam Mayes, Ben Kennedy, Jackson Thurlow, Jed Anderson, a host of Dogs in Jake Stringer, Jack Macrae, Nathan Hrovat and Lachie Hunter, and of course a Sudanese specimen with a jaw-dropping physique you might have heard of, Majak Daw.

With Jack Martin and Jesse Hogan already getting people excited about what they’re going to bring to the competition next year, it seems the future of the AFL is in the best of hands.

The regeneration of talent is what keeps any sport thriving, and the 2013 crew looks a special one. If they can provide half the thrills that the 1993 group did, we’re going to be very lucky indeed.

The Crowd Says:

2013-06-24T13:26:41+00:00

Lroy

Guest


Dont we hear this every year?

2013-06-24T09:17:57+00:00

Slane

Guest


You've got to be joking. There are more kids playing auskick and junior footy than ever before. The game is bigger than ever before. There is no evidence that the talent pool has been spread too thin. You want to talk about a talent pool spread thin, what about how from 1925 to 1987 when we had 12 teams playing in the VFL and a massive percentage of the players coming from one state!!

AUTHOR

2013-06-24T04:21:04+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Good call Brendon, he's one I forgot, should have thrown him in.

2013-06-24T03:33:14+00:00

Tim

Guest


good call hawker, hill looks a gem, but needs more weight or he will just get bashed up in big games.....anderson looks great too- he is a bit like the male version of nick dal santo with real Hodge like plumbs

2013-06-24T02:10:46+00:00

johno

Guest


1999 was a pretty good year as well - Top Class - J Brown, M Pavlich, Darren Glass, Luke McPharlin, Joel Corey, Bob Murphy, Paul Chapman, Cameron Ling, Corey Enright, Ryan O'Keefe, Haselby, Brad Green, Brett Kirk Very serviceable - Rhys Shaw, Gilbee, Ryan Hargave, Ben Johnson, David Hille, Adam Hunter, Leon Davis, Mitch Hahn, Josh Fraser, Leigh Brown, Guerra, Grover,

2013-06-24T02:07:36+00:00

Brendon

Guest


Jake Neade is the new Cyril Rioli, I love the way the little fella goes about it.

AUTHOR

2013-06-24T02:02:54+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


I just happened to be on the Gold Coast during the Q-Clash earlier this year Tom, so I went along. I though Mayes was almost the Lions best player, it just felt like he was everywhere, even though he only had 21 touches. His smooth moving caught my eye, and looked to have lovely skills too. I've been glad to see him keep it up (quiet yesterday though). You're right about these players being good to watch. I probably haven't seen enough of Plowman at this stage, it's hard to watch GWS when there's usually another option.

2013-06-24T01:39:39+00:00

TomC

Roar Guru


Good article, Cam. And because I'm feeling parochial today, let's give Sam Mayes another mention. Has played some very good games in his debut season and is already one of the Lions' most reliable field kicks. What I love about this list of half a dozen you've put together is that all of those players are just great to watch. They've all shown class and toughness at different times. Another name to mention is Lachie Plowman. Very rare for undersized KPPs to contribute much in their first season, but I've liked what I've seen of him.

2013-06-24T00:15:45+00:00

Hawker

Guest


Brad Hill has been going nicely for us

2013-06-24T00:05:48+00:00

Chaos

Guest


It's pretty hard to go past the 2001 AFL Draft as the best ever.... Top Class = Judd, Ablett, Bartel, Del Santo, Hodge, Ball, Kelly, Stevie J, Sam Mitchell, Dane Swan... + very servicable players in: Waite, Cambell Brown, Lewis Thompson, Medhurst, Seaby, Hale, Montagna... Could have been anything = Sampi, Polak

AUTHOR

2013-06-23T23:41:58+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Yeah, you'd think O'Meara is all but a lock for the Rising Star Andy. Goodes has been excellent, very calm when in possession. Melbourne's mature-agers have had an impact as well, or as much as they can have in that team. Kommer at Essendon has been important too.

AUTHOR

2013-06-23T23:39:49+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


I'd suggest the difference between Hill/Rich and the main players I point out above is the first two were purely outside players, and still are really, whereas this years guns are comfortable winning their own ball. Rhys Palmer might be the best example, but his kicking was ordinary from the start. O'Meara, Vlastuin etc look a cut or two above him in skill.

AUTHOR

2013-06-23T23:36:09+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Franko, I assume you are referring to the spreading of talent over 18 clubs? It's a point that gets made often, but surely every sport that expands deals with the same issue? I'd find it hard to believe all of the above wouldn't have made it at any time.

2013-06-23T23:34:37+00:00

Brent Ford

Roar Guru


Yeah it is interesting to look at the rate that players develop, some come out like an absolute rocket and relish the conditions of AFL football, while some take a few years to develop their bodies. No doubt Rich has the nous, I think because be made such an impact in such a short space of time he was being tagged, I only saw highlights yesterday but if he is being tagged he is getting used to shaking it a lot more then he has previously in his career.

AUTHOR

2013-06-23T23:34:25+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


Grimley's debut has certainly been a long time coming Tim, but we know young talls take time, the Hawks are a strong team to break into. I haven't seen enough of him yet to declare him. Winguard's flying isn't he Kevin, and was a key player again on the weekend.

2013-06-23T23:25:27+00:00

Andy_Roo

Roar Guru


The young recruits are all looking very good this year. O'Meara is the standout and should win the rising star award. It's interesting to follow the mature age recruits as well. Brett Goodes seems to be playing well at the Bulldogs at 28 years old.

2013-06-23T23:06:29+00:00

D.Large

Guest


Daniel Rich is a very good player today, but in his year 2 & 3 he fell behind at least 10 others from the same draft. From the 2nd half of last year onward however I think he is getting closer to the elite bracket.

2013-06-23T23:02:30+00:00

Brent Ford

Roar Guru


Agreed Daniel Rich was incredible yesterday, his ability to hit a flat kick over 50 metres is as valuable a skill that one can possess.

2013-06-23T22:40:28+00:00

TomC

Roar Guru


Did Daniel Rich fall away? He's a bloody good player at the moment. Probably best on ground yesterday.

2013-06-23T22:21:35+00:00

D.Large

Guest


Looking at Stephen Hill, Daniel Rich, Rhys Palmer, Daniel Pearce & Toby Greene etc who all had amazing debuts and them fell away the next year, I don’t think you can really make these assessments until halfway through year 2. But these guys certainly look the real deal.

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