The lure of a local lad

By Erin Across the Pond / Roar Rookie

While those in Victoria and Western Australia were seeing their personal fairytales unfold before them, South Australians already had their eyes on a prize of a different kind: a draft so full of local talent it’s almost overwhelming.

Okay, it’s hardly premiership glory and, given the choice, the preference would surely have been to go deep into finals, play out the redemption arc of dreams and hear Tex give a winner’s speech that would move even the harshest naysayers to tears.

However, with this fantasy well and truly quashed by the end of Round 22, sometimes you need to find a silver lining on the storm cloud. The same could be said for Port Adelaide, who held on to their finals hopes a little longer than the Crows only to find themselves similarly unoccupied come September.

Only those in the inner sanctum will know which players are most needed and desired by a club. Rumours abound about trades, tying significantly into what they can do for draft hopes – is Mitch McGovern, plus whatever bells and whistles Adelaide can add in order to sweeten the deal, worth that elusive pick 1? Or is that massive overs and something that Carlton would be mad to accept?

Mitch McGovern of the Adelaide Crows. (AAP Image/David Mariuz)

The answer is probably the latter, but you miss all the shots you don’t take and don’t you need to take every shot you can in order to land the Jack Lukosiuses of this world? Or the Izak Rankines?

The Crows are surely weighing this up and, over at Alberton, the same names will be on a whiteboard in the recruitment office, organised into meticulous pros-and-cons columns.

The list of pros will be filled to bursting – these are talented kids, and one would hope that drafting locally will inspire old-school tales of homegrown heroes.

How strictly do you try to balance these ideas with the all too real question of: who does the team actually need? Is there really much point in selling the farm for Rankine if it turns out Chad Wingard isn’t leaving the Power for a Victorian side after all?

Is Lukosius superfluous to Adelaide’s needs at the moment, or is he available at just the right time, to bulk up in the SANFL so he can slot into the side as Walker and Jenkins inch closer to their thirties?

Landing a sought-after draft prospect is a morale boost in anyone’s book, so both South Australian sides can expect some hefty competition.

For Adelaide, the draw of a superstar without the go-home flight risk may be too good to pass up. For the Gold Coast Suns, who are reportedly eyeing off Jack Lukosius and his good mate, Connor Rozee, seem to have some ideas of their own about how to draft and retain interstate talent.

With some top picks at their disposal, it may be that they’re the biggest roadblock on the path to recruitment victory.

Some of the best in our game come from more humble beginnings, however, and it’s important to remember that for every top pick, there could be – and probably is – another Rory Laird waiting in the rookie draft, ready to work hard and surprise everybody.

There are no consolation prizes, only new opportunities.

The Crowd Says:

2018-10-04T01:15:00+00:00

Goalsonly

Roar Rookie


The AFL would certainly be halfway to fulfilling their community obligations if the clubs were more invested in local talent. They put North Melb. and Haw. games in Tasmania and then we find out the local leagues are having even more trouble. What's that about? On who's watch? I sometimes wonder if they service the best interests of the game or if the executive class are almost wholly self interested.

AUTHOR

2018-10-04T00:21:58+00:00

Erin Across the Pond

Roar Rookie


Thanks for commenting! I feel like fans might not enjoy the result of the McGovern deal, if the assessments of his value by various industry folk are any indication. It fluctuates between a top 10 pick and maybe two second round picks within the same news day. Not enough interstate love for our Mitch, but then maybe that's just a business move, trying to dictate the market. I imagine both teams will get a nifty local from the draft, even if they end up looking further down the list. There's a lot to like about Jackson Hately, who may not quite break the top 10. What a great problem, to be so spoiled for choice.

2018-10-03T23:57:03+00:00

Mister Football

Roar Guru


Spot on Erin, really good article. I'd say it's been a very, very long time since we've seen two South Australians considered top 5 material in the one draft, so that's definitely unique. Things might pan out nicely for both SA clubs. With Carlton eyeing off Walsh with its top pick, the Suns are seriously considering taking the King twins at 2 and 3, all of a sudden, the SA clubs only need to deal themselves into picks 4 to 6 to each have a nibble at the best SA talent (plus another which is likely to go top 12). The Crows have McGovern as a pretty good barganing chip, and I guess Port might still be thinking about cashing in Wingard. If that fails, they should both consider trading multiple picks to get to those top six picks. They might get there.

AUTHOR

2018-10-03T23:08:20+00:00

Erin Across the Pond

Roar Rookie


Thanks! It's a bit bare-bones, considering the depth of draft talent available, but I trust the rest of Australia will be catching onto some new names very soon.

2018-10-03T23:02:47+00:00

Downsey

Roar Pro


Informative read. I don't often hear what's happening in SA, so I appreciated the insight.

AUTHOR

2018-10-03T15:07:42+00:00

Erin Across the Pond

Roar Rookie


I guess the key is balance. Everyone wants the local hero, but to overlook a potential superstar because they're from interstate can be seen as short-sighted and hindsight is always 20-20. I want a focus on drafting the local kids but I'm sure I'll be the first to throw down sobbing emojis if it doesn't work out, ha.

AUTHOR

2018-10-03T14:52:19+00:00

Erin Across the Pond

Roar Rookie


I suppose that's why this draft feels so special. A chance for SA to nab some seemingly less risky future prospects from the very top of the list! I'm excited to see how it all pans out.

2018-10-03T00:34:59+00:00

Goalsonly

Roar Rookie


Is there a good reason why AFL clubs don't harvest an area that's their own Patch? I know footballers aren't carrots but it would add a lot of local character and interest to the competition. Is it because some locals just don't work out and then what do they do? I don't get why it's not just normal given the lessons of Gold Coast and to a certain extent GWS. All the boffins had them down for a few flags by now. Many individuals rise to a level when given the chance. That's a test for every young player (bar the few exceptions that prove the rule). Is this all about marketing and star making from the rookie list on? I know the AFL need big names for people to cheer on . In manufacturing them from rookies and seeing who 'sticks' are we missing the opportunity of cultivating local heroes?

2018-10-02T23:09:51+00:00

Russ Sharp

Guest


Interstate clubs will try to secure top end local talent to avoid the 'go home' factor. The issue is that Victoria still produces the most players in the competition.

Read more at The Roar