The Roar's 2019 AFL Top 50: 40-31

By Josh / Expert

Yesterday Jay Croucher took us through the first instalment of this year’s AFL top 50, and today I’m counting down the players ranked 40-31. Let’s get started.

40. Tom J Lynch (Richmond Tigers)
Lynch was one of the biggest talking points of the 2018 season, though this was unfortunately due to his off-field contract discussions rather than his on-field form, which itself was somewhat mixed and then ended early by a PCL injury.

It’s been two years since Lynch was at his best, booting 66 goals in an All-Australian season for Gold Coast in 2016, but even in a lean and interrupted 2018 he showed flashes of his best, such as his bag of eight against Carlton in Round 2.

Leaving aside any misgivings over free agency and equalisation, it’s undeniable that one of the most exciting aspects of the 2019 season ahead will be getting to see what Lynch can do as the spearhead of a far more competitive side than he has ever previously had the chance to play in.

All but one of our five judges included Lynch in their top 50.

(Photo by Michael Dodge/Getty Images)

39. Trent Cotchin (Richmond Tigers)
Few football stories better illustrate the value of patience than that of Trent Cotchin, who has – like the club he captains – gone almost in the blink of an eye from being somewhere between a punch line and a punching bag to being one of the AFL’s most respected footballers.

From a purely statistical perspective he hasn’t quite again touched his mythic 2012 form (for which he was retroactively rewarded a Brownlow) in the years since, and in fact his average disposals and total goals (five) in 2018 were both the lowest he’s returned in eight seasons.

However there’s no doubt he’s been a key figure in the Richmond revolution and resurgence, and his on-field leadership a key factor in the Tigers’ ability to practice a gameplan that took them to the minor premiership in 2018.

Two judges left Cotchin out of their top 50s entirely, but Adrian Polykandrites backed the Tigers skipper in rating him 15th overall.

38. Jack Gunston (Hawthorn Hawks)
Gunston’s 2018 season was an impressive display of his versatility as a footballer. After being played in defence for a lot of the 2017 season, he returned to the forward line for a total of 51 goals – as good or comparable to his best previous work – while also being thrown further up the ground on a more regular basis.

This saw him deliver the ball inside 50 a career-best 70 times for the year, while also recording disposal, rebound 50 and goal assist numbers comparable to his career-best. He was ultimately rewarded with 10 Brownlow votes, his most in a season to date, and All Australian selection.

Gunston was overlooked for the top 50 by two of our five judges. My ranking of him at No.27 was the highest of the five.

37. Tom Hawkins (Geelong Cats)
2018 saw Hawkins recapture his best form in years, kicking 60 goals for the first time in five seasons. It was a feat he has only achieved twice before (in 2012 and 2014).

Most impressively this came despite being called on to contribute in the ruck more than he has since 2011, averaging nearly two hit-outs per game. He also recorded career-high numbers in disposals (15.5 per game), marks (7.3 per game) and goal assists (24 in 2018).

Four of five judges included Hawkins in their top fifty.

36. Ben Brown (North Melbourne Kangaroos)
If you’ll allow me to let my inner North Melbourne fan out here a little, Brown’s ranking as low as No.36 is a crime against humanity. I had him at No.23 overall, but being left out entirely by Ryan Buckland and Cam Rose (yes, I’m naming names) has dragged him down a fair bit.

This despite the fact that Ben Brown is the only player in the AFL to have kicked 60 goals in each of the last two seasons – a time period across which his 124 goals is second only to Lance Franklin and equal with Jack Riewoldt (and in a side that has given far less quality service to key forwards than theirs have to them).

Brown boasts great football intelligence, impressive ground-level work and running ability for a big man, and one of the most accurate set shots in the competition; but most importantly he has the frizzy red hair of an angel.

An angel I tell you! (Photo by Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

35. Tom McDonald (Melbourne Demons)
Tom McDonald played the first 59 games of his AFL career without kicking a goal. I still remember noting the oddity of see him kick his first – in Round 23, 2014 against North Melbourne – and then the further oddity of seeing him kick his second, perhaps only two minutes later, at the end of virtually the exact same play as saw him get the first.

Well, he has certainly come a long way since then – the man who took 60 AFL matches to kick a goal booted 53 of them from just 20 appearances last year, his start to the season delayed by injury but roaring to life when he arrived in Round 5.

All five of our judges put McDonald in their top 50s and he is actually the first player to appear in the count down so far not to have been left out by at least one judge.

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34. Jack Darling (West Coast Eagles)
The 30s appears to have become the home of key forwards, doesn’t it? Darling marks the end of a streak of five players who between them kicked 275 goals in season 2018, and although he’s at the top of that group, his 48 goals was the lowest of any.

Why then is he rated so high? Perhaps it’s his dominant start to the season – Darling was arguably the form player of the competition early in 2018, and at no point was this more true than after his simply majestic six-goal demolition of Richmond in Round 9 (a match where he also took 15 marks).

Injury then saw Darling miss the middle chunk of the year and he wasn’t quite the same thereafter. He had a mixed bag of a grand final – playing a stinker in the first half, only to be crucial in the third quarter, then nearly revisit his worst nightmare by spilling an easy mark in the final minute.

Make of him what you will, but he is never boring. I didn’t have him in my personal top 50, while Jay Croucher had him at 19th overall.

33. Toby Greene (GWS Giants)
How many AFL players average 28 disposals in their first year in the competition, then decrease their disposal numbers on an almost perfectly linear progression every year after but somehow manage to become better and better players while doing so? Toby Greene is unique to say the least.

The AFL has plenty of big key forwards or speedy smalls, but players like Toby – a Leigh Matthews-esque 70s-era throwback if ever there was one – are hard to find in modern footy. Love him, hate him, or love to hate him – which ever path you go down, there’s no denying he sparks a passionate reaction.

I’m a big fan of the jolly Greene and had him at No.19 in my rankings overall, while two of five judges left him out of the top 50 entirely.

Pictured: Adult Dennis the Menace (Photo by Adam Trafford/AFL Media/Getty Images)

32. Lachie Whitfield (GWS Giants)
A crisis at halfback prompted Leon Cameron to move Whitfield into defence in season 2018, and it proved to be one of the smartest coaching moves of the season. Whitfield recorded career-high disposal numbers and was named in the All Australian team for the first time.

There’s no doubting Whitfield’s 2018 form was praiseworthy, at the same time it shouldn’t come as too big of a surprise that a quality player recorded excellent stats when moved into what many regard as the easiest position in footy. Set to move back into the middle in 2019, I’ll be interested to see if we still rate him as highly in 12 months’ time.

I had Whitfield at No.40 over all, while Ryan Buckland ranked him at 21, and one judge left him out of the top fifty entirely.

31. Joel Selwood (Geelong Cats)
Finally we come to just our second player in the count so far to be included in the top 50 by every judge, and it’s Geelong skipper Joel Selwood.

Boasting three premiership medals, six All Australian guernseys (three as captain), four most-courageous awards, three club best and fairests, and as of last year becoming Geelong’s longest-serving captain in club history, Selwood has a football resume that any player would kill for.

Joel Selwood. (Photo by Quinn Rooney/Getty Images)

However one can’t help but notice that he has slipped a fair bit in the rankings since 2018, when we had him at 12th overall. While his stats don’t show any significant drop-off, it’s hard to escape the feeling that Selwood – and Geelong’s midfield more generally – just wasn’t firing on all cylinders last year.

At 30-years-old, is he entering the twilight of his career or just going through a temporary lull? Here’s hoping it’s the latter.

The top 50 so far
50. Luke Breust
49. Daniel Rioli
48. Jack Viney
47. Tim Kelly
46. Charlie Curnow
45. Harris Andrews
44. Angus Brayshaw
43. Joe Daniher
42. Shaun Higgins
41. Lachie Neale
40. Tom J Lynch
39. Trent Cotchin
38. Jack Gunston
37. Tom Hawkins
36. Ben Brown
35. Tom McDonald
34. Jack Darling
33. Toby Greene
32. Lachie Whitfield
31. Joel Selwood

Be sure to join us again tomorrow when Cam Rose will take us through the players ranked 30-21.

The Crowd Says:

2019-02-27T11:56:09+00:00

Scott

Guest


I rate Gunston

2019-02-27T11:48:27+00:00

Scott

Guest


He has actually been pretty good since his 1st game. Check his stats. They are as good or better then Tom Lynch and Daniher who have both at some point been rated as one of the best players in the game. I’ll say again that I don’t think he is better then any of them, it’s just that his entire career has been judged on those 2 dropped marks. The general rule is that midfielders start to peak in their 6th year and key position players their 8th. Last year was his 8th year and he played bloody well for the whole year. He was injured at the start of 2 games last year as well, so average his stats against 19 games instead of 21 and you can see how good he was.

2019-02-27T08:01:25+00:00

Dean

Guest


Gunston is ahead of Darling. You compare the stats between the 2 but Gunston has been a versatile swingman for the last few years where Darling is predominately a forward. Gunston is highly underrated and can switch to almost any position. You just have to look at Gunstons finals series stats over the last few years to show how much better he is. Wouldn't have Darling over any of the 6 players below him. That's not to say he hasn't improved but if you look at it over their career than just the second half of last year will more than show Gunston has been a better player.

2019-02-27T02:59:08+00:00

Brendon the 1st

Roar Rookie


I did say half a good year, but half a good year does not a top 50 make.

2019-02-27T02:09:32+00:00

Scott

Guest


West coast interstate away record between 2015-18 is; 23 wins, 20 losses and 1 draw. I dare say that is one of the best interstate records in the league

2019-02-27T00:47:33+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


We are talking about Jack Riewoldt, who has famously been the lone tall in a forward-line surrounded by a fleet of small players. And won a premiership and Coleman medal while doing so. I think he knows what it is like to have to fly with two or three defenders against him.

2019-02-27T00:12:13+00:00

Scott

Guest


True. But his stats over his career are almost identical to Gunston and Lynch. His stats are actually better in many of the key categories. It’s just that 90% of the football world know him for those 2 dropped marks. Interestingly he has actually had less turnovers then both of them and less clangers then Lynch. Pretty good considering he played every game in his 1st 4 years when he would’ve been most nervous. Those dropped marks were shocking but had he not dropped them he would prob be somewhere in the 20-30 range and no one would debate it. Because he dropped them, 30-40 sounds about right

2019-02-26T23:33:58+00:00

shifty

Roar Rookie


His form for half a year. Consistency is backing up that form year after year not week after week for 9 weeks.

2019-02-26T23:29:21+00:00

shifty

Roar Rookie


One outlier year does not a consistent travelling team make. Apart from Richmond in their premiership year I'd say that most recent premier's have been good on the road during their premiership season. Plus over the last 10 games against Collingwood, West Coast lead 6-4 so you could say they match up quite well. What are West Coast's home vs away seasons 15-18 inclusive?

2019-02-26T14:08:24+00:00

Scott

Guest


Bahahaha this will never get old. Both these comments are based 100% off 2 dropped marks. Don’t get me wrong, they were both in grand finals and absolute shockers, but thats all that any fan that doesn’t see him play each week knows him for. Not in the same league as Lynch, Gunston and co?? Pre injury last year he was in fact a league above those. He was arguably the best player in the whole comp for the 1st half of last year. I’m not gonna go as far as saying he is a better player then those mentioned, I don’t reckon he is, but based on his form last year he actually was a league above.

2019-02-26T06:32:41+00:00

Cat

Roar Guru


Hawkins often carries the entire Geelong (dysfunctional) forward line – and typically with two or three defenders on him. Jack get a lot more help. I can only imagine what Hawkins could do if defenses had anyone else to worry about besides him ...

2019-02-26T05:49:28+00:00

Brendon the 1st

Roar Rookie


I agree, shouldn’t be anywhere near this list, has had half a good year, not only is he the worst of all the forwards here you could easily put Breaust above him as well

2019-02-26T04:48:03+00:00

Ryan Buckland

Expert


West Coast was 8-3 on the road last year, including 3-0 at the MCG, and they won the Grand Final there against a tenant club (which was supposed to be impossible).

2019-02-26T04:32:13+00:00

Dockerman

Roar Rookie


Jack Darling In the top 50, seriously? His first GF was an unmitigated disaster, worst player on the ground. His first half last year was terrible, agreed that he stepped up in the 3rd quarter, but if WCE has lost that match after dropping a sitter on the goal line, he would have been forever known as the player who dropped the 2018 AFL Premiership Cup. No doubt he has improved his consistency, but he’s not in the same league as Gunston, Lynch & Co.

2019-02-26T04:31:09+00:00

Steele

Guest


The injuries combined with playing for two unglamorous clubs. Also must be performing for a number of years for the casual observer’s to take note. You know the ones that regurgitate the mornings Herald Sun takes and listens to a spot of SEN. I think you’d find that a lot of people like reading the articles more than watching the game these days. Reason being it’s not quite the spectacle of yesteryear. Fingers crossed on the rule changes.

2019-02-26T04:28:48+00:00

shifty

Roar Rookie


I think Darling is a great snapshot of West Coast as a whole, brilliant at home but inconsistent away

2019-02-26T00:46:54+00:00

Dalgety Carrington

Roar Guru


I don't have it, but surely frizzy red hair is more demonic than angelic? Particularly on blokes. It's all a bit reminiscent of Pennywise.

2019-02-26T00:39:45+00:00

Dalgety Carrington

Roar Guru


Greene is one of the most bankable matchwinners in the AFL and does that from one of the harder positions on the ground to be a matchwinner in. I reckon top 20 is a better fit for him. The injury disruption last year hampered him somewhat, but still would’ve been the no. 1 concern for defences coming up against the Giants.

2019-02-26T00:00:46+00:00

Cameron Rose

Expert


I need to head over to Perth and catch up with Buckland so he can spend a day or two walking me through his Pythagorean theories. :) To be fair to me, I often forget North Melbourne are in the AFL. I always confuse them with Port Melbourne.

2019-02-25T23:45:33+00:00

Rissole

Roar Rookie


Agreed, he is better than that lot.

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