The AFL draft sliders your club can target

By Tomas Cooling / Roar Rookie

It’s the time of year when anticipation for the AFL draft is at fever pitch. Journalists, fans and clubs are all desperate to find out the order in which the names will be read out later this month.

But while the publicity has focused on the talented and high-performing crop who’ve excelled in their respective draft years, it’s often the lesser known prospects who make their mark on the league in quick time.

The likes of Rory Sloane (pick 44), Ben Brown (47), Luke Parker (40), Lachie Neale (48), James Sicily (56) and Harris Andrews (61) have all had no issues finding their way to the top level despite falling through to later picks.

More recently, clubs such as Richmond and Hawthorn have built a strong reputation of picking up steals later in the piece. Liam Baker, Jason Castagna, Kane Lambert, Jayden Short and Ivan Soldo went on to become premiership players with the Tigers despite all five going undrafted in their particular national drafts.

Citing these recent trends, here are some potential draft sliders that will look to make a name for themselves despite being selected later in the piece.

Among the most talented key position players in this year’s pool is the Western Jets’ Emerson Jeka and Oakleigh’s Cooper Sharman. Arguably the best contested mark of his peers, Jeka was previously being floated in the top-five mix, however a knee injury meant he missed a chunk of football mid-year and slid down many draft boards.

However, his talent can’t be questioned and given his remarkable athleticism, he has the traits to develop into an elite key position player.

Sharman has terrific athleticism and X-factor. The 192cm key forward is among this year’s best set shots. Although he is still quite raw, he has the makings of a future key forward at AFL level if a club can put time and effort into him.

Western Australia’s Mitch Georgiades is another who fits this mould. Likely to fall in a pick between 30 and 50, the club that picks up Georgiades will receive a high flyer with serious talent. Although undersized at 191 centimetres and not playing this year due to injury, he could be a diamond in the rough later in the draft.

South Australian duo Dyson Hilder and Karl Finlay are also promising key position prospects. Both provided great strength and rebound out of defence in the under-18 championships this year and are ready-made physically, standing at 195 and 192 centimetres respectively.

(AAP Image/Tracey Nearmy)

This year’s midfield crop also goes deep.

Sam Philp and Jay Rantall are two Victorian midfield bulls that will add immediate grunt and competitiveness to teams that pick them up. Philp is a Northern Knights mainstay who has a rare mix of speed and endurance to which many inside midfielders aspire, while Rantall was a junior Australian basketballer who will be looked at as a player who will have no problems keeping up with the modern game.

Both have the scope to build upon the foundations set by their under-age performances this year and could end up great players out of this draft.

Sandringham Dragons trio Jack Mahony, Darcy Chirgwin and Hugo Ralphsmith are all expected to fall during the second and third rounds of the draft. Mahony, in particular, is an exciting prospect who is a noted match-winner for Vic Metro and school side St Kevin’s. His combination of spread from the contest and ball use going forward makes him exciting to watch, either as a potential midfielder or forward flanker at an AFL club.

Chirgwin has shown this year that he can be that big-bodied inside midfielder who wins the hard ball, dishes it off to teammates, wins the disposals, and provides an elite number of tackles per game. From a pure inside midfielder perspective, the 191cm prospect has the skills to thrive at senior level.

Meanwhile, Ralphsmith is an extremely talented mid/forward who was able to perform one of the plays of the year with a long range banana for Vic Metro. Similar to Daniel Rioli, he is the type of player who could excel in a team like Richmond that like to move the ball selflessly and quickly.

Rounding out this group of midfielders are Thomson Dow and Tasmanian Mitch O’Neill. Dow, who is the brother of Carlton’s Paddy, is an athletically talented midfielder with great inside ball-winning abilities, and is often able to hit the scoreboard.

O’Neill has spent a lot of time with North Melbourne hailing from Hobart, and is close mates with 2018 draftees Fraser Turner (Richmond) and Tarryn Thomas (North Melbourne). Although injured for parts of the year, O’Neill is a proven ball-user of either half-back or through the midfield. With some development to add to his 72kg frame, if he can stay injury-free at an AFL club, he will slot in nicely as an accumulator.

One of this year’s hard luck stories is Bendigo midfielder Flynn Perez, who unfortunately missed all year with an ACL injury. The 188cm midfielder is a developing talent with a strong vertical leap and class with ball in hand. Perez will hope he has done enough in his bottom-age year to earn a spot on a club’s list.

Josh Honey, Riley Garcia and Elijah Taylor are all small to medium-sized forwards who can occasionally go into the midfield and provide a spark and goal sense to their team. All three should be snapped up in the national draft and have great athleticism and skill, most notably WA duo Garcia and Taylor.

Although clubs are often reluctant to pick up ruckmen early on in the piece, both Oakleigh’s Nick Bryan and Gippsland’s Charlie Comben are great prospects with scope for development.

The 202cm Bryan pieced together some strong performances on the big stage, and showed recruiters just what he could do while still having plenty of development and time on his side. Comben also has some athletic traits which he puts to good use rotating between ruck and key forward. Standing at almost 200 centimetres, Comben can have an impact at ground level as well as in the air.

So while not getting the publicity of Matt Rowell and Noah Anderson, these players may well slot straight in to your club next year and have an impact from day one, so get excited.

The Crowd Says:

2019-11-27T22:10:15+00:00

ScottD

Roar Guru


Good article mate.

2019-11-21T02:43:25+00:00

WCE

Roar Rookie


Ben Sokol from the mighty Subi Lions would be a brilliant choice for West Coast , providing he's still available. This kid is a great sharp shooter with a good footy brain, certainly worth serious consideration. Yes Mitch Georgiades is the son of John who played in Subi's late 80's grand finals who went to the bully's. Mitch has been unfortunate with injury but is a gun so worth a pick up as well. I hope West Coast use there 2 late draft picks from the state league as there are some terrific players running around the WAFL.

2019-11-19T10:39:10+00:00

Eagles supporter

Guest


What about jake pasini?

2019-11-19T10:32:57+00:00

Eagles supporter

Guest


I have a hunch the eagles might draft someone good. If Masten, McInnes, Riach, Bines, J. Smith, M. Allen, K.Mutimer, K. Brooksby are delisted with Brayshaw and ah chee will be redrafted unless any other clubs don't draft them freo or dees could draft Brayshaw or brissie could draft b ah chee. We have gained tim Kelly, pick 47 (rumoured to be ben sokol, darcy chirgwin, josh shute), pick 91 probably most likely won't be used they'll just pass by then as the eagles did last year at the end of last years draft. So if we can have a maximum of three rookies , lets say Brayshaw, ah chee and some other guy. So we gain three and lose eight therefore due to the Kelly trade with have a big gap. I think the eagles will do a trade picks swap with due to the Kelly trade we have an extra 3rd round pick this year, if I had done the trade I would have had the extra 3rd round pick this year instead of next year though the eagles recruiters might think next year has the better pool, we need young talent, lets pick a diamond in the rough

2019-11-18T00:46:35+00:00

Seymorebutts

Guest


Mitch Georgiades Im guessing is the son of John Georgiadies a bloke who kicked 8 goals on debut for the Dogs against Carlton round one 1988. The Blues were the 1987 premiers, so not a bad effort. He got inured soon after and was never heard from again.

2019-11-17T11:32:29+00:00

Aransan

Roar Rookie


A good article Tomas, I hope recruiters are paying more attention than roarers to the possibilities. In recent times Essendon have recruited more mature players in Matt Guelfi at #76 and Brandon Zerk-Thatcher in the 60s. Guelfi has played most games since being drafted and Zerk-Thatcher is expected to be a good key position back. Names of players in the past that quickly come to mind include Michael Hibberd who moved to Melbourne and was an All-Australian and Stuart Crameri who was traded to the Bulldogs for pick 26 which was used to draft Zac Merrett. Michael Hartley and Mitch Brown were more than useful depth players. Bigger players including ruckmen tend to be overlooked as the talent is often harder to identify when they are 18 and often clubs are reluctant to put the time into their development, focussing instead on poaching such talent from other clubs. This is especially where I see recruiting possibilities, even if these players are drafted as rookies.

AUTHOR

2019-11-16T21:56:03+00:00

Tomas Cooling

Roar Rookie


Absolutely right mate

2019-11-16T15:25:29+00:00

Aransan

Roar Rookie


I am sure there will be a number of players who missed out in their 18yo draft year who will turn out to be very good players if given a chance. It is hard to determine which 18yo players will develop into top ruckmen and they typically start their careers later and frequently on a rookie list.

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