Trade and draft review: Power recharge

By Thom Roker / Roar Guru

The courage of Brad Ebert’s final act on an AFL field was synonymous with Port Adelaide’s season in 2020. Yet try as they might, their ageing warriors simply couldn’t outlast the seemingly ageless Tigers.

Weeks earlier Justin Westoff played his last AFL game and questions were raised about the sustainability of Port’s table-topping form given the number of players above the age of 30 in 2021.

It is a conversation that usually comes at the end of a club’s premiership window years, yet this Port list is just entering its window and the experienced players are as much in the running for 2021 success as the two teams who played off in the grand final.

Charlie Dixon (Daniel Kalisz/Getty Images)

The Power identified a couple of areas where they needed immediate help on the ground, namely an intercepting key defender and goal-sneak small forward.

Port took until the second last day of the trade period to secure Aliir Aliir, who they landed in exchange for a future second-round draft pick, while the club’s unsuccessful trade target of 2019 – Bomber Orazio Fantasia – ended up going back to SA with pick 73 for pick 29 and a future third-rounder.

The trouble with giving up their early second-rounder and their future second and third-rounders, as well as giving up their first-rounder at last year’s draft, was the lack of draft capital the club had remaining to match bids on their father-sons in order to still be able to stay in the draft.

Three retirements and half a dozen delistings had yielded zero in terms of draft picks, so the list management team were operating in severe deficit for this year’s draft as well as 2021.

Port’s first act on draft night was to move back four places in the second round to secure a future fourth-round pick from Adelaide, which they later did again with Collingwood to get a future fourth-round pick tied to Geelong and shift back five places in the third round.

Therefore, when the Pies put a bid on next generation academy product Lachie Jones at pick 16, Port were still able to match and keep a live pick available toward the back of the draft, but when no bid came for father-son prospect Taj Schofield in the 40s, Port opted to use pick 49 on Ollie Lord from the Sandringham Dragons.

This allowed Port to claim the son of premiership player Jarrad Schofield as a rookie, although they shocked observers by naming Tyson Goldsack with their first pick in the rookie draft.

Aliir brings a competitive flair to the Power back line that was missing when Westhoff could no longer produce his best footy, which perhaps Jack Watts had previously been earmarked to cover.

Fantasia can be part of the answer to Port’s goal-kicking question, with fans hoping to see the 2017 version of the electrifying small forward – when he kicked 39.22 with 18 goal assists in 20 games – rather than the listless player who kicked a sole goal from only five games in an injury-riddled 2020 season.

Orazio Fantasia (Photo by Dylan Burns/AFL Photos/Getty Images)

Jones capped off a brilliant SANFL season by winning the flag with Woodville-West Torrens and the solid defender should come straight into the best 22 such is his trajectory in 2020.

Lord is a developing tall forward who hasn’t stopped growing, but with an eye to the future and some rigorous lessons in the SANFL system, he has the potential to grow into the number one forward spot once the big Queenslander hangs up his boots.

Schofield was the seventh player drafted from Woodville-West Torrens, although unlike most of the others, he didn’t feature in the senior premiership as he is very small and needs to add some size to play senior footy.

Goldsack is a waste of a pick at this point in his career unless he is being used as a playing coach for the SANFL team to get the defence playing with the same structures so that the next player up is inculcated into the game plan. But if he is playing AFL, then Port Adelaide’s season would not be going to plan.

This recruitment period has been a recharge for the Power, with some ready-to-play additions and development pieces for the future, while the 2021 draft picks will include one early pick and three late picks thanks to micro trades that mean top-rated father-son Jase Burgoyne will join the club in similar circumstances to this year’s draft.

Port have been proactive in the past two post-seasons in putting together a group of young players ready to join the old guard in making a tilt at the flag. This year they had club-tied players and will again have control of their draft destiny in 2021.

The Crowd Says:

2021-01-16T05:04:09+00:00

Aaron Paul

Roar Rookie


yeah I am basically a scottish baronet and descended from Charles II, speak for yourself crows supporting pleb :silly:

2021-01-07T02:51:10+00:00


Lived by the sea …. apparently.

2021-01-06T11:34:08+00:00

Rowdy

Roar Rookie


...the magic dragon.

2021-01-06T10:06:16+00:00

Pelican

Roar Rookie


Who's puff?

2021-01-06T05:58:16+00:00


Oh, I thought they said the puff choked in yet another important match - oh well!

2021-01-06T03:30:20+00:00

Pelican

Roar Rookie


No they said the crows finished last

2021-01-04T08:22:06+00:00

Maxy

Roar Rookie


Pretty sure I came on here and praised the Tigers for beating Port in Adelaide in a season where Vic sides hubbed on the gold coast,but sure I must be a bogan

2021-01-04T03:58:12+00:00

pablocruz

Roar Rookie


Exactly. Port hit the front early in the last yet it was all Richmond from that moment on. Losing their best player, Ebert, doesn't bode well for 2021.

2021-01-04T03:56:14+00:00

pablocruz

Roar Rookie


Yes. Hilarious yet very, very sad.

2021-01-04T03:15:31+00:00


Don’t say anything negative about the poorties - they don’t take it well!

2021-01-04T03:13:19+00:00


Did somebody say - rose coloured glasses?!

2021-01-04T03:12:19+00:00


Port fans don’t handle losing very well - see sanfl GF loss by their fans after siren against Glenelg! Sore loser bogans!

2021-01-04T03:10:25+00:00


Whatever helps you sleep at night - tigers win by six more scoring shots, going away from port - a better comment would be lucky port didn’t lose by 5+ goals

2021-01-04T00:30:16+00:00

Brendon the 1st

Roar Rookie


Robbie's influence was down this year but has been offset by rozee and butters being brilliant, but Dixon is a problem when he retires. He missed a heap of easy goals this year though so maybe it won't hurt as much as we think. Surely Marshall starts to really take hold of games soon, he has so much potential. Boaky will be almost impossible to replace bit it feels like he's got another 2 good years left in him.

2021-01-03T21:15:06+00:00

Maxy

Roar Rookie


That is the key to good list management,when players retire the next player in line is good to go.Watts Ebert and Westhoff finished up last year and after what I would consider reasonably good careers their departures will not send Port plummeting down the Ladder,the Boaks,Gray's and Dixon's are different kettle of fish though,think Gray will go first [cant replace these types] Boak aging like a Penfolds Grange at the moment and Dixon...well KPP are the hardest to replace so hope Marshall Georgiades and Lord can develop over time[dixon only 30 has a few years to go] to off set Dixons departure,or hit the free agency market to replace them

AUTHOR

2021-01-03T12:08:51+00:00

Thom Roker

Roar Guru


The terminology I used is a reference to the broader conversation about Port’s mainstays from the past 10 years who have been in finals before. Westhoff was in the 2007 GF! The older playing group have been through a lot and the knock on them has been that they were running out of time. Before the 2020 season, people were saying that Ken Hinkley would be sacked if Port didn’t make finals. The same people said Port’s stars were too old. They said the same about Geelong, but don’t seem to be as concerned about Richmond. Now they’re worried West Coast are too old. See what I’m getting at? St Kilda has the oldest list because they recruited older players, as did the second oldest list in Geelong. This wasn’t an ageist article. It is meant to show that age isn’t everything and if you read all my articles you’ll see that it is a winning strategy if the 33yos are A Graders.

2021-01-03T07:16:17+00:00

pablocruz

Roar Rookie


'But they really weren't'. Errrr . . . absolutely they were. Criticise Tiger supporters for lacking humility in victory all you want but your lack of graciousness in defeat is quite sad.

2021-01-02T13:06:07+00:00

RT

Roar Rookie


Richmond dominated the last quarter in the Prelim and Port lacked poise. Wet weather could only have cost Richmond a bigger victory. As for the GF I don't remember much rain, but seriously it was a 46 point turnaround after half time (or make it 52 from late in the second). Turn it up.

AUTHOR

2021-01-02T12:40:49+00:00

Thom Roker

Roar Guru


My articles are just covering the trade and draft aspects because I'm nowhere near as knowledgable about entire lists to be able to judge them, so I'll defer to your in-depth observations about your own club. But I will observe that I think retirements will dictate Port's strategy over the next few seasons, although that isn't a negative observation because the talent that will replace the veterans is mostly already on the list. A 22 game season gives good sides the opportunity to blood new talent and field the best 22 in the finals. Port have several players drafted last season that haven't debuted yet and now 10 overall yet to play AFL. If AFL lists go back up to 47 at the end of the year, Port will beef up on win now recruits, but in the meantime the debutants will be lining up and there could be a few Rising Star noms headed your way while this could be a double premiership season with so much AFL quality in the SANFL side.

2021-01-02T11:44:32+00:00

Slane

Guest


When did 'Port have them'? Port were rubbish after the first 5 minutes of the second quarter. Didn't fire a shot.

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