The real draft rookies
18 September 2006 Herald-Sun
Damian Barrett
THERE is no need for a summit to explore what's gone wrong with Victorian footy.
It would be a waste of money because we already have the answer.
Many Victorian clubs, compared with those interstate, do not adequately respect the national, pre-season and rookie drafts.
Yes, there are relevant arguments about home-ground advantages and facilities providing benefits for those outside this state, but they can easily be overcome provided the drafts are used properly.
Adelaide, West Coast and Fremantle have been using recent drafts to produce playing lists that have allowed them to reach preliminary finals this year.
Those at the other end of the ladder -- Essendon, the Kangaroos and Carlton -- have headed down a contrasting path.
The competition's best ruckman, Dean Cox, and perhaps its second best, Aaron Sandilands, were rookie-listed by West Coast and Fremantle before becoming stars.
As were Ben Rutten and Nathan Bock at Adelaide and Chad Fletcher (West Coast).
No one was stopping the 10 Melbourne clubs from recruiting these guys. Victorian clubs have not been really prepared to work the SANFL and WAFL systems.
Too often, they are prepared to go with a kid who has played only against kids, and not a 19, 20 or 21-year-old who has put together a couple of good seasons among men.
Need evidence? Try this. Adelaide has used the rookie list -- the list that some Melbourne clubs don't bother with -- for Ben Rutten, Nathan Bock and Martin Mattner.
It used pick No. 67 in the 2000 national draft to recruit Graham Johncock and No. 58 in the 2003 national draft for Ben Hudson.
From the pre-season draft -- the draft that most Melbourne clubs use merely as an after-thought and actually often bypass -- the Crows have secured Tyson Edwards, Simon Goodwin and Trent Hentschel.
This is expert talent spotting and clever use of a system which, aside from the father-son clause in the national draft, provides equality.
It is not part of a woe-is-us argument from Victorian clubs.
Fremantle used pick No. 55 to recruit Ryan Crowley from Calder Cannons in the 2002 national draft. At the end of last year, after a stint as a rookie, he was elevated back to the senior list and is about to enter a preliminary final as a crucial member of the Dockers.
Seven Victorian clubs, including the Bulldogs and Demons (twice each), passed on Ryan Murphy in the 2003 national draft before the Dockers snared him at No. 12.
In the same pool, Fremantle secured David Mundy with pick No. 19.
No one wanted the now-budding star Michael Johnson. He went with pick eight in the 2004 pre-season draft.
Need more? Sandilands went at pick No. 33 in the 2002 rookie draft. That's the rookie draft, which West Coast had used two years earlier to recruit Cox (at No. 28).
The two favourites for next Monday's Brownlow Medal count are Victorian -- Chris Judd and Adam Goodes.
Two Victorian clubs overlooked Judd in 2001, and all 10 ignored Goodes in 1997 before the Swans used pick No. 43.
In recent years, Essendon went for Scott Camporeale and Chris Heffernan, and Richard Cole and Ty Zantuck, and Justin Murphy and Matthew Allan, and Mark Alvey.
Even when it did choose kids, did it get it right? Mostly no.
Then there's the Kangaroos. They gave up a first-round pick for Jonathan Hay last year and used six of nine selections in last year's national and pre-season drafts to recruit players from other clubs.
Including Jade Rawlings, who was virtually a VFL-only player, including Mark Powell who didn't last beyond December, including Hay who may never play again.
Carlton? Where do you start? Callum Chambers? Troy Longmuir? David Clarke? Daniel Harford? Digby Morrell? Ricky Mott? Glen Bowyer? Clearly, the hysteria about what's wrong with Victorian football is misplaced.
Poor use of the player drafts is a problem far greater than hostile crowds at home grounds and state-of-the-art facilities.
http://www.heraldsun.news.com.au/footy/common/story_page/0,8033,20429579%255E19742,00.html