The difference is that you think it is a fair deal, others don't. For some reason you seem to think that opinion overrides all others.
The argument that Grigg has delivered more than Collins or that he has significantly more upside is pure opinion, not fact.
In their career, they both average about 17 possessions, 4 marks and Collins has an extra tackle per game.
As for the weight thing, I thought we were looking for elite kicks and outside mids - does Grigg or Bacher truly fit that profile?
Grigg has player 18 more games but is a year older and has a year more development under his belt.
Whose to say Collins won't put on 4 or 5 kilos next year, play 22 games and develop the engine required to play midfield.
On the flip side, Grigg might play 22 games, have an injury free run and improve his decision making to off set his average kicking.
There are all marginal arguments for or against this trade.
As for the negotiating a "fair deal" thing, honestly some people think they are part of the United Nations!!!!
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I dont think my opinion that it is a fair deal over rides all others. So far no one has really put forward why it is not a fair deal so happy for that to be out there.
From your post it seems you think it a fair deal too?
Most of the angst here seems to be that we didnt bend Carlton over. Big deal. The club got what they wanted for something they were prepared to let go. that's all that matters.
The idea of trading is to get what you want, not to screw over another club because your supporters hate them.
It's not about being like the united nations, it how things work in the real world.
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The deal is average - nothing great nothing horrendous.
I would rather see the club develop the players they have instead of trying to re-develop other clubs.
Our strike rate on other clubs players is poor.
I'm not sure what experience you base "real world" for describing fairness in negotiating, "win win" always seemed a bit idealistic to me, I'd be interested to hear more.