Author Topic: Reece McKenzie [merged]  (Read 27725 times)

Offline Willy

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Re: Pick 77. Reece McKenzie
« Reply #45 on: November 27, 2014, 10:57:07 PM »
From BF

The athleticism that McKenzie has for a bloke his size (bulk) is phenomenal. Also, I have no idea how the myth started about him being no good at ground level... it is complete rubbish, I'd actually say he is more than capable to be honest.

 I've seen him play first hand about 7-8x this season because I live a stones throw away from Cramer Street Oval and the only knock I'd have on him is endurance at this point. I don't think he has an AFL tank just yet, but that will come with more training in an elite environment.

 As a Melbourne supporter, I honestly wouldn't be disappointed if we picked him ahead of a McCartin or Wright at Pick #3, but it won't happen. The kid is going to be a 200-gamer

Offline YellowandBlackBlood

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Re: Pick 77. Reece McKenzie
« Reply #46 on: November 27, 2014, 10:58:27 PM »
http://www.bigfooty.com/forum/threads/peter-wright-vs-reece-mckenzie.1081600/:shh
Even respected BF phantom draft poster Knightmare mentioned he thought McKenzie had the attributes to make him the best of this draft in the future! :clapping :clapping :clapping :clapping
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tony_montana

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Re: Pick 77. Reece McKenzie
« Reply #47 on: November 27, 2014, 11:01:56 PM »
excellent.. given that he was a bees dick away from playing college BB, fair to say you'd expect him to be reasonably athletic!

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Re: Pick 77. Reece McKenzie
« Reply #48 on: November 27, 2014, 11:03:06 PM »
Like this one.
Caracella and Balmey.

Offline Judge Roughneck

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Re: Pick 77. Reece McKenzie
« Reply #49 on: November 27, 2014, 11:09:22 PM »
Quote
2014 draft power rankings:

-- Best few on list quality --

1. Christian Petracca (VIC – Mid/Fwd)

2. Angus Brayshaw (VIC – Mid)

3. Isaac Heeney (Syd – Academy - NSW – Mid)

4. Darcy Moore (Coll - F/S – VIC – KPF/KPD)

5. Patrick McCartin (VIC - KPF)

6. Reece McKenzie (VIC – KPF)

7. Connor Blakely (WA – Mid)

8. Peter Wright (VIC - KPF/Ruck)

9. Jarrod Pickett (WA – Mid/Fwd)

10. Jake Lever (VIC – KPD)

11. Jayden Laverde (VIC – Util)

12. Kyle Langford (VIC – Util)




Go to guy talent – McKenzie with his size, presence and contested marking ability is a genuine go to guy in the front half. He has the performances on the board and proven production whereby from July onward in this role he absolutely dominated and looked like the dominant key forward in the TAC Cup. McKenzie can draw double and triple teams and is a handful for any key defender to contain, particularly deep in the forward 50 with his contested marking ability, ability in the air and ability on the lead.
Contested marking/marking ability – McKenzie has vice-like hands overhead and consistently takes the big contested grabs at the absolute highest point making him near on undefendable as someone who even with heavy contact will still take his marks overhead. His contested marking numbers are elite at TAC Cup level. He has a rare presence in the front half when he goes for his marks. He takes advantage of smaller opponents 1v1 with superior body work and can bully anyone physically at TAC Cup level in the contest just with the use of his body. He takes the big pack grabs and reads the flight better than opposition defenders. He crashes packs and will if anyone is in his way knock them over with force. He is an unstoppable mark in the air and is near impossible to stop when he launches at the ball due to his size, strength, power and an impressive vertical leap (72cm which was top 10 at the draft combine) which is staggering for such a big guy. He is also a significant threat on the lead as someone with rare acceleration on the lead and excellent ability to create separation (and we saw it at the draft combine with his 2.87 seconds over 20m which was equal second best) which also is ridiculous for someone his size. He also has nice variety on his leads and leads to good spots making him unpredictable on the lead.
Total athletic package – At 106kg McKenzie has excellent size and strength for his age and he has clearly put the time and effort in, in the gym. 1v1 McKenzie has rare strength in the contest and is a near immovable object with the strength through his legs and core strength. He has an excellent 72cm vertical leap making him impossible to stop in the air with his ability to consistently take it strongly at the highest point, regardless of contact. Then he also has a 2.87 second 20m sprint time which if not for an American project player would have been equal best at the draft combine and he uses that speed to breakaway on the lead as someone no key defender can stay with once he is up and moving, consistently creating separation on the lead regardless of who is defending him.
Scoreboard impact – McKenzie is one of leading goalkickers in the TAC Cup and has shown he can take over games and have a heavy impact on the scoreboard with 10, 7 and 6 goal games in the TAC Cup this season as well as a 16 goal game for Marcellin College.
Strong improvement as year has progressed suggesting significant upside – McKenzie from July onward made the shift from playing a mix of forward and ruck minutes to a full time key forward and since then he has significantly lifted his scoreboard impact and contested mark totals. His numbers over the second half of the season have been a significant improvement on what he was showing over the first half of the season and while the role change to permanent forward has definitely helped him in achieving this it is difficult to ignore the sharp improvement in his scoreboard impact and contested marking totals. Given this sharp improvement in production I evaluate McKenzie’s upside to be exceptionally high with his numbers evidence of the speed with which he is improving and I anticipate that sharp improvement to continue into the future. Additionally having spent last year playing basketball instead of football I cannot help but think the fact that he is putting up these numbers having not played TAC Cup last year suggests strong upside and substantial scope to improve further as he plays more inside an AFL system.
Weaknesses:
Ability to hit the scoreboard from general play – McKenzie is very much a mark and goal forward who will get a large volume of set shot attempts at goal but few if any shots at goal from general play. If you have a guy who can match McKenzie for size and strength at the next level it is likely that he will get shut out of games as his game is very much just going out there and marking everything. At ground level McKenzie is dexterous and can pick up the footy relatively cleanly off the deck but he is not a goal scoring threat when he wins it at ground level as he lacks the ability to turn opposition players around and run into an open goal or create adequate time and space for himself at ground level to get it onto his boot.
Does not have the same impact against better opponents – McKenzie has capitalised against weaker opponents in a big way but his impact has been less against the better teams with better key defenders such as Oakleigh Chargers as his only game where he did not kick multiple goals from July onward.
Slow change of direction/limited agility – As such a big guy while explosive on the lead he is not someone who changes direction quickly. He is not someone who will turn on a dime and changes direction, and as a result he is not someone who is a threat running back into an open goal. He also is not someone who makes, agile steps to create the time and space for himself after winning a ground ball as someone who in general play takes time to get the ball onto his boot for a shot at goal. As a result after winning a ground ball he will just be handballing it off to a team mate which is fine, but he is just not going to kick a whole lot of goals from general play throughout his career. He is also more a one lead only guy rather than someone capable of providing multiple leads given the sheer momentum he has with the speed and power behind his leads.
Set shot goalkicking – McKenzie’s kicked a very good 35 goals, 22 behinds, which is fine but his set shot conversation while it improved as the season progressed is an area that would benefit from further improvement.
What I expect will improve:
McKenzie I feel will continue in the most part make his strengths more dominant and take his dominant contested marking, marking in the air, marking on the lead and scoreboard impact to the next level where it eventually translates at AFL level.
Who he can become?
McKenzie has the scope to develop into a similar quality forward to Tom Hawkins as that similar style of dominant, deep full forward, but with greater athleticism and much stronger overhead marking ability as someone less reliant on his physical size to dominate.
When will he be ready to play?
McKenzie I anticipate will take three years before he establishes himself as a regular for a team and until season four before McKenzie really realises his potential and becomes a genuine go to guy. As a big marking forward he is not going to be able to take advantage of guys physically at AFL level right away so there will be an adjustment period getting accustomed to the bigger bodied but at his size and with his dominant marking ability, strength, ability in the air and ability on the lead his game can translate to AFL level.
How to best utilise him?
McKenzie is best used at full forward as the go to target in the front half. Play him anywhere else, and that includes even in a relief ruck role and it is a waste of his talent.
Interpretation of his numbers:
McKenzie has put forward some dominant performances forward through the TAC Cup and for his school. His numbers are clearly best when utilised as a full time key forward as evidenced by his much improved mark, contested mark and goal scoring totals over the second half of the season. His numbers are trending sharply upward as the season has progressed which suggests he will continue this trend over coming seasons. His scoreboard impact and marking over the second half of the season have been outstanding and after Patrick McCartin has been arguably the next most dominant key forward with his contested marking numbers the strongest in this draft class.

5. Reece McKenzie (VIC – KPF/Ruck)
Height: 196cm, Weight: 106kg, DOB: 28/03/1996
Recruited from: Northern Knights
Draft range: 20-50
Best position/role: Full forward.

http://www.bigfooty.com/forum/threads/knightmare-2014-phantom-draft.1081319/

 


 :shh

Offline Mr Magic

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Re: Pick 77. Reece McKenzie
« Reply #50 on: November 27, 2014, 11:15:37 PM »
Plugger reborn. Might actually be a good thing with some of the new rules in the marking contest.

Offline Dice

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Re: Pick 77. Reece McKenzie
« Reply #51 on: November 27, 2014, 11:39:59 PM »
On SEN today they had a draft ' expert' on and they asked him who St.Kilda would take with pick 1. He said they were really keen on McKenzie so they may take Petracca with pick 1 and Mckenzie with their pick in the early 20s. Said if they pick McCartin they most likely won't pick Mckenzie with their next pick.
He gave McKenzie a huge wrap too....for whatever that's worth. We might've got a bargain ?
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Offline Judge Roughneck

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Re: Pick 77. Reece McKenzie
« Reply #52 on: November 27, 2014, 11:42:14 PM »
Bout time

Offline Andyy

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Re: Pick 77. Reece McKenzie
« Reply #53 on: November 27, 2014, 11:43:44 PM »
Seems to be a lot of hype. Really gotta wonder why he went so late.

Next Hawkins? Please God.

Offline Andyy

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Offline Andyy

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Re: Pick 77. Reece McKenzie
« Reply #55 on: November 28, 2014, 12:04:05 AM »
Possibly a bit one dimensional but looks like an excellent lead+mark+goal power forward.

Some nice grabs double-teamed also.

Check out la vid.

http://m.afl.com.au/video/2014-09-15/draft-prospect-reece-mckenzie

dwaino

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Re: Pick 77. Reece McKenzie
« Reply #56 on: November 28, 2014, 12:09:50 AM »
When Reece McKenzie does push ups he doesn't push himself up, he pushes the world down.

dwaino

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Re: Pick 77. Reece McKenzie
« Reply #57 on: November 28, 2014, 12:12:07 AM »
Good to see we added to our McQuota.

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Pick 77. Reece McKenzie
« Reply #58 on: November 28, 2014, 02:33:14 AM »
Reece McKenzie celebrates on of his 10 goals against Eastern Ranges 9/7/2014.




Northern Knights power forward Reece McKenzie dreaming of AFL career after chasing college basketball dream
Herald-Sun
November 16, 2014


IT  WAS December 22, 2013, and Reece McKenzie was nervously pacing around his family home in Warrandyte.

It was not because ­Christmas was just around the corner but instead because the then 17-year-old’s future was potentially about to take a major turn.

Having turned his back on football 12 months earlier to pursue a dream of playing US college basketball, ­McKenzie and his father Warren had arranged a meeting with Northern Knights talent manager Peter Kennedy and coach Andrew Shakepeare.

It was there that ­McKenzie would signal his desire to rejoin the TAC Cup club for his final year of underage football in a bid to make it big in the AFL.

“I was really nervous going into it, but Peter ­pretty much welcomed me back with open arms,” ­McKenzie said.

“Last year I just saw an ­opportunity to pursue a ­basketball career. It’s always been a dream of mine to play college basketball in America and with my build it’s not the hardest thing to do in the world, so it was quite a realistic goal.

“But I guess the politics of basketball really wear you down after a while. It gets you, and I guess I sort of saw football as the saviour.”

McKenzie had juggled both sports before last year and was considered a top ­talent in both.

He made his first state ­basketball team at under-12 level and went on to play in Vic Metro’s under-16 team alongside this year’s likely No. 1 draft pick, ­Christian Petracca.

At the same time he was a member of the Knights’ under-16 Max Richardson squad and made the initial Vic Metro under-16 side in 2012. But when things began to get more serious last year, McKenzie solely pursued basketball before opting to go back to football.

“It’s been a good outcome so far,” Kennedy said of the switch.

A power forward likened to Tom Hawkins, McKenzie has been described by his coach Shakepeare this year as a “man mountain”.

Standing 196cm tall and weighing 106kg, it is easy to see why.

But despite his size — and the fact he did not start pre-season training until January — this man mountain is remarkably mobile, which is part of the reason he has been drawing the attention of AFL clubs in the lead up to the national draft.

At the AFL Draft Combine last month, McKenzie was one of the genuine standouts in testing. Of 101 players tested, he finished equal first in the clean hands test with a score of 26 out of 30 while ranking equal ­second in the 20m sprint (2.87sec) and equal-fifth in the standing vertical jump (72cm).

The clean hands test ­result was one that did not surprise Kennedy, who has described McKenzie as the best contested mark he has seen in the TAC Cup in a decade. But a 13.2 result in the critical beep test was a surprise, even for ­McKenzie himself.
McKenzie flies for a mark against Eastern Ranges during the 2014 TAC Cup season. Picture:

McKenzie flies for a mark against Eastern Ranges during the 2014 TAC Cup season. Picture: Richard Serong. Source: News Corp Australia

“A lot of clubs have question marks over a certain ­aspect of your game,” ­McKenzie said.

“For me it’s my endurance.

“So going into the beep and the 3km I was extremely nervous but I thought, ‘You’re never going to get another chance to do the draft combine so just give it your all’.”

McKenzie had taken a similar mindset into the Northern Knights’ clash with Calder Cannons in Round 2 this year.

That day he had spotted Vic Metro’s high performance manager, Anton Grbac, in the Knights’ rooms before the game and knew it was his time to shine.

McKenzie went out and gave his all, kicking 3.2, grabbing four contested marks and showing his ability to assist in the ruck department with nine hit-outs.

It was a game that got Grbac’s attention and saw McKenzie included in Vic Metro’s under-18 side for the national championships.

As a goal-setter, making the Vic Metro squad had been at the top of ­McKenzie’s list.

A niggling foot injury ­restricted him to only one game in the championships, but just being involved was enough to put him firmly on the radar of AFL recruiters.

McKenzie sent another message to recruiters when he booted 10.2 against Eastern Ranges in Round 13 among 18 disposals, 13 marks including six contested and three goal assists.

It was a performance that saw him accumulate 256 Supercoach points — a total that has not even been achieved by the AFL’s Supercoach star, Gary Ablett.

Kennedy went along to watch McKenzie’s final game of the school football season for Marcellin ­College. At three-quarter time, he left. McKenzie had eight goals to his name and Marcellin led by plenty.

Kennedy missed out.

McKenzie went on to double his goal tally in the final term to finish with a school record 16.4 for the game.

Now with the football ­season over and Year 12 studies done and dusted, a new journey looks set to begin for McKenzie.

Like his father Warren, who played in Carlton’s 1987 premiership team, McKenzie might just receive an early Christmas present on November 27 — being selected by an AFL club.

“Before I know it, it will be the 27th of November and I think I’ll be very excited to see if I get picked up or where I go,” McKenzie said.

“It’s exciting times.”

http://www.news.com.au/national/northern-knights-power-forward-reece-mckenzie-dreaming-of-afl-career-after-chasing-college-basketball-dream/story-e6frfkp9-1227124732882


Offline YellowandBlackBlood

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Re: Pick 77. Reece McKenzie
« Reply #59 on: November 28, 2014, 07:03:03 AM »
Forget McBean, this is McBeast! :clapping :clapping :clapping
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