Priority picks: the lowdown
6:40:49 PM Thu 17 November, 2005
Matt Burgan
Exclusive to afl.com.au
Although a special assistance rule was first adopted in 1993, it wasn't until 1997 that the priority selection rule - as we know it today - was initiated.
Clubs were given priority selections before the first round of the NAB AFL Draft, if they had claimed 20 points or less in any one season. This will remain the case until the end of the 2005 NAB AFL Draft. But from 2006, a new special assistance rule will be introduced.
These are two examples:
- If a club claims 16 points or less after one season, a selection will be awarded before the second round of the NAB AFL Draft. That club will then receive selections No.1, No.17 and No.18, plus the first pick in the NAB AFL Pre-Season Draft.
- If a club claims 16 points or less after two or more years, a selection will be awarded before the first round of the NAB AFL Draft. That club will then receive selections No.1, No.2 and No.18, plus the first pick in the NAB AFL Pre-Season Draft.
Originally, the special assistance rule/priority selection was designed to assist the 'perennial poor performer'.
But over time, it was strongly debated in the football community that one poor season did not necessarily equate to a club being a 'perennial poor performer'.
It was also felt that clubs that had poor seasons, because of a number of injuries to key personnel, had the ability to bounce back the following year. The question then posed was: "Is this team a cellar-dweller?"
The perception - although totally unproven - was that clubs could 'tank' matches or 'lay-down' in order to gain priority selections. This was seen as unhealthy for the overall game as the perception was that losers could be winners.
The re-jigging of priority selections can still provide some benefit for some clubs, but virtually eliminates the 'lay-down' factor in home-and-away matches late in the season.
It is rare these days that players taken as priority selections don't fulfill their potential, such is the amount of data available to clubs about players selected in this bracket in the NAB AFL Draft.
Carlton, Collingwood and Hawthorn will all have priority selections in the 2005 NAB AFL Draft, which will be held on Saturday November 26, before the new rule is brought into place for next year's meeting.
The following list proves how beneficial priority selections have been since 1997, as these players were all acquired via this rule.
1997 - Melbourne (Travis Johnstone)
1998 - No team qualified for a priority selection
1999 - Josh Fraser (Collingwood), Paul Hasleby (Fremantle)
2000 - Nick Riewoldt (St Kilda)
2001 - *Fremantle traded its priority selection to Hawthorn. It received Trent Croad and in exchange Hawthorn drafted Luke Hodge. Luke Ball (St Kilda), Chris Judd (West Coast)
2002 - *Carlton was stripped of its priority selection due to salary cap breaches
2003 - Western Bulldogs (Adam Cooney), Carlton (Andrew Walker), Melbourne (Colin Sylvia)
2004 - Richmond (Brett Deledio), Hawthorn (Jarryd Roughead), Western Bulldogs (Ryan Griffen)
2005 - Carlton? Collingwood? Hawthorn?
http://afl.com.au/default.asp?pg=news&spg=display&articleid=237544