Chris Masten Sandgropers new kings of juniors
Emma Quayle | July 12, 2007
IN PAST years, two types of teams have turned up to the AFL's under-18 championships. There have been teams filled with talented, draftable players who haven't been able to win games.
Then there have been squads filled with less gifted types, who the recruiters have been less keen to see, but who have come together much better and won.
This year, Western Australia did a little bit of both. In 2006, it lost all three matches at the national carnival, having entered with the most highly rated team. Still, it had 16 players make AFL lists come draft time.
This year, its squad was considered less talented than the Vic Metro line-up, but had eight players make the All-Australian squad and won all three games by large margins. A 77-point win over South Australia at Casey Fields yesterday clinched the title.
Cale Morton won the Larke Medal as the best division one player, one vote ahead of teammate Rhys Palmer. After dominating the first two games, Palmer has made sure clubs will keep an eye on him for the rest of the year.
Morton, Chris Masten and David Myers will be snapped up reasonably early in the draft, with fellow All-Australians Patrick McGinnity and Alex Rance enhancing their own chances and Daniel Rich and Nick Naitanui becoming two to watch for next year. Morton is the younger brother of West Coast player Mitch and Hawthorn's Jarryd, an agile 192-centimetre player who can fill almost any spot on the ground.
Vic Metro was afflicted with the problem WA once had, if not to the same extent. After being thumped by WA in their first match, the Victorians responded with two wins, their eight-goal victory over Vic Country leaving them in second place overall.
They had four members of their highly rated squad make the All-Australian team — Matthew Kreuzer, Addam Maric, captain Jack Grimes and Michael Hurley, who held down full-back throughout the carnival, but is not old enough to be drafted this season.
The West Australians' win was their first since the likes of Paul Hasleby, Darren Glass, Adam Hunter, Joel Corey, Chance Bateman and Leon Davis played in their 1999 title.
They won in 1985, with a team featuring John Worsfold, Peter Sumich, Guy McKenna, Scott Watters, Paul Peos, Chris Lewis and Chris Waterman, and AFL talent manager Kevin Sheehan expects a similar number of AFL players to emerge from the current group.
"We always emphasise that this championship is about two things — trying to win the title but about ensuring everyone who has a chance to get drafted or make the AFL is given every opportunity," he said.
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