By Jake Niall
realfooty.theage.com.au
May 12, 2004
In keeping with the league's tendency to be influenced by the crisis or outcry of the day, what will be its reaction if Collingwood, grand finalist for the past two seasons, finishes at or near the bottom and qualifies for a priority draft choice?
The obvious injustice of priority picks is the advantage they confer on the bottom teams, compared with the rest, particularly those unlucky clubs mired in no-man's land, stuck between ninth and 13th without a top-five pick, while denied access to an uncontracted player via the pre-season draft.
For a competition that professes to follow a socialist model, the priority-pick rule is strangely unequal, given that it actually rewards one or two teams - those that don't exceed five wins in a given season - over and above the rest.
Of far greater concern, though, is the effect this rule has on the integrity of the competition.
Melbourne has already shown that its priority pick gained last season wasn't warranted. The rule, remember, was originally established to assist continued poor performance, not a one-off blip.
And watching St Kilda soar from bottom to top and establish the foundations for a Brisbane-esque dynasty, rival clubs are more aware than ever that the bottom is the place to be and that the middle and lower middle - where Geelong has lived for years - are the worst addresses on the AFL ladder.
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