Gold Coast is clear for draft gold
Damian Barrett | July 11, 2009
AFL commissioners are too professional to publicly gloat. But, rest assured, there has been a lot of in-house high-fiving and heel clicking in the months since they officially granted list-management concessions for the Gold Coast team.
Exactly how the commission managed to convince the 16 existing clubs to provide such a gift to the new team, which will join the national competition in 2011, remains baffling.
Especially when the clubs did so knowing they would also have to give the Western Sydney outfit, which will join the AFL in 2012, similar player-drafting favours.
For those who have forgotten or not yet absorbed the concessions given to Gold Coast, prepare to be shocked in coming months - and again late next year - when the talent pool will be raided.
At this year's national draft, Gold Coast recruiter Scott Clayton has been empowered to select the 12 17-year-olds he deems to be the best in the country.
In the 2010 draft, Clayton, if he can bring himself to stop salivating, will load right up with players chosen at picks 1, 2, 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13 and 15.
Those teenagers will join big-name players from other clubs snared by the Gold Coast under another AFL Commission-enforced concession.
Gold Coast has rights to 16 - a maximum of one from each club - uncontracted players next year.
But wait, there is more. The new club will be given the first five picks in this year's rookie draft.
And that is on top of already having had unfettered access to up to 15 Queensland-based teenagers for three years from 2010.
For its first four seasons, Gold Coast will be allowed to operate with an expanded list as well as pay its players more than all other clubs, including $1 million extra in 2011.
It is astonishing what Gold Coast has been granted.
Sure, it was important the new franchise be given significant support from the outset, but the raft of allowances will destroy an already compromised drafting system and, by extension, place even further pressure on struggling existing clubs.
Seven senior football club officials were appointed by the AFL to act on a sub-committee in discussions relating to concessions given to the Gold Coast.
Ian Robson, Cameron Schwab and Steven Trigg (chief executives of Hawthorn, Melbourne and Adelaide), Andrew Ireland and Graeme Allan (football department heads at Sydney and Brisbane) and Stephen Wells and Derek Hine (chief recruiters at Geelong and Collingwood) joined AFL officials on the committee.
The same men will also be the representative club group for the same discussions that will be had about Western Sydney.
Unless the existing 16 clubs show some clout, which they refused to display when it came to the Gold Coast deliberations, Western Sydney will also benefit from a lucrative set of drafting favours.
The AFL does not want its new teams languishing for years down the bottom of the ladder.
While that is sound ideology, it is just as easy to mount an argument that having those teams artificially pitch-forked in to the finals would be just as damaging for the competition.
Try convincing a supporter of the Western Bulldogs, whose only flag came 55 years ago, that it will be good for football to have the Gold Coast present itself as a premiership force within years of being born.
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/sport/afl/story/0,26576,25762053-19742,00.html