Getting good KPP and rucks are much harder than getting a midfielder.samoht wrote: ↑Wed 17 Nov 2021 10:06am I agree with drafting for talent ...
I'm not talking about scraping the bottom of the barrel.
Obviously they will need to be talented.
And if we're talking about a ranking difference of 2-3 places, you go with whoever you need.
I mean Patrick Dangerfield was a pick 10, for instance.
Did we end up with a better player when we went for McEvoy?
This is not an exact science.
You have to use your nous - and at this stage, if a talented kid that meets our needs is available, I reckon we'd be mad not to pick him.
We seem to follow the mock drafts ... here's a 2007 mock draft where Dangerfield was ranked #14. He's the type of player I'm talking about - a dashing midfielder!!
https://www.bigfooty.com/forum/threads/ ... ft.397701/
There are very few exceptions to the rule that your key talls are what you build your team around.
Melbourne just built theirs from the backline. They went out and traded for May and Lever. They recruited Gawn, McDonald, Fritsch, Petracca, and Oliver. That constitutes your spine. Thats what you build the team around.
Richmond did it with a solid set of key defenders and one key forward initially, then added another. They had a solid spine. That allowed Martin to be the match winner. But Dusty wasn't always that. It took him years to become that player.
I can see why we were enamoured with McCartin at the time. Riewoldt was in the twilight and we needed a replacement key forward in the years to come.
I think that you always take the best available player regardless of your immediate need. You can tweak the list in the following years to trade for immediate needs - especially with free agency.