TalkingFootyNow1223
Stay Calm... Its Just A Game... SweetFA..
Surely the thread nazi has to be looking at these last posts frothing at the mouth like a rabies infested stray dog screaming over and over THESE LAST POSTS BELONG IN THE DRAFT THREAD
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Trade WinesHmmmmm
If only.....
Apparently there was 30,000+ at the AO day/night Test Match today
Less recovery time - more injuries and burnout.Yep, of everything that bothers me about footy, I can honestly say the length of the half-time break is pretty much bottom of the list. I guess though that the broadcasters want it so they don't have to create so much filler and can schedule more easily.
OR... Just leave it how it is.Less recovery time - more injuries and burnout.
keep the breaks as is, just make the quarters 20 minutes (down from 21minutes) plus time on and that saves 4 minutes. Dont call time on for certain things, save another 5 minutes.
Hey, presto. Game finishes nearly 10 minutes
Yeah I can't help thinking that with record attendances and TV audiences, this isn't something that really needs attention. But I guess like managers everywhere, Gil needs something easy he can "fix" so the hoi polloi think that there is actually something going on at AFL House.OR... Just leave it how it is.
How about letting the umpires bounce the ball rather than waiting for the flashing light or 2 ruckmen to nominate.Less recovery time - more injuries and burnout.
keep the breaks as is, just make the quarters 20 minutes (down from 21minutes) plus time on and that saves 4 minutes. Dont call time on for certain things, save another 5 minutes.
Hey, presto. Game finishes nearly 10 minutes
Or now that we have 4 boundary umpires they get to the ball that has gone out of bounds and wait up to 15 seconds to throw the ball in and the ruckmen to get to the contest and nominate who is rucking. Just throw the ball in and if no players are there then the lose ball stats go up. Eliminate that waste first.How about letting the umpires bounce the ball rather than waiting for the flashing light or 2 ruckmen to nominate.
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They should of let him play out to beat the 400When watching Dave Warner celebrate his 300, I did detect him produce a faultlessly executed bow to the Adelaide Oval fans. Why arenāt the cricket media types, like the AFLās Robert Walls, lambasting Warner for showing no respect towards the Pakistanis? Poor old Tredders coped a hiding for his bow by the Victorian media in 2007. How dare he disrespect North Melbourne.
Davey Warner averaged single figures in England against quality bowling in testing conditions. Him now holding the second best test score for Australia is a blight on the game.When watching Dave Warner celebrate his 300, I did detect him produce a faultlessly executed bow to the Adelaide Oval fans. Why arenāt the cricket media types, like the AFLās Robert Walls, lambasting Warner for showing no respect towards the Pakistanis? Poor old Tredders coped a hiding for his bow by the Victorian media in 2007. How dare he disrespect North Melbourne.
When watching Dave Warner celebrate his 300, I did detect him produce a faultlessly executed bow to the Adelaide Oval fans. Why arenāt the cricket media types, like the AFLās Robert Walls, lambasting Warner for showing no respect towards the Pakistanis? Poor old Tredders coped a hiding for his bow by the Victorian media in 2007. How dare he disrespect North Melbourne.
When watching Dave Warner celebrate his 300, I did detect him produce a faultlessly executed bow to the Adelaide Oval fans. Why arenāt the cricket media types, like the AFLās Robert Walls, lambasting Warner for showing no respect towards the Pakistanis? Poor old Tredders coped a hiding for his bow by the Victorian media in 2007. How dare he disrespect North Melbourne.
70 x 5 minutes per pick, plus extra time for trades and matching bids, plus ad breaks plus BS interviews, plus talking to mum crying and you are up to a 420 minute extravaganza.No one has yet come up with a logical reason why the National Draft had to be conducted over two nights. Maybe it sounds a trifle rhetorical but I cannot help but feel that like the Brownlow Count the National Draft has become a media driven extravaganza with just a hint of reality TV thrown in to boost the ratings of the AFL's 'broadcast partners'. Why confine your ratings to one night when you can extract two nights of ratings from the mugs that follow the game? The fact that Gillion McLachlan's speech was too long and it took 45 minutes to get the first pick out of the bag showed just how much the AFL had to pad the proceedings out to make that first night go the distance. Reports are that social media went ballistic at the slowness of the proceedings with fans irate at the amount of time it took for clubs to make selections that they were always tipped to make. Then there is the human element, the Draft must be a really stressful time for a couple of hundred young men so why should many of them be put through 48hrs of purgatory just to provide the media with some sport related reality TV?
No one has yet justified the inclusion of Draft picks during the Draft. The clubs have a ten day Trade Week and clubs had from Oct 10 til November 22 to trade Draft picks. You have to wonder why they need such a long trade period if the clubs are going to wait until Draft Night before they move? Trading on the night just made the whole process more complicated and overlong. Perhaps it would not have been so bad if the AFL Draft Tracker had been able to track the pick swaps and and show an up to date Draft selection order of the entire Draft not just picks 1-22. If it had not been for a couple of sharp posters on this site I would not have know what the situation was re our pick swaps. Port did OK out of trading picks during the Draft this year but that is not a reason to keep a complicated system going. At the time of the Draft I posed the question why Carlton made consecutive bids on players they know were going to be matched? A sharp poster on this site may have had the answer in that Carton were creating the time to negotiate a pick swap with another club. We now know at least one of the clubs they were talking to. Doubtless there are advantages to pick swaps on Draft Night but that does not mean they have to be there or that they add anything to the night(s).
I am possibly a voice in the wilderness here but I used to enjoy Draft Day when it was a relatively straight forward AFL exercise covered by the media. Now that it has become a media driven exercise with an AFL flavour the enjoyment is not there and I watch and listen out of curiosity and nothing else.
Yeah. Itās split over two nights because it would take that long anyway lol.70 x 5 minutes per pick, plus extra time for trades and matching bids, plus ad breaks plus BS interviews, plus talking to mum crying and you are up to a 420 minute extravaganza.
No one has yet come up with a logical reason why the National Draft had to be conducted over two nights. Maybe it sounds a trifle rhetorical but I cannot help but feel that like the Brownlow Count the National Draft has become a media driven extravaganza with just a hint of reality TV thrown in to boost the ratings of the AFL's 'broadcast partners'. Why confine your ratings to one night when you can extract two nights of ratings from the mugs that follow the game? The fact that Gillion McLachlan's speech was too long and it took 45 minutes to get the first pick out of the bag showed just how much the AFL had to pad the proceedings out to make that first night go the distance. Reports are that social media went ballistic at the slowness of the proceedings with fans irate at the amount of time it took for clubs to make selections that they were always tipped to make. Then there is the human element, the Draft must be a really stressful time for a couple of hundred young men so why should many of them be put through 48hrs of purgatory just to provide the media with some sport related reality TV?
No one has yet justified the inclusion of Draft picks during the Draft. The clubs have a ten day Trade Week and clubs had from Oct 10 til November 22 to trade Draft picks. You have to wonder why they need such a long trade period if the clubs are going to wait until Draft Night before they move? Trading on the night just made the whole process more complicated and overlong. Perhaps it would not have been so bad if the AFL Draft Tracker had been able to track the pick swaps and and show an up to date Draft selection order of the entire Draft not just picks 1-22. If it had not been for a couple of sharp posters on this site I would not have know what the situation was re our pick swaps. Port did OK out of trading picks during the Draft this year but that is not a reason to keep a complicated system going. At the time of the Draft I posed the question why Carlton made consecutive bids on players they know were going to be matched? A sharp poster on this site may have had the answer in that Carton were creating the time to negotiate a pick swap with another club. We now know at least one of the clubs they were talking to. Doubtless there are advantages to pick swaps on Draft Night but that does not mean they have to be there or that they add anything to the night(s).
I am possibly a voice in the wilderness here but I used to enjoy Draft Day when it was a relatively straight forward AFL exercise covered by the media. Now that it has become a media driven exercise with an AFL flavour the enjoyment is not there and I watch and listen out of curiosity and nothing else.
It doesnāt need to take 5 minutes per pick. GC and Melbourne for instance could have gone:70 x 5 minutes per pick, plus extra time for trades and matching bids, plus ad breaks plus BS interviews, plus talking to mum crying and you are up to a 420 minute extravaganza.
People want to see their pick not see some kick from another club be interviewed, other people don't want to hear or see some kicked drafted by another club, but want to see and hear the announcement of who their club selected and then watch their interview.It doesnāt need to take 5 minutes per pick. GC and Melbourne for instance could have gone:
Gil: GC who do you pi..
GC: Rowell
and over before Gil can finish asking. Even if not the whole draft the first two rounds could easily fit in without the artificial 5 minute break every time.
Quite a big whinge for the sake of it.
The draft is a big thing for a lot of fans - arguably too much so, but we all like our magic beans. While I no longer have the luxury of time to follow it all the way through the year, it's a ritual as a fan to look forward to the onboarding of these next young hopefuls to represent the club and as a follower of the game always intriguing to see where players land. So I like the fact the first round is given a bit of gravitas with the jumper presentation, highlights etc. There's definitely a lot of over-analysis that accompanies it on the production but that's just the reality with anything these days. Then gives a day to digest the first round, some more speculation for how the rest of it will play out etc. all good fun as evidenced by the reams of posts and clicks on articles
Would have thought that the live trading on draft night was fairly obvious. Allows clubs to assess and take advantage of any opportunities that present themself - this has been a good addition in my opinion. Carlton's move on Stocker last year was talked about all throughout the year, daresay plenty will be said into the future about Brisbane's eagerness to get hold of Robertson or the Suns with Sharp. Yeah it's all pretty drawn out when the bids start coming in etc. (but again I found it interesting watching Brisbane's reaction to the bids on Coleman and the two the Tigers took from them).
Yeah its nostalgic thinking about when it used to be 8am Saturday morning before heading off to cricket, but people were whingeing about how long it took then and will be doing so long into the future. It's always cool to complain - yet am sure you among man others watched it all and spend hours debating it online because you care a lot about it! Everything could be considered overexposed or excessively analysed by fans.
No doubt about that the club picking next had to wait for the interview of the previous player to finish way to drawn out.No one has yet come up with a logical reason why the National Draft had to be conducted over two nights. Maybe it sounds a trifle rhetorical but I cannot help but feel that like the Brownlow Count the National Draft has become a media driven extravaganza with just a hint of reality TV thrown in to boost the ratings of the AFL's 'broadcast partners'. Why confine your ratings to one night when you can extract two nights of ratings from the mugs that follow the game? The fact that Gillion McLachlan's speech was too long and it took 45 minutes to get the first pick out of the bag showed just how much the AFL had to pad the proceedings out to make that first night go the distance. Reports are that social media went ballistic at the slowness of the proceedings with fans irate at the amount of time it took for clubs to make selections that they were always tipped to make. Then there is the human element, the Draft must be a really stressful time for a couple of hundred young men so why should many of them be put through 48hrs of purgatory just to provide the media with some sport related reality TV?
No one has yet justified the inclusion of Draft picks during the Draft. The clubs have a ten day Trade Week and clubs had from Oct 10 til November 22 to trade Draft picks. You have to wonder why they need such a long trade period if the clubs are going to wait until Draft Night before they move? Trading on the night just made the whole process more complicated and overlong. Perhaps it would not have been so bad if the AFL Draft Tracker had been able to track the pick swaps and and show an up to date Draft selection order of the entire Draft not just picks 1-22. If it had not been for a couple of sharp posters on this site I would not have know what the situation was re our pick swaps. Port did OK out of trading picks during the Draft this year but that is not a reason to keep a complicated system going. At the time of the Draft I posed the question why Carlton made consecutive bids on players they know were going to be matched? A sharp poster on this site may have had the answer in that Carton were creating the time to negotiate a pick swap with another club. We now know at least one of the clubs they were talking to. Doubtless there are advantages to pick swaps on Draft Night but that does not mean they have to be there or that they add anything to the night(s).
I am possibly a voice in the wilderness here but I used to enjoy Draft Day when it was a relatively straight forward AFL exercise covered by the media. Now that it has become a media driven exercise with an AFL flavour the enjoyment is not there and I watch and listen out of curiosity and nothing else.