That doesn't sound right. I don't think you pick nor does the round determine where your points come from in the following year, I believe they come off your first, but will defer to others in the know.
Emma Quayle has covered this in her article yesterday on the new bidding system.
http://www.theage.com.au/afl/injury...e-new-afl-bidding-system-20151112-gkxg8b.html
"There's that word again: deficit. Does this mean that a club can continue to match bids if it runs out of points in a draft?
They can, to a point. Clubs that don't have the required number of points to match bids for one or more of their players are able to eat into their points allowance from the following year's draft. For example, say a club ends up 'owing' 250 points after this year's draft. Those points will be subtracted from their 2016 points balance.
Will the points be subtracted from their first pick?
If that's where the bid they are matching was placed.
Under that scenario, the club's future first pick will be repositioned in the drafted order. Owing 300 points, for instance, would see pick 4 moved to pick 7. However, if a club runs out of points matching a bid for a player in the third round, the points owed would be subtracted from their future third round selection. That pick would also then be repositioned in the draft order, according to the DVI.
In the event that a club has traded out the future pick they need to pay back any owed points, the points will be subtracted from their next selection. If they've brought a future pick back in as a replacement - Brisbane this year traded a future third round pick to Geelong but got one back from North Melbourne - any owed points will be taken from the pick traded in.
How much deficit can you go into?
Only so much. The deficit limit is set at 1723 points (the equivalent of the first four picks assigned to the premier side each year, 18, 36, 54 and 72)."









