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List Mgmt. 2022 Trade & List Management Thread II

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Key Dates:

Friday 07 October at 5.00pm

Close of AFL Restricted Free Agency Offer and Unrestricted Free Agency Period.

Monday 10 October
NAB AFL Draft Nominations open (9am)
AFL Restricted Free Agency Matching Offer 3 Day Period Ends (5pm)

Wednesday 12 October at 7.30pm
AFL Trade Period closes – players and selections


Thursday 03 November at 9.00am
AFL Delisted Player Free Agency Period (1) commences

Wednesday 09 November at 5.00pm

AFL Delisted Player Free Agency Period (1) closes

Friday 11 November at 9.00am

AFL Delisted Player Free Agency Period (2) commences

Tuesday 15 November by 5.00pm

AFL Delisted Player Free Agency Period (2) closes
AFL Trade Period closes – selections only

Monday 21 November by 3.00pm

NAB AFL Draft Nominations close

Monday 28 November at 7.10pm

2022 NAB AFL Draft Round One (Venue TBC)

Father/Son, Academy & NGA and Players Bidding opens.

Tuesday 29 November

AFL Trade Period – selections only (5.45pm to 6.30pm)

2022 NAB AFL National Draft Round two until completion (7pm)

Rookie Upgrade Period opens (10pm)

AFL Delisted Player Free Agency Period (3) commences (10pm)

Rookie Upgrade Period closes (11pm)

AFL Delisted Player Free Agency Period (3) closes (11pm)

Wednesday 30 November

NAB AFL Pre-Season Draft (3pm, online)
NAB AFL Rookie Draft (3.20pm, online)

Thursday 01 December by 4.00pm

Final AFL Club List Lodgement
 
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If Port are happy for Bonner to go then he is the wrong player. It needs to make them very uncomfortable. Josh Kennedy uncomfortable, when there will be forever debate on who won the trade no matter how good JHF ends up being.
Bang on.
 
If Port are happy for Bonner to go then he is the wrong player. It needs to make them very uncomfortable. Josh Kennedy uncomfortable, when there will be forever debate on who won the trade no matter how good JHF ends up being.
Exactly, and WC won it, just like we should.
 
To be honest I don’t watch much of Port, but could we include Chad Wingard in the trade
 

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Why JHF, Bowes deals have Jackson in limbo​


Jay Clark



Melbourne is ready to hand Collingwood superstar Brodie Grundy the keys to its star-studded engine room after the Dockers and Demons edged closer to a deal on young ruckman Luke Jackson.

Fremantle secured the crucial extra selection required to help unlock the Jackson trade when it agreed to receiving a future second-round selection as part of the deal to send Dockers’ pair Griffin Logue and Darcy Tucker to North Melbourne.

While the deal is yet to be submitted, Fremantle was set to secure a future second, third and fourth-round pick from the Kangaroos in exchange for Logue, Tucker and a future-third-round pick from North.

It means the Dockers can give Melbourne pick 13 in this year’s draft as well as a future first-round and second-round pick (from North Melbourne) in next year’s draft to complete the Jackson trade.

If Fremantle push for a top-four berth and the Kangaroos finish bottom-four next season, the future first round picks could fall between 15-18 and 19-23 next season in addition to this year’s pick 13.

The future-second rounder from North Melbourne was part of the special assistance package North Melbourne received from the AFL to help it climb out of the AFL doldrums but the picks (future second and third rounders) had to be traded for experienced players.

Three picks inside the top 25-selections over two drafts, potentially alongside some other late pick swaps, could help seal the deal to send Jackson to Fremantle in a massive boost to the Dockers’ premiership aspirations for next season.

West Coast remains interested in Jackson but he is intent on landing at Fremantle after making the move home tom Western Australia to be closer to family after winning the Rising Star award and a premiership in his second season in 2021.

Melbourne may ask the Dockers to try and sneak higher up the order by swapping picks, but Port Adelaide wants to use pick eight as part of the Jason Horne-Francis deal and Gold Coast is poised to off-load pick seven as part of the Jack Bowes transaction.

The Demons were hopeful Fremantle could secure a pick inside the top-eight to pass on as part of the Jackson trade but it remains unclear whether that will be possible as Port zeros in on Horne-Francis.

It means the Demons may have to accept pick 13, plus the future first and second-round choices for Jackson, if the Dockers can’t swap them for other selections up the order.

Melbourne is also now in prime position to land Grundy as a superstar replacement for Jackson as part of a bargain deal with Collingwood after a pick swap with Port Adelaide late Tuesday.

The Demons moved up the draft order by nabbing pick 27 from Port Adelaide in exchange for pick 33, 43 and 53 on Tuesday.

It means Melbourne can offer pick 27 to Collingwood for Grundy who only two years ago was considered one of the best players in the game before injury troubles and form issues struck.

Collingwood want a pick inside 25 for Grundy but could accept 27 with some other late pick swaps to help improve the deal.

Collingwood is juggling some big moves in this year’s trade period and may need 27 and another pick from Geelong for Ollie Henry to help facilitate deals for Adelaide defender Billy Frampton, Hawthorn’s Tom Mitchell and Gold Coast’s Brayden Fiorini.

Collingwood is happy to try and wait for a better deal on Henry and Grundy but both could swap clubs for second-round selections.

Collingwood will also pay some of Grundy’s wage to play at Melbourne with Demons’ chiefs the move to combine Grundy and Max Gawn will give its on-ballers an armchair ride in the middle of the ground.
Grundy was committed to Collingwood but was encouraged to find a new home as the Pies went in a different direction after signing him in 2020 to a $950,000 a year deal.
 
How is it within the rules that a chairman of another club can contact a player, manager, and his parents multiple times in the first year of his AFL rookie contract? AFL absolutely lacks in anti tampering rules.
As a newbie, but long time follower ... this has finally tipped me over to create a post...WT is right! Any wonder the boy has been running around like he couldn't give a, when he has had senior Port leaders and his family in his ear for half the year on leaving... didn't even wait until the season was even done!
 
Love how this thread is stoked to pick up Darcy Tucker but shattered to hear we are after bonner.
 

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Love how this thread is stoked to pick up Darcy Tucker but shattered to hear we are after bonner.
Darcy Tucker as steak knives for a future third
Riley Bonner as a "key part" of a deal for our 19yo contracted #1 pick
 
LOL

*St Kilda and Gold Coast are in a stalemate over a deal for Ben Long with the Saints wanting pick 25 for the player and Gold Coast reluctant to offer more than pick 36.
 
Bonner is a South Australian. Why would be want to trade one go home factor for a potential other?
It’s our secret plan, to have terrible players so crap, even the state leagues don’t want them
 

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LOL

*St Kilda and Gold Coast are in a stalemate over a deal for Ben Long with the Saints wanting pick 25 for the player and Gold Coast reluctant to offer more than pick 36.

Lol. Throw in Montagna, as steak knives.
 
Port Adelaide believes it has made strong progress on a deal to secure North Melbourne’s No. 1 pick Jason Horne-Francis with flanker Riley Bonner part of a potential trade package.

The Roos and Power have held constructive talks over a deal for Horne-Francis with the Power’s pick eight and future first-rounder certain to be part of the deal.

Bonner, 25, is contracted for next season but it is felt he may slip down the pecking order at the club in 2023 and Port Adelaide is open to trading him.

Whether he is traded as part of the Horne-Francis package or to a third club with that pick then passed on to North Melbourne, it gives the Power more trade collateral to satisfy the roos.

The Roos would significantly boost their backline stocks by bringing in Bonner and Griffin Logue, who is part of a separate trade with Fremantle.

Both clubs are keen to do a fair and responsible deal for Horne-Francis that maximises the Roos’ return and does not diminish the Power’s flag chances.

While Zac Butters’ name was floated in some reports the Roos could secure two high picks and then use them in trades for rival players if a deal was done relatively early.

Port Adelaide still holds out hope that Geelong will relent in a deal with Esava Ratugolea even as the Cats rule out a trade.

The Power believe he has little chance of getting a regular senior game in the Geelong side next year so are hopeful the Cats will have an open mind by the end of the trade period next week.

Port Adelaide was happy to let Karl Amon move on because it is loaded with running defenders and wingman types, such as Darcy Byrne-Jones, Dan Houston, Kane Farrell, Jase Burgoyne, Xavier Duursma, Lachie Jones and Miles Bergman and Josh Sinn, ensuring a selection squeeze for Bonner to get a regular game.
Farrell moved into defence late in the season, Burgoyne showed plenty of promise in his seven games down back and Jones should return there after playing as a makeshift half-forward

in 2022, given the pending arrivals of Junior Rioli and Francis Evans, and availability of Orazio Fantasia.

Bonner has played 82 matches over the past seven seasons, including 17 in 2022.

He was sidelined this year with an ankle injury, a fractured cheekbone and Covid.

If a deal comes from a rival club and Bonner is keen to leave, the Power will certainly consider it.

The Power drafted Bonner from West Adelaide with pick 37 in 2015
 
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