You are being grossly unfair on the club here IMO.
Sure, long term deals are risky but we are hardly the only club operating in that space. It is very much the norm for marquee players in the current environment. This is not an issue for our club specifically.
7+ year deals
Clayton Oliver
Christian Petracca
Jacob Hopper
Tim Taranto
Josh Kelly
Lachie Whitfield
Stephen Coniglio
Tom Lynch
Dustin Martin
6 years:
Charlie Curnow
Callum Mills
Darcy Moore
Shai Bolton
Isaac Heeney
Patrick Cripps
Zach Merrett
Hayden Young
Zac Williams
Toby Greene
Brad Hill
Tim Kelly
Dylan Shiel
Brandon Ellis
5 years; far too many to mention, and I think you probably get the point anyway.
Players are opting for longer term contracts and are prepared to accept a lower annual salary for that additional security.
It's all well and good to say we should push back on that, but what exactly do we stand to gain by doing so? And does that potential gain outweigh the likely situation of not being as attractive a destination for potential recruits?
Zac Williams is notably a rung or three lower than almost every player on that list - the only comparable deal would be Brandon Ellis and GC have their own special world they have to operate in.
It was an utterly bizarre deal at the time - a massive deal to a solid role player on the whim that he would be able to switch positions and become a star. It's turned into an absolute mess because of the length and his subsequent injuries, and is almost unquestionably the worst contract in the AFL at this point.
Almost because of this, our other long term deals are probably a good thing, though. We've locked in our bookends and core pieces, and that means we know what we are working with for the next 3-5 years, and can plan around it. There isn't likely to be any more big deals coming in during that time, so might as well build around what we have.
So far, that seems a refreshing change for the club, a shift away from the 'great man' hope that we're only ever just one big piece away. Instead, we seem to be pushing singles and chipping the ball around the park a bit more with good solid role players and smarter draft picks (just taking guys who have AFL calibre skills, not trying to hit sixes all over the place with speculative roughies).





