Yep. Me includedAnd probably 80% of the draft thread nuffies on here got completely sucked in with the Robey hype.


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Yep. Me includedAnd probably 80% of the draft thread nuffies on here got completely sucked in with the Robey hype.


Show me the contract otherwise you talking shit againI mean yeah the draft was a week and a half ago and was on live tv. How much more confirmation you want?![]()
Pick 7s:I think it would be easier looking at a list of say pick 26's v a list of pick 8's. Let's say 2005 to 2019, 15 years so we can get a decent handle on how all the players in the sample are resolving.
Bold = elite, marquee wage level player
Green = strong career never marquee wage level
Red = outright failure
Pick 8
Oakley-Nichols
Ben Reid
L Henderson
Vickery
Butcher
Heppell
Longer
Mayes
L McDonald
P Wright
C Ah Chee
Logue
Coffield
Taryn Thomas
Serong
(Of those drafted since 2019, D Curtin is probably shaping as a really high end player at this stage)
Pick 26
Ibbotson
Shane Edwards
Meredith
Post
Colyer
Darling
Elton
Viney
Z Merrett
T McLean
K Collins
Parfitt
Liam Ryan
Rhylee West
Gould
(of those drafted since 2019, Will Graham looks like being a high end talent, perhaps wouldn't have quite the value of Curtin at this point)
Maybe if we compared picks 7-9 to picks 25-27 we might get a more accurate picture. Because 8 v 26, I am not seeing any great difference between the amounts of strong players coming from these picks. What we see is there are about twice as many outright failures at pick 26.
If you looked at the above and no other evidence, you are trading pick 8 for 2 x pick 26 any day of the week. But I don't pretend that is the real value of the picks, these are probably historic outliers to some extent.
What those figures all appear to me to show is pick 8 would be roughly twice the value of a pick in the mid 20's on average. Or in other words, equally as valuable as two picks in the mid 20's.
We can see from trading patterns however clubs generally think pick 8 is worth more than 2 x mid 20's picks. Under the draft points system in place in 2024, North gave up about 100 points. Equal to a pick in the 60's. The current model it would be like North giving up the value of pick 35.
But in the end, North get value from recruiting the player a year earlier and also by getting access to the right player types at their fair positions in the draft.
Let's just say North had pick 11 this year and took Dovaston with that pick. Or pick 17 last year and took Whitlock with that pick, it wouldn't have raised a ripple. But they would have been giving up similar value. It just isn't worth the fuss that was made about it. Which was my point from the outset.
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Pick 7s:
David Hale - A
Andrew Mackie - A
K Tenance - F
Jordan Lewis - A+
Patrick Ryder - A
Joel Selwood - A+
Rhys Palmer - C
Daniel Rich - A
Brad Sheppard - B+
Josh Caddy - B
Nick Haynes - B+
Ollie wines - A
James Aish - B
Paul Ahern - F
Jacob Hopper - B+
Jack Scrimshaw - B+
Hunter Clark - C
Bailey Smith - A
Hayden Young - A
Pick 9s:
L Molan - F
H McInotsh - B
D Trotter - F
J Russell - D
M Clark - C
D Armitage - B
B McEvoy - A
J Ziebell - A
A Moore - F
D Prestia - A
A Tomlinson - C
N Vlastuin - A+
C Salem - B+
D Moore - A+
S Weideman - D
W Brodie - D
A Naughton - A+
C Jones - C
L Henry - C
Pick 25s:
S Amstrong - D
C Urch - F
H Miller - F
A Hartlett - F
W Mills - F
N Djkerrkura - F
T Colllier - F
J Redden - A
A Black - F
P Karnezis - F
S Ross - A
S White - F
D Mcstay - B+
D Nielson - F
J Dunkley - A+
B Long - B+
N Balta - B+
J Rowbottom - B
J Mead - C
Pick 27s:
T Davidson - F
D Walsh - F
A Campbell - F
P Garner - F
D addison - D
B Howard - F
A Otten - D
S Wright - D
C Bartlett - F
K harper - F
S Kerridge - D
J Stewart - C
S Lemmens - C
L Webb - F
D Tucker - C
Z Fisher - C
B Daniels - B+
T Sparrow - C+
J Sharp - D
24 players from pick 7/9 that are B or higher. 5 complete fails.
8 players from 25/27 that are B or higher. 18 complete fails.
Sharp went to Essendon.
Who let Sharp go through to the keeper??? Melbourne
Who else did Melbourne let go through to the keeper??? Dusty
May not be the same bust just saying, could be an omen
Adelaide who wanted to jump up, arguably more intel, possible bias granted, wanted him
It's certainly not the real value, as it makes no sense to compare only pick-8 v pick-26. It's like comparing pick-6 (average of 69 games played), to draft pick-56 (average of 76 games) and saying you'd trade pick-56 for pick-6 every day of the week as a long history tells you this would be a winner.I think it would be easier looking at a list of say pick 26's v a list of pick 8's. Let's say 2005 to 2019, 15 years so we can get a decent handle on how all the players in the sample are resolving.
Bold = elite, marquee wage level player
Green = strong career never marquee wage level
Red = outright failure
Pick 8
Oakley-Nichols
Ben Reid
L Henderson
Vickery
Butcher
Heppell
Longer
Mayes
L McDonald
P Wright
C Ah Chee
Logue
Coffield
Taryn Thomas
Serong
(Of those drafted since 2019, D Curtin is probably shaping as a really high end player at this stage)
Pick 26
Ibbotson
Shane Edwards
Meredith
Post
Colyer
Darling
Elton
Viney
Z Merrett
T McLean
K Collins
Parfitt
Liam Ryan
Rhylee West
Gould
(of those drafted since 2019, Will Graham looks like being a high end talent, perhaps wouldn't have quite the value of Curtin at this point)
Maybe if we compared picks 7-9 to picks 25-27 we might get a more accurate picture. Because 8 v 26, I am not seeing any great difference between the amounts of strong players coming from these picks. What we see is there are about twice as many outright failures at pick 26.
If you looked at the above and no other evidence, you are trading pick 8 for 2 x pick 26 any day of the week. But I don't pretend that is the real value of the picks, these are probably historic outliers to some extent.
This thread is 'draft' analysis....... And we are analysing the absolute bejeezus out of it....... but we all should realise, these historical averages and medians and the like would be the drafting bible for the likes of Blair Hartley. I know most don't, but I find the actual science behind the building of a list very interesting, as I strongly believe if you follow the 'science' (what history shows works) for long enough success is almost guaranteed to come your way.
It's certainly not the real value, as it makes no sense to compare only pick-8 v pick-26. It's like comparing pick-6 (average of 69 games played), to draft pick-56 (average of 76 games) and saying you'd trade pick-56 for pick-6 every day of the week as a long history tells you this would be a winner.
It's interesting to look at a few other sets of data - for example to not look at coaches vote averages (can by SKU'd heavily by top end performers), and look at 'medians'...the 'middle' value.
So for example, for picks 6-10, the coaches vote 'median' across 130 x players taken in 26 x drafts is 24. So 65 x players have less than 24 votes, 65 have more than 24. For players 21-30 (260 players), the coaches vote median is 3. So 130 x players have less than 3 x votes, 130 x players have more than 3 votes. SO from 21-30 you're a 50% chance of getting a player who receives 3 x coaches votes or less in their career.
Unlike median, averages are SKU'd heavily by the outliers .....some players taken in the 20's - Merrett, Edwards, Petrie, Darling, Stevie J, Gunston, Duncan and so on....
Another quick comparison of 6-10 v 21-30 is to look at AA final team:
6-10 : 49 selections
21-30 : 36 (from twice as many players)
So a pick from 6-10 is 2.72x more likely to be selected in an AA team each year than a pick taken 21-30.
The funny thing is, if the data compared 7-11 v 21-30 it would be even more of a discrepancy, as for no logical reason at all pick-6 is an absolute graveyard. Having said that, maybe some of the picks from 21-30 are abnormally horrendous as well.
There's no perfect science of course, other than the very clear data that shows picks 6-10 are on average vastly superior to picks taken 21-30.
However...previous research and a quick review now does show the quality on average really drops away from pick-31 onwards, so if you ever are going to trade picks into later rounds, making sure they remain top-30 should be a huge priority.
Thanks for that. It certainly balances things up a bit. I had only gone back to 2005 to get 15 years. The A, A+, C+ gradings etc are of course all debatable but I think you have done a decent job of it overall.
What we were discussing was the likelihood of getting needle shifting guns with a single pick around 8 versus 2 picks around 26.
No matter how you define it, the gradings are always going to be debatable.
You have in your picks 7 & 9 contingent a few I would grade differently. Certainly if you looked at their salaries some of them wouldn't have been paid like A Graders.
A graders you have: Hale Mackie Ryder Rich Wines Smith Young McEvoy Ziebell Prestia.
A+ Graders you have: Lewis, Vlastuin, Selwood, Darcy Moore, Naughton.
Others may disagree, but to be an A+ player(the highest possible grade) I think you need to be doing something really noteworthy. For Key Forwards winning Colemans or near enough, mids winning Brownlow's or Coach MVP's or consistently finishing near the top for a number of years or be a consistently very strong big game performer.
I would reduce your A+'s to Selwood.
To be an A grader you need to be a marquee wage player, really strong consistent performer over a decent period, reliably stand up in big games, and be a top 10% in your role level player for a number of years.
I would say your A Grade list should be more like Lewis, Wines(just and probably being generous due to Brownlow) Smith, Young, Vlastuin, Prestia, Naughton(I am biased towards him due to a belief he is worth a lot more than his goals.). You could possibly throw in Darcy Moore but you could as easily argue he is not quite at this level.
Mackie is not an A Grader, good player, but he is not a needle shifter.
Hale, same. Neither a top end ruckman nor forward. Very handy second ruck but this is not A Grade.
Rich too many exploitable weaknesses to be considered an A Grader.
Lewis is not A+ he is not in the top shelf of players in the comp ever. Probably an A Grader though.
Moore is not A+ he has probably had a couple of years where he flirted with being in the top 2 key defenders. Has some poor finals.
Naughton I love but is not an A+ Key Forward.
Ryder has not had an A Grade career, very good career but not consistently top few in his position.
McEvoy, Ziebell, just not A Grade careers.
Equally you might be a bit generous with Redden and Seb Ross as A Grade careers.
So for the purposes of the debate I would just reduce it to something like this:
Picks 7, 8, 9
Highest echelon - Selwood, Serong.
Really strong careers - Lewis, Wines, Moore, Smith, Prestia, Vlastuin, Naughton, Young(can raise his rating yet)
Picks 25, 26, 27
Highest echelon - Merrett, Dunkley
Really strong careers - S Edwards, Darling, Viney
Where you can argue some of the A Graders in the pick 7-8-9 cohort are or will be A+, you probably cannot say that with the Edwards, Darling, Viney.
I don't know. I think it sort of supports my view that 2 picks in the mid 20's are almost, but not quite as likely to find you a needle shifter as 1 pick in the 7-9 range. This analysis seems to me to confirm the trading behaviour of the clubs, the value is mainly tilted to the side of one 7-9 range pick over 2 x mid 20's picks but not to the extent you would forever rule out doing a trade like North did with Richmond. If you get exceptional circumstances like a really strong draft v a really weak draft, or particular positional needs, you wouldn't rule that trade out based on the whole relevant history of the picks in question.
Thanks for that. It certainly balances things up a bit. I had only gone back to 2005 to get 15 years. The A, A+, C+ gradings etc are of course all debatable but I think you have done a decent job of it overall.
What we were discussing was the likelihood of getting needle shifting guns with a single pick around 8 versus 2 picks around 26.
No matter how you define it, the gradings are always going to be debatable.
You have in your picks 7 & 9 contingent a few I would grade differently. Certainly if you looked at their salaries some of them wouldn't have been paid like A Graders.
A graders you have: Hale Mackie Ryder Rich Wines Smith Young McEvoy Ziebell Prestia.
A+ Graders you have: Lewis, Vlastuin, Selwood, Darcy Moore, Naughton.
Others may disagree, but to be an A+ player(the highest possible grade) I think you need to be doing something really noteworthy. For Key Forwards winning Colemans or near enough, mids winning Brownlow's or Coach MVP's or consistently finishing near the top for a number of years or be a consistently very strong big game performer.
I would reduce your A+'s to Selwood.
To be an A grader you need to be a marquee wage player, really strong consistent performer over a decent period, reliably stand up in big games, and be a top 10% in your role level player for a number of years.
I would say your A Grade list should be more like Lewis, Wines(just and probably being generous due to Brownlow) Smith, Young, Vlastuin, Prestia, Naughton(I am biased towards him due to a belief he is worth a lot more than his goals.). You could possibly throw in Darcy Moore but you could as easily argue he is not quite at this level.
Mackie is not an A Grader, good player, but he is not a needle shifter.
Hale, same. Neither a top end ruckman nor forward. Very handy second ruck but this is not A Grade.
Rich too many exploitable weaknesses to be considered an A Grader.
Lewis is not A+ he is not in the top shelf of players in the comp ever. Probably an A Grader though.
Moore is not A+ he has probably had a couple of years where he flirted with being in the top 2 key defenders. Has some poor finals.
Naughton I love but is not an A+ Key Forward.
Ryder has not had an A Grade career, very good career but not consistently top few in his position.
McEvoy, Ziebell, just not A Grade careers.
Equally you might be a bit generous with Redden and Seb Ross as A Grade careers.
So for the purposes of the debate I would just reduce it to something like this:
Picks 7, 8, 9
Highest echelon - Selwood, Serong.
Really strong careers - Lewis, Wines, Moore, Smith, Prestia, Vlastuin, Naughton, Young(can raise his rating yet)
Picks 25, 26, 27
Highest echelon - Merrett, Dunkley
Really strong careers - S Edwards, Darling, Viney
Where you can argue some of the A Graders in the pick 7-8-9 cohort are or will be A+, you probably cannot say that with the Edwards, Darling, Viney.
I don't know. I think it sort of supports my view that 2 picks in the mid 20's are almost, but not quite as likely to find you a needle shifter as 1 pick in the 7-9 range. This analysis seems to me to confirm the trading behaviour of the clubs, the value is mainly tilted to the side of one 7-9 range pick over 2 x mid 20's picks but not to the extent you would forever rule out doing a trade like North did with Richmond. If you get exceptional circumstances like a really strong draft v a really weak draft, or particular positional needs, you wouldn't rule that trade out based on the whole relevant history of the picks in question.
Can someone please tell me what happened to Dyson Sharp? The kid was described as a generational talent, #1 pick, etc, etc, and ended up falling to #13 (Essendon)?
Interesting that pre draft everyone talking about Sharpe's leadership qualities as captain of SA but didn't hear the same with Grjl as captain of vic metro?
Think we have a beauty along with cumming.
Grlj is an example, but I’m really talking about the sum of the 2024-2025 drafts including Lalor, Smillie, Hotton, Faull etc. All the 2024-2025 draftees.A flag list is built over 6-8 x seasons. Made up of literally hundreds of list management decisions across ND, RD, MSD, Trades, F/S, Academy and free agency.
It’ll be disappointing if Robey, Sharp and Taylor are superior players to Grlj. But if we turn into a flag contending list and Grlj is part of that team, then it’s sort of irrelevant. As maybe Grlj plays a more important role as a great team player than others may play as individuals.
Cripps and Merrett have both been outstanding individual players, far superior to Lambert or Edwards. Would I swap Lambert or Edwards for either of them? Not a chance. (We kicked 2 x goals in the entire last qtr of Port v Tigers PF … Lambert kicked both). He also chased Dusty’s man for most of his career.
So every recruiter will have more losses than hits… 95% of picks will have superior players taken after them.
It’s the sum of the parts over the entire build that’s important, not ‘Robey is better than Grlj’ so we don’t know what we’re doing…
If we are crud in 3-years then we’ve likely stuffed up too many decisions and heads should roll.
Pretty ground breaking stuff you guys are doing ... the results are that you usually get a better player at pick 7 and 9 than you do in the late 20'sThis thread is 'draft' analysis....... And we are analysing the absolute bejeezus out of it....... but we all should realise, these historical averages and medians and the like would be the drafting bible for the likes of Blair Hartley. I know most don't, but I find the actual science behind the building of a list very interesting, as I strongly believe if you follow the 'science' (what history shows works) for long enough success is almost guaranteed to come your way.
Too many clubs lose patience and look for sugar hits and succumb to pressure from outside....and they inevitably fail.
Already has now after 1 training session and wearing the yellow & blackthink public opinion on the grlj pick will change very very quickly.
Of course...but are 2 x mid-20's picks worth more than pick-8? What about Pick-12? And are 2 x B+ players worth as much/more than 1 x A-grader? If we aren't discussing this on November 30th, then please bring some nuggets for us.Pretty ground breaking stuff you guys are doing ... the results are that you usually get a better player at pick 7 and 9 than you do in the late 20's
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Keep in mind list spots are themselves valuable.I don't know. I think it sort of supports my view that 2 picks in the mid 20's are almost, but not quite as likely to find you a needle shifter as 1 pick in the 7-9 range.
I’m really confident that at the top of the order, we just go on best available talent. … As it goes deeper in the draft you might consider what your list needs, but we’ve always been draft the best available player and then you can work through that in list management later on.
Would you have been ok with us offloading pick 8 this year for 25 and 26?My sense and the trading activity of clubs and the previous and current draft points index values indicate a pick in the 6-10 range would be worth roughly in the range 2.25-2.75 x the value of a pick in the mid 20's on average, probably tending towards the higher end of that range.
So if you go by that alone, North has undercharged Richmond for pick 8 by getting back picks 26 & 27. By a factor of around 20-25%, which is substantial, but not completely outrageous. But as I said in my previous post on this thread, it makes a bit more sense as North are targeting specific positional needs for their list, and also one of the picks they got was in the uncommonly deep & strong 2024 draft.
It definitely doesn't look anywhere near as lopsided as receiving picks 26 & 27 for pick 3. Though if you looked at it in terms of open pool players only, then correctly stated, it would be picks 17 & 23 for pick 4.
They would of had tiers and rankings just as an exampleIn the interview with Richo, Gieschen mentioned there were 'players we moved towards the top of the list a little bit more' on account of us needing speed and outside run.
It proves it's not always 'take the best available' for those who believe this type of pre-draft media fluff: