Dtennent94
Club Legend
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2022
- Posts
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- AFL Club
- Collingwood
Schultz is this player. Problem is we also want him close to goal without Hill and Elliott.Yes, it was long-winded, but I wasn’t thinking of a specific player when I was thinking of and responding to sr36 and apex36’s posts. However, thinking of a player now, it’s not Zac Bailey. The cost to get him will be prohibitively expensive (trade/ pay etc.)
What the Pies appear to need is a true connector half-forward.
In 2023, Beau McCreery was essentially playing that connector role at his best. The challenge is that Beau's greatest weapon is his explosiveness and pressure. If he's not winning enough of those half-forward contests or providing enough linkage, the entire transition chain suffers.
- Strong aerobic capacity — can repeatedly lead up and get back.
- Good overhead without needing to dominate aerially — just enough to compete.
- Quick decision maker — can give first possession to runners.
- Pressure-oriented — doesn't become a liability when the ball turns over.
- Team-first mover — happy to create space and opportunities for others rather than chasing goals.
Gryan Miers, Alex Neal-Bullen and Issac Heeney come to mind. Zac Bailey is great at creating and converting opportunities, but he is more a pressure forward/ attacking weapon.
Bailey Humphrey would be the perfect player. If you're paying the acquisition cost for Humphrey, you're not bringing him in to spend most of his time making sacrificial leads between the arcs. He'd rightly expect significant midfield time because that's where his ceiling lies.
But as you have stated – "If he is going anywhere, it’s Melbourne."
If we brought in Lachie Neale, the primary value wouldn't be Neale himself playing half-forward. It would be the structural domino effect it creates.
The chain would look something like:
From a role-balance perspective, that arguably makes more sense than trying to recruit a specialist half-forward.
- Neale strengthens the midfield rotation
- Nick Daicos continues as the primary distributor
- Jordan De Goey spends significantly more time at high half-forward
- Josh Daicos returns to being a true linking wing
- Dan Houston handles much of the rebounding and distribution from defence
De Goey's attributes line up remarkably well with the connector role:
The role wouldn't be a traditional stay-at-home forward role. It would be more akin to what Heeney does at times for Sydney: start high, connect the chain, then become dangerous once the ball enters attack.
- strong overhead for his size
- wins contested ball
- draws defenders
- elite decision-maker in traffic
- can go forward and score if ignored
- powerful enough to stop opposition rebound
De Goey forces opponents into difficult match-up decisions. If they play a smaller runner on him, he can win aerially and physically. If they play a bigger defender, he can run them into the ground and push into midfield.
De Goey could probably be this player in his later years if we can recruit a good enough midfield that we can afford to move him.
Maybe Pod can also be this guy. Maybe Anderson with some more development.






