We traded out picks 17 and 26 for those crap picks in the 30's and 40's.I'm not talking about Hipwood being a top liner or not, I'm talking about taking advantage of the fact that you were able to jump the draft position and get him at a discount.
Hipwood pick 14 and Keays pick 24 in the same draft for a bunch of almost worthless picks in the 40's, on top of the fact that it was the same draft you already had a pick 2 in the draft. So you in effect got a pick 14 for free.
We got pick 17 from losing Jack Redden to West Coast, and pick 26 from Collingwood from losing James Aish.
Yes we were crap, because we were being raided year on year by Vic and WA clubs for all our young talent. Yeo, Crisp, Polec, Redden, Aish, and others.So you were crap that year but your 'natural' picks were pick 2, early 20s and a bunch of random meaningful pick. The net result of that year of all your trades ins and outs was that you got Schache and Keays (your natural 1st and 2nd picks) so got a pick 14 for free.
Pick 14 wasn't free. That was essentially matched from us losing Redden.
What f***ing advantage. Drafting our own academy kids with picks that we got from losing players we drafted 2 or 3 years before.I do not give a stuff about what Hipwood's career turned out to be. All that matters was the economic advantage on draft day itself. For the purposes of discussing draft day advantages it is irrelevant. Whether or not Keays became delisted is also irrelevant. The point remains is that you were able to use multiple picks in the 40s to jump up to a pick in the mid 20's.
This is what frustrates me about this discussion. It's not about how good the players become, it's how much of an advantage you get on draft day.
Get off your f***ing rocking horse w
The Dogs benefitted more on draft day by getting Ayce Cordy than they did Tom Liberatore, Lachie Hunter or Mitch Wallis, because we got a more valuable discount, for instance. Ayce Cordy was considered a top 10 prospect we got with pick 14, and a jump for 14 to pick 8 is more valuable than us taking a roughly pick 25-30 rated Liberatore at pick 41.
May seem counter-intuitive but it's true, in the same way that you benefitted from Hipwood and Keays that year.






it’s not really a draft, just a weird sort of semi-auction system using draft points. I’d just go to a full auction with draft points (not salary based). Equal bids break in favour of the lower ranking team. Max bid 3000 points.