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He also can't get a game at WC and played poorly in the 2nds.
If I've figured correctly, our second pick would be around pick 25. Would that get a deal for McKenzie across the line?
That's not how you assess the balance of a trade.The general point of the comment was that Lions weren't completely ripped off in trading Yeo, as what they brought in with the pick they got looks around the mark of what Yeo can bring.
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That's not how you assess the balance of a trade.
If WC accepted pick 50 for Liam Duggan but then drafted a superior player with that pick 50, would that make the original deal a good one?
No. It wouldn't. It would mean two unrelated things occurred. The first would be a shitty deal for Duggan. The second would be a drafting coup with a relatively late pick. The second does not rehabilitate the first.
Again, there are two things going on there. They are not connected.If we accepted pick 50 for Eric Mackenzie (i.e. because he wanted out for more opportunity) and we managed to draft a superior player with that pick (i.e. a superior player was identified as likely to be available in the draft), I would be very happy with that deal as a supporter..
Clearly. But see above and maybe the penny will drop.I am having trouble understanding how factoring in what the pick can buy is completely unrelated in assessing the worth of a trade.
Sure. But that's not the same as the actual outcome.I would have thought the recruiting department would weigh up what that pick could net a team before signing off on the trade.
Indeed.Alas, my poor limited intellect. Carry on without me, I am not up to understanding the complexities of which you speak.
They are independant events.If we accepted pick 50 for Eric Mackenzie (i.e. because he wanted out for more opportunity) and we managed to draft a superior player with that pick (i.e. a superior player was identified as likely to be available in the draft), I would be very happy with that deal as a supporter.
I am having trouble understanding how factoring in what the pick can buy is completely unrelated in assessing the worth of a trade. I would have thought the recruiting department would weigh up what that pick could net a team before signing off on the trade. Obviously if it was pure chance that the second move came off, the first move would be worrying. But I didn't think that recruiting departments made decisions discretely, and independently without taking into account a broader recruitment strategy. E.g. trading down a pick without understanding what those picks could buy. I am glad that you are here to correct my understanding.
Alas, my poor limited intellect. Carry on without me, I am not up to understanding the complexities of which you speak.
Wait. What?They are independant events.
That's unrealistic.
2nd the best you would get
Haven't seen much of him this year, hence the question.
Ok, so then the offer is pick 43!![]()
Why are you acting like you actually do the deals?
Success of draftee is not dependant on the quality of traded player.Wait. What?
Mind blown.Success of draftee is not dependant on the quality of traded player.
Can we really swap Taylor for Yeo? PleaseAnd what has Yeo delivered? Very inconsistent and failed in finals.
Pick 28 isn't nothing, it landed you Taylor.
I'd be happy to send Yeo back for pick 28 or Taylor.
Can we really swap Taylor for Yeo? Please
Isn't Brown a free agent?Really interesting to see what happens with Mackeznie. Think either one of him or Brown won't be at the club next year due to the emergence in 2015 and 2016 of McGovern, Barrass (basically fighting for same positions) and to a lesser extent the surety of Sheppard in the back 6.
Ideally one could be put into a package to gain Lobb from GWS.
The first is the deal for Mackenzie. Is pick 50 sufficient?
Indeed.
That may be a partial consideration but it's really pretty hard to predict who'll be there at 50. At that point, you're hoping for a slider. So there is massive uncertainty around which attractive prospects will still be available and, of course, whether they'll make it as a player.The answer to this questions is dependent on who the club thinks will be available at that pick. If every player the club is interested in will be gone by pick 50 then it would be deemed insufficient.
See above.While the trading of Mackenzie, and the use of any return draft pick are two independent events, the worth or attractiveness of trading of Mackenzie to obtain a draft pick is determined by who you may be able to draft.
Cool. Minson was AA a couple of years ago. Straight swap?Returning from a knee down on confidence. Confidence can return and he's proven and named in the AA squad twice.
We'll throw in Chad Fletcher.Cool. Minson was AA a couple of years ago. Straight swap?
That may be a partial consideration but it's really pretty hard to predict who'll be there at 50. At that point, you're hoping for a slider. So there is massive uncertainty around which attractive prospects will still be available and, of course, whether they'll make it as a player.
And merely considering who will be available when weighing such a trade is not the same as the actual outcome of who the club drafts and whether they end up being any good. That's not something you can project with real confidence.
So in the end, it's still a case of Mackenzie for pick 50 – not Mackenzie for whoever gets taken there. And that would still be a poor deal. Even if that player taken at 50 turns out to be a superstar, that would be a separate, independent event that does not redeem the initial trade.
I find it remarkable that there is resistance to such an obvious truism.
See above.
A bad trade that returns a late pick doesn't become a good trade just because a team pulls a rabbit out of the hat with that late pick. That's a shitty trade followed by a drafting coup. It doesn't make sense to conflate the two.
But the club doesn't know the outcome when they're doing the deal.I understand your logic, but you can not totally remove what you will be doing/who you will be drafting with the pick. The outcome of the pick does not determine Mackenzie's value, I agree, but it does have a direct correlation with the clubs desire to trade him for that pick.
That's a ridiculous hypothetical and it doesn't take into account the massive uncertainty around late draft picks.If the recruiters/scouts had the view that all of the top 50 would end up better than Mackenzie (obviously exaggerating to make my point) do you think that would effect our willlingness to make such a trade?
Again, couching everything in a certainty that is unjustified.Now if they thought that no one after pick 25 was likely to play over 25 AFL games do you think that would have an impact on a trade where we may receive pick 50?
Actually, that was the origin of the discussion. Another poster suggested WC got Yeo in return for Taylor, when in fact WC traded a draft pick that was used to select Taylor. I made the point that these are two independent events.No one is suggesting (we I am not) that how a player develops that was taken with a pick we received for trading Mackenzie determines how good/bad the trade was.
And the trade would still be Mackenzie for pick 50. That's a bad trade, regardless of who gets drafted with that selection.I am saying that a club will value picks in certain ranges higher/lower based on who they assume will be available at those picks, so therefor who they assume will be available at pick 50 has an impact on a trade where we would receive pick 50.