Paddywhackers
Cancelled
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2005
- Posts
- 4,485
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- Location
- Melbourne
- AFL Club
- Collingwood
- Other Teams
- Collingwood
Apperently Essendon had intense discussion to pick either Sidebottom or Hurley at five. In the end they went with Hurley at 5. Sidebottom slipped to Collingwood at 11.
Essendon's big guns on notice
Jon Ralph | December 01, 2008 12:00am
MATTHEW Knights says he has no desire to force Dustin Fletcher and Scott Lucas into retirement, but warned them not to coast through next season. On Saturday the Bombers added another high-quality tall to a playing list now overflowing with young key-position players.
Draft selection five Michael Hurley (182cm) joins Scott Gumbleton (197cm), Paddy Ryder (197cm), Jay Neagle (191cm), Darcy Daniher (191cm), Tayte Pears (191cm), Cale Hooker (196cm) and Tom Bellchambers (200cm) as next-generation Essendon talls.
Knights is keen to continue blooding youngsters, but not at the expense of Fletcher, Lucas and captain Matthew Lloyd.
He has told the trio he will put no use-by-date on their careers as long as they train hard and remain valuable.
"I have said to those three guys I have no limitation on how long you play this game. That will be entirely up to you," Knights said.
"But I believe veterans need to have a hard edge to them with their training and their appetite for work because you have all these young punks chasing you and trying to take your position.
"As long as they do the hard yakka I am fine. I reckon that's their choice - how they can keep that hard edge, how they can mentor our young players, and how they can drive our vision of our game style. If they can do that they are very valuable."
Knights said all three had manageable loads in pre-season, but "if they are doing the cross-training they are doing it at a really hard level."
Fletcher and 30-year-old Lucas are on one-year contracts, while Lloyd turns 31 in April.
Former Northern Knight Hurley is a big, strong full-back in the Fletcher mould, and shapes as the perfect replacement when the 33-year-old defender retires.
Knights was extremely keen on Victorian midfielder Steele Sidebottom even before his 10-goal heroics in the TAC Cup grand final.
But despite some internal debate, the club decided last Wednesday that Hurley was the right recruit.
"Yeah, I guess I watched a lot of the TAC Cup finals and Steele was the standout in the finals and Michael didn't play," Knights said.
"Steele performed wonderfully, but Michael was always at the forefront of our mind. He has the capacity to play key back but also we believe he may be one of the best forwards in the draft.
"He kicked six goals in a TAC Cup game at under-18 level, and we really like his ability to play full-forward or centre half-forward.
"When you have that flexibility it's hard to ignore."
Essendon's big guns on notice
Jon Ralph | December 01, 2008 12:00am
MATTHEW Knights says he has no desire to force Dustin Fletcher and Scott Lucas into retirement, but warned them not to coast through next season. On Saturday the Bombers added another high-quality tall to a playing list now overflowing with young key-position players.
Draft selection five Michael Hurley (182cm) joins Scott Gumbleton (197cm), Paddy Ryder (197cm), Jay Neagle (191cm), Darcy Daniher (191cm), Tayte Pears (191cm), Cale Hooker (196cm) and Tom Bellchambers (200cm) as next-generation Essendon talls.
Knights is keen to continue blooding youngsters, but not at the expense of Fletcher, Lucas and captain Matthew Lloyd.
He has told the trio he will put no use-by-date on their careers as long as they train hard and remain valuable.
"I have said to those three guys I have no limitation on how long you play this game. That will be entirely up to you," Knights said.
"But I believe veterans need to have a hard edge to them with their training and their appetite for work because you have all these young punks chasing you and trying to take your position.
"As long as they do the hard yakka I am fine. I reckon that's their choice - how they can keep that hard edge, how they can mentor our young players, and how they can drive our vision of our game style. If they can do that they are very valuable."
Knights said all three had manageable loads in pre-season, but "if they are doing the cross-training they are doing it at a really hard level."
Fletcher and 30-year-old Lucas are on one-year contracts, while Lloyd turns 31 in April.
Former Northern Knight Hurley is a big, strong full-back in the Fletcher mould, and shapes as the perfect replacement when the 33-year-old defender retires.
Knights was extremely keen on Victorian midfielder Steele Sidebottom even before his 10-goal heroics in the TAC Cup grand final.
But despite some internal debate, the club decided last Wednesday that Hurley was the right recruit.
"Yeah, I guess I watched a lot of the TAC Cup finals and Steele was the standout in the finals and Michael didn't play," Knights said.
"Steele performed wonderfully, but Michael was always at the forefront of our mind. He has the capacity to play key back but also we believe he may be one of the best forwards in the draft.
"He kicked six goals in a TAC Cup game at under-18 level, and we really like his ability to play full-forward or centre half-forward.
"When you have that flexibility it's hard to ignore."





