Jack Steele, Brayden Maynard among new faces in Mark Robinson’s mid-season All-Australian team
Who would’ve thought Nat Fyfe and Patrick Cripps would be missing from the mid-year All-Australian side? See who Mark Robinson has named in his 2020 team of the year — so far.
Mark Robinson, Herald Sun
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July 31, 2020 2:37pm
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It’s a crazy season, so we’re borrowing a line from Bob Dylan.
So, come gather ’round people, wherever you roam …
That’s the footy to the halfway mark of the season.
In this cluster muck, we’ve gathered at home as the footballers have roamed far and wide and everything before us and them “is a changing”.
So, too, are potential All-Australian spots.
Who would have thought at the start of the season the likes of Jacob Weitering, Brayden Maynard and Caleb Daniel would unseat the likes of Jeremy McGovern and Bachar Houli from defence?
Or the Patties — Cripps and Dangerfield — and Nathan Fyfe wouldn’t get a spot in the midfield.
The Cats champ makes the team on the bench, but Port’s Travis Boak, Melbourne’s Christian Petracca and Brisbane’s Lachie Neale get the gigs in the centre square.
With Max Gawn as the ruck.
St Kilda’s Jack Steele makes the bench. The bum-down, head-up midfielder is running third in the coaches award.
His consistency gets him a spot. And the fact he curtails the opposition’s best midfielder, while winning the ball himself.
He is one of the competition’s most valuable players.
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Caleb Daniel is an elite ball-user coming out of the backline.
The backline has three relative newbies.
The Bulldogs’ Daniel the distributor, Weitering the stopper and Maynard the general defender.
They join Harris Andrews, Dane Rampe and Nick Haynes.
For the last spot on the bench, it was a decision between West Coast’s Brad Sheppard, Richmond’s Nick Vlastuin and Collingwood’s Darcy Moore.
I opted for Sheppard, who could be leading the club best-and-fairest at this point.
Moore, of course, was unlucky, but you can say that about plenty of players.
Dustin Martin slots in at mid-forward as does Toby Greene, while Charlie Dixon and Tom Hawkins take the key posts.
Dixon has been the most threatening of the key forwards, while Hawkins rates elite for disposals, marks, forward 50 marks, score involvements and goals.
Sydney’s Tom Papley was one the first magnets put on the board and he leads the Coleman Medal, while the other forward pocket landed with Dan Butler ahead of Charlie Cameron.
Of course, Cameron is the talent of the two, but Butler’s defensive commitment won him the spot. Gee, it was close.
This year might be the year the selectors recognise legitimate wingmen and not plonk gun mids in those positions.
DID ROBBO GET IT RIGHT? HAVE YOUR SAY IN THE COMMENTS SECTION BELOW
That’s why Brisbane’s Hugh McCluggage and Geelong’s Mitch Duncan deserve their spots — they are legitimate wingmen and it’s a position that has effectively been discarded over the past decade by AA selectors.
The skipper?
After handing over the captaincy at Port Adelaide, Boak’s standing as a leader has not diminished.
The coach?
Brett Ratten, Ken Hinkley or Stuart Dew were top of the list. Ratten gets the nod at the midway mark.
Who would’ve thought Nat Fyfe and Patrick Cripps would be missing from the mid-year All-Australian side? See who Mark Robinson has named in his 2020 team of the year — so far.
Mark Robinson, Herald Sun
Subscriber only
|
July 31, 2020 2:37pm
FOXSPORTS0:34 'Dusty, you are a freak!' |
MORE IN SPORT
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It’s a crazy season, so we’re borrowing a line from Bob Dylan.
So, come gather ’round people, wherever you roam …
That’s the footy to the halfway mark of the season.
In this cluster muck, we’ve gathered at home as the footballers have roamed far and wide and everything before us and them “is a changing”.
So, too, are potential All-Australian spots.
Who would have thought at the start of the season the likes of Jacob Weitering, Brayden Maynard and Caleb Daniel would unseat the likes of Jeremy McGovern and Bachar Houli from defence?
Or the Patties — Cripps and Dangerfield — and Nathan Fyfe wouldn’t get a spot in the midfield.
The Cats champ makes the team on the bench, but Port’s Travis Boak, Melbourne’s Christian Petracca and Brisbane’s Lachie Neale get the gigs in the centre square.
With Max Gawn as the ruck.
St Kilda’s Jack Steele makes the bench. The bum-down, head-up midfielder is running third in the coaches award.
His consistency gets him a spot. And the fact he curtails the opposition’s best midfielder, while winning the ball himself.
He is one of the competition’s most valuable players.
Kayo is your ticket to the 2020 Toyota AFL Premiership Season. Watch every match of every round Live & On-Demand. New to Kayo? Get your 14-day free trial & start streaming instantly >
The backline has three relative newbies.
The Bulldogs’ Daniel the distributor, Weitering the stopper and Maynard the general defender.
They join Harris Andrews, Dane Rampe and Nick Haynes.
For the last spot on the bench, it was a decision between West Coast’s Brad Sheppard, Richmond’s Nick Vlastuin and Collingwood’s Darcy Moore.
I opted for Sheppard, who could be leading the club best-and-fairest at this point.
Moore, of course, was unlucky, but you can say that about plenty of players.
Dustin Martin slots in at mid-forward as does Toby Greene, while Charlie Dixon and Tom Hawkins take the key posts.
Dixon has been the most threatening of the key forwards, while Hawkins rates elite for disposals, marks, forward 50 marks, score involvements and goals.
Sydney’s Tom Papley was one the first magnets put on the board and he leads the Coleman Medal, while the other forward pocket landed with Dan Butler ahead of Charlie Cameron.
Of course, Cameron is the talent of the two, but Butler’s defensive commitment won him the spot. Gee, it was close.
This year might be the year the selectors recognise legitimate wingmen and not plonk gun mids in those positions.
DID ROBBO GET IT RIGHT? HAVE YOUR SAY IN THE COMMENTS SECTION BELOW
That’s why Brisbane’s Hugh McCluggage and Geelong’s Mitch Duncan deserve their spots — they are legitimate wingmen and it’s a position that has effectively been discarded over the past decade by AA selectors.
The skipper?
After handing over the captaincy at Port Adelaide, Boak’s standing as a leader has not diminished.
The coach?
Brett Ratten, Ken Hinkley or Stuart Dew were top of the list. Ratten gets the nod at the midway mark.