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AFLW 2024 - Round 10 - Chat, game threads, injury lists, team lineups and more.
yeah.. wish him well in the future.Daniel has been fantastic for us
AFL house probably forcing us to wait until 7pm to sign the papers so they can drum up suspenseHas this actually been finalized yet?
We made out like thieves on this one, love the man but at his age and with our list this was by far the best outcome we could have hoped for.Still pissed off he didn't see through his contract. Be nice of him to be a mentor to the younger developing kids. But fugg him. Will enjoy giving him shit in the piss poor ronald mcdonald colours of the suns. May you lose every game.
sad caseExpecting a big year for Dan next year, given Dimma can tuck him into bed every night again.
sad case
What happened with caddy?Phenomenal return on investment for Rioli. Spewing on Bolton leaving but fully support someone who was always homesick with a young family and no family support wanting to go back home. But Dan is a rat in my book. The club got him well looked after at St Pats as a kid without any guarantees of landing him. We endured years of lean output up fwd without him fearing getting dropped. Sending him to the easiest position was a master-stroke, allowing him to be flashy and pump up his value although he leaked goals like a sieve.
Many of us called he was goneski with his p1ss poor acting when interviewed during Aboriginal round and at the airport. Let's be honest the club did everything right for him and he basically on it to always look out for his and that lousy DJ'S interests. I'm predicting he'll have a good 2025 honeymoon year then fall off a cliff. Stupid move by GC extending his 3 year x $600k salary to 5 years at >>>>>>> $600k.
His pace will be greatly gone before 3 years is up and they'll be left with a couple years of a slow hbf who's not best 22 but old mate Hardwick will cover for him as always. Look forward to this washing away the Pitura trade as Dan's 20 odd good games and 30 odd mediocre and 30 putrid games is blown away by the 250+ game and 150+ games careers of who we take at pick 6 and 23.
It only took a couple years to hear how Caddy deal really happened. Took 10 years to hear the true story how Buddy lied all along and 18 months out was already going to Sydney. No doubt we'll find out the real shifty dealings of Dan and Dumma going to GC before too long.
Long story short. Caddy's older brother Saul played Tigs U19's and magoos with Benny Gale. At 2016 gf he told Gale that Caddy wanted out of Cats and wanted to be reunited with Prestia and to get more midfield as Cats shunted him fwd and he hated it there. Deledio then wanted to go to Cats. They offered us sfa but dangled Caddy.What happened with caddy?
What happened with caddy?
https://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/...y/news-story/8536079b5629b6a514cecd2b518bcd7e
How a chance meeting in the September Club at the 2016 Grand Final helped Richmond secure Josh Caddy
GLENN McFARLANE, Herald Sun
9 minutes ago
Subscriber only
IT WAS the sliding doors moment that helped Richmond secure Josh Caddy, and it came in the most unlikely of circumstances and locations.
Just hours after the Western Bulldogs pulled off a fairytale 2016 Grand Final triumph, Richmond chief executive Brendon Gale was networking in the AFL’s exclusive September Club, perhaps even dreaming his Tigers could achieve the same result one day.
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Amid the raucous revelry coming from the corporate who’s who surrounding him, Gale was approached by a face he recognised as a one-time teammate who had been on Richmond’s supplementary list in the late 1990s.
His name was Saul Caddy; he wanted to introduce his brother Josh to Gale.
“It was just a chance meeting,” Gale revealed this week, eager to play down the importance of this never-before revealed conversation.
But what happened that night undoubtedly played a part in the Tigers securing Josh Caddy from Geelong in a surprise trade only weeks later — a player who would become a part of Richmond’s own fairytale success on the same day a year later, and a footballer rated as the AFL’s most improved this year according to Champion Data’s Official AFL Player Ratings.
“Saul just came up to and said ‘G’day’,” Gale told the Herald Sun. “I hadn’t seen him in years, I think he was still a bit dirty on not getting an opportunity all those years ago.
“Saul said that he would love to see Josh at Richmond. He didn’t bag Geelong or anything like that. He just indicated that Josh was a little bit restless.
“I hadn’t made the connection that Josh was his brother. I said just hello to Josh and we made some small talk.”
Josh Caddy (right) celebrates Richmond’s premiership with Dustin Martin and Damien Hardwick.
Gale didn’t think any more about the conversation until the following week when he was in a list management meeting at Punt Rd, just a few hundred metres from where the September Club function was held. The discussion centred on Geelong’s interest in Tigers’ veteran Brett Deledio, which Richmond was sure the Cats couldn’t get done in terms of draft picks or players.
But as the talk narrowed, Gale raised his casual chat with Saul Caddy, and the unlikely opportunity it had presented for a club eager for a hard-bodied midfielder who was capable of going forward and kicking multiple goals.
“I just said to ‘Balmey’ (Neil Balme), (list manager) Blair (Hartley) and ‘Richo’ (then Tigers general manager of football talent Dan Richardson) that I had bumped into Saul, and that it might be worth following up,” Gale said.
“They went to work on it, and it had nothing to do with me. He was just the sort of player who made sense for us.”
Josh Caddy had kicked 27 goals this year.
As it turned out, Deledio chose the Giants, and Caddy — receptive to a move to Punt Rd and eager for more game time in the midfield — ended up being a shock trade to Richmond for picks 26 (Brandon Parfitt) and 60 (Quinton Narkle).
Gale gives all the credit for securing Caddy to Richmond’s list management team, who took his initial tip-off, and made it happen.
Fast-forward a season-and-a-half and Richmond’s effort to prise Caddy out of Geelong has proven just another of their list management masterstrokes.
Caddy, 25, has played 31 games for his third club — he was originally pick seven for Gold Coast in the 2010 draft — and has kicked 48 goals.
He played a key role in the Tigers’ 2017 flag success, and has taken his game to a higher plane this season.
Playing predominantly in attack — it’s been a 61 per cent, 39 per cent split, according to Champion Data — Caddy has kicked 27.6 from nine games this year, which puts him equal-fourth in the Coleman Medal.
When Caddy spoke to the Herald Sun following Richmond’s Dreamtime win against Essendon last Saturday night, teammate Jack Riewoldt — who has twice won the AFL leading goalkicker award — walked past and yelled: “Caddy for the Coleman”.
As strange as it might have seemed at the start of the season, Caddy is not without a fluker’s chance, only eight behind tearaway leader Ben Brown.
Of the top 10 leading goalkickers this season, only two — Brown and Lance Franklin — have a better goals per game average in 2018 than Caddy’s 3.0.
Most improved player 2018
Player Club 2017 2018 Diff
Josh Caddy Richmond 9.2 16.7 +7.5
Max Gawn Melbourne 11.2 18 +6.8
Tom McDonald Melbourne 11.9 17.5 +5.6
Brodie Grundy Collingwood 13.8 19.2 +5.4
Brandan Parfitt Geelong 6.2 11.5 +5.3
Jake Melksham Melbourne 9.5 14.4 +4.9
James Sicily Hawthorn 8.7 13.5 +4.8
Harris Andrews Brisbane Lions 10.8 15.4 +4.6
Jayden Short Richmond 6.0 10.4 +4.4
Tom Phillips Collingwood 10.7 15.0 +4.3
* table based on Champion Data’s Official AFL Player Ratings
Caddy insists he doesn’t care where he plays, saying he is now enjoying his football more than at any other stage of his 126-game career.
“I honestly don’t care,” he stressed. “I am just loving playing footy. I’ve had a taste of success last year, and that’s what it is all about.”
“We were fortunate enough to do what we did last year. If anything, that motivates us more to get back there again, because you know how good it feels.”
Gale remembers Caddy playing some big TAC Cup games in key forward posts, saying the midfielder-cum-forward has an uncanny knack for kicking goals.
“You have either got that goalkicking chip, or you don’t,” Gale said. “And Josh has got it.”
Caddy can’t put his finger on any specific reason for his growth this year, other than natural maturity and help from those around him.
“You always want to improve as a player,” he said. “As long as you are on the right trajectory, that’s the most important thing.”
“I haven’t done anything differently. It is working for me, and hopefully it keeps rolling. But footy’s the great leveller, it will bring you back to earth if you get ahead of yourself.
“We’ve got such an even contribution. Cotch and Dusty are spending more time down there, and it is a good sign big Jack (Riewoldt) doesn’t have to kick a big bag each week.”
Josh Caddy celebrates a goal against Essendon. Picture: Michael Klein
Coach Damien Hardwick said Caddy’s elevation into All-Australian contention — he is ranked No. 1 for a mid-forward in goals and No. 2 for scoring involvements — comes from hard work.
“We tried to figure out where his best fit was, and his back end of last year was very, very important,” Hardwick said. “Now we are seeing his progression … his ability to play inside (mid) and to play forward is incredible.
“He has worked incredibly hard on improving his game on and off the field and he is starting to reap the rewards.
“He still has a long way to go, which is exciting for us.”
That hunger to achieve more and his inherent competitive streak continues to drive him, with the next challenge coming against Port Adelaide at the hostile Adelaide Oval.
“We’ve probably been a little flat for the past month, but (the Dreamtime) win was good,” he said of Richmond. “We were back to close to our best.”
If the Tigers keep that momentum up, neither Caddy — or Gale, for that matter — will have any need for corporate hospitality tickets into the September Club again this year.