With the AFL looking close to finally getting a reserves league going with all 19 teams included, I think now would be a good time to rejig the talent pathways for undrafted players.
I would remove the rookie list completely and replace it with a 30 player reserves list (possibly with a slightly larger senior list).
The reserves list would be full of part time players that are signed post-draft, with the idea being that clubs could elevate their reserves players to the senior list at any point during the season to cover long-term injuries. (E.g. last year Richmond could have signed Lefau to replace Gibcus without having to wait until the draft and risk losing him to another club.)
Clubs wouldn't be able to sign each other's reserves players, but could still take them in the draft if their current club didn't want to sign them to the senior list.
This would make the midseason draft redundant, so state league clubs (now the third tier) wouldn't be disrupted midseason. The small pool of overage players taken midseason from the CTL would need to wait until the national draft.
I like this idea because it cuts a bunch of players from senior AFL lists to help spread the talent around to accommodate the Devils + incentivises clubs to develop more players outside their list in the way Geelong, Footscray and Richmond have been successfully doing for a number of years now.
It also addresses the unfairness of clubs investing development time into their reserves players only to have them poached by another club (e.g. Sam Durham being taken by Essendon before Richmond).
I would remove the rookie list completely and replace it with a 30 player reserves list (possibly with a slightly larger senior list).
The reserves list would be full of part time players that are signed post-draft, with the idea being that clubs could elevate their reserves players to the senior list at any point during the season to cover long-term injuries. (E.g. last year Richmond could have signed Lefau to replace Gibcus without having to wait until the draft and risk losing him to another club.)
Clubs wouldn't be able to sign each other's reserves players, but could still take them in the draft if their current club didn't want to sign them to the senior list.
This would make the midseason draft redundant, so state league clubs (now the third tier) wouldn't be disrupted midseason. The small pool of overage players taken midseason from the CTL would need to wait until the national draft.
I like this idea because it cuts a bunch of players from senior AFL lists to help spread the talent around to accommodate the Devils + incentivises clubs to develop more players outside their list in the way Geelong, Footscray and Richmond have been successfully doing for a number of years now.
It also addresses the unfairness of clubs investing development time into their reserves players only to have them poached by another club (e.g. Sam Durham being taken by Essendon before Richmond).