goBlue
Debutant
- Oct 7, 2017
- 100
- 89
- AFL Club
- Carlton
- Banned
- #3,576
If a club has a positional need. Trade/free agency is the period to fill those needs. Skip out on a McGovern and get Jarryd Lyons/Aaron Hall/Tom Scully.
It's like if you go back to the 2000 AFL Draft. Nick Riewoldt is in the draft and Alan Didak is seen as the best midfielder. Who are you take? I'm going Nick Riewoldt every day - even if my squad is stacked with KPPs. And knowing that, I'm making trades around that planning.
On Lukosius, he can play this year. On debut in 2017 in the SANFL League finals he kicked four goals and he's been playing at the level all through 2018. Put him either end, on a flank, wing. He's good to go. As with other KPPs, it will probably take until roughly his fourth year to enter his prime, but that's hardly problematic with the best KPPs able to last into their mid 30s anyway.
Setterfield is fantastic and I liked that trade by Carlton. Injuries permitting he can be a player. I'm not sure given his injury history (including juniors before the AFL) that I would bet on Setterfield over Collier-Dawkins. If Setterfield never gets hurt again, I'd go that way, but with that element of uncertainty around that, I'll go the guy who is more likely to be available and as a result higher probability to develop.
On Smith, I don't look at his upside as being nearly maxed out or even limited. I evaluate upside based on rate of improvement or lack of improvement. If at 15/16 you're the same guy at 18/19, it's unlikely much is going to change. If you're improving year-on-year, the probability is further improvement is to come. And all the guys we're talking about are improving so they're all set to continue to improve injuries permitting and development programs, leadership groups and coaching doing their jobs at their respective clubs. From an attribute standpoint I consider Smith favourable to Walsh as a better stoppage player/contested ball winner but also a much more explosive runner and better kick. He's the professional of the draft who wants it most, so he probably puts in the most work. But with that combination of attributes, I look at his scope to grow as more favourable to that of Walsh.
How many times have you seen Carlton acquire a decent player from trading. We just tried for Shiel and failed. Currently, not many players want to come to Carlton except for players out of favour at their own or players who are still undiscovered. SOS will be drafting for best available BUT for Carlton's needs, I'm sure if he was an Adelaide list manager he would've taken Lukosius, but its not what Carlton needs.
SOS and Agresta would look at both best talented in the draft and needs. Overall, they felt that Walsh was the better option and they are the full time professionals working day in day out. SoS looked at best available and took Walsh.
Every year in a draft there is "the guy" (Lukosius) who will be able to change the world from day dot. Ive seen it before and i presume its gonna happen for years to come. I appreciate the fact that you love Lukosius, but he could just be a bust. How many other tall prospects have failed in recent history compared to mids. You keep using Nick Riewoldt as an example for how good Lukosius could be but I've seen loads of people compare draftees to Judd and they have never been even close. So until Lukosius does prove himself I will wait.