Yeah I find it an interesting case that some people raised the point that he monsters the lower tier ruckman as a negative whereas the same trait is highly valued in Grundy and Gawn.
If Gawn doesn’t get up for round 1, he’ll be my replacement. Faces a lot of those mid tier rucks early in the year to give him the best shot at closing the price gap.
The point I’ve made on ROB might be slightly different to some others, and I think it ties in to your second point nicely.
My view is that better/fitter rucks often monster second choice or tired opponents in the second half of the year. This is obviously good for point scoring, but if you believe this is a systematic thing, it means that full year averages may not paint the full picture - ie perhaps we should
expect someone like ROB to score better in the second half of the year, assuming he remains one of the less battered rucks at that stage. That could make him (or almost anyone else) less appealing as a stepping stone to Gawn, because the opportunity to score really well in 1H is not as strong. It’s like a batsman facing tired bowlers - it’s easier going, but they have to be tired out first!
Your point about mid tier rucks in ROB’s early draw mitigates this and might even neutralize it if a couple of injuries fall his way. My theory - and it’s only a theory - would be that it’s not so much the mid tier players that make the difference, it’s when you come up against makeshift/third choice rucks, or decent second choices who have been shouldering responsibility as first ruck for a while and are performing more like third choice options by that stage.
As I say, I haven’t run all the numbers on this, although I will likely do some more of this if Gawn doesn’t look like being a good starter.