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Key Forward Conundrum: Are key defenders really worthwhile drafting in SuperCoach? If so, just where should you take one?
When we think key position players, we generally think of them as tall, slow and not great for our SuperCoach teams.
We’ve already seen that there’s value to be had with forwards, but what about at the other end of the park? If we take a closer look at the behemoths of our game there are some players who are worth a spot on our rosters.
While the key position player is generally frowned upon when it comes to drafting a team, they can be good scorers but remember they will score you a 120 one week and then score a 45 the next.
Throughout this article I’m going to look at some key position defenders and when to get them in your draft.
Defining a key defender in this day in age is a bit blurred. What was once a defender who played one-on-one with the forwards has now changed. With the evolution of rebounding and intercepting defender they can now be placed under the definition of key defender.
In the early rounds of your draft a key defender such as
James Sicily will still be on the board for you to pick. Sicily has been maligned throughout his career. When he first joined the Hawks, he was thrown in as a forward and wasn’t a viable draft option. It wasn’t until halfway through 2017 where Alistair Clarkson threw Sicily down back where he proved to be a valuable intercept defender and SuperCoach scorer where he averaged 93.9 in 2019 and 105.1 in 2018.
The only risk to drafting Sicily is that sometimes Clarkson likes to play him as a forward, destroying any consistent scoring we might see from Sicily. Sicily builds his score on kicks and marks in which he averaged 7.2 a game in 2019. Sicily’s scores are also helped by his disposal efficiency in which he has averaged at 81% the last three years.
In the middle rounds of your draft and you’re looking for a solid D3 to balance out your defence, then look no further than
Harris Andrews or Michael Hurley.
Andrews, who averaged 82.7 in 2019 is as solid a D3 as they come. Ranked 18th for intercepts and contested marks and at 200cm there aren’t many opponents who can out mark him which is why he is a solid pick. Also, he has a decent floor, so if he does have an off game, it still a reasonable score that won’t hurt you too much.
Hurley coming into 2020 is an interesting one. In the past we have seen him average 90+ and be in the D1/D2 range. In 2019 he fell away a little bit, partly to a role change and injury. Instead of playing his intercept game he was forced to play as a lockdown defender which dropped his average to 79.7.
If you used an early draft pick on him, the value wasn’t returned, and you could say he was a bust. This year I’m more interested in him because he would have left a sour taste in people’s mouths and his average is down from previous years. Last year Hurley dropped two possessions a game. If he can pick those two possessions up again or lay an extra tackle a game, we could see Hurley return to his scoring ways, and you would have picked him up for a bargain in your draft.
At the end of draft and your looking at your tiers as too what’s available, it can be pretty grim. That’s why picks at the end aren’t so important as the ones at the beginning of your draft. Here is where you can roll the dice on a speculative pick that you’ve had your eye on and it’s not going to bite you.
If you need a defender to fill out your D5 / bench spot, I would be looking at
Darcy Moore. When this guy is on the park he can score. He was marking and intercepting everything that came in the defensive 50 last year. He only averaged the 74.7, but if he can raise his average marks per game to 6.0-6.5 a game (4.7 in 2019) and raise his average possessions per game to 18-19 (14.8 in 2019), then he could average 83-87 which would make him a viable D3 in which you used a speculative pick on to better your team.