KFC SuperCoach 2023: The best premium Ruck options
Set and forget the ruck, right? Not in KFC SuperCoach this year, says The Phantom. Our expert rates the best premium options in the big man department.
The Phantom
21 min read
February 2, 2023 - 3:56PM
You know their names, but which KFC SuperCoach stars should you start this season?
Given the salary cap, as much as you want to, you just can’t pick all of the big-scoring guns.
The
available rookies and
mid-price value will dictate how many premiums you select on each line, but that’s only part of it.
Set and forget in the ruck, right?
This year it’s more like set everywhere else and forget about the ruck for the moment.
Top-line ruckmen are among the best KFC SuperCoach scorers in the game, but for varying reasons, even the best ones have questions marks hanging over them this year.
Max Gawn and Brodie Grundy are used to playing together in our teams, now they actually play on the same team in reality.
We’re about fantasy around here, though, not reality. Especially a reality we cannot yet picture clearly.
Docker big man Sean Darcy also has a new ruck partner in Luke Jackson – it’s unclear how that combination will work, too.
And Tim English is injured. So is Magpie Darcy Cameron, who sits just below premium category as the best value option this year.
Lucky we will have data from a few pre-seasons matches to assess before we have to make a final decision.
Oh, wait.
PHANTOM’S TOP FIVE
1. Rowan Marshall (StK $506,500)
2022 average: 92
“I think I am ready to step up now” are the words KFC SuperCoaches have been waiting for, and Marshall delivered them on Channel 7 last week. He’s fit and firing, and even pushed endurance king Brad Hill in a running session according to those watching on at St Kilda training. With Paddy Ryder retired and Tom Campbell having a delayed start to pre-season, the No.1 ruck role is surely his. In 2022, Marshall averaged 101 points per game as the lead man and, on average, was 34 points better off when Ryder wasn’t playing. And in the games he attended at least 90 per cent of ruck contests, his average was 120. But – and sadly there is still a but – marking targets Max King and Jack Hayes are injured and Marshall, as much as KFC SuperCoaches don’t like to admit it, is a good forward.
The Phantom’s verdict: We still can’t be 100 per cent sure Marshall is the man. But we can probably be more sure than we are about most others on this list. Locked in – for now.
2. Brodie Grundy (Melb $512,900)
2022 average: 103.5
Again, it’s not about scoring here. Like every player on this list, Grundy is an elite KFC SuperCoach scorer. If you take out the game when Collingwood played Grundy, Cameron and Mason Cox in the same side – yuck – and Grundy scored 53 points, he averaged 114 points in five matches last year before injury. He’s averaged that and more – a lot more – in every season since 2017. But what happens to his scoring alongside Gawn in 2023? Will his ability to win the ball around the ground be limited, like it was on that day against Brisbane last year? It’s hard to be sure right now. As he’s proven in recent years, Gawn is effective for Melbourne behind the ball or as a marking target in attack. Grundy’s strengths don’t lie in either of those settings.
The Phantom’s verdict: And that’s why I have hope – but I’ll be waiting to see what coach Simon Goodwin does in the pre-season games. Marshall and Grundy, both at $512k or less, would be an ideal starting ruck combination.
3. Tim English (WB $581,000)
2022 average: 105
The Bulldogs big man finally went bang in 2022, averaging 128 in his first six matches for the year including big totals of 123, 152, 138 and 160. Problem was, though, he didn’t play that sixth game until round 11, due to a hamstring injury. While he did return with that 160-point display against the Eagles, he was out again with concussion four games later. The good news – and all due respect to the bloke – Stefan Martin has retired. The bad news? English has reportedly battled an adductor injury this summer.
The Phantom’s verdict: Honestly, not really sure. As good as he could be this year, does the risk outweigh the price tag? Probably not at this point.
4. Jarrod Witts (GC $605,100)
2022 average: 109.9
The only ruckman we can right now guarantee will start and finish as his side’s No.1 big man – barring injury of course – is at No.4, Phantom? Yes, it might seem a bit off, but so was Witts’ finish to the season, with the Suns’ co-captain reaching three figures just four times in his final 10 matches, and failing to score 80 on three occasions. Sure, he tired in his first season back from a torn ACL – a fact that makes his start to the year even more remarkable. But can we really be sure he hits the heights of early last season and stays there at age 30?
The Phantom’s verdict: We can’t be sure, no, but, as this entire piece points out, we can’t be sure on a lot. I might be harsh on Witts here, but I’d prefer to spend $605k elsewhere.
5. Max Gawn (Melb $622,100)
2022 average: 113
The Melbourne skipper is a KFC SuperCoach scoring powerhouse but even he isn’t above the effects of a second ruckman. Gawn still proved vital to the Demons away from the ruck contest in 2022 but there’s no denying a slight tweak in role was detrimental to his KFC SuperCoach scoring. In the seven games Gawn attended 62 per cent of ruck contests or fewer last year, he averaged 86 points. I know. It’s a concern for a player with a $622k price tag, who is about to welcome another top-five player in his position into the game-day rotation.
The Phantom’s verdict: I’ll be staying away to start with, and I’m not sure we’ll see anything in the pre-season games that would change my mind.