2023: SC Planning Thread

Joined
6 Mar 2013
Messages
10,190
Likes
31,121
AFL Club
Carlton
Yeah him and Bruhn didn’t make the cut in my side due to uncertainty in breaking into the side
Would be pretty harsh if they don't select him but it is a premiership side. Ideally they use him the same way they did in the preseason games whilst in the back half of the season they start throwing people like Dangerfield into the midfield more.
 
Joined
26 Jun 2019
Messages
2,559
Likes
9,517
AFL Club
Richmond
Thanks @Professor

Question now is whether there is one or two value strategies.

1) Premium value - There is the type last year where you went Hewett, Sicily, Witts and traded them out if unsuccessful.

2) Midprice value - Then there is the type where you go 200-350k players more in force.

Option 1 can help you potentially start with 12 premiums, Option 2 can you see you start with 10 premiums and many of the $300k players.

I am probably a 2 person as my success on picking breakout premiums is poor (Houston type). The $300k players have more positional risk, but should make $100k.

what's everyone thinking on this thread? any other strategy to throw in?
There's a few things here to try and disseminate.

What I'm seeing is a lot of teams with no rookies on the field in the forward and a few others with say Flanders/Cheezel/ McLean at F6. This is in part due to the more viable rookies being available in defence, although they are still looking pretty thin there too. Plus the fact that Fwd rookies and/or young KPF's in poor teams just don't have reliable scoring. So fielding 1 or 2 MP's forward gives us the option to not field a rookie at F5/6. Same can be said for the mids where a couple of MP's allows us to just field 2 rookies there ie: Ashcroft and MacKenzie with Phillips on the bench. Ditto for defence where most are only fielding Ginbey at D6 or Constable at D6 and Ginbey at D5, again, 2-3 Mp's on this lines gives us the opportunity for this to happen.
As Selby alluded to, past strategies relied on a G n R's approach because of the difficulty of scoring a hit on the MidPricers, but with 6 extra trades we can take a chance on 6 MP's, maybe scoring a hit on 2-3 of them and using maybe 4 correctional trades getting the ones that look like they'll be successful picks. Adjusting for rookies on the bubble come round 3 is part of the equation as is jumping on a value premo off to a hot start and attractive BE, like Cripps and Heeney last year.
Another thing that the extra trades allows for is the chance to jump on an unexpected spike scorer for just a couple of rounds and benefit from an immediate cash injection, Jake Bowey did this for me last year where his price jump gave me the opportunity to trade an underperforming MP with him to nab Doc in round 6. That sort of strategy isn't really possible with limited trades and can still only be done once or twice a year. I'm still smarting from not jumping on Walker the year before.
We still have to chase value though as those 'free points' are absolute gold. VC/C scores are also vital, which really goes without saying. The other thing connected to value is cash generation, you don't really get that from a value premo who outscores his starting price by 10-20 pts apart from the initial purchase price as you're unlikely to trade him out. There were numbers however from 2021 (I haven't seen any from 2020 yet) that showed 14 rookies gaining $150k+ and 17 MP's gaining $150k+, so there's a solid argument in the pro's column for both the cash generation, points scoring and possibly the most important, job security in choosing a successful MP (or 2) over a premium and a rookie. You obviously have to get those picks close to right which the extra trades certainly help achieve.
 
Top