noobermensch
Premiership Player
- Apr 21, 2022
- 3,414
- 13,552
- AFL Club
- Essendon
Not watching the game. I heard that Murphy Reid might have been injured?
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AFLW 2024 - Round 10 - Chat, game threads, injury lists, team lineups and more.
Looked like a knee on first glance, not sure what the prognosis is though. Stayed down after a heavy tackle and was struggling to walk offNot watching the game. I heard that Murphy Reid might have been injured?
He looked fantasticRebels outclassed but Ollie Hannaford playing midfield today vying with Levi Ashcroft for best on ground, sneaky 1st round chance I'm starting to think.
Thinking he goes before 15 on the chatter around forumsAnyone keeping up with the draft know if Joe Berry will be available at Dogs (Geelong’s) pick 15 or whatever it blows out to with academies?
Thinking he goes before 15 on the chatter around forums
has alot of fans
Another good Cobden boy coming throughDragons jumped the Rebels with an 6 goal to zero 1st quarter, reasonably even after that.
My votes
5. Sam Marshall
4. Levi Ashcroft
3. Ollie Hannaford
2. Harry Armstrong
1. Rhys Unwin
There was a video of him getting his medal and he didn't have crutches. Also the lack of news proably means it's not serious.Any word on Reid?
Was this Tom Lamb by any chance?A few years back, a mate's son was "guaranteed" by 3 clubs that they would take him if available at their mid/late first rd picks. They all then didn't lol. One of them also then had an early 2nd....still didn't pick him lol.
Ending up getting picked by a club later in 2nd rd who had given him next to no indication.
Draft night has a life of its own for some/many.
Was this Tom Lamb by any chance?
But yes, you’re right- no guarantees until the name is called out. Just never know who clubs may rate over others.
That’s good reading for the saintsFrom the U18 GF.
SANDRINGHAM DRAGONS
Levi Ashcroft
28 disposals, 8 marks, 7 inside-50s, 3 goals
The Brisbane Lions father-son prospect would be the No.1 pick if he were in an open draft. Ashcroft was simply sublime, capping a standout finals campaign with the Dragons. He started onball, before spending some time rotating forward. Some of his clearance work was brilliant, he used the footy well and he was kicking goals from everywhere. He snapped a great goal from tight on the boundary during the second quarter and kicked a beautiful drop punt from 40m out on the boundary line during the third term.
Sam Marshall
28 disposals, 5 marks, 6 inside-50s, 2 goals
A Brisbane Lions Academy member, Marshall only enhanced his standing in this year’s draft pool with a best-on-ground performance. He spent most of the day in the midfield and got involved multiple times in some possession chains, helped by running power, strong agility and clean hands. His groundball work also caught the eye, as did a one-handed loose ball gather in the second quarter which resulted in a snap goal from the pocket. Along with two goals himself, Marshall set up teammates for multiple score assists. He shapes as another beauty for Brisbane.
Lennox Hofmann
13 disposals, 5 marks, 4 rebound-50s
A St Kilda Next Generation Academy member, Hofmann has been a big improver this year and was one of the Dragons’ best in the Grand Final. A 190cm key defender, he was rock-solid down back spending time on dangerous Rebels key forwards Jonty Faull and Floyd Burmeister. He read the play well and recorded four intercept marks. There should have been a fifth, which was dropped in the third quarter, but Hofmann calmly mopped up. He also got some important spoils in at times. A player with plenty of promise.
Adrian Cole
5 disposals, 1 mark, 3 tackles
Similar to Hofmann, Cole is a rapidly-improving 195cm key defender who is also linked to St Kilda’s Next Generation Academy. With Dragons interceptor Luke Trainor missing the Grand Final through concussion, Cole and Hofmann had to step up – and they did. Cole is very much a lock-down defender and performed that role well against Rebels key forwards Jonty Faull and Floyd Burmeister to also finish among Sandringham’s best players in the win.
Harry Armstrong
8 disposals, 5 marks, 3 tackles, 4 goals
A strong-marking 195cm key forward who has attracted increasing interest from clubs since the under-18 national championships, Armstrong was the leading goalkicker on the ground in the Grand Final with four majors. He competed well and crashed packs – which is exactly what you want from a key forward. He’s also a beautiful set-shot goal. Three of Armstrong’s four goals game from set shots, while his one behind hit the post. There’s plenty of excitement about a player who is now expected to be a top-10 selection in November.
Murphy Reid
8 disposals, 1 goal
If you only saw the stats sheet, you would be puzzled as to why Reid was so quiet. The 180cm midfielder has been a consistent performer at all levels this season and regularly racks up plenty of ball with his clean hands and neat kicking going forward, which is why he is considered a top-10 draft prospect. Reid started the Grand Final well, with seven disposals and a goal in the opening quarter. However, he was hampered by a minor ankle issue and then suffered a knock to the knee early in the third quarter which ended his day early.
Harrison Oliver
17 disposals, 5 marks, 3 inside-50s
A small rebounding defender with a piercing left-foot kick, Oliver provided some good run and bounce off half-back. He came from the field early in the second quarter after being crunched in a marking contest, but later returned and had a reasonable afternoon.
Mitch Kirkwood-Scott
21 disposals, 10 marks, 8 rebound-50s
A 178cm rebounding defender, Kirkwood-Scott caught the eye with his running and bouncing off half-back. He broke the lines, read the play well, used the ball beautifully and showed a penetrating kick at times. It capped a strong season for Kirkwood-Scott, who was a gun junior cricketer before turning his attention to football.
GREATER WESTERN VICTORIA REBELS
Ollie Hannaford
24 disposals, 2 marks, 9 tackles, 7 inside-50s
Earlier this year, recruiters thought they might be able to secure Hannaford with a very late draft pick. That is no longer the case. Hannaford started the year well at half-back but was even better after switching forward in the second half of the season. In the Grand Final he spent most his time in the midfield against the likes of Levi Ashcroft and Sam Marshall and held his own. Hannaford has good burst speed, can break the lines with his run and bounce, wins his own footy and applies plenty of tackling pressure when the footy is not in his possession. He kicked the Rebels’ first goal of the game midway through the second quarter – a set shot on a tight angle from outside 50m.
Jonty Faull
10 disposals, 5 marks, 6 inside-50s
A 195cm key forward, Faull was sidelined until June finished the year well. Recruiters still wonder if his back injury is hampering him a little, but Faull was a workhorse throughout the Grand Final. He presented well pushing higher up the ground as a link-up player and took some nice marks in the air. He only had one shot on goal in the fourth-quarter, though, missing a set shot.
Jack Ough
21 disposals, 7 marks, 5 tackles
A big bodied 194cm midfield who can also push forward, Ough is hard-at-it and a great size. He was tough in the contest and worked hard to find the footy throughout the day. He copped a heavy knock in the third quarter which felled him, but Ough picked himself up and played on.
Floyd Burmeister
10 disposals, 3 marks, 6 hitouts, 2 goals
The mobile 198cm forward who has been making the Rebels go ‘Wow’ in recent weeks had some more big moments. He plucked a one-handed mark in the last quarter and went back to slot a nice set shot goal. When he was rotating in the ruck, Burmeister put his huge leap on display for all to see. He’s also tough and competitive around the contest and wasn’t afraid to throw his weight around and make his presence felt on the field.
Rhys Unwin
19 disposals, 2 marks, 4 tackles, 6 inside-50s
Another strong performer for the Rebels, the 178cm small forward impressed again through the midfield in the absence of the injured Sam Lalor. Unwin is clever in traffic and uses the ball well on his preferred left-foot, with his midfield stint late in the year showing the versatility that he offers.
Harry Charleson
12 disposals, 3 marks, 3 rebound-50s
The younger brother of Port Adelaide’s Lachlan Charleson, the 182cm rebounding defender had a big first half of the year but a quieter finish. He had only three disposals in the first half, but lifted his output after the main break.
From the U18 GF.
SANDRINGHAM DRAGONS
Levi Ashcroft
28 disposals, 8 marks, 7 inside-50s, 3 goals
The Brisbane Lions father-son prospect would be the No.1 pick if he were in an open draft. Ashcroft was simply sublime, capping a standout finals campaign with the Dragons. He started onball, before spending some time rotating forward. Some of his clearance work was brilliant, he used the footy well and he was kicking goals from everywhere. He snapped a great goal from tight on the boundary during the second quarter and kicked a beautiful drop punt from 40m out on the boundary line during the third term.
Sam Marshall
28 disposals, 5 marks, 6 inside-50s, 2 goals
A Brisbane Lions Academy member, Marshall only enhanced his standing in this year’s draft pool with a best-on-ground performance. He spent most of the day in the midfield and got involved multiple times in some possession chains, helped by running power, strong agility and clean hands. His groundball work also caught the eye, as did a one-handed loose ball gather in the second quarter which resulted in a snap goal from the pocket. Along with two goals himself, Marshall set up teammates for multiple score assists. He shapes as another beauty for Brisbane.
Lennox Hofmann
13 disposals, 5 marks, 4 rebound-50s
A St Kilda Next Generation Academy member, Hofmann has been a big improver this year and was one of the Dragons’ best in the Grand Final. A 190cm key defender, he was rock-solid down back spending time on dangerous Rebels key forwards Jonty Faull and Floyd Burmeister. He read the play well and recorded four intercept marks. There should have been a fifth, which was dropped in the third quarter, but Hofmann calmly mopped up. He also got some important spoils in at times. A player with plenty of promise.
Adrian Cole
5 disposals, 1 mark, 3 tackles
Similar to Hofmann, Cole is a rapidly-improving 195cm key defender who is also linked to St Kilda’s Next Generation Academy. With Dragons interceptor Luke Trainor missing the Grand Final through concussion, Cole and Hofmann had to step up – and they did. Cole is very much a lock-down defender and performed that role well against Rebels key forwards Jonty Faull and Floyd Burmeister to also finish among Sandringham’s best players in the win.
Harry Armstrong
8 disposals, 5 marks, 3 tackles, 4 goals
A strong-marking 195cm key forward who has attracted increasing interest from clubs since the under-18 national championships, Armstrong was the leading goalkicker on the ground in the Grand Final with four majors. He competed well and crashed packs – which is exactly what you want from a key forward. He’s also a beautiful set-shot goal. Three of Armstrong’s four goals game from set shots, while his one behind hit the post. There’s plenty of excitement about a player who is now expected to be a top-10 selection in November.
Murphy Reid
8 disposals, 1 goal
If you only saw the stats sheet, you would be puzzled as to why Reid was so quiet. The 180cm midfielder has been a consistent performer at all levels this season and regularly racks up plenty of ball with his clean hands and neat kicking going forward, which is why he is considered a top-10 draft prospect. Reid started the Grand Final well, with seven disposals and a goal in the opening quarter. However, he was hampered by a minor ankle issue and then suffered a knock to the knee early in the third quarter which ended his day early.
Harrison Oliver
17 disposals, 5 marks, 3 inside-50s
A small rebounding defender with a piercing left-foot kick, Oliver provided some good run and bounce off half-back. He came from the field early in the second quarter after being crunched in a marking contest, but later returned and had a reasonable afternoon.
Mitch Kirkwood-Scott
21 disposals, 10 marks, 8 rebound-50s
A 178cm rebounding defender, Kirkwood-Scott caught the eye with his running and bouncing off half-back. He broke the lines, read the play well, used the ball beautifully and showed a penetrating kick at times. It capped a strong season for Kirkwood-Scott, who was a gun junior cricketer before turning his attention to football.
GREATER WESTERN VICTORIA REBELS
Ollie Hannaford
24 disposals, 2 marks, 9 tackles, 7 inside-50s
Earlier this year, recruiters thought they might be able to secure Hannaford with a very late draft pick. That is no longer the case. Hannaford started the year well at half-back but was even better after switching forward in the second half of the season. In the Grand Final he spent most his time in the midfield against the likes of Levi Ashcroft and Sam Marshall and held his own. Hannaford has good burst speed, can break the lines with his run and bounce, wins his own footy and applies plenty of tackling pressure when the footy is not in his possession. He kicked the Rebels’ first goal of the game midway through the second quarter – a set shot on a tight angle from outside 50m.
Jonty Faull
10 disposals, 5 marks, 6 inside-50s
A 195cm key forward, Faull was sidelined until June finished the year well. Recruiters still wonder if his back injury is hampering him a little, but Faull was a workhorse throughout the Grand Final. He presented well pushing higher up the ground as a link-up player and took some nice marks in the air. He only had one shot on goal in the fourth-quarter, though, missing a set shot.
Jack Ough
21 disposals, 7 marks, 5 tackles
A big bodied 194cm midfield who can also push forward, Ough is hard-at-it and a great size. He was tough in the contest and worked hard to find the footy throughout the day. He copped a heavy knock in the third quarter which felled him, but Ough picked himself up and played on.
Floyd Burmeister
10 disposals, 3 marks, 6 hitouts, 2 goals
The mobile 198cm forward who has been making the Rebels go ‘Wow’ in recent weeks had some more big moments. He plucked a one-handed mark in the last quarter and went back to slot a nice set shot goal. When he was rotating in the ruck, Burmeister put his huge leap on display for all to see. He’s also tough and competitive around the contest and wasn’t afraid to throw his weight around and make his presence felt on the field.
Rhys Unwin
19 disposals, 2 marks, 4 tackles, 6 inside-50s
Another strong performer for the Rebels, the 178cm small forward impressed again through the midfield in the absence of the injured Sam Lalor. Unwin is clever in traffic and uses the ball well on his preferred left-foot, with his midfield stint late in the year showing the versatility that he offers.
Harry Charleson
12 disposals, 3 marks, 3 rebound-50s
The younger brother of Port Adelaide’s Lachlan Charleson, the 182cm rebounding defender had a big first half of the year but a quieter finish. He had only three disposals in the first half, but lifted his output after the main break.
Dude move on…. It’s not like anyone in here will actually influence the picks we end up with..Dogs got to get Hannaford with 24
Richmond or North should look at him, at minimum he'll set high standards in training.No idea if he's on AFL club's radars but can't help but admire Dom Brew's leadership and passion.
Runaway JJ Liston Trophy winner, then backed up with 31 touches including 27 contested possessions in the Grand Final yesterday. I'm sure he has AFL limitations, but a pure heart-and-soul player - massive will for the contest and never-give-up attitude.
Seems like a ripping bloke, would love to see him get a crack somewhere.
Werribee hangs on to win VFL flag against surging Southport
The Sharks were circling but couldn't quite catch Tigers in a state league thrillerwww.afl.com.au
And passion for the club and team! In tears on the telecast after the game. I would take him at the blues in a heartbeat.. we let Kane lambert go and look how that panned out!Richmond or North should look at him, at minimum he'll set high standards in training.
So he’s older than Levi then.Jack Ough really impressing at the right time and massive upside for 1 of the youngest players in the draft
height: 194cm
D.O.B: 15-12-2006
Its funny to open the assessment of his game with this line when he spent the entire game dropping every mark that wasn't completely uncontested.Harry Armstrong
A strong-marking 195cm key forward