Do you think if you really tried hard enough, you could make it to the AFL?

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I played Northern Knights with Trent Cotchin. I was a slow forward flanker. He was just a cut above everyone else.

He is now Richmond captain, premiership player X2. I drive buses and 20kgs overweight. Apples and oranges, really.
 
It is a mixture between natural ability, attitude and a body that doesn’t breakdown plus physical attributes (hard to get on a list if you are under 6’.
Yes, the harder you work, the better you will get but the best players just make it look easy.
 
The team I played junior footy in as a teenager, only one bloke made the AFL.

He was probably the fourth or fifth best player on the team... at the time.

He was always tall and grew to 199cm, and was a bloody good athlete at that size.

He got a chance and made a go of it for a reasonable career (incl a flag) thru being dedicated in the AFL environment.

He would’ve never got the chance if not for his size.
 

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The fringe AFL players we often write off as 'spuds' often go back to state level and wipe the floor with them. And of course to get to the top of the state level, you'd have to be pretty good in the first place and they are the best of the best of the amateur leagues.

We might make fun of Chris Masten's disposal but I guarantee even in retirement he'd still beat the crap out of all posters on this board.
I remember Kayne Pettifer being a lightning rod for criticism on BigFooty when I first started posting here. Since leaving the AFL world he has kicked mountain's of goals, including a 100 goal season at the age of 36 in the Goulburn Valley League, which is a very strong competition.
 
Someone like Stephen Armstrong was earmarked for a long AFL career from a young age. Third generation of a footballing family, junior star, won the Larke Medal in 2001 and was pick 25 in the Hodge-Ball-Judd superdraft. Ended up having a pretty unremarkable career with Melbourne and WC but was at least lucky to get a late season call up in 2006 and go on to play in a flag. Wasn't a complete bust but never looked like becoming a star at AFL level.
 
I remember Kayne Pettifer being a lightning rod for criticism on BigFooty when I first started posting here. Since leaving the AFL world he has kicked mountain's of goals, including a 100 goal season at the age of 36 in the Goulburn Valley League, which is a very strong competition.

Pettifer’s real level was probably somewhere in between.

GVFL is a long, long way from the AFL.
 
I played Northern Knights with Trent Cotchin. I was a slow forward flanker. He was just a cut above everyone else.

He is now Richmond captain, premiership player X2. I drive buses and 20kgs overweight. Apples and oranges, really.


bet he would crash the bus though
 
I played school football with a nobody who got cut after a couple games with an AFL club. He was taller, stronger, had a better footy brain, and far better skills than me...so that's a no for me.

My best chance would've been to reinvent myself as a dirtier version of Tony Liberatore, if that's possible.
 
Pettifer’s real level was probably somewhere in between.

GVFL is a long, long way from the AFL.
Absoutely a long way from AFL but it's still a strong league, and I reckon there's a lot of Friday night punters who watch footy from the pub and would genuinely believe they could rock up to a GVFL game and show them how it's done.
 
I was basketballer and didn't play my first game until I was 18 in the VFA. Won a pair of women's crutchless undies in my first game in the magoo's, after playing U19's the day before. You could get away with that back then.
 
I was basketballer and didn't play my first game until I was 18 in the VFA. Won a pair of women's crutchless undies in my first game in the magoo's, after playing U19's the day before. You could get away with that back then.

You can get away with it today if you know where to shop :thumbsu:
 

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Physically - maybe. 200cm, solid frame (i.e. dad bod now), good skills.

Mentally - no way. Far too fragile.

Overall I maybe could have drifted in and out of a few lists like a Zac Smith or Dan Currie.

The dream of the unco giant. How many years can you survive in the system on being tall and able to run a bit...
 
If I'd really knuckled down? Like, ate properly, went to the gym every day, trained hard, gave up darts, drugs and alcohol?

Hell no. I wouldn't have even made country reserves.

It's hilarious to me that people can spend so much time watching AFL, they can see what athletic freaks these guys are, and they can still think "yeah, I could've done that if I'd just laid off the Maccas."

People want to shit on AFLW as being substandard. But when they do that they're comparing it to AFL(M), and they're completely underestimating the extent to which AFL players are trained to be athletic mutants from 14 years old (if not earlier).

Making the AFL isn't about working hard at 16 or 17 years old. It's about being a freak at 13-15 years old, being in the right place at the right time to be identified, and having a pathway to the top level. Any of us who played with guys who went onto the AFL know just how ******* good they were at a young age.

As an aside, the last 2 points there is why draftees from Tassie have dried up - it's not that there aren't freaks, and good players, it's that they aren't being identified and aren't being given a pathway. And it's why AFLW will take a while for the standard to build - because there hasn't been a reason to identify those players young enough, to give them a pathway, and to turn into the freaks that play AFL(M).
I have to agree, I played junior footy and one guy was drafted to North Melbourne, but didn't go, the other ended up playing 5 games for Central's in the SANFL, whilst another could run like the wind, ran for Australia in juniors, and ended up playing 20 odd games for Port in the AFL & captained a few Centrals premierships - but these guys were FREAKS and at a young age able to do things us other's simply weren't able too. People capable of playing AFL are few and far between
 
If you have special athleticism, toughness and a commitment to work hard I think the skill level required is actually quite low to get a chance at the AFL.

But that means either being 200cm+, mobile and fit or having good or great pace and running a sub 9;30 3km.

The big ruckman is probably the easiest path. Often times there's athletic really tough defenders with unfashionable skills who come from a long way back at the junior age to make very good AFL footballers without a lot of ball skills but they are usually excellent footballers in terms of ball winning, toughness and underrated athleticism at a lower level. I'm thinking of guys like Nick Maxwell and Dale Morris who were unfashionable with skills and didn't get drafted the first time around due to lack of skills but were far more than scrubbers who worked hard.
 
Maxwell was 193cm and 93kg, Morris 190 and 93. Both AFL key position size or just under. Average height is about 176 so these guys are still outliers in most social circles.

Very rare to get drafted under 180cm now and most that do have to have 'little guy' traits like electric pace or smarts around goal.

The AFL is a funny system because players are typically drafted at 18 when they aren't the finished product. Clubs are trying to project how a player's skills and abilities will translate and what their bodies will do rather than just picking the best performed.
 
I played school football with a nobody who got cut after a couple games with an AFL club. He was taller, stronger, had a better footy brain, and far better skills than me...so that's a no for me.

My best chance would've been to reinvent myself as a dirtier version of Tony Liberatore, if that's possible.

:smile: :smile:

Trouble is Libba was actually good before he got dirty.

He only got dirty later when Terry Wallace kept wanting to de-list him.
 
Maxwell was 193cm and 93kg, Morris 190 and 93. Both AFL key position size or just under. Average height is about 176 so these guys are still outliers in most social circles.

Very rare to get drafted under 180cm now and most that do have to have 'little guy' traits like electric pace or smarts around goal.

The AFL is a funny system because players are typically drafted at 18 when they aren't the finished product. Clubs are trying to project how a player's skills and abilities will translate and what their bodies will do rather than just picking the best performed.

If the AFL had half a brain they’d make the draft age 20.

Better players, more easily rated, more mature, happier, more well-rounded after perhaps some work or study.
 
If the AFL had half a brain they’d make the draft age 20.

Better players, more easily rated, more mature, happier, more well-rounded after perhaps some work or study.

No one seems to want that. Clubs would rather draft project players and prove they are more cleverer than have Zion Williamsons ready to go from day 1.
 
No chance played along side some fellas who have played wafl/ fringe AFL they where that much better it wasn't funny
 

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