Review Ex Giants player watch

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Whitfield too to an extent but he was the next one along the line after O'Meara.
Definitely.
The Whitfield pick never cops criticism, the other 2 are often viewed as poor picks.
They were both just unlucky.
 

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The website is continuing with its series of the top 10 draft picks over previous years. As with others here in this thread, it is very positive about our pick of Whitfield in the 2012 draft. We had the top 3 picks in that draft (and Bulldogs took Stringer as a 5th pick), although maybe the pick of O’Rourke wasn’t the best in hindsight.

1 - Lachie Whitfield (GWS)

The prized pick in the 2012 draft, Whitfield, unlike some, has lived up to the hype.

Still a one-club player, the utility is a two-time All-Australian and two-time Kevin Sheedy medallist.

Whitfield has been a pillar of durability, rarely missing a game since debuting in 2013 and playing at an impressively high level.


 
Lachie looks like he'd break in a strong breeze, but he's been pretty durable as noted. With 2 x AA and 2 x KSM, he's the second most decorated Giant behind Toby Greene. One of the few #1 picks who comes close to being the best player in his draft.
 
Lachie looks like he'd break in a strong breeze, but he's been pretty durable as noted. With 2 x AA and 2 x KSM, he's the second most decorated Giant behind Toby Greene. One of the few #1 picks who comes close to being the best player in his draft.
Could play at a high level for another 5 years imo.
 
AFL website has an interesting article on the biggest draft success and failures for the last 10 years


gws-giants.jpg

Biggest hit: Sam Taylor, pick 28, 2017
Biggest miss: Jarrod Pickett, pick 4, 2014

After six wins in its third season in the League, the Giants had a healthy hand going to the 2014 draft and used it on Jarrod Pickett, Caleb Marchbank (No.6) and Paul Ahern (No.7). The trio would all be traded out just two years later with a collective total of seven senior games – all to Marchbank. Rubbing salt in for the Giants was the fact Jordan De Goey went to Collingwood with pick No.5. Peter Wright (No.8), Lachie Weller (No.13) and Jake Lever (No.14) were also options that would have fitted nicely into an emerging GWS outfit. They absolutely nailed it with Sam Taylor three years later though, with the Swan Districts recruit arguably one of the game's best defenders over the past three years. – Michael Whiting


 
AFL website has an interesting article on the biggest draft success and failures for the last 10 years


gws-giants.jpg

Biggest hit: Sam Taylor, pick 28, 2017
Biggest miss: Jarrod Pickett, pick 4, 2014

After six wins in its third season in the League, the Giants had a healthy hand going to the 2014 draft and used it on Jarrod Pickett, Caleb Marchbank (No.6) and Paul Ahern (No.7). The trio would all be traded out just two years later with a collective total of seven senior games – all to Marchbank. Rubbing salt in for the Giants was the fact Jordan De Goey went to Collingwood with pick No.5. Peter Wright (No.8), Lachie Weller (No.13) and Jake Lever (No.14) were also options that would have fitted nicely into an emerging GWS outfit. They absolutely nailed it with Sam Taylor three years later though, with the Swan Districts recruit arguably one of the game's best defenders over the past three years. – Michael Whiting


Very fair call for us. Our 2014 draft was shocking.
 

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Yet Sos still has his defenders. 🙄
Normally Carlton and Now St Kilda fans.
Not many Giants fans.

I must say, (and have many times before) I think he traded well.
He got excellent value for our departing players, poor judge of talent though.
Drafted very poorly. And not just the benefit of hindsight, even at the time Rourke, Pickitt and Ahearn felt like reaches and proved to be so.
 
Tom Boyd, one of our number 1 draft picks, reflecting on leaving the game and forgoing $2 million of his contract

“Walking away from a couple of million dollars at the age of 23 when it seems like I basically got the greatest existence the world has ever given anyone. I mean that not in an arrogant way, but much more in an appreciative way," he said.

"When I look back at that period of time, on paper I was a premiership player in a club who hadn't won in 62 years, I have highlights from that day that will last forever. I was getting paid a million dollars a year to play football, which is the game that I grew up loving, wanting to play as a professional athlete.

"Even off the field, I had great family and friends, a beautiful partner who's now my wife and mother of my daughter. I literally had the most perfect, beyond your imagination life that could possibly ask.

"But I was using that exact circumstance as a reason why I wasn't dealing with the issues.

"The decision to walk away, and in particular the decision to give back that amount of money is a really foreign concept to people. And I understand that, absolutely. I understand how much money it was, I understand how many people wish they could play football for a living.

"But it was the right decision for me at that time, and it's been proven to be the right decision over the last five years."

Since retiring, Boyd has switched his focus to mental health advocacy and public speaking, and also runs performance measurement company Everperform in the private sector.


 
Tom Boyd, one of our number 1 draft picks, reflecting on leaving the game and forgoing $2 million of his contract

“Walking away from a couple of million dollars at the age of 23 when it seems like I basically got the greatest existence the world has ever given anyone. I mean that not in an arrogant way, but much more in an appreciative way," he said.

"When I look back at that period of time, on paper I was a premiership player in a club who hadn't won in 62 years, I have highlights from that day that will last forever. I was getting paid a million dollars a year to play football, which is the game that I grew up loving, wanting to play as a professional athlete.

"Even off the field, I had great family and friends, a beautiful partner who's now my wife and mother of my daughter. I literally had the most perfect, beyond your imagination life that could possibly ask.

"But I was using that exact circumstance as a reason why I wasn't dealing with the issues.

"The decision to walk away, and in particular the decision to give back that amount of money is a really foreign concept to people. And I understand that, absolutely. I understand how much money it was, I understand how many people wish they could play football for a living.

"But it was the right decision for me at that time, and it's been proven to be the right decision over the last five years."

Since retiring, Boyd has switched his focus to mental health advocacy and public speaking, and also runs performance measurement company Everperform in the private sector.


His open Mike episode was amazing and he spoke about all this, was really interesting
 

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Review Ex Giants player watch

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