FR0GGY
From a cartel villa in Tuscany
Can’t remember? 3 years maybe?Speaking of Tex, what’s the longest contract he’s got?
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Can’t remember? 3 years maybe?Speaking of Tex, what’s the longest contract he’s got?
I think Max Michalanney might be that guy.I wish we had a young player like Sloane on the list.
Unconditional effort, maximises his talent, capacity to lift the team and seems like a great bloke to have at a club.
He had his limitations that stopped him being in the ultra elite of players but he wasn't far off for a few seasons predominantly on effort and determination.
Reckon max has alot more natural ability than Rory though.I think Max Michalanney might be that guy.
Jake Soligo is the guyI wish we had a young player like Sloane on the list.
Unconditional effort, maximises his talent, capacity to lift the team and seems like a great bloke to have at a club.
He had his limitations that stopped him being in the ultra elite of players but he wasn't far off for a few seasons predominantly on effort and determination.
Next year the LG should be Dawson, Keays, Max and Jake. Maybe one more (Hinge) but that's it.Jake Soligo is the guy
Funny how the negative sentiments seem to correspond with their lack of form. Amazing.
Haven’t seen too many piss off Tex posts in the last few years, have you?
Why? Because a footy club supposed to be a family. You don't sh*t on members of the family. Especially on those that worked hard to make the family better. One might criticise some of the decisions made, but don't put down a player that has given all he could and call him selfish and greedy. But that's just my take.
Exactly what I was going to reply with!Reckon max has alot more natural ability than Rory though.
I feel it’s unfortunate how a fair few on here are blinded by a player’s statistical output, that nothing else becomes important. Sloane is the epitome of why a player is more than just his stats for these various reasons:
1. One-club man from an interstate location. It’s likely a testament to his overall talent and his ability to get the most of what his body can achieve, but likely to be a sign of loyalty in part. Speaking of which..
2. His contract extension in 2018 was more than just the sum of numbers between him and the club. Let me paint an ugly picture..we had a camp being talked about ad infinitum by a couple of Vic journalists (not in a good way); meanwhile, we were having players getting hammies, groin awareness, ass tightness etc. it was like a battlefield! Needless to say, 2018 was probably the lowest of lows in the overall mood department for players, coaches and fans alike. It was rumoured that a host of players would be leaving due to a “bad culture”. Going back on topic, Sloane was the guy that helped to produce calm among the calamity, with the contract extension. That had helped to galvanise the team from a wreckage of a year, and it was a statement that says “through thick or thin, I still want to be a part of it”.
3. The amount of injuries he’s sustained over the years is probably a sign of his courage mixed with (plenty of) bad luck. The courage part, is irrefutable and I’ll be impressed if anyone can find a bloke who has bled more for the club than Sloaney, figuratively and literally!
4. His mental strength and willpower to go through a ton of rehab. Honestly, if anyone of you who actually plays sport, you’d know injuries are inevitable. But if I were to go through all the rehab that’s Sloane has gone through, I’d quit much earlier than him. He’s certainly not in the peak of form in the last few years, but how many people can be in peak form with the amount of injuries like Sloane?
Thanks Sloaney for your contributions!
Soligo definitely with the effort, has less physical barriers to being a top tier player due to his pace and agility.Jake Soligo is the guy
I remember Rendell saying that he wanted to pick Rory late in the previous year's draft. I think it was when you could still take 17 year olds of a certain birth date range
We didn't but when was still there the year after we grabbed him
We lost a lot when Rendell left. Even if a lot of decisions are collaborative and others chip in, it was the partnership that worked
I remember Rendell saying that he wanted to pick Rory late in the previous year's draft. I think it was when you could still take 17 year olds of a certain birth date range
We didn't but when was still there the year after we grabbed him
We lost a lot when Rendell left. Even if a lot of decisions are collaborative and others chip in, it was the partnership that worked
To be fair, Rendell deciding to select Aaron Kite over Rory Sloane doesn't exactly reflect well on him, and even if you buy the "the club wanted a taller player" story, he had previously selected Armstrong, Cook and Jacky over him as well But hey, nobody else picked him up either that year.
My main memory from Sloane being recruited is the story of him playing on one of the high-ranked small forwards of that year (Yarran?), completely blanketing him, and then refusing to let him leave the ground until he shook his hand.
Beau Dowler Mitch Thorpe BoardCertainly a great drafting decision
Taking Shaun McKernan before Sloane (and Dayne Beams and Dan Hannebery and Liam Shiels and Steven Motlop and Mitch Robinson and Michael Walters) in the 2008 draft, not so much
Just quietly, the 2008 draft had a really good strike rate in the 2nd and 3rd rounds, bit of a superdraft in that respect
No current season stats available
With Sloane's retirement that leaves only seven players from the 2008 draft class who are still on AFL lists.
Steele Sidebottom
Liam Jones
Liam Shiels
Rhys Stanley
Michael Walters
Luke Breust
Lachlan Keeffe (who somehow has only 111 games in 14 years)
And, only seven players recruited prior to him as well:
Scott Pendlebury (2005)
Travis Boak (2006)
Todd Goldstein (2006)
Tom Hawkins (2006)
Patrick Dangerfield (2007)
Callan Ward (2007)
Taylor Walker (2007)
Lachlan Keefe and Rhys Stanley real outliers on that list from a quality standpoint
It goes with the turf. A professional athlete's career can be over suddenly after a serious injury, or just unemployed after a drop in form and is unwanted. It is in their interest to make as much as they can, and preferably as early as they can (especially in a high level contact sport).Find it weird when people don’t accept that basically all professional athletes are selfish and greedy, heck most humans are selfish and greedy on some level, it’s the nature of professional sports worldwide if you don’t back it up with success and performance whilst being selfish and greedy especially in a team sport you of course are open for at least some criticism no matter what you done previously.