Salary Cap Strategy

#37 Most Relevant | Stephen Hill
0 0
Read Time:4 Minute, 39 Second

Injuries have been cruel to Stephen Hill in the past few seasons. Is 2020 the year the former #3 draft pick bounces back into fantasy relevance?

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Stephen Hill
Age: 29
Club: Fremantle Dockers
Position: Defender/Forward

2019 Highest Score: 
51 Vs Hawthorn (AFLFantasy)
53 Vs Hawthorn (SuperCoach)

2019 Average: 

37.6 (AFLFantasy)
39 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $190,600
AFLFantasy Price: 
$428,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$245,100

Embed from Getty Images

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

Safe to say it has been a difficult past few seasons for Stephen Hill. He suffered back-to-back calf and quad injuries. The talented wingman also sustained a minor hamstring strain just as a return to AFL was close. Sadly for Freo and Hill, he managed only three matches in 2019 after playing thirteen the year prior.

Like many players that have featured in the 50 Most Relevant, while injuries are not wished upon anybody, they do create potential value for money selections. And for SuperCoach and AFLDreamTeam especially, that’s certainly the case.

When a player misses alot of football, we the footy fan and fantasy coach can quickly forget about just how quality the player is. Stephen Hill, when fit is a sublimely talented player. He offers a rare combination of elite speed, classy ball user and an elite decision-maker.

Between 2014-2016 we saw the scoring potential of Hill. In AFLFantasy/DreamTeam he averaged 84, 90 & 91. While for SuperCoach he averaged 96, 95 and 89.

The positive news for coaches is that he’s currently enjoying an injury-free preseason. Before going on Christmas break, he told reporters that he’s been getting through training well. 

HIll said to the club website that “Throughout the pre-season, I’ve been doing a lot of sprint work and I feel like my running hasn’t changed too much. “I’ve still got my speed and my endurance, so I feel fine, and hopefully, I can bring that speed into games.”

This is the sort of news potential owners have wanted to see. Here’s hoping he keeps having an injury-free and robust preseason.

Embed from Getty Images

MY TAKE

Stephen Hill offers us two things that most cash cows priced under $250,000 cannot. Firstly, he provides us with job security. Say what you wish about the need for the Dockers to blood youth, but that will not be at the extent of a Hill if he’s fit. He offers experience and a class in the midfield that is desperately crying out for it. If he’s healthy, even under a new coaching regime, he plays

Secondly, he offers us proven scoring potential. Often players under $250K are players that have played less than a handful of games and there scoring potential is predominantly unknown. It isn’t the case with Stephen Hill. He’s capable of averaging in the 80-90 range.

The beauty of him at his price is he doesn’t need to do that to be worth starting. AFLFantasy it’s a little higher and is priced awkwardly. AS such you’ll want to feel more confident in his scoring potential than in other formats.

Twelve months ago, one of the best cash cows we had was Connor Rozee. One of the things that made him so valuable was the flexibility of being able to select him in either your forward or defensive lines. While you don’t choose someone based on having FWD/DEF DPP it certainly adds a higher value to him.

The risk with selecting Hill isn’t about job security, or for the most part, scoring potential. Instead, it’s about whether his body will allow him enough games played to be a good cash cow for us. With Freo having the round thirteen week off, he can be held up till this point and then using his DPP move him onto a forward or defensive premium.

Honestly, a minimum of 6-8 games at the 60+ range will mean he’s more than done his job as a cash cow for DreamTeam and SuperCoach. Getting him until the bye round would be excellent, but you may not need him that long.

The reason for not picking Stephen Hill is relatively apparent. His durability of late has been weak. Just three games last year and has only played sixteen of a possible past forty-four matches available.

Hill is an injury risk, but so too are many players. At his price point, the risk is almost non-existent. Remember, he doesn’t need to score like a premium to make his selection worthwhile. You could build a case that it’s riskier to start Docherty than Hill.

In SuperCoach and DreamTeam if he’s fit, I find it very difficult to build a case not to start him. In those two formats, I have him in my side. AFLFantasy, at this stage, I’m more than likely to pass and look elsewhere.

DRAFT DECISION

A very, very, very late selection. And that’s at best. Maybe his DPP is enough to get you over the line if you need some versatility with your benches.

JOIN THE CONVERSATION

Do you believe he is fantasy relevant?
Will you be starting with him?
Have your say at our Facebook,  Twitter or Instagram

WANT EARLY ACCESS?

Want access 24 hours early to the 50 Most Relevant podcasts? Join our Patreon and get ahead of the Crowd!

NEXT UP…

Tune into our Facebook page at 9pmEDST for a clue

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %
#38 Most Relevant | Andrew Gaff
0 0
Read Time:5 Minute, 16 Second

Over the past two seasons, Andrew Gaff has been one of the most underrated and consistent midfield premiums. In 2020 will he continue on this trend?

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Andrew Gaff
Age: 27
Club: West Coast Eagles
Position: Midfield

2019 Highest Score: 
144 Vs Gold Coast (AFLFantasy)
154 Vs Gold Coast (SuperCoach)

2019 Average: 

111 (AFLFantasy)
107 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $583,200
AFLFantasy Price: 
$824,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$802,500

Embed from Getty Images

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

Andrew Gaff wasn’t a popular option in starting squads in 2019. The reason being he still had two weeks remaining from his suspension that saw him miss the Eagles 2018 Premiership. However, once he returned to the side, he showcased his footballing prowess.

The West Coast Eagles wingman finished the season averaging 31 possessions, twenty-two of them uncontested. He ranks elite in the league for kicks, handballs, clearances, uncontested possessions, uncontested marks and inside ’50s.

From his twenty games played in SuperCoach, he delivered fourteen scores over the ton, five of them over 120 including a 154 against the Suns and finished the year with an average of 107. Added to his ceiling, he had only six games where he scored below 100 and nothing lower than 76.

While for AFLFantasy/DreamTeam he sixteen scores of 100 or more, eight of them were 110 or over and his lowest score for the season was 91. Over the final nine games of the season, his lowest score was 100. Yep, he ended the year with a run of nine consecutive hundreds and a seasonal average of 111.

It backs up his breakout 2018 season which elevated from him being a consistent performer to being a genuine top 8 midfielder in all the formats. That season he averaged 110 in AFLFantasy from nineteen games and hit the triple-figure range in thirteen of those matches. Eight of those tons were over 110 and three were 146 or higher. In SuperCoach he averaged 108 for the year and rewarded coaches with fourteen tons including a stretch of nine consecutive tons from round 2-10. 

Gaff has long been heralded as one of the best outside midfielders in the game, but historically has struggled to score when tagged. With players like Luke Shuey and now Tim Kelly entering into the midfield unit he’s not always been the oppositions first (or only) target. However, in 2019 we started to see him overcome this. In round 12 against Sydney, he was tagged by Ryan Clarke for scores of 91 (AFLFantasy) & 107 (SuperCoach). The next game he lined up against Essendon’s Dylan Clarke and scored 92 (AFLFantasy) and 89 (SuperCoach.) Don’t forget some of Clarke’s successful tags killed the fantasy output of Patrick Cripps, Jaeger O’Meara and Rory Sloane.

Like many of our premiums, he scores better in wins over losses. For AFLFantasy/DreamTeam the difference is last year in wins he averaged 113.3 as opposed to 105.7 in losses. That’s a differential of 7.6. For SuperCoach in victories, he averages 109.1 as opposed to 103.3 when the Eagles lose. A difference of 5.8.

Embed from Getty Images

MY TAKE

The three key things you want from your premiums are that their scoring deviation is minimal, that they have a high ceiling and they rarely miss matches. For Andrew Gaff, he has all three in spades. Barring his suspension in 2018/2019, he has missed just one game (concussion related) between 2012-2017. Six games in eight seasons missed and five of those games were due to his hit on Brayshaw.

Last year as well as starting to overcome the tag, we saw Adam Simpson start to use Gaff inside the square at centre bounces not just across the wing. Across the season he moved from attending 20% of centre bounces (6-8 per game) right up to 50% (13-15 per game). Will this continue on moving into 2020?

Possibly the biggest unknown for him and it’s linked to his attendance at centre bounces is around the addition of Tim Kelly coming into the midfield. Last year he ranked elite across the league for clearances, contested possessions, disposals, goal assists, inside ’50s and was a staple part of the Cats midfield core.

What is the impact? Does he move out of centre bounces entirely? Does Tim Kelly eat away at his fantasy scoring? In all honesty, until we see the West Coast full midfield strength, it’ll just be a combination of hypothesis and fantasy coaches intuition. If you have any doubts or concern, the equation is simple. Mark him then down as an upgrade target and pass on him in your starting side.

Even if Gaff does move back to the outside role more exclusively, we have the data from 2018 season. That year he played predominantly as a wingman with little inside work. His fantasy numbers across 2019 and 2018 are less than 1 point per game difference, and last year he was up only one kick and mark per game.

He has an excellent bye round for upgrade target, and if you don’t want to take the ‘risk’ that may be associated with Kelly’s arrival, you’ll be able to take a few weeks to watch for any reduction in scores. Right now, I’ve got Gaff currently in my AFLDreamTeam side and will seriously consider him as an upgrade target in SuperCoach and AFLFantasy.

DRAFT DECISION

Andrew Gaff is a genuine top 10-15 midfielder across the formats. However, he doesn’t offer the broad appeal that others do. As such, he could still slide and be available in the third or even fourth rounds of drafts. I’d happily gobble him up at this selection and is a worthy pick at an M2. Anything lower is a nice early win on draft day.

JOIN THE CONVERSATION

Do you believe he is fantasy relevant?
Will you be starting with him?
Have your say at our Facebook,  Twitter or Instagram

WANT EARLY ACCESS?

Want access 24 hours early to the 50 Most Relevant podcasts? Join our Patreon and get ahead of the Crowd!

NEXT UP…

Tune into our Facebook page at 9pmEDST for a clue

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %
#39 Most Relevant | James Sicily
0 0
Read Time:5 Minute, 7 Second

Last year looked as though James Sicily was primed to enter into becoming one of the elite scoring defenders. However, things didn’t go to plan. Will they in 2020?

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: James Sicily
Age: 25
Club: Hawthorn Hawks
Position: Defender

2019 Highest Score: 
121 Vs Collingwood (AFLFantasy)
141 Vs Collingwood (SuperCoach)

2019 Average: 

83.6 (AFLFantasy)
93.8 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $509,500
AFLFantasy Price: 
$620,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$604,600

Embed from Getty Images

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

James Sicily is one of the best defenders in the league. Last year he finished fourth in the Hawks best and fairest and was recognised for his season with selection in the initial All Australian squad of forty.

Sicily possesses the rare ability to control the game from behind the ball with his elite marking and his decision making by foot makes him a valuable asset for the Hawks. He ranks elite in the AFL for kicks, contested marks, uncontested marks and rebound 50’s.

Up until the bye round, he was delivering as fantasy coaches expected. From the first eleven games of the year in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, he had five scores over 100 including three over 110 and averaging 94.2 For SuperCoach he was averaging 99.8 and had scored six times in triple figures with three of them 117 or higher.

2019 was a year of inconsistency (which we’ll talk about later), but we’ve got more than just a dozen games of data that highlight his potential scoring. Back in 2018 from a SuperCoach perspective, he scored eight tons, half of those were over 120, and during the season he had only three scores that dipped below 90. For AFLFantasy/SuperCoach he scored five tons including a 125 against Essendon and had five further games that he scored over 90.

During the final ten matches of 2017 when his defensive role was initiated. He averaged 24 possessions, nine marks and despite being heavily tagged in one match where he didn’t score over 25 in any fantasy format he still scored like a premium. During that stretch of games in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, he had eight scores of 85 or more, five tons and an average of 89.8. While in SuperCoach Sicily posted eight scores 87 or above, five of those were tons and averaged 91.4.

The positive of a quite back half of the season (and with good reason) means he’s priced significantly cheaper than what you’d have paid twelve months earlier. I would suggest if you were bullish on Sicily last year and started him at 95 in AFLFantasy or 105 in SuperCoach, then you should be seriously factoring him into your starting squad this year.

Embed from Getty Images

MY TAKE

2019 was meant to be the year James Sicily established himself as one of the best long term defensive premiums. However, after the bye round the scoring consistency of Sicily was impacted due to some coaching adjustments. These forced him to play two roles that were both impacting his fantasy football output. Firstly in round thirteen and fourteen, he played as a key forward. Additionally the final eight weeks he played predominantly as a lockdown key defender.

One of the primary reasons for a role change was due to a lack of key defensive options due to injuries. This forced Sicily to play as a more accountable defender and was unable to peel off and set up the play as we’d previously seen.

Over the final 11 games of the season, he averaged a measly 73 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 87.8 in SuperCoach. That’s approximately twenty points difference to what he was doing pre bye in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and twelve in SuperCoach.

During the offseason, Hawthorn acquired the services of Sam Frost, Michael Hately and Jon Patton. The recruitment of these three should help free up Sicily in his preferred role in defence.

Clarko is no John Longmire who’ll change a players role for the sake of it. But he has shown over his coaching career and again emphasised with Sicily’s moves this year he’s more than happy to experiment. Whether it be a mid-game move or something that would last for multiple weeks. The master coach is always looking for a new edge to win a game.

The other two key variables to consider are around his bye round and what his ownership percentage is entering the season. If Sicily is at 10% or lower ownership that might be the deciding factor in me selecting him. A player with his ceiling potential at the small ownership is a handy point of difference.

Additionally, how do you rank him against other premium options from his bye round (14)? Rory Laird, Caleb Daniel and Zac Williams loom as three great options for us in 2020. Where you rank Sicily within those three should give you an indicator of whether he is in consideration as a starting squad option or a trade-in target across the season.

Currently, I have Sicily in my AFLFantasy side and am seriously considering him in DreamTeam and SuperCoach. I wouldn’t be surprised to see him bounce back and become a top-five defender in all formats of the game.

DRAFT DECISION

Twelve months ago to own him you’d have been forking out atop 3-5 round selection. However, this season you won’t have to do that. I still like him as a draft option as a D2 with the potential is he should get scoring returns of a D1.
Alternatively, you can target to draft him as your D1 and go heavier early on with selections in other lines.

JOIN THE CONVERSATION

Do you believe he is fantasy relevant?
Will you be starting with him?
Have your say at our Facebook,  Twitter or Instagram

WANT EARLY ACCESS?

Want access 24 hours early to the 50 Most Relevant podcasts? Join our Patreon and get ahead of the Crowd!

NEXT UP…

Tune into our Facebook page at 9pmEDST for a clue

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %
#40 Most Relevant | Matt Rowell
0 0
Read Time:5 Minute, 55 Second

Will it be worth spending top dollar for last years #1 AFL draft pick?

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Matt Rowell
Age: 18
Club: Gold Coast Suns
Position: Midfield

SuperCoach Price: $207,300
AFLFantasy Price: 
$270,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$252,200

Embed from Getty Images

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

Like 12 months earlier with Sam Walsh, the number one selection in the draft was clear for the majority of this season. Inside midfielder Matt Rowell dominated the Under 18 Championships for Vic Metro and the NAB league for Oakleigh Chargers.

For the past few seasons, Rowell has dominated the junior tournaments. He’s won back-to-back best-afield medals in the Under 18 Grand Finals. This year in Oakleigh’s premiership win he had 44 disposals and two crucial goals.

At the Under 18 Championships for Vic Metro, Rowell averaged 25 disposals a game, 12 of those were contested possessions. In the NAB League for Oakleigh, Rowell averaged 171 SuperCoach and 123 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam. From his seven games, he averaged 32 disposals, 17 contested possessions, eight tackles and four marks per game.

Here’s a picture of his total stats dominance over the past two seasons across his time playing for Oakleigh and Vic Metro.

Under 18s Championships

SeasonTeamKHBDMCPUPTHOCLRI50R50GLGM
2018Vic Metro1425395202011083102
2019Vic Metro3564992048532402112434
Total49891382568733502915536

NAB League

SeasonTeamKHBDMCPUPTHOCLRI50R50GLGM
2018Oakleigh Chargers1101022125479139290153314311
2019Oakleigh Chargers891332222911810860058311237
Total227274501942142981020767728822

He is such a dominant inside midfielder. You could build the case that he is already the best midfielder at Gold Coast. That’s not a slide on the talent they have, instead, it’s an indicator at just how good he already is.

The inside bull doesn’t waste touches, and he has a burst of speed away from stoppages. You can lock him in for Round 1 this year if fit. He has the ball-winning skills, defensive efforts and a solid tank to have an impact from day one.

Priced over $200,000 across all fantasy football formats Matt Rowell is the most expensive first-year player in the game. However, if he can even get close to the fantasy scores of Sam Walsh, then it will be worth every cent.

Embed from Getty Images

MY TAKE

Historically, spending the big bucks on the top-priced cash cow midfielders hasn’t always been the correct play. Here’s a breakdown of how the all #1 draft and mini-draft selections since 2010. I’ve removed all key position players. Here’s how they scored in terms of fantasy footy output in their debut season.

NAMESuperCoach
Debut Season AVG
AFLFantasy/DreamTeam
Debut Season AVG
Sam Walsh86.992.2
Cam Rayner60.358.6
Andrew McGrath70.670.5
Lachie Whitfield7371.1
David Swallow79.576.2
Jaeger O’Meara89.989.1
Brad Crouch87.292
Jack Martin56.450.3

One key factor in the decision-making process is, do you believe in ‘paying up for job security’? Without playing our cash cows become null and void. I understand that perspective. However, just because of players increased price, it doesn’t guarantee them games. Instead, it must be based on the unique variables on why they are getting games to begin.

The job of cash cows primarily is to make us as much money as possible as quickly as possible. While the higher ceiling scores are preferrable, the more expensive a cash cow is, the higher they need to score to generate the same amount of money. To make the same amount Rowell must outscore others at the base price. 

We are using AFLDreamTeam pricing formats as an illustration. Currently, Rowell is priced at an average of 35 ($252,200). If we were to contrast him to a Ned McHenry ($160,900) is around 22. Straight away, Rowell is giving up thirteen points on the starting price average. To simplify the equation, we want Rowell to score 13 points per game more than McHenry generate the same out of money. While McHenry may not ‘score the same’ on-field, he doesn’t have to for him to make the same amount of money. Also, the salary cap saved (in this illustration is $91K) could be the difference between going from starting Scott Pendlebury to affording Jack Macrae which based on last years averages is 12 points per game.

The logic is similar across SuperCoach and AFLFantasy. However, the key questions we need to discover over the preseason are:

– How many rookies will we get that are midfield eligible? 

– How are they priced?

– Do you forecast Rowell will score approximately 15 points per game more than the lower-priced rookies?

The answers to these questions will give you an informed perspective to make the best decision possible for your side and the strategies your choosing to action.

Finally, should Matt Rowell commence the season and for whatever justification you choose to take him on, the other factor you need to consider is around ownership. If his ownership is north of 50%-60% of teams any risk of ‘overpaying’ to own him gets eliminated. If you do choose to take him on, my encouragement is to set an ownership benchmark that you feel comfortable, because there is a point where the risk vs reward can switch very quickly against you.

So many of the stats line up about Rowell and Walsh, how are they different? One of the critical differences between Sam Walsh and Matt Rowell is that Rowell is a higher risk of being tagged. At Carlton as good as Walsh is, no coach is crazy enough to choose to negate his input in a game and allow Cripps to go free. At Gold Coast, nobody is demanding attention ahead of him. Not every side players ‘taggers’ but for those that do, Rowell is a genuine candidate to cop it.

For what it’s worth the opening six matches for Gold Coast are: Port Adelaide, Geelong, Sydney, Fremantle, Melbourne and GWS. Round three against Sydney should they tag will be a crucial game in terms of his cash generation.

Currently, like I did Sam Walsh, I have him in my side. I will watch him, and our other cash cows preseasons and Marsh series games to give me all the information I need to make an informed decision.

DRAFT DECISION

Matt Rowell is a midfielder who in keeper leagues will be valued incredibly highly for many years to come. Regardless of my ladder position in a keeper league, I’d be doing anything I could to get access to the #1 selection, barring something extraordinary being dropped back into the pool he’s the clear pick in your draft.

For single-season / redraft leagues, I don’t mind him as a selection in the last few rounds of the draft in the hope that he does match, Sam Walsh.

JOIN THE CONVERSATION

Do you believe he is fantasy relevant?
Will you be starting with him?
Have your say at our Facebook,  Twitter or Instagram

WANT EARLY ACCESS?

Want access 24 hours early to the 50 Most Relevant podcasts? Join our Patreon and get ahead of the Crowd!

NEXT UP…

Tune into our Facebook page at 9pmEDST for a clue

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %
#41 Most Relevant |Connor Blakely
0 0
Read Time:5 Minute, 45 Second

I’m giving you one last chance, Connor! It’s the make or break year of fantasy relevance for this Fremantle Docker. Will 2020 be his year?

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Connor Blakely
Age: 23
Club: Fremantle Dockers
Position: Defender

2019 Highest Score: 
104 Vs Carlton (AFLFantasy)
105 Vs Collingwood (SuperCoach)

2019 Average: 

74.7 (AFLFantasy)
75.7 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $411,500
AFLFantasy Price:
$555,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$540,700

Embed from Getty Images

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

Twelve months ago Connor Blakely was one of the preseason darlings of the fantasy football community. Lachie Neale had just departed the club, and many were speculating that after biding his time as a half back, that a move into the midfield was inevitable.

Sadly, we never got to see this much-hyped move. He severely injured his hamstring, which required surgery. It meant he would miss a minimum of three months of football. It wasn’t until mid-May in the Dockers round nine match against the Bombers that we saw him at the elite level. Across his fourteen games this year his role was never fully settled floating between a rebounding half-back, occasional inside midfielder and even at times a small lockdown defender.

From a fantasy perspective, the injuries and occasional role moves meant we had an inconsistent scoring season from Connor. Just one AFLFantasy/DreamTeam ton for the season, and four additional scores over 90. For SuperCoach only the two scores of 105 and an average in the mid-’70s.

The positive of an interrupted season is he could present value for potential owners. Even without a discount, he’s priced 17 points beneath his 2017 and 2018 averages for AFLFantasy/DreamTeam. While for SuperCoach he’s priced 14 points under his personal best average of 89 from 2017.

2017 was a career-best fantasy footy year for Connor Blakely. For SuperCoach he averaged 89, scored nine times of 100 or more, three of them over 120 and twice he had a run of four consecutive hundreds. In the same season for AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, he averaged 91, had seven scores over 100 including three of 134 or higher.

The following year, he averaged 91 again for AFLFantasy/DreamTeam with just five scores in triple figures. For SuperCoachers, he averaged 85 and had only the four scores over the ton. Given what he’s done previously, he shows enormous potential for coaches prepared to select him.

When talking about scoring, there are two types of potential. Firstly, there is proven potential. Someone that has been there, done that. And for whatever reason is priced beneath what he’s shown as his capacity. The other is someone who could or even should be based on a forecast of possible scenarios. Connor Blakely isn’t someone that could or should be able to score well. Instead, he is someone we know can and does when he gets on the field and has the right role.

Embed from Getty Images

MY TAKE

There are plenty of potential upsides when looking at Connor Blakely. Unlike others, he doesn’t need to move into the midfield to score 100’s. We have multiple seasons of data that suggests he’s as capable as scoring off the half-back. That said, I have my reservations. 

Until we get to see the preseason matches, I find it increasingly difficult to select him with confidence. I have so many questions about how Fremantle will structure up on all lines, what game style they’ll employ and what if any impact that will have on his fantasy game. 

Does he have a role in the new look Fremantle midfield? He was drafted as an inside midfielder. Does he move into the guts? Beyond Nat Fyfe as the centrepiece, there are still so many questions as to how it could look. I expect Michael Walters to have plenty of time in the guts, along with Reece Conca. Then which developing talent gets the bulk of the time? Is it Andrew Brayshaw, Adam Cerra, Mitchell Crowden, Luke Valente, Tom North, Darcy Tucker, Brett Bewley, James Aish or the man that kicked off the 50 Most Relevant Blake Acres. It’s just too early to know. 

There is the possibility he stays part of the core backline unit. However, the inclusion of Hayden Young will change the dynamic of that back six and in the right way. Young’s ability to intercept and then distribute the ball with pinpoint precision will only advance the Fremantle Dockers. However, will that aid or hurt Blakely? Only time will tell. A fit Connor Blakely is in my mind part of the Dockers best 22. However, what role he plays I’m not confident.

As much as I have questions on role, the biggest red flag when considering Connor Blakely is his durability. In the past five seasons, his games played tally reads like an Ashton Agar batting card: 15, 17, 13 & 14. A players historical durability shouldn’t be a sole reason not to select a player. Twelve months ago people would’ve said the same about Brad Crouch, yet he went on to play 22 games last year. The year before it was Devon Smith, and before that, Taylor Adams.

Every year someone finds a way to break the cycle and gets a full season of footy. Will 2020 be that year for Connor? My encouragement would be, if you rule him out of your starting squad for the reason of injury risk, then you should not target him as a trade target. If injuries are the only reason you avoid, the potential for injuries based on history only increases with every game played.

I’ll be watching the preseason gameplan of Fremantle and role of Connor Blakely very carefully this preseason. He’ll stay on my watchlist, but in AFLFantasy I’m more interested given the potential of upside at his low price and the ease of being able to move him on with two trades a week.

DRAFT DECISION

When your draft happens and what role he has will determine where he’s ranked for many coaches. If I had to make a judgement call right now, I’d be looking to target him no earlier than as a D3 across all formats knowing that the best-case scenario is he’s a D2 with the worst case he becomes a bench cover option.

JOIN THE CONVERSATION

Do you believe he is fantasy relevant?
Will you be starting with him?
Have your say at our Facebook,  Twitter or Instagram

WANT EARLY ACCESS?

Want access 24 hours early to the 50 Most Relevant podcasts? Join our Patreon and get ahead of the Crowd!

NEXT UP…

Tune into our Facebook page at 9pmEDST for a clue

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %
#42 Most Relevant | Dayne Zorko
0 0
Read Time:5 Minute, 18 Second

The Brisbane Lions captain was one of the form players of fantasy footy over the final few months of 2019. Does that scoring continue entering into 2020?

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Dayne Zorko
Age: 30
Club: Brisbane Lions
Position: Midfield

2019 Highest Score: 
143 Vs Melbourne (AFLFantasy)
155 Vs Melbourne (SuperCoach)

2019 Average: 

104.1 (AFLFantasy)
106.6 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $579,100
AFLFantasy Price: 
$775,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$753,200

Embed from Getty Images

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

If you started Dayne Zorko, it was a painful some few weeks early, but it had a glorious finish for the year. Over the opening six matches, he scored just the one AFLFantasy/DreaTeam hundred and two in SuperCoach. I know some coaches that at this point committed the cardinal sin, and traded out a misfiring premium.

Don’t forget one of the keys to success in all formats of fantasy footy. Buy low, sell high! The signs started to come, that post-round thirteen Zorko was a standout upgrade target. Between rounds 7-12 he had three AFLFantasy/DreamTeam scores of 100+ and didn’t dip below 80 while in SuperCoach during these six games his lowest score was 85 and posted four tons.

Timing is everything when it comes to having success in fantasy footy. Whether it be who you start, or when you trade a player. The timing of the moves can ultimately return value for money and ensure you get on the right player right on the perfect time.

Coaches that got Dayne Zorko after his slow start at his bottomed-out price or straight after his round 13 bye were rewarded handsomely. Here’s a visual of his scorers over the final ten matches of the year.

In the final ten matches post-bye round Zorko had just two scores under 100 for both formats. One of these was an injury impacted score against the bulldogs. In that match, he had only 49% time on the ground as he pulled up with tight hamstring and the club chose to be cautious. And yes, he was on track to score another 100 at this point of the game.

In SuperCoach he averaged 116, had eight scores over 100, five of them were above 120, and an impressive three surpassed 140. In AFLFantasy/DreamTeam he averaged 111 and had five scores where he scored 120 or more.

Long-time coaches will know this isn’t the first high scoring season from Zorko. In 2017 for AFLFantasy/DreamTeam he averaged 114 and scored 15 hundred plus scores, while in SuperCoach he averaged 110, posted 15 tons including a personal best 196 against Geelong. The year before that he averaged 106 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam which featured 14 scores over the ton and for SuperCoach he averaged 108 and scored over 100 in 14 matches including a run of nine consecutive hundreds to start the season.

In addition to his great scoring ceiling and consistency, Dayne is also incredibly durable. Zorko has missed just four games in the past seven seasons. History should give coaches confidence that should they choose Zorko he’s got zero accounts of ongoing or frequent injury concerns.

Embed from Getty Images

MY TAKE

The scoring highs of Dayne Zorko are as strong as any other topline premium in the game. However, his scoring basement historically can sometimes rival that of a first-year player. The predominant reason for these lower scores has been when opposition sides have chosen to place a hard tag. Back in 2018, he had multiple tagging impacted scores were he struggled to score 50.

However, across 2019 this didn’t appear to take place with Lachie Neale becoming opposition teams absolute priority to stop. I’d have confidence that this trend should continue, but it’s undoubtedly a prospective fantasy owner need to factor into calculations.

Interestingly at first glance, he appears to have a more frequent higher ceiling against struggling teams. Perhaps that could be due to the fixture the Lions had across their season. For what it’s worth of his five scores of 120+ last year only once was it for SuperCoach (141 Vs Richmond) and three times In AFLFantasy/DreamTeam against teams that played finals.

He’ll be 31 at the start of the AFL season, could we see a more diminished midfield role? The Lions have brought in Cam Ellis-Yolmen while they are keen to keep developing the potential already shown by Jarrod Berry, Cam Rayner and Hugh McCluggage. I don’t believe so. He brings a dimension of flair, dash and XFactor that should the Lions plan to go deeper into playing finals will require the captain to play a central role inside the Brisbane midfield.

At the end of the season, Zorko was in around 5% of teams across all formats. Even with such incredibly strong scoring that’s very low ownership. The positive for coaches this year is whether you choose to start or upgrade to him, even if he’s flying, he appears to be the type of player that is underrated in the fantasy community.

Finally, with the Lions have the first week of the byes off, coaches may target him as a critical upgrade target coming off the rest. Personally, that’s where I will be seriously considering in all formats.

DRAFT DECISION

Across all formats of the game, he’s ranked inside top 20 midfield options based off last years averages. If he remains in a similar scoring vein, then he’ll be one of the secure midfield options for draft coaches. He’s a genuine M2 candidate but could slide to as late as M3 if coaches choose to either go for same more flashier names positioned beneath him. Alternatively, if coaches decide to draft deeper in the midfield and not use the initial selections on alternate lines.

As a durable and high ceiling midfielder, he indeed looms as being a fantastic addition for whichever coach picks him up.

JOIN THE CONVERSATION

Do you believe he is fantasy relevant?
Will you be starting with him?
Have your say at our Facebook,  Twitter or Instagram

WANT EARLY ACCESS?

Want access 24 hours early to the 50 Most Relevant podcasts? Join our Patreon and get ahead of the Crowd!

NEXT UP…

Tune into our Facebook page at 9pmEDST for a clue

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %
#44 Most Relevant | Callan Ward
0 0
Read Time:5 Minute, 6 Second

Plenty went right for the Giants in season 2019. One thing that didn’t was a season-ending injury in round one to then captain Callan Ward. If he can get back to his fantasy footy best, then in 2020 we have a firm bargain pick.

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Callan Ward
Age: 29
Club: GWS Giants
Position: Midfield

SuperCoach Price: $511,400
AFLFantasy Price: 
To Be Announced
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$630,500

Embed from Getty Images

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

Plenty went right for the Giants in season 2019. The clubs first-ever appearance in a Grand Final, retaining the services of Stephen Coniglio as well as Jeremy Cameron’s success in winning Coleman Medal. One thing that didn’t was a season-ending injury in round one to then captain Callan Ward. If he can get back to his fantasy footy best, then in 2020 we have a firm bargain pick.

Before his ACL injury in the opening minutes of the year, the former GWS co-captain was among the most consistent performers in all formats of the game.

In SuperCoach since 2012 only twice has a failed to average 100 or more, with his lowest seasonal average being 97.3. Most recently since 2015, he hadn’t missed a game and his lowest tally of hundreds in a season was twelve back in 2016. As a visual, here’s how consistent he has been as a scoring option.

In AFLFantasy/DreamTeam he hasn’t been as prominent over the 100 marker average per season but has still been incredibly consistent. From 2012-2018 his lowest seasonal average was 93.5, including a personal best year averaging 100 on 2015.

With a discount across all formats of the game, you’re no longer paying ‘top dollar’ for him. If in previous seasons he’s been a player of interest to you then you need to factor him into your calculations given his discount.

The big difference between Ward and others at his price point is that he’s a proven performer over a number of years and isn’t someone that offers unproven potential. He offers fantastic value based on the price investment and could very well be the 2020 version of Rory Sloane in SuperCoach. By that I mean to be someone who’s averaged 100 before, offers value due to an injury impacted previous season and ends up being someone you keep as your final on-field midfielder.

Embed from Getty Images

MY TAKE

The injury to Callan Ward was a horrific start to the yeat for the Giants. However, the loss of Ward was minimized with the emergence of a new set of s from GWS. Tim Taranto raised his game to a new level. He elevated his AFLFantasy average up 22 points to 110 and SuperCoach average up 14 points to 102. Lachie Whitfield was already a star of the competition but took his game and fantasy outputs to new heights. He averaged 113 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 111 in SuperCoach. Even the human bull Jacob Hopper had his average leap 15 points per game in all formats.

What impact does his return have on his and the other GWS Giants midfielders? Does he even move straight back into the midfield full time or will he be eased back in by the coaching staff? If he does returns through the midfield (which he should), it’d be more likely the second and third-tier options have their minutes affected. Players like Harry PerrymanAdam Kennedy, Daniel Lloyd and even Toby Greene will barely be required to roll through the guts of a fully fit midfield unit. I forecast the GWS midfield unit to be built Josh Kelly, Stephen Coniglio, Callan Ward, Lachie Whitfield, Tim Taranto, Zac Williams and Matt de Boer.

The other key variable is how well does he score, even with the role coming off an ACL injury? The data suggests that most players don’t start scoring at the same pace in the opening few months as they take their time getting back into the full riggers of AFL.

While he has received a discount, he is awkwardly priced, especially in the more limited trade formats of the game. In DreamTeam he’s priced around options like Angus Brayshaw. While for SuperCoach the new captain of the Giants Stephen Coniglio is only $40,000 more expensive. At his price point in these formats to select him you’ll be hoping he turns into someone to hold for the season more likely than a stepping stone.

For me, in the limited trade formats, I’m likely to approach the midfield with premium and cash cow options so midprice or stepping stone selections don’t work for me. So Callan Ward won’t be selected. For AFLFantasy I’ll consider him as he could easily score well over the opening 5-6 weeks and do enough to make a quick trade to a bottomed-out premium.

Regardless, he needs to be on your watchlist because even if he isn’t someone your keen on, his arrival back into the Giants midfield may impact a player you are keen on.

DRAFT DECISION

Every scoring format of drafts requires a different strategy. Where you’ll be able to draft Ward in SuperCoach will likely be significantly earlier than if you play AFL Fantasy scoring. Previously you’d be parting with as high as an M3 draft selection. However, with question marks about how he returned from injury and will he now be someone who slides and be likely available a few rounds later and is someone I’d consider from M5-M6.

JOIN THE CONVERSATION

Do you believe he is fantasy relevant?
Will you be starting with him?
Have your say at our Facebook,  Twitter or Instagram

WANT EARLY ACCESS?

Want access 24 hours early to the 50 Most Relevant podcasts? Join our Patreon and get ahead of the Crowd!

NEXT UP…

Tune into our Facebook page at 9pmEDST for a clue

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %
#45 Most Relevant | Zac Williams
0 0
Read Time:4 Minute, 28 Second

In 2019 he was one of the most popular midprice selections that turned out to be a season-long keeper. Is Zac Williams a good selection in 2020?

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Zac Williams
Age: 25
Club: GWS Giants
Position: Defender

2019 Highest Score: 
142 Vs Sydney (AFLFantasy)
143 Vs North Melbourne (SuperCoach)

2019 Average: 

92.7 (AFLFantasy)
101.6 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $551,700
AFLFantasy Price: 
To Be announced
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$670,00

Embed from Getty Images

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

Last year Zac Williams was one of the most popular midpriced players of 2019. In the 50 Most Relevant last year, I spoke about him being a candidate for becoming a SuperCoach keeper for the year. He certainly delivered on that!

Zac delivered a personal best year in SuperCoach averaging 101, posting eleven tons and only scored below 80 in three matches. It was also a career-high year for him in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam averaging 92.7 and reaching triple figures in nine games.

As strong as he was across the year, several coaches decided to upgrade him once he injured his hamstring in round nine against Carlton. It appeared to be the correct decision. He was averaging 94 in SuperCoach, 84 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and made enough money to sideways him to a fallen premium.

It was upon his return in round twelve that Zac’s scoring got moving. 

In the final 11 games of the year, he posted an average of 103 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and scored seven tons including three over 120. While for SuperCoach he averaged 107 and posted 8 tons including a season-high 143 against the Kangaroos. In terms of scoring differential for pre and post-injury that’s +19 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and +13 in SuperCoach.

Zac wasn’t the only injury that struck the Giants midfield in 2019. At one time or another, they were missing Callan Ward, Josh Kelly, Stephen Coniglio and tagger Matt de Boer. When now current captain Coniglio got injured Zac’s role moved from the halfback to playing through the midfield.

The role carried through the AFL Finals, during which he averaged 91in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 101 in SuperCoach.

He’s currently training with the midfield group through the preseason and the now #4 ranked SuperCoach and #8 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam defender still present potential value if he can retain the scoring that saw him fly through the last few months of the year.

Embed from Getty Images

MY TAKE

Hindsight says it was the correct decisions to start and hold Zac Williams throughout the 2019 season. However, alot went right for him that meant he scored in the ways that he did. Does he maintain that midfield role in 2020?

He currently is training with the midfield group across the preseason, and when he did play that role last year, he added another dimension to what is already a potent midfield unit.

The departure of Adam Tomlinson could open up a way to help him retain his midfield time even with the return of injured stars Callan Ward and Stephen Coniglio. Coach Leon Cameron loved the work he brought in the midfield when injured stars were absent. However, he’ll face competition from second-year players Jye Caldwell, and Jackson Hately will also be pushing hard in the preseason for this role.

Even if he doesn’t retain midfield minutes, I don’t have a concern of a significant score fall away. Between rounds 12-17 he averaged 97 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 117 in SuperCoach from his half-back role. The reason for his ‘slower’ start was the fact that he’d only played two games of AFL in about 18 months.

With a round fourteen multi bye round he’s a prime candidate to start with as you get thirteen consecutive weeks of football from him. The only other premium defenders that can match that is James Sicily and Rory Laird.

I started researching the preseason and wrongly made this conclusion. That Williams was only Fantasy relevant because of the role change. This is a false conclusion. For AFLFantasy/DreamTeam it did give him a small bump, but not an astronomical one. Zac was and did score enough to be a genuine premium and worth selecting at his price point even if he plays from the halfback.

Watch his preseason role, but regardless he needs to be seriously factored in as an option this year. He might even prove to be one of the best defenders we get.

DRAFT DECISION

Zac Willaims is not a first-round selection, but he’ll be drafted as someone’s first defender. If you want to own him, then you’ll likely be a selection in your first few rounds. By the time round 5 comes around regardless of the format, Zac will be well off the board. 

JOIN THE CONVERSATION

Do you believe he is fantasy relevant?
Will you be starting with him?
Have your say at our Facebook,  Twitter or Instagram

WANT EARLY ACCESS?

Want access 24 hours early to the 50 Most Relevant podcasts? Join our Patreon and get ahead of the Crowd!

NEXT UP…

Tune into our Facebook page at 9pmEDST for a clue

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %
#47 Most Relevant | Nic Naitanui
0 0
Read Time:5 Minute, 45 Second

Injuries have been cruel to the West Coast Eagles ruckman. The one positive of another injury-interrupted season is we can get some supreme value for a proven performer.

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Nic Naitanui
Age: 29
Club: West Coast Eagles
Position: Ruck

2019 Highest Score: 
82 Vs Collingwood (AFLFantasy)
99 Vs Hawthorn (SuperCoach)

2019 Average: 

72.3 (AFLFantasy)
93.6 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $457,800
AFLFantasy Price: 
$471,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$470,600

Embed from Getty Images

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

Standing at 201cm and weighing at over 110kg Nic Naitanui is one of the most dominant big men in the AFL. From his ariel ability to take massive contested grabs to him being one of the most dominant ruckmen who wins hitouts at ease.

In was 2011 and 2012 that were saw NicNat breakout as a fantasy footballer. Across both seasons he shared the ruck duties with Dean Cox and averaged 75 and 86 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 93 & 113 in SuperCoach.

2015 and 2016 we started to see him at his consistent best when he took over the #1 ruck mantle. Across both seasons he averaged 88 and 84 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 103 & 105 in SuperCoach. Throughout 2016 Nic battled through Achilles soreness for the first few months of the year. Just as the Eagles were preparing for finals, he did his knee in round 22 against the Hawks. This injury cost him the entirety of the 2017 AFL season.

His return game was round one 2018. It seemed as though NicNat was going to pick up just where he left off. He scored 113 in SuperCoach and 93 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam against the Swans. The next 14 games he showed scoring promise until in round 17 against the Pies a second knee reconstruction (this time on the other knee) was required. If we were to remove the injury impacted game, he was averaging 83 in AFLFantasy including two tons and averaging 100 in SuperCoach and scored seven times over the century.

He returns against successfully from a knee injury in 2019 to play three games during the season but then got unlucky again with an ankle injury ruling him out until finals. He still managed to score well, averaging 72 in AFLFantasy and 94 in SuperCoach. While those numbers don’t scream ‘pick me’ this was done off incredibly low time of field. Over his five games (including finals) he averaged time on the ground of per game 56%. The highest time on the field for a single match was 62% in the semi-final loss to Geelong.

Embed from Getty Images

MY TAKE

If NicNat is fit, he’ll score plenty of fantasy points. And at his price point, he provides substantial value, especially for SuperCoach. All signs do point to him being a reliable stepping stone ruck option if you choose not to start with two premium rucks.

His pricing is approximately $250,000 thousand cheaper than last seasons top two scoring rucks in Gawn and Grundy. That’s the equivalent pricing of being able to afford Matt Rowell. Since 2011 in SuperCoach he hasn’t had a season average dip below 90 and has three seasons where he has averaged 100 or more. If NicNat can deliver scores like that, that financial saving could create a significant difference to your starting side.

If you do choose to start him, you have a few things you’ll need to factor into the decision. Firstly, his durability is a concern. He’s played just 50% of home and away games over the past three seasons. It isn’t only his ACL injuries. He’s also missed big chunks of footy with an ankle injury and even an Achilles injury. You have to go back to 2010 for the last time he played every game in the season, meaning if you select him history suggests it’ll cost you either a trade or the need to have a playing R3.

Thankfully all the news coming out about Nic is more about is Michael Jordan tattoo rather than any new or lingering injury. Hopefully, for his sake as well as the football community that good news continues.

The durability for me isn’t the major detractor in selecting him. Instead, it’s the bye round the West Coast Eagles have. Likely top performers Max Gawn and Brodie Grundy yet again share the round 13 bye, meaning if you were choosing to start without one of them, you’d ideally be looking at a candidate from the round 14 bunch. Then post-bye, make the easy trade to select the other you opted to forgo. Sadly, Naitanui is not part of that bye round. Instead, he has the first multi bye round off in round 12. 

By having this as his bye round, you would get an additional play-in round 13 through the ruck line. But honestly, unless Naitanui was scoring within a few points of the big boys scoring, you’d want to upgrade him by the time the bye rounds are completed.

For your team and structures, he might just be the perfect fit. I know I’ve spoken alot about him as more SuperCoach friendly. Still, he could be an excellent AFLFantasy starter if you’re looking to for just quick money-making experience before moving quickly to a safe 100+ averaging ruckmen. Currently, I’m seriously considering him in that format if he gets through the preseason fit.

DRAFT DECISION

Max Gawn and Brodie Grundy are still wildly considered the top two rucks again entering into 2020. Where NicNat goes will largely depend on the format you play. For AFLFantasy/DreamTeam he’s currently ranked outside of the top 20 rucks in the competition in terms of average score. If people draft based off rankings then he’ll get drafted, but will be among the later few picks towards the end of the ruck selections. Personally, I believe he’ll return good value for whoever selects him, but he’s not a top 5-8 scoring ruck.

It’s SuperCoach that he presents excellent value for drafters. Beyond Gawn and Grundy, Todd Goldstein is the clear #3 based off previous years numbers. Then you could build a case that NicNat sits in the next grouping including Reilly O’Brien, Jarrod Witts and Scott Lycett. Where he goes, will in part be dictated to if/when a run of rucks is selected.

JOIN THE CONVERSATION

Do you believe he is fantasy relevant?
Will you be starting with him?
Have your say at our Facebook,  Twitter or Instagram

WANT EARLY ACCESS?

Want access 24 hours early to the 50 Most Relevant podcasts? Join our Patreon and get ahead of the Crowd!

NEXT UP…

Tune into our Facebook page at 9pmEDST for a clue

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %
#48 Most Relevant | Dan Houston
0 0
Read Time:5 Minute, 56 Second

He broke out late in 2019 and became one of the top-scoring defensive eligible players across all formats of the game. Can he do it for a full season? Or was it just a purple patch?

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Dan Houston
Age: 22
Club: Port Adelaide Power
Position: Defender/Midfield

2019 Highest Score: 
123 Vs Essendon (AFLFantasy)
134 Vs Essendon (SuperCoach)

2019 Average: 

80.3 (AFLFantasy)
89.2 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $484,800
AFLFantasy Price: 
$596,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$580,800

Embed from Getty Images

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

In 2015 Port Adelaide struck upon a massive win in the 2016 rookie draft by selecting Dan Houston. The former Oakleigh Chargers co-captain was picked by the club as a medium-sized forward target at selection 45. At the under 18 championships he was lauded for is clean hands and for his reliability as a set shot for goal. Once walking into the club, he quickly developed into someone who could play off half-back for the club.

After spending a few years on the Port list a strong preseason saw him debut in round one of 2017 and play the opening seven games for the year. As a cash cow during this time he averaged 70 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 67 in SuperCoach. However, since then for the majority of the next two seasons, he’s been fantasy footy irrelevant for coaches.

From 2018 and the majority of the 2019 season he had games where he scored across half-back. However, on the most part was nothing more than a solid depth squad player for Drafts and Daily Fantasy games.

Things changed drastically for him in the latter third of last year. It started in the round fourteen clash against the Cats. Ken Hinkley and the coaching staff sent him to tag Tim Kelly. He did a pretty decent job on him too, keeping Kelly to 17 disposals and at 52% efficiency and the Power going on to win the game by eleven points. In that match, Houston managed 25 possessions, eleven of them contested. He won five clearances, six inside ’50s and scored 89 in AFLFantasy and 110 in SuperCoach.

Over the final five rounds of the year, Houston moved back into the midfield, and the strong fantasy footy scores flowed. During that five games stretch in SuperCoach, he posted three tons, one of which was a personal best of 134 and averaged 105. For AFLFantasy/DreamTeam during this same stretch of games, he scored 100 or more in three matches didn’t drop a score below 89 and averaged 103.

In may only be a small sample size of games, but based off the seven games (Rounds 14-15 & 19-23), I tracked him playing as a midfielder he averaged 99 in SuperCoach and 93 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam.

It can be misleading and dangerous to begin ‘splitting’ a players averages. However, for Houston who had such a clearly defined role change, it can give fantasy coaches a level of insight about what we may lay ahead.

SUPERCOACHAFLFANTASY
PLAYING MIDFIELD9993
PLAYING DEFENCE8473

If those scoring trends continue into the new season that could place him as the enormous value, given his end of season average, he’s priced at 89 in SuperCoach and 80 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam. He could have between 10-13 points per game of value in him.

Embed from Getty Images

MY TAKE

He’s a tricky one to pin down, as such he’s quite low in the 50 Most Relevant. Back in August Ken Hinkley explained the major reason for the midfield move. It was due to the need to bring quality ball use into the midfield unit, something Houston has in spades. So far this preseason he’s been training with midfield group and impressing the coaching staff in his continued development.

A look at the Port defensive unit would suggest he isn’t required there any longer. Hamish Hartlett, Darcy-Byrne Jones and Ryan Burton all can use the ball well by hand and foot and can play attacking roles off defensive 50/ Tom Jonas & Tom Clurey take up the key defensive posts while Riley Bonner rounds out the core defensive six. Should injuries strike Joel Garner Sam Mayes & Jarrod Lienert have all shown something at AFL level across half-back.

Houston needs to play through the midfield. Travis Boak, Ollie Wines, Tom Rockliff, Robbie Gray and Sam Powell-Pepper form the nucleus of the midfield group. Xavier Durrsma and Connor Rozee still need multiple rotations per quarter to keep fast-tracking their development. At first glance, things don’t look too bad for the Power, but to kick winning score players like Rozee and Gray must be used often inside forward 50. Added to this, Rockliff’s injury history implies he’s no certainty to play 22 games.

Dan Houston adds a combination of quality disposal, clean hands in the contest and some defensive pressure which they currently lack from that group. To select him in SuperCoach, AFLFantasy and DreamTeam you need him to have this role change to make the selection worthwhile.

Selecting him in your starting squad is a classic case of risk versus reward. The risk is that at his price point he must breakout and average in the ’90s for the selection to pay off. Without it, you’ll be stuck with a defender who’s scoring OK (late 70’s-early 80’s) but won’t be doing badly enough to prioritise him as a sideways trade. The reward is if he does play midfield he’ll score as a premium in our backlines and you’ll get them at a fraction of the price returning value on investment.

I believe he continues to play through the guts but I to give me the confidence to start him I’ll be watching his Marsh series games to determine his role. If he retains that midfield role, then he’ll be a popular D3 starting option for all formats.

Should he continues to play through the guts it will give me the confidence to start him. I’ll be watching his Marsh series games to determine his role. If he retains that midfield role, then he’ll be a popular D3 starting option for all formats.

DRAFT DECISION

I like the potential of Dan Houston when it comes to drafts of all formats. He’s got the potential to score as your topline defender (D1), but he won’t cost you that on draft day. In an ideal world, I’d love to be able to select him as my third defender. However, with strong preseason hype already surrounding him, you might have to bite a round or two early at D2 to secure his services. 

JOIN THE CONVERSATION

Do you believe he is fantasy relevant?
Will you be starting with him?
Have your say at our Facebook,  Twitter or Instagram

WANT EARLY ACCESS?

Want access 24 hours early to the 50 Most Relevant podcasts? Join our Patreon and get ahead of the Crowd!

Become a Patron!

NEXT UP…

Tune into our Facebook page at 9pmEDST for a clue

Happy
Happy
0 %
Sad
Sad
0 %
Excited
Excited
0 %
Sleepy
Sleepy
0 %
Angry
Angry
0 %
Surprise
Surprise
0 %