50 Most Relevant

#20 Most Relevant | Callum Mills
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Read Time:9 Minute, 29 Second

There’s only a handful of players that, across all formats of fantasy footy, have averaged 110 or higher in the past two seasons; Callum Mills is one of them. Despite his high-scoring pedigree, his ownership is criminally low. The upside for brave coaches is he could create the separation you need to succeed in 2023. 

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Callum Mills
Age: 25
Club: Sydney Swans
Position: Midfield

2022 Highest Score: 
162 Vs Hawthorn (AFLFantasy)
214 Vs Hawthorn (SuperCoach)

Career Highest Score: 
162 Vs Hawthorn | AFLFantasy (2022)
214 Vs Hawthorn | SuperCoach (2022)

2022 Average: 
111 (AFLFantasy)
116.7 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $642,400
AFLFantasy Price: 
$983,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$1,008,100

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WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

It wasn’t a great day for Callum Mills and his Swans in the final match of the 2023 season. But outside of that, everything went to script for the Sydney Co-Captain. He is such a damaging player that he scores in almost every way imaginable. His high-capacity workrate gets him into open spaces for plenty of uncontested possessions and marks. But he’s not just an outside skier. This guy gets it done on the inside, offensively and defensively. He ranked inside the top ten for tackles per game and top ten for marks.

For AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, he was exceptional. His average of 111 was the fourth highest in the format. Higher than Touk Miller, Jack Steele and Zach Merrett. While he ranked second overall for total points. He was a mere 30 points off dethroning Andrew Brayshaw. He scored fourteen tons over the season, seven over 120, five over 130 and his two top scores of the season were 156 & 162. Alongside this elite, scoring was a phenomenal basement with just three scores under 80 all season and just one under 75.

His season was just as prolific in SuperCoach. His average of 116.7 has him ranked fifth for averages, with only Rory Laird, Touk Miller, Clayton Oliver and Lachie Neale with better seasonal averages. While he ranked fourth for total points, and only Touk Miller, Clayton Oliver and Lachie Neale scored more than him all year. He posted fifteen tons; 60% of those (nine) were above 120, seven were above 130 and two monsters across the season. A 167 against the Bombers in round nine, while just three weeks earlier, he joined the double-ton club with his personal best, a 214 versus Hawthorn. He had just two scores sub 80 all year, while two of his three lowest scores gradually built fitness off the back of no preseason. Amazing!

One of the most extraordinary things about Mills scoring is that he can post strong fantasy numbers in multiple ways. For example, he scored a ton in round two when he tagged Dangerfield. In other games, he did it as a high-volume centre-bounce midfielder and others across the wing. And despite being a prolific and regular high-scoring fantasy prospect, he only twice had 30 possessions or more. However, that round-six game against the Hawks showcased how big his scoring can be when he puts it all together. That day, he won 37 touches, 11 marks, five tackles, a 162 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and a 214 in SuperCoach.

What should make this season even more encouraging is that Mills did this off the back of little/no preseason. He battled his way to navigating an Achilles injury he suffered late in 2021 that hampered his preseason. To do what he did with little to no fitness or conditioning behind him is exceptional.

Speaking of 2021, in AFLFantasy, he scored thirteen tons from his eighteen matches. Of these thirteen tons, he showed his scoring ability to translate them into strong scores, with eleven of these tons going 110+. Over the season, his three top scores were 152, 142 & 133. Over the season, he had just two scores under 90 all year. One was in round two, an 85, and the other was an injury-affected 78, where he went down early in their third term. However, he was on pace for another 120+ performance in that game. Ranking him against midfielders, he’s tenth and had better seasons (by average) than Clayton Oliver, Sam Walsh, Marcus Bontempelli and Darcy Parish.

Over in SuperCoach, he had arguably an even stronger season. He averaged 112 and is currently ranked the 14th-best midfielder in the game. Last season he posted fourteen scores of 100 or more, including seven over 120, one of which was a season-high of 154. A highlight in the season for owners would’ve been his 11 consecutive tons between rounds 6 -17, going at an average of 116.

We’ve got multiple seasons of data to tell us that he’s a 110+ premium midfielder. Beyond Callum Mills, only Jack Steele and Rory Laird can boast that in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam. While it’s more common in SuperCoach, the elite premiums can back up strong seasons consecutively, and Callum’s history means that he should be considered in the same light as the big names of fantasy football.

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MY TAKE

The scoring capacity and pedigree of Callum Mills are unquestioned. Everyone knows that on his day, he can be the top-scoring player. But there is some significant hesitation in the fantasy community around starting him. Of course, when you’re investing the salary you are in him, you don’t want any big doubts, but with Mills, a trend appeared that concerned coaches.

At various times in the back half of the season, John Longmire would change up the midfield role of Callum. It was not just moving him from an inside/outside midfield split from the centre bounce to wing, but playing as a spare deep inside the Swans defensive 50. This was used multiple times in games late in quarters or in the final few minutes of the match to stem the opposition teams momentum against them.

This is less than ideal, and while we need to let the team’s past movements inform future decisions, we cannot simply assume, because it happened last year, it’ll happen again to the same level. So yes, there’s more potential, but from watching those games back, the movement of Mills made little to no impact on the game’s outcome. If anything, it actually to one of the Swans best players away from the ball & gave the opposition more opportunity to score.

For example, the game it was most notable for him moving behind the ball was round 18 against the Dockers. And yet, in that match, he still scored a 132 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 116 in SuperCoach. Hardly a ‘poor score’. The only poor game he had was the surprise loss against Essendon, where he was deployed down back to avoid a tag, not to save a game.

The scoring threat wasn’t this move; it was a drift from a heavy CBA midfield role to now being more evenly split between there and the wings. As you look over the Sydney midfield, that centre-bounce crew looks rock solid. It’s a tight four of Chad Warner, Luke Parker, James Rowbottom and Callum Mills. As the 2022 season went on, we did see an increase in CBA’s for Tom Papley. These started to appear from round 15 until the end of the season. From here, his CBAs did start to slide, and from a fantasy perspective, his numbers align with a dip. Over the first 13 games in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, he averaged 113 and went at 122 in SuperCoach. But from round 15 onwards, he had a nine-week stretch that Mills averaged 107 across the formats. As you can see, a scoring dip did emerge.

The fact remains: if you doubt him and the role he might play, he’s giving you a reason to fade as a starting squad option. But that’s the beauty of fantasy footy; two different people can see the same thing and come to different conclusions. Some see the volatility as a potential risk. Others might see a potential for upside should the ball fall his way down back or the positional movement doesn’t occur.

After playing fantasy footy formats for over a decade, a common mistake people make in their teams is they focus more on their starting squads than on their upgrades. So, instead of just picking the best players, they outdo themselves by ensuring they have unique starting teams. Getting the point of difference is fine, but you only come first because of your starting squad at the end of the day. Success in the salary cap formats of the game is based on the timing and execution of the correct trades. If you’re not convinced he’s a captaincy candidate most weeks and a top 3-4 midfielder for the season, you can safely target him as an upgrade.

That is the big question for Mills: do you feel comfortable using him as a VC/C option? In the opening six weeks of the season, you will have the lowest volume of premiums and the least amount of captaincy candidates. So if you don’t think Mills will be someone you could throw the VC/C on, then he isn’t a starter for you.

When you go, unique premiums, especially in the starting squad. You need it to fire. If it doesn’t, then you can be playing catch-up all year. When a unique premium isn’t firing, it can force you to trade more aggressively than usual to get back into contention. While that play can work for you, the harder you go early in limited trades can often mean the greater injury luck you need later.

Mills is right in the mix for me in a few formats. I love his ceiling, scoring consistency and the fact that his lowly owned only makes him more appetizing as a selection for me. He’s not locked, but he’s in contention.

DRAFT DECISION

One of the most enjoyable players to own in drafts is Callum Mills Because he feels capable of a monster score against any opponent in any week. He’ll head off draft boards as an M1 but will be taken early in the second round. If he gets picked any later than this, it’s already a significant win for his owner.

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#21 Most Relevant | Toby McLean
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Read Time:5 Minute, 33 Second

It’s been a long time since we’ve talked about Toby McLean and used the phrase ‘fantasy relevant.’ But after a strong score in his one game in the AFL finals, plus favourable pricing across the formats, he’s become a staple in plenty of preseason structures. 

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Toby McLean
Age: 26
Club: Western Bulldogs
Position: Midfield/Forward

2022 Highest Score: 
Did Not Play

Career Highest Score: 
152 Vs Collingwood | AFLFantasy (2018)
146 Vs Gold Coast | SuperCoach (2018)

2022 Average: 
Did Not Play

SuperCoach Price: $178,900
AFLFantasy Price: 
$401,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$293,500

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WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

There are two reasons that Toby McLean is on fantasy coaches radars. Firstly, value! After recovering from an ACL injury, he’s priced at an absolute bargain. In two formats, he’s priced as a cash cow. In SuperCoach, he’s priced about $25k cheaper than our most expensive cash cow this year Aaron Cadman. For DreamTeam, he’s priced just a few thousand beneath him, and AFLFantasy, he’s priced $100k more than him, but it’s at the price point of a guy averaging 45.

The second is due to a proven record of fantasy scoring. In 2018 he scored nine AFLFantasy/DreamTeam tons, including 143 & 152. He had eight additional scores of 80+ on the way to averaging 94.5. That same season in SuperCoach, he posted 10 tons, three of them over 120. His seasonal average of 94.6 is exceptional, but there was a pocket of nine rounds where he went at an average of 113.3

2018 is far from a career outlier; the season earlier, he averaged 85.5 across the formats. However, over the final ten weeks of the season, he averaged 95.3 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 97.2 in SuperCoach. So, in reality, we’ve got a gut that, for 32 games straight, showed the capacity of being a mid-90s performing player.

This history might feel too distant to carry much substance. And in part, that’s reasonable. However, his game in the elimination final against the Dockers last year adds some weight to the hope that his coring potential still exists. In that match, he had 21 possessions, nine tackles, two marks, and two behinds. In fantasy terms, he scored 100 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam & SuperCoach. Most impressively, he did this without attending a centre bounce. Rather McLean started as a forward and then would push up the ground.

McLean is a proven performer who, in DreamTeam & SuperCoach, is priced as a cash cow. While in AFLFantasy, he’s right on the lower edges of being a stepping stone. If fit and named round one, Toby appears to be one of the easiest selections in the 2023 fantasy season.

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MY TAKE

As much as Toby McLean has shown the potential to score as a premium forward, nobody should be walking into the season expecting he’ll become one. It’s in the realm of possibility, but you should temper those expectations. Based on his price point, you should view him through the same lens as a cash cow. He’s a 6-8 week play in which you can make some coin, score a few points and then be flipped into a premium forward.

One of the hardest teams to get a gauge on this preseason is the Western Bulldogs. Who are the bottom five players that sneak into the best 22 for round one? As much as McLean should be picked in round one, the Dogs have plenty of depth for players that can play inside forward 50 and then push up the ground. Unfortunately, you can only fit some of Robbie McComb, Anthony Scott, Roarke Smith, Mitch Hannan, Lachie McNeil, Laitham Vandermeer, Riley Garcia and Toby McLean all playing a forward-midfield rotation. As you can see, the dogs are DEEP in this area of the list.

What it does mean if you need to have a contingency plan. An ‘ITTT’. This stands for If This Then That. In essence, specified events occur a specific follow-up is triggered and handled. With McLean, you need to have a backup, he should be best 22, but he’s far from locked in. What will you do if he isn’t named that doesn’t create an entire squad restructure? If you have yet to think this through, then now’s a great chance to start doing so.

Where he plays is of little concern to me; predicting what the coaching team at Western Bulldogs is hard enough to predict, even for some of their best players. So to think that McLean has greater positional security than these bigger names is slightly ludicrous. For what it’s worth, I believe that should he play, I suspect he’ll be heavily based in the forward fifty with some opportunities to push up the wings. I don’t see him picking up any, let alone many CBAs.

Sometimes you can overcomplicate things. We can get too cute or create narratives that don’t exist. But the story should be very simple for Toby McLean. He should end up on your side if he’s named round one. In DreamTeam & SuperCoach, there is little to process. He’s a proven performer priced as a cow. In AFLFantasy, I see him being overlooked only if we get an abundance of cows and no longer require players at his price range.

DRAFT DECISION

Toby McLean’s relevance is heavily in classic game formats, but as a result, he’ll get noticed by draft coaches. I’d happily take him as a flyer with my last on-field or bench spot. Unfortunately, there’s only upside on him at that point of the draft. At best, he pops up to an F3; at worst, I delist him for a player that is popping. 

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#22 Most Relevant | Christian Petracca
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Read Time:8 Minute, 5 Second

A player can slide in and out of favour in the eyes of the fantasy football community. Sometimes for valid reasons, other times for no valid reason. Entering into the 2023 season, the conversations around Christian Petracca have been minimal, but he’s got the potential to be a topline midfielder again this year. 

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Christian Petracca
Age: 27
Club: Melbourne Demons
Position: Midfield

2022 Highest Score: 
142 Vs Western Bulldogs (AFLFantasy)
189 Vs Adelaide (SuperCoach)

Career Highest Score: 
153 Vs Port Adelaide | AFLFantasy (2021)
189 Vs Adelaide | SuperCoach (2022)

2022 Average: 
102.5 (AFLFantasy)
112.4 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $618,600
AFLFantasy Price: 
$908,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$930,500

Embed from Getty Images

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

If you were drafting an AFL side from scratch, Christian Petracca would be one of the first players selected. He’s one of the league’s most elite players. Whether deployed as a centre-bounce midfielder or across the half-forward line, CP5 provides the opposition with a headache wherever he plays.

One of the keys behind what makes Petracca so good is the combination of his high footy IQ to see a game-changing option, but then he has the courage and the skill to make it happen. Last year he ranked first in the competition for goals, assists, and inside 50s per game. He’s also ranked inside the top twenty for metres gained, disposals and contested possessions.

In AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, his seasonal average of 102.5 ranked him as the 14th-best midfielder in the game. He scored thirteen tons, five over 120, including 136, 139, 141 & 142. Those are some strong ceiling games! And in the first ten games of the season, he averaged 111. Alongside these top-end scoring elements were five scores below 80. We’ll address one of them in particular shortly. By the season’s conclusion, he was ranked eleventh for total points. Not a bad result for a guy who had a ‘down’ season in the eyes of many.

His SuperCoach season was even stronger. His average of 112.3 made him the 8th best midfielder by averages and seventh best for points. He ended 2022 as the ninth-highest scorer across the format. He got there by scoring twelve tons; he converted eight into scores over 120 and seven above 130. Some of these were absolute monsters. They included a 163 in the opening round and a career-high 189 against the Crows. He had just two scores below 80 all year and ended the season with an average of 120 from the final nine games.

These averages include a game that was an outlier. In round eleven, he scored 40 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 53 in SuperCoach. He wasn’t tagged, rather, he was battling a virus and later, after the defeat, coach Simon Goodwin conceded he probably shouldn’t have played. While it hurt coaches on him during the season, it does build in some additional value for coaches keen on him in 2023.

During the Dees premiership season of 2021 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, he scored 14 tons, seven above 120 and five were higher than 130. To go with his ceiling and consistency of tons was a strong basement with no scores under 78. His average of 110 meant he was ranked eighth by averages in the game. Petracca scored more points than Zach Merrett, Sam Walsh, Marcus Bontempelli, Bean Keays and teammate Clayton Oliver.

For SuperCoach, he had an equally as strong season. He posted thirteen tons for the year, eight above 120 and three monsters of 145 or higher. He also dropped one score below 80 all year. By the close of the 2021 season, he finished the year ranked sixteenth for total points and his average of 111.4 just snuck inside the top 20 overall.

These two seasons have validated his 2020 breakout season. Where the covid bubble affected game length, he averaged an adjusted 108 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 117.5 in SuperCoach.

Alongside three seasons of being a topline premium midfielder is the durability variable. There’s nothing more frustrating than jumping off on a premium. It causes you to potentially slide behind the pack as you make fix-up trades while others keep surging forward with their moves. With Petracca, h hasn’t missed a game of footy in four years and just one in six. Nobody can predict injuries, but based on history, you feel an element of confidence with Christian.

I’ve been playing fantasy football for over a decade, and normally I don’t get too concerned or pay significant attention to player ownership percentages. But I keep an eye on them to get insights into what the ‘group think’ or ‘mob mentality’ is doing. What can give you an edge over the pack is if your split on a player’s forecast performance, sometimes ownership can be the separator. I nearly fell off my chair when I saw that Trac has an ownership of 3.57% in AFLFantasy, 5% in SuperCoach and 3% in DreamTeam. For a player with a safe 100+ average history and the potential to push top-eight midfield numbers, that’s criminally low. He was already on my radar, but seeing that few on him combined with his known potential has made him quite a tempting starter.

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MY TAKE

Over the last four weeks of the season we saw Christian Petracca start to take on a significant role change. Over the season he was a 75% centre bounce attendance midfielder. Yet, in the last month he attended just 50% of CBA’s. At the same time we saw a spike in CBA’s for Angus Brayshaw? Was this the causation? Or was it correlation alongside the the fact that he was battling some niggles in the back half of the season? Ultimately only the football and Christian will know.

But what it did do is create another damaging option in the Demons forward line. Does he stay as high 70’s CBA midfielder this year? Or do the club choose to use his skills and weapons more in the forward half of the ground. If they do, then there’s a universe I see him picking up DPP and becoming MID/FWD. I wouldn’t select him on the hoped basis of a DPP gain alone, but I would be factoring it as a consideration.

Last year we saw Luke Parker, Tom Liberatore, Rowan Marshall Bailey Smith and Marcus Bontempelli at times across the season gain forward status. The year prior it was Josh Kelly. At some point in 2023 we will get some new premium options in the forward division. The reason I bring it up is because I’m seeing teams go heavy on the premiums this year in starting squads. And it makes sense given the value we have. But factoring in potential additions doesn’t appear to be in the periphery of the fantasy community. There’s a real chance that the demons split CP5’s time more forward and he becomes someone we’ll need to factor into our upgrade plans.

I’m considering Petracca as an upgrade target; this isn’t just because I’m watching what might happen regarding a DPP addition. That’s a factor, but not the defender. Historically, he always gives you a look to get him in cheap with a few poor scores. Between rounds 11-13, he averaged 71.6 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 74 in SuperCoach. The year prior, between rounds 7-9, he averaged 90 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 88 in SuperCoach. These aren’t disasters when you own him for a season because it’s levelled out when he has multiple weeks where he averages north of 120. But these pockets of games create an opportunity for coaches to pick up a premium performer at a discounted price point.

There is a little bit of meat on the premium bone, so if you’re starting him, your expectation is an increase of his average back up towards 110 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and pushing back towards 120 in SuperCoach. That’ll likely place him as a VC/C candidate in your early rounds. I don’t trust him enough to be that reliable, so it’s an upgrade city for me!

DRAFT DECISION

Based on his 2022 seasonal data Christian Petracca will get ranked as the 14th best midfield inAFLFantasy/DreamTeam. That’d place him as an M2; that’s about the range for him. And he has the upside to becoming an M1 and pushing to be a top-ten averaging midfielder. Getting him as an M2 will see him heard off draft boards in the late third-early fourth range.

In SuperCoach, he’s got the capacity to be selected as an M1, but I need help seeing him getting selected there. So instead, he’s an early M2. He’ll likely get taken in the range of the late second and into the third round.

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#23 Most Relevant | Nat Fyfe
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Read Time:7 Minute, 37 Second

For years Nat Fyfe has been one of the best players in the AFL. Lately, his body has dominated the headlines more than his football. As we enter the 2023 fantasy football season, the gang at Champion Data has given us a potential gift. They’ve awarded Fyfe DPP. As a MID/FWD, he could be one of the best starting squad options. 

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Nat Fyfe
Age: 31
Club: Fremantle Dockers
Position: Midfield/Forward

2022 Highest Score: 
89 Vs St Kilda(AFLFantasy)
96 Vs St Kilda (SuperCoach)

Career Highest Score: 
150 Vs Adelaide | AFLFantasy (2015)
171 Vs Carlton | SuperCoach (2014)

2022 Average: 
56.1 (AFLFantasy)
63.3 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $313,600
AFLFantasy Price: 
$681,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$458,700

Embed from Getty Images

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

For over a decade, Nat Fyfe has been one of the best AFL players and a staple of our fantasy football sides. With multiple Brownlow Medals, numerous club best and fairest wins and broader AFL media acclaim, there is no doubt then when Nat is fit and healthy, at full flight, he’s magnificent to watch and enjoyable to own in fantasy footy.

The 2022 season will go down as one of Nat’s most frustrating seasons. An injury interrupted preseason left him managing a back issue that required some surgery. After a few setbacks, he managed to get back into the side; however, a series of hamstring-related issues brought further disruption and cost him a spot in the Fremantle finals campgain.

It took til round thirteen for Fyfe to make his first appearance in the season. Of. the seven games he managed to play, he averaged 56.1 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, and for SuperCoach, he averaged 63.2. He had just one match that even vaguely resembled what he’s historically been capable of doing. In round seventeen, he scored 89 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 96 in SuperCoach. That came from 21 possessions, six marks and three goals.

This scoring is well below what he achieved in 2021. From his fifteen games, he averaged 100.4 in SuperCoach, which featured eight tons, five of which were above 120, and his scoring fell below 90 in just five games. In addition, Fyfe averaged 84.4 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, which featured five tons and five additional scores of 80+.

Few players could match his scoring capacity from 2011-2020 across all formats, especially in SuperCoach. Over that decade, he regularly averaged between 95-105 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, and in SuperCoach, he had nine seasons averaging 100+, including three 119+.

Fyfe’s scoring power over the last 10+ seasons cannot be ignored. And while injury-interrupted seasons like last year can hurt, the benefit for the fantasy community is the player will receive a pricing discount, and they can become undeniable value. He’s currently priced at an average of 57 in SuperCoach, 50 in AFLDreamTeam and 77 in AFLFantasy. Based on his historical capacity, he’s got anywhere from 25-70 points per game of value!

Throw in the fact that he’s not just midfield eligible. Champion Data had awarded him MID/FWD status after playing heavy forward minutes after returning from injury last year. So you now have a potentially elite scorer that could become a season-long premium in the forward lines at an insanely good price. If Fyfe has yet to be considered this preseason, you’ve been doing it wrong!

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MY TAKE

Nat Fyfe is of undeniable value IF he plays in the role through the midfield that saw him win two Brownlow Medals. However, the news from the club with match simulations is that he’s playing as a forward. You can look at that in two lights. Firstly, this will be his new role, and any midfield opportunities through the Dockers midfield will be minimal. While this is a possibility, an alternate reality could eventuate.

Preseason club match simulations, practice matches and community series games mean nothing to players of Fyfe’s experience and age. These games are much more about getting them through from a fitness perspective. Nat’s a game champion, and Fremantle is fully aware of what he can do through the midfield. So why not spend the preseason enhancing his forward craft and protecting his health through the preseason by developing his forward craft?

Fyfe will play forward for chunks of the season, as he should. He’s a difficult matchup for any defender, and his power and aerial strength will add some experience to arguably the line the Dockers are the most vulnerable. However, if Fremantle is serious about not just making finals, they must play him through the midfield for more than just a few rotations. He is still one of the most dynamic and damaging midfielders in the AFL when at full health. Am I saying Nat will play as a permanent midfielder? Certainly not! But the narrative that when the season proper comes around that Fyfe won’t be given a decent MID/FWD split is false.

Normally a player with a recent injury history comparable to Fyfe, I’d be driving home the point that you start them or fade them. And as true as that might be with Nat, the starting price mitigates any risk. He’s got the scoring history to certainly be a player capable of turning into a season-long hold as a keeper, but he doesn’t have to be that in some formats. As a reference in SuperCoach, he’s priced cheaper than preseason popular stepping-stone midfielders in Dom Sheed & Jacob Hopper. Based on his scoring potential, he’s got way more scoring potential than them both.

If this were an AFLFantasy only 50 most relevant, he wouldn’t even make the 50, let alone be this high. Priced at an average of the high 70s, your only selecting him if you were confident he’s returning to a 90+ average. While he has the potential to do it, he’ll likely need a heavy midfield role.

In SuperCoach & DreamTeam, he’s very relevant, given he’s got the potential to average double what he’s priced at. With the volume of trades we have in these formats, you can look at Fyfe not just as a starting squad stepping stone but as an in-season trade, whether that be to use as one of your correctional trades in the opening few weeks. Or as a fixture/role runner for a month or two.

Most club watchers of the Dockers believe they’ll have a narrow rotation of midfielders. Andrew Brayshaw, Caleb Serong, Will Brodie and Jaeger O’Meara will be the main four, with potential cameos from Aish, Erasmus or Johnson if they get into the 22. It’s not the most experienced midfield; all it can take is one injury to one of the main four, and Fyfe HAS to become a lead midfielder rather than a supporting one. While you don’t wish injuries on anyone, he is one variable change away from sliding back into that first midfield grouping.

All a player with his injury history can do is get through the preseason unscathed; if he does, he still needs to be considered. He’s not currently in my side, but that doesn’t mean I’ll be ruling him out of my side considerations in 2023. In SuperCoach especially, I’ll be watching his role closely. If the chips fall his way, he is one of only a few known forward options in SuperCoach who could outscore most people’s #1 scoring candidate in Josh Dunkley.

DRAFT DECISION

Players with high fantasy legacy possess name appeal in coaches eyes, and Nat Fyfe’s name carries some significant weight. So much has been made of this pre-season about how good the top-end forward is, but then how quickly the division depth falls away. With this and his scoring potential, his ‘brand’ will become a heavy reason coaches want to draft him. I see him heading off draft boards as an F3 in SuperCoach and a positional spot later as an F4 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam scoring formats.

At that point of the draft, there is no risk on him, and If you’re worried about injuries, then protect that selection of Fyfe by drafting deeper in the forward lines. Always protect each pick with the subsequent picks.

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#24 Most Relevant | Brodie Grundy
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Read Time:6 Minute, 20 Second

In the offseason, Collingwood forced the hand of Brodie Grundy to move to another football club. As he lands at Melbourne, fantasy coaches wonder how well our favourite ‘set & forget’ ruck duo co-exist in a real-life football team. 

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Brodie Grundy
Age: 28
Club: Melbourne Demons
Position: Ruck

2022 Highest Score: 
124 Vs West Coast (AFLFantasy)
129 Vs Essendon (SuperCoach)

Career Highest Score: 
181 Vs GWS Giants | AFLFantasy (2019)
179 Vs Western Bulldogs | SuperCoach (2020)

2022 Average: 
93.3 (AFLFantasy)
103.5 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $512,900
AFLFantasy Price: 
$830,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$762,600

Embed from Getty Images

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

‘We exist to win premierships.’ Every AFL club would have this sentiment driving them somewhere within the four walls of the inner sanctum. While Collingwood has gotten close over the past few seasons, the club decided that their best chance to compete for premierships would be by reshaping the list. They’ve done this by relieving themselves of the salary invested into Brodie Grundy. And placing it into players that they believe fit some ‘gaps’ in their list but getting an inside midfielder in Tom Mitchell, a tall forward, Dan McStay and another crafty small in Bobby Hill.

They might be right that these three might improve their premiership chances with Darcy Cameron in the ruck. But without a doubt, the ‘snub’ will have lit a fire under Grundy, and it won’t shock me if we see him return to his beast mode best. Sometimes when you haven’t seen a player perform at their best due to injury and form concerns, you forget just how dominant a fantasy footballer they can be. And with Brodie, he can be the best scorer in the game.

From 2018-2020 he was among one of the premier performers. In AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, he averaged 120, 122 and an adjusted average of 113.6. While for SuperCoach, it was 130, 130 & 120.6. Even in 2021, he showcased this same scoring capacity. Before suffering a freak neck injury that cost him to miss some games, Grundy was averaging 115.3 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 126.5 in SuperCoach. However, by the time he got back, the Magpies were experimenting with their structure under a caretaker coach. No surprise, his scoring plummeted by his standards down to 100 in AFLFantasy and 107 in SuperCoach.

Last year we saw some of the scoring and role experimentation. For example, in round five, Collingwood played Grundy, Cameron and Cox on the same side. Unsurprisingly, it resulted in a horrible score for all three. Despite this, he still reminded coaches of his pedigree before the injury that cut his season short to just six matches. An average of 93.3 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam consisted of a season-high 124, plus three more scores between 94-105. For SuperCoach, he averaged 103.5, posted four tons, two of them over 120 and had just one score (round five) under 96.

All this scoring does is remind us of how good he can be when he’s fit and allowed to dominate as the lead ruckman at the club. But that’s not the concern or the question. Instead, everyone wants to know how the Demons will work the structure to include both Brodie Grundy and Max Gawn.

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MY TAKE

In 2023 Brodie Grundy offers us something he has yet to do for the past few seasons. Significant financial value. For AFLFantasy, he’s received an injury discount off his 2021 data. In reality, that prices him at his average of 2022. In SuperCoach, he’s priced similarly at an average space of the low 90’s. While it’s AFLDreamTeam, he’s priced in the low 80’s.

For Brodie to be a pick that works out, he doesn’t have to evolve back to being a 120+ performer like in seasons of old. Last year we started to see the benchmark for what it means to be a top-tier ruck diminish. Rather all he needs to do is be close enough to score at an R2 level. If he can do that from his current price point, then it’s a sensational win.

Remember, over the past few years, the bar of what it takes to be a top ruck has been sliding. For example, just 2-3 seasons ago, you needed to be 120+. Whereas last year just two rucks averaged over 100 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and five in SuperCoach, with just one cracking an average over 110.

A few days ago, we revealed Max Gawn in the 50 most relevant. Throughout this article and podcast, we discussed the potential makeup of the Demons ruck structure. I won’t go over that again to add needless length to an article/podcast we’ve already covered.

However, even in a ruck share with Gawn, Brodie will still have plenty of opportunity to be around the ball. And unlike previously in his career, he could find himself with favourable matchups against other teams #2 ruck option. With these, he can more than make up enough points to push towards the top rucks in a capped opportunity due to a shared ruck role.

The ruck division and its structure are proving countless headaches for coaches. Do they go set & forget and roll with a Tim English and Rowan Marshall pairing? It should be strong. But are you confident they’ll be clear and supreme top rucks? If not, then don’t lock yourself into it. Are you considering a pair of one of these with a value option like Scott Lycett or the halfway house with RUC/FWD DPP in Darcy Cameron?

What Grundy can do is over the upside of pushing his scoring to match, if not supersede the topline option in this division. He should hold his price value, as I cannot see his scoring falling below 90 this year across the formats. He’s too good of a player in a good side that even on split midfield minutes, he’ll still score well. Absolute watchlist candidate for me this preseason!

DRAFT DECISION

It was just 24 months ago that Brodie Grundy was viewed as a consensus first pick in a draft, not just for a single season but also in keeper leagues. Outside of Tim English and Rowan Marshall, I see coaches hesitant to use a first few rounds pick early on rucks. There will come the point on the draft day where his name value will become impossible to ignore. From the moment the fifth round hits, if he’s still there, coaches may find his brand too strong not to jump on. 

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#25 Most Relevant | Marcus Bontempelli
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Read Time:7 Minute, 44 Second

In 2015 Marcus Bontempelli achieved a rarely-seen feat of becoming a fantasy premium in just his second season of AFL. Since then, ‘Bont’ has been a premium midfielder and a staple of our fantasy sides. As he enters 2023, is it business as usual? Or will we see something change?

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Marcus Bontempelli
Age: 27
Club: Western Bulldogs
Position: Midfield

2022 Highest Score: 
145 Vs Fremantle (AFLFantasy)
181 Vs St Kilda (SuperCoach)

Career Highest Score: 
145 Vs Fremantle | AFLFantasy (2022)
199 Vs Adelaide | SuperCoach (2020)

2022 Average: 
100.6 (AFLFantasy)
116.1 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $639,500
AFLFantasy Price: 
$891,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$913,000

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WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

When you look back over the AFL career of Marcus Bontempelli, if it doesn’t end with at least one Brownlow Medal, it’ll feel like a crime against the award. He is everything that’s great about our modern-day AFL player. He’s strong, clean, versatile, powerful and fast. He doesn’t waste a movement or action on the ground and deserves his place as one of the best players in the league right now.

Despite a ‘down’ season in the eyes of many, he still finished the season ranked inside the top five of the AFL for goal assists, inside 50s & score involvements. Even in the fantasy world, we saw a solid season. He ranked 17th amongst midfielders by average and 23rd for total points in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam. For SuperCoach, he was the 6th highest-ranked midfielder by average and 11th for total points. I’ll take that from a ‘down’ year. It was even more impressive when you remember that he was eligible as a MID/FWD when he gained DPP ahead of round six.

Looking into his 2022 year with more detail in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, he scored eleven tons, just the two over 120, but his scoring dipped under 80 just once all year. We saw again last year a trend that we’d seen across most of his career. This format’s all about timing the ownership run with Bont. From round nine til the season’s end, he averaged 103.4 over the final fourteen games of the year. The peak being between rounds 14-19, he averaged 113.

His SuperCoach season was still stunning. His average of 116 consisted of 18 tons from his 21 games. That’s a ton in 85% of matches last year. Of those 18 tons, seven were above 120 and featured some monsters, including 161 and 181. Post-bye, he hit his straps with a ten-week average of 122. The reason people were cooler on the form of his 2022 season was due to his hot run in 2021

From his 22 games for the 2021 season in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, he scored 16 tons, with 50% of those going at 120 or higher. Four times he scored over 130, and he had just three matches all year where he dropped under 80. By the close of the 2021 season, he ranked 14th for total points, and his average of 107.8 ranked him 18th in the game. At first glance, some might not be uber excited by those numbers, but players who owned him or those that bother to look into the data should be genuinely excited by his scoring. During the year, from rounds five to sixteen, he scored eleven consecutive tons, averaged 120 and had the lowest score of 102.

As strong as he was in this format, he’s another level of dominance in SuperCoach. Of the sixteen times he scored 100, twelve were above 120, eight were over 130, and an insane five were 145 plus! To go with this near-ridiculous scoring ceiling is a low variable scoring basement. Just once, he dipped his scoring beneath 80. He wrapped his SuperCoach season as the fifth-best points performer, with only Jack Macrae, Jack Steele, Clayton Oliver and Max Gawn scoring more than him. His average of 119.7 is the sixth-best in the game.

The evidence is conclusive and backed by multiple years of data. He’s one of the best uber-premium midfielders for SuperCoach, and when you get the timing right in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, he’s got the capacity to match it with the best of them. Additionally to his scoring is the consistency he holds regarding availability. Bont is one of the most durable players in the game. He has missed one match in four years and only six games since 2015. When you combine his scoring capacity and availability, it makes for serious consideration for someone to start within 2023.

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MY TAKE

What makes Marcus Bontempelli one of the most feared players in the AFL is his ability to be damaging at any position on the ground. At centre bounce, his work is elite and is just as damaging as the first-touch clearance midfielder as he is the finesse player delivering it inside fifty for the Dogs. Around the ground, he’s a strong overhead mark, penetrating left foot, and, if asked to go forward, is a handful for even the best defenders. Honestly, the only apparent discrepancy is his occasionally wayward set shot at goal, but in reality, it’s nitpicking. He’s nearly impossible to stop, and his poor games are rarer than St Kilda’s premierships.

He’s a stronger SuperCoach candidate than any other format. With averages of 114, 116, 119.7 & 116, it’s evident that this is the case. He genuinely is a starting squad option, as his volume of ceiling scores makes him a captaincy option in most games. If he’s not someone you are considering, and you play this format, then you’re doing it wrong. He doesn’t even have to ‘improve’ to be a safe top tier midfield premium, he’s gone 114+ for the past four years!

In AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, he’s now shown the ceiling over stretches of games that could make him a legitimate top-tier option. But the challenge that does prevent coaches in these formats is the need for more frequency of high-possession games. Bont isn’t a stats-stuffer type of player. Instead, he’s an impact-per-possession player.

The other challenge to his scoring ceiling in DT and AF is around the midfielder’s mouths to feed the Bulldogs. They do a good job of sharing the points around. Still, with ball magnets like Jack Macrae, Bailey Smith, Adam Treloar and even Tom Liberatore in the side, it’s hard to see his possession stat line having a boost to give me confidence he can elevate his game for the season north of 110.

One potential avenue for upside is the Dogs have gained some further support in the forward line through Rory Lobb. He, alongside Jamarra Ugle-Hagan and Aaron Naughton, should provide the tall timber required for the sons of the west. Then guys Cody WeightmanRhylee West and Robbie McComb can do the heavy lifting as the smalls. So all of a sudden, where Bont was forced to play forward due to necessity, it can now be a luxury and matchup move.

The Bulldogs have also seen the departure of Josh Dunkley, which in theory, should create a greater capacity for the Bulldogs to roll through a tighter midfield rotation should Bevo desire it. This could be another place where his scoring could elevate once again. In 2021, Dunkley played just eleven games; in those matches, Marcus averaged 97.2 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 107.2 in SuperCoach. However, in the other eleven matches that Dunkley was absent, Bont went at an average of 118.5 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 132.5 in SuperCoach. That differential is 21.4 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 25.1 in SuperCoach.

Safe, reliable, durable and dependable. Those four reasons are enough: even if you’re not considering him in your starting squad, he’s an absolute must-watch as an upgrade target during the season.

DRAFT DECISION

Each format of the draft games will require a different ranking position for Marcus Bontempelli. In SuperCoach, he’s a solid M1 and will be off the draft board in either the second round or a very late first. AFLFantasy scoring I’d be targetting him at M2, making him a third or early fourth round selection.

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#26 Most Relevant | Zak Butters
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Read Time:7 Minute, 7 Second

All the talk this pre-season is about a Port Adelaide MID/FWD that could be one the best starting squad options. But none of it is about Zak Butters. He’s got the upside not just to match his more popular teammate, but he could be an even better pick.

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Zak Butters
Age: 22
Club: Port Adelaide Power
Position: Midfield/Forward

2022 Highest Score: 
137 Vs Hawthorn (AFLFantasy)
136 Vs Hawthorn (SuperCoach)

Career Highest Score: 
137 Vs Hawthorn | AFLFantasy (2022)
163 Vs Essendon | SuperCoach (2021)

2022 Average: 
86.3 (AFLFantasy)
96.2 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $529,400
AFLFantasy Price: 
$764,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$783,400

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WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

It’s amazing how twelve months can change a players narrative can drastically change. This time last year, Zak Butters was one of the most hyped players entering the season. And while over the totality of 2022, there were multiple rollercoaster moments, he’s still entering into 2023 ranked by average as the #4 forward in SuperCoach and #7 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam

In AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, his seasonal average consisted of six tons. Two were above 120, while his scoring dipped below 80 in seven matches. While for SuperCoach, his average of 96.15 consisted of eleven tons, five above 120 and just six under 80. It’s not a bad effort, given in two of his games, he suffered serious head clashes, another he played with a virus and was also subbed out of one game with a knee injury.

What has coaches salivating entering into 2023 is that after he returned from injury, it appeared that he and the Power coaching staff found the perfect balance. In the final seven games of the year, he averaged 101.1 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 106.8 in SuperCoach. While in the final five games of the year, he averaged 107.4 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 115.6 in SuperCoach.

The scoring glimpses we saw last year were also seen in patches for the two seasons prior. In 2021 for AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, he averaged 76, scored one ton and four additional scores of 80 or higher. While in SuperCoach, he averaged 82, hit triple digits in one game and had four additional scores of 90+. In 2020 he averaged 87 in SuperCoach, which consisted of six tons; five were over 110 and four additional scores 80+. While in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, he averaged 62.3 in the shorter games (adjusted 77) and scored one ton (114 pure 142 adjusted) and two other games 80+.

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MY TAKE

Many readers of our articles and podcast listeners are focused on one thing. Winning it all and getting the highest ranking possible. To do so, plenty of variables need to fall your way, but one thing is required. Pack separation. It can manifest itself in many ways, but ultimately you need something about your team to create separation from the pack and fantasy footy groupthink.

One of the areas in which you can create positive separation is you can opt into selecting a player that others are overlooking with the intent that they can either match or surpass others’ performances that have way higher ownership. For contrast’s sake, when you think of a premium Port Adelaide forward, the first thought for the majority of the community is Connor Rozee. That’s not necessarily a bad or wrong call, but it highlights how much Zak Butters is flying under the radar. Remember, in SuperCoach, Zak averaged more and was only two points per game off him in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam. For players that have a similar scoring pedigree, that’s a drastic ownership differential.

SuperCoachDreamTeamAFLFantasy
Rozee33%38%42%
Butters10%10%6%

The above isn’t to say you should be on Team Butters or Team Rozee. You can select one, none or both. But rather, it’s to highlight the group think that can exist in the fantasy community and, certainly, the narrative reflected in the early ownership numbers. The seasonal data of Rozee is stronger, but to say they had similarities in the season is unfair. Rozee spent 3/4 of it as a centre-bounce midfielder, whereas Butters had only five games where he attended over 50%. Again, this is not about choosing one over the other but to remind you of the importance of looking broader and deeper to create separation from the pack.

A potentially valid reason to avoid owning Zak is that he’s shown over his AFL career to find multiple ways to get injured. For example, last year was a career season for games played. And yet he still had games where he had multiple head clashes, shoulder stingers, and then in round 14, he was subbed off and missed multiple games with a knee injury.

We’ve discussed players with less-than-friendly injury history throughout the preseason. My basic premise is with these players that if the injury is the question mark, you choose to start or pass on them for the season.

The reason being is that if you start with them, you can bank all the scores they deliver. And with every passing game, the likelihood of injury will only increase. However, suppose you trade into an injury ‘risk’. In that case, you run the gauntlet of not just missing his good scores that attracted you to make them an upgrade, but rather your likelihood of trading into that injury is higher with every game past.

Starting these ‘injury-prone’ players is the best way to offset the risk. If an injury does occur, you have banked every good score available but also spent just one trade, not multiple, on removing him from your side.

One big unknown entering the coming season is what happens to Port Adelaide, especially with their midfield mix. Last year Rozee and, to a lesser extent, Butters showcased the ability to play significant time through the midfield. They will split their time between midfield and forward because they could be in both roles, but how much split is uncertain. Ollie Wines will be the leader of the midfield pack. Then how much time is split across Travis Boak, Willem Drew, and recruit Jason Horne-Francis will be of great interest to watch.

Back to focus on Butters, will he score better with more time around the midfield? Or as a forward by reaping some of the benefits of a stronger midfield unit than last year? Arguably, as the final few months of 2022 showed, he is more capable of playing a 60% forward split and still averaging over 100. I genuinely believe Port found the sweet spot of how to use him to maximise both his competitive and fearless edge through the midfield. While not sacrificing his goal smarts up forward to Port Adelaide.

This preseason time shouldn’t be about locking players in & ruling players out of your starting squad. It should be about trying out multiple different squad formations and combinations. If Zak Butters hasn’t been at least considered before this moment, I suggest you reevaluate it and ponder the potential output he could bring this year.

DRAFT DECISION

Securing a strong F1 will be a coach’s top priority early on draft day. Zak Butters won’t be the top scoring forward, but he won’t have to be where you draft him. Across the formats, Josh DunkleyStephen Conilgio, Tim Taranto and Connor Rozee will be ahead of him. All will be top 15-20 selections as coaches scamper to get something strong. I see Zak heading off draft boards starting from the third round and into the early fourth. 

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#27 Most Relevant | Dom Sheed
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Read Time:6 Minute, 10 Second

Injuries create two things: Opportunities and Value. For Dom Sheed, an injury-interrupted season has meant a significant discount on his starting price for the 2023 season. So is he the perfect stepping stone for your starting squad?

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Dom Sheed
Age: 27
Club: West Coast
Position: Midfield

2022 Highest Score: 
70 Vs Geelong (AFLFantasy)
67 Vs Geelong (SuperCoach)

Career Highest Score: 
138 Vs Gold Coast | AFLFantasy (2021)
148 Vs Essendon | SuperCoach (2019)

2022 Average: 
70 (AFLFantasy)
67 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $332,000
AFLFantasy Price: 
$591,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$571,900

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WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

Nothing went the way of the Eagles in 2023. It started with the club being decimated by Covid and, in the early portion of the year, most weeks having to play top-up players that were listed outside the West Coast official AFL list. On top of that, the club suffered multiple long-term injuries to many experienced players. As a result, the club spent the first half of the season largely uncompetitive at the AFL level.

One of those players that had their year ruined by injury was Dom Sheed. The premiership-winning goal kicker had multiple setbacks across the season. In February, in a practice game against Fremantle, he suffered an ankle injury that required some surgery. He was able to make his return against Geelong in round fourteen. But within that, he suffered a setback with a stress-related lower leg injury that would mean he didn’t play another game for the year.

The reason Dom has made his way into this series should be apparent, but let’s be clear. Sheed is here because of his potential to be one of the best stepping stones for you this year. If you contrast his scoring power against his price point, the potential for value is apparent.

In 2021 he didn’t miss a game and averaged 91.3. It consisted of nine tons, four of which were above 120, including two scores of 135. In addition to these tons, he had five additional scores of 80+. While for SuperCoach, he averaged 82.2, scored six tons and four additional scores over 80.

This isn’t the only season that Sheed has shown a capacity to score multiple times near the upper ends. Across 2020-2019 he averaged 89 & 95 in SuperCoach and 95 & an adjusted average of 88 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam. These aren’t averages of a premium midfielder, but you’re not paying for Sheed to be that. Rather, the attraction is getting a guy who can boost you some significant cash while scoring good high-level fantasy points. With multiple seasons of low 90’s averages, it’s easy to see that there could be nearly thirty points per game of upside, given he’s priced in the low 60s across all formats of the game,

Even though his 2022 season was ruined by injury, he doesn’t have a recent history where you should be concerned. Between 2019-2021 he missed just one game. That should give coaches the confidence to start with him should he be over any lingering effects of his lower leg injuries. He’s got a history of being a constant figure on the field for the Eagles.

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MY TAKE

When a player is coming off the back of a serious injury like Dom Sheed, the first consideration before selecting them is to determine their current fitness and health status. Positively the news out of the Eagles camp is extremely positive. The club has been ‘impressed’ with his workrate, skills and leadership, especially in match simulations.

At 27 years of age, Sheed should still be a central piece of the Eagles midfield rebuild. But the unknown variable is who gets midfield minutes alongside him. That matters because, depending on the makeup, he might take a more senior or supporting role. Does West Coast push hard and maximise the experience of Tim Kelly, Elliot Yeo, Andrew Gaff and Luke Shuey? If these four are staples, Sheed will have a potential cap on his scoring and might need to be moved on sooner rather than later.

Alternatively, does Adam Simpson give the kids the keys to the engine room and let Liam Duggan, Jai Culley, Elijah Hewett & Reuben Ginbey get high minutes exposure? Should this eventuate, Sheed could end up as the leading centre-bounce midfielder for the club. It’s likely a combination somewhere in the middle, but that would still make Sheed relevant based on his scoring potential vs. cash outlay.

It is possible to go too heavy on midprice/stepping stones, especially in the limited trade formats of DreamTeam and SuperCoach. For example, Ben Cunnington as a MID/FWD is a mere $80,000 more. Christian Salem is under $70,00 more. Elliot Yeo is only $5k more, Jacob Hopper is the same price, while James Worpel and Nat Fyfe save you money. All present value. However, you can only really start a few of these. You could find yourself running shallow on trades if the majority don’t become premiums. How you rank Sheed alongside these names will ultimately determine whether he’s right for you.

If Sheed gets through the preseason without any setbacks and he’s playing through the midfield, then regardless of the format you play, he’s got to be a consideration. For the Sheed selection to be viewed as a success, he doesn’t have to average over 90; that’d be ideal but not essential. Going mid 80’s is enough to make the pick worthwhile. In AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, Sheed is right in the mix as a starting squad option. While for SuperCoach, I’m currently selecting Jacob Hopper at the same price ahead of him. I’ll take the player on a good side with the same scoring potential over a guy in a potential bottom-four side. I know some coaches want to get both, but based on the structure I have currently, I won’t be doing that.

DRAFT DECISION

A good season for Dom Sheed would have him knocking on the door of the top fifty midfielders. To do that, he’d need to average 90 across the formats. While it’s a potential outcome, I’m not prepared to reach for a pick for him at an M5 range. If he falls to me as an M6/7, I’ll happily take him, but any higher and I’ll happily let him go. 

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#28 Most Relevant | Max Gawn
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Read Time:6 Minute, 51 Second

Over the past eight seasons, Max Gawn has been a regular feature in our fantasy football sides. As he enters 2023, his ownership might not be as high as in previous seasons, but he holds the key to several possible outcomes for fantasy coaches this year. 

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Max Gawn
Age: 31
Club: Melbourne Demons
Position: Ruck

2022 Highest Score: 
152 Vs Collingwood (AFLFantasy)
198 Vs Sydney (SuperCoach)

Career Highest Score: 
154 Vs North Melbourne | AFLFantasy (2019)
212 Vs North Melbourne | SuperCoach (2019)

2022 Average: 
103.2 (AFLFantasy)
113 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $622,100
AFLFantasy Price: 
$914,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$936,900

Embed from Getty Images

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

If you’ve played SuperCoach, AFLFantasy or DreamTeam at any point over the past few seasons and ranked OK, then there’s every chance you’ve owned Max Gawn during that time. Since 2015, Max has found a way to score among not just the topline ruckmen but among the best fantasy options in the game. His scoring consistency, ceiling and durability make him a phenomenal prospect historically.

In 2022 even on what many believed was a regression not just in fantasy but in a pure football sense, we still saw Max dominate. He ranked second in the league for contested marks and fifth for hitouts per game.

Last year he scored ten AFLFantasy/DreamTeam tons; six of them were above 120, and he had four scores above 140, including a 152. He averaged 103.2 and ended the season as the number-one ranked ruck by average and for total points.

For SuperCoach, he scored eleven tons, with the lowest for season 114. Eight of his tons were above 120, four over 140, including 160, 172 & 198. He ended the season as the number-one ranked ruck with an average of 113. That average was also the tenth highest in the game.

From his 22 games in 2021, Gawn delivered fifteen AFLFantasy/DreamTeam tons, five of them over 120 and four over 130. To go with his scoring frequency of tons is one of the best scoring basements in the game, all year, he had just three matches in which he failed to go 90 or higher. By the end of that year, he was the clear ruck top ruck by average and total points. And while he wasn’t as dominant in this format as in prior seasons, he ended the season ranked twelfth for overall points and sixteenth by averages. Not a bad season for a guy that many considered a ‘good’ but ‘not great’ fantasy season.

Historically big Max has always been a better SuperCoach performer, and he didn’t disappoint coaches during the 2021 season. He scored 18 tons; that’s 81% of games last year he hit the triple figures. Of those tons, eleven were over 120, four higher than 140 and an insane three were 159+. His strong scoring basement was on display in this format too. He had just one score below 90 all year. He ended the year as the best ruckman by averages and points, but he ranked fourth for total points and fifth for averages, including all positions.

There are plenty of question marks around Max, specifically his role-sharing with Brodie Grundy in 2023. However, as valid as they are (we’ll discuss them shortly), the reality is he can still score and is relevant not just because of what he does by scoring fantasy points but also because his game can impact others fantasy outputs.

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MY TAKE

Every stat about Max Gawn’s scoring past is almost null and void. Sorry to burst the bubble, but the moment Brodie Grundy walked into the side via a trade in the off-season, everything Max had done prior had a substantial variable change. That doesn’t make it irrelevant because all it takes is one long-term injury, and Max can quickly slide back into his ‘good old days’ of scoring.

The ultimate question is how does the former ‘set and forget’ ruck pair now co-exist on the same side? Furthermore, what impact does it have on their fantasy football scoring output? Luke Jackson is a different player than Brodie Grundy, but last year we did start to see the slow transition to a more shared ruck structure. In 2021 Gawn averaged 73% of CBAs, with Jackson at 28%.

Last year Max slipped down to 66%, while Jackson moved upwards to 36%. And even with him only attending 2/3 of the ruck contests, he still averaged not just 100, but importantly was the #1 ruck by average across the formats. So remember, just because players scoring might dip marginally doesn’t mean they still can’t score highly enough to be the #1 in their line.

So how does he function with Grundy? Does the footy club play a level share of a 50/50 split? Do they give one ruckman the edge? Ultimately, we can speculate, but that’s all it can be. We might see that Gawn become DPP eligible under Champion Data’s 35% ruling at either of the rounds 6,12, or 18 DPP additions. In SuperCoach, where Gawn excels is rewarded. Hitouts to advantage, intercept marks and contested possessions receive a scoring weight that benefits. Imagine if Gawn were to get DPP as a RUC/FWD. That’d change the narrative drastically about what a top-tier forward would need to average.

The narrative of the fantasy community is that Grundy and Gawn will either damage each other’s scoring power to become irrelevant or that one will drastically suffer while the other flourishes. I propose that there is a world where they can both co-exist and succeed. In 2012 the West Coast Eagles had Dean Cox and Nic Naitanui both deliver sensational seasons. Both ended up as part of the All-Australian side but were SuperCoach elite that year. Cox averaged 111.6 & Naitanui averaged 113.8. It’s rare to have two elite rucks both exist on the one AFL list, let alone score well. But the 2012 Eagles have shown both can be done.

Max is currently recovering from a hamstring injury that he suffered at training. However, the club has not indicated that it’s of serious concern or that he’ll not be right for round one. As a result, he should be able to still have a few weeks of training before the start of any preseason matches against opposition clubs.

With the number of unknowns around the Demons rucks, I’m targeting Gawn as an upgrade target. But just because he’s not in my starting squad, it doesn’t make him irrelevant. Max is still very relevant in 2023.

DRAFT DECISION

Gone are the days when Max Gawn is a first-round selection. The upside is that if some variables land his way, he could score like he used to. There comes the point in every draft where Max Gawn’s name value and scoring potential will be too great for any coach to pass up any longer. That range could come as early as the third round in SuperCoach and the fifth round in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam. I won’t draft him there, but I can see people not being able to resist his scoring upside much beyond it. 

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#29 Most Relevant | Lachie Neale
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Read Time:7 Minute, 6 Second

The 2022 season of Lachie Neale will go down as one of his best. However, it’s another season of wasted opportunities for the Brisbane Lions. Having stocked up over the off-season, is it now the time for Neale to carry his side to premiership glory? 

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Lachie Neale
Age: 29
Club: Brisbane Lions
Position: Midfield

2022 Highest Score: 
145 Vs Essendon (AFLFantasy)
198 Vs Essendon (SuperCoach)

Career Highest Score: 
169 Vs GWS Giants | AFLFantasy (2019)
198 Vs Essendon | SuperCoach (2022)

2022 Average: 
107 (AFLFantasy)
122.8 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $676,200
AFLFantasy Price: 
$947,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$971,300

Embed from Getty Images

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

2022 was a stunning season for Lachie Neale. Individually he was so strong and consistent last year that he was just one Brownlow vote away from becoming a two-time winner of the leagues top individual honour. The Brisbane Lions midfield star ranked second in the AFL for possessions and centre clearances while also being in the top ten for disposals, clearances, stoppage clearances and handbells per game.

In AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, he scored thirteen tons, four of them over 120, all of which were between 133-145. He had five additional scores of 90+ and only had his scoring dip below 80 in just three games. He ended the season ranked eighth for total points, and his average of 107 places him with the tenth-best average from 2022.

For SuperCoach, he scored a ton in 86% of matches last year. He registered a triple-digit score in 19 of his 22 games. Eleven tons were above 120, six over 130, and three monsters over 160 – a 164, 187 & his career-high 198. From the three games in which he failed to score a ton, he had just one below 80. Last year he was ranked first for total points and third by averages. His 122.8 was one of four players who went over 120 last season.

This was a return to peak Neale after struggling to find full health in 2021. That year he battled back tightness in the preseason, and then in round six, he suffered a significant ankle injury that saw him miss almost two months of footy. He ended the season with an average of 94.4 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 99.8 in SuperCoach. That was his lowest average in a season since 2014.

As much as he suffered a few injuries in 2021, the narrative of any poor injury history is garbage. In his previous nine seasons, he’s missed nine games, and seven of those came during the 2021 season. So is he an injury risk? No. Arguably he’s one of the most durable premium midfielders we could own.

One of the questions around Neale before moving to Brisbane was around could he ever be a topline fantasy performer without being protected by the likes of David Mundy and Nat Fye. But since joining the Lions, those concerns haven’t been answered; they’ve been smashed. Since 2019 in his 76 home and away games, he’s averaged 107.3 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 118.5 in SuperCoach.

There is a direct correlation between Neale’s scoring dominance and when his Lions win. In victories last year, he averaged 122 in SuperCoach, and in losses, he goes at 104.1. A differential of 18.1. When they win in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam, he goes at 113.3, but in losses, he limps to 93.4. A gap of 19.9. Last year the lions won fifteen matches and dropped just seven. But the expectation amongst the broader football media is that it should increase. The addition of Jack Gunston up forward could be a premiership-winning move. At the same time, Josh Dunkley should only strengthen the already excellent midfield. It’s easy to see the narrative that Neale, with all this extra support, should have zero concerns about being one of the top-scoring premium midfielders across the game formats. 

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MY TAKE

The recent history of Lachie Neale speaks for itself. He is one of the top premium midfielders going around. However, as he enters a new season, there are two key questions that fantasy coaches are asking ahead of deciding whether he’s right to choose as a starting squad option or an upgrade target.

The first isn’t a new concern, but it’s the fact that he’s shown over time that he’s quite susceptible to a tag. Last year there were six matches he was tagged, and he averaged 81.1 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam & 101.5 in SuperCoach.

The positive of being a Neale owner is that most of these tags can be predicted when you closely watch the fixture. For those considering starting Lachie, his first six weeks are against Port, Demons, Dogs, Pies, North & Giants. Of those six teams, only Melbourne chose to tag Neale last year.

Speaking of the Lions fixture, they have two Thursday night and one Friday night game in the opening five weeks to start the season. They also have their first Sunday game in round eleven. That makes him a perfect early-round vice-captaincy option where any risk of tags can be mitigated by using the VC/C loophole.

Last year his seasonal splits were interesting. Before the Lions multi-bye round he averaged 115.6 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 130.3 in SuperCoach. However, after the byes, his scoring dipped well below his best & interestingly below his current starting price. In his final nine games of the year, he averaged 94.5 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 111.8 for SuperCoach. As important as it is to take note of, it’s important to remember that this Lions midfield unit will have some differences from 2022 to 2023.

It was alluded to earlier in the article, but the big change for the Lions that could impact Neale is the arrival of Josh Dunkley. Does his arrival help or hinder? Ultimately we can only forecast and speculate. Both on Dunkley’s role and what it means for Neale’s fantasy output. For what it’s worth, I believe it will clip some of the ceilings of Neale. Dunkley is an elite groundball player, sensational defensively at stoppages and is a strong overhead mark. I expect him to get plenty of midfield minutes, which won’t benefit Neale. But that’s purely my speculation. There’s a viable scenario where Dunkley does nothing to hinder his scoring power.

Neale has been an elite performer, especially in SuperCoach, over several seasons, and even with Dunkley’s arrival, it’s this format he still must be considered as a starting option. If you do choose to overlook him in your starting squad, he must be someone you keep an eye on his price during the season. If he drops to the right range, he’s someone to consider seriously. He’s got the scoring power to put on a monster stretch of big tons.

DRAFT DECISION

The big variable in drafts this year is what happens with the topline premiums that are eligible outside the midfielder. Players like Sam Docherty, Josh Dunkley, Stephen Coniglio, Tim Taranto and even Tim English will drastically shape the first round of a draft. In SuperCoach formats of the draft, I still expect him to be drafted as someone’s M1 and be right in the mix late in the first round through to early in the second. For AFLFantasy/DreamTeam drafts, I have him falling outside the top ten mids, which means I’d draft him as my M2. I’d be looking for him in the fourth round. 

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