Tag: Aiden Bonar

10 Players that stood out in the Marsh Series | Week One
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Read Time:5 Minute, 21 Second

Week one of the Marsh Community Series has wrapped up. We’ve had 5 games, with 10 teams play. It’s time to look at 10 Players that stood out in the Marsh Series in week one.

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Marcus Bontempelli

From the first bounce to the final siren looked like a Lamborghini in a Holden factory. Marcus Bontempelli was clean, precise, articulate, smooth and creative. He brought his best with 37 disposals at 78% efficiency, 17 contested, 10 clearances and 8 tackles. He attended 24 centre bounces and 2 last quarter goals to notch up a massive 195 SC and 151 AF points.

If you haven’t already noticed, his ownership across all formats received a healthy bump

Read our full preseason take on him from the 50 Most Relevant Series here.

Tom Mitchell

Let’s be honest, this guy was a major reason we tuned in for this game. Our headline act returned after 12 months out and most importantly got through unscathed. His numbers were decent, 21 touches and 5 tackles from 3 quarters, but it was his intent and attack on the ball that stood out and really impressed me. 60 seconds into the game, he had laid 2 tackles and by the quarter time, it was 4. Yes, he was a bit handball happy, but he was at most stoppages looking hungry for the ball and once he shakes off the cobwebs, will be looking like himself again.

Read our full preseason take on him from the 50 Most Relevant Series here.

Christian Petracca

There’s no dancing about this one. Angry midfield Petracca is the best kind of Petracca. Started the day lined up against Brad Crouch but neither paid the other any respect in a sometimes fiery contest. Trac dominated all over the ground and pushed forward on occasion for a couple of goals, which should remind Coaches of his value inside the forward 50 – which is not where we want him playing if you select him.

It’s also worth noting that Angus Brayshaw didn’t play and that if Trac has an opening quarter like that in the real thing, he’ll have a tagger hanging off him for the other three. Still, there’s potential value here if you believe that a permanent midfield role beckons.

Hugh Greenwood

A relatively popular, value premium in some sides already, this game won’t do anything to put you off. He was more in the midfield than up forward although it wouldn’t surprise to see this flip during the regular season, with his pressure being a strength. He may also find himself as the Suns’ tagger at times if needed. The Suns’ ultimate midfield splits in the regular season will be fascinating for both Greenwood and their team as a whole.

Aiden Bonar

As a cash generation option hold Mid-Fwd DPP he eased into the game. He attended nine centre bounces had eight tackles from 61% time on the ground. A positive trend, but don’t forget Jack Ziebell and Shaun Higgins were missing from this team, so keep the powder dry for at least another week.

Read our full preseason take on him from the 50 Most Relevant Series here.

Hunter Clark:

All the pre-season hype in the backline has been around Dan Houston and rightly so but some have forgotten how well Clark finished last season. After a quiet start, he really got going and provided the Saints with great drive off half back where he roamed for most of the night. His 3rd quarter impressed as he collected 8 possessions and kicked a beautiful goal on the run. Finished with 22 touches and only 2 marks but I’d expect him to take more advantage of the junk time action that was offered when the real stuff starts.

If you’re looking to run a value heavy backline, then Hunter certainly fits into that category.

Dan Houston

He’s one of the most hyped players of the preseason, and all eyes were on whether Dan Houston would give the much-promised midfield role. For those that missed the game, the news is positive. Houston led the Power for centre bounce attendances and was clear with the ball both in traffic and with space.

Brad Crouch

For all the talk about Petracca in the Crows and Demons clash, it warrants mentioning that Brad Crouch was very very good. Won plenty of ball at the coalface and was damaging delivering inside 50. Had more kicks than handballs which is a rarity for him.

His scoring style is more suited to AFLFantasy/DreamTeam formats but if he keeps building off his season from last year then Brad is destined again for a top 10 midfield average.

Quinton Narkle

A big game from Narkle, following on from his large, although limited, efforts from 2019. He led all comers for clearances, led Geelong for Inside 50s and generally ran around and collected a lot of the ball.

Before getting too ahead of ourselves though, scroll back up and read the list of Cats mids who didn’t play this game, as well as the limited minute’s Danger, had, and take it with a grain of salt. Still, one to keep an eye on, however.

Lachie Neale

He had the footy on a string in this game. Lachie Neale had 46 disposals, 26 contested possessions and 12 clearances. Rather than looking to shut him down, Port was happy to attempt to go head-to-head against the Lions star midfielder.

To be clear, Neale was excellent and displayed to all current owners just how good he can be with a score over 160 in all formats of the game. If you currently have him in your team, then he gave you 0 reasons to not select him.

However, games like this do two things. Firstly, they highlight how little defensive pressure sides place in the preseason games. Secondly, it sets a giant reminder to opposition teams around the importance of negating his influence around the contest.

Please read our full preseason take on him from the 50 Most Relevant Series here.

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Marsh Community Series Review | Bulldogs Vs Kangaroos
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Read Time:2 Minute, 36 Second

Under an open roof, the Kangaroos came to take on the Dogs at Marvel Stadium, the ground that is fast becoming a Fantasy Feast for the Doggies, especially Bontempelli, Macrae and Dunkley and they didn’t disappoint.

North was without Higgins, Ziebell, Brown, Polec, Hall, Tarrant and LDU but brought with them a physical game, especially early on. The Dogs were without English, Naughton, Suckling, Bruce and Wood and after a tough first quarter, the Dogs got on top and pretty much cruised out the remaining game to win by a 44 point margin.

Marcus Bontempelli:

From the first bounce to the final siren looked like a Lamborghini in a Holden factory, clean, precise, articulate, smooth and creative, he brought his best, 37 disposals at 78% efficiency, 17 contested, 10 clearances, 8 tackles, 24 CBA’s and 2 last quarter goals to notch up a massive 195 SC and 151 AF points.

Read our full preseason take on him from the 50 Most Relevant Series here.

Jack Macrae:

The second amigo who along with the Bont and Dunkley started every quarter in the guts and he also amassed over 20 CBA’s. Carrying on from 2019 not much has changed.

Read our full preseason take on him from the 50 Most Relevant Series here.

Josh Dunkley

The third amigo, 21 CBA’s and every chance he’ll be the 150 point guy in his next game, these 3 are serious fantasy beasts.

Read our full preseason take on him from the 50 Most Relevant Series here.

Caleb Daniel

Started slow, more of a lockdown role early but got into the game and hit 20 disposals Hayden Crozier: 21 disposals, with 8 marks, will be one to watch more closely in the role, especially for drafts

Read our full preseason take on him from the 50 Most Relevant Series here.

Lewis Young:

The rookie defender who presented well and kicked 3 goals Jordon Sweet: Rookie ruck, filled in for English, pretty much took on the sole ruck duties against Goldy, a cheap R3.

Todd Goldstein

Predominant in the first half then shared duties with Xerri, looks fit and ready for the 2020 season, 20 of his HO’s were in the first quarter, the opposition tonight was poor.

Ben Cunnington

Solid game but needs to realise theirs more points in kicking than there is in handballing, 27 disposals for 97 SC points.

Aiden Bonar

Rookie Mid-Fwd eased into the game, 9 CBA’s and 8 tackles, 61%TOG

Read our full preseason take on him from the 50 Most Relevant Series here.

Tristan Xerri :

Rookie Ruck-Fwd played predominantly forward and took full advantage of the opportunity, just needs to find a spot Jack Mahony: Rookie Mid-Fwd didn’t really get into the game with just the 6 disposals, do rate this guy, let’s see his next game

Curtis Taylor:

Rookie Forward nice cameo including mark of the day in which he went back and slotted the goal.

Charlie Comben

Rookie Ruck-Fwd-Loop hole candidate, he did exactly what most coaches wanted him to do, not play

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#12 Most Relevant | Aiden Bonar
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Read Time:3 Minute, 16 Second

The former first-round draft pick found it challenging to break into the GWS Giants best 22. An offseason trade to North Melbourne brings him right into the best Kangaroos side and a fantasy-relevant player.

PLAYER PROFILE

Name: Aiden Bonar
Age: 20
Club: North Melbourne Kangaroos
Position: Midfield/Forward

2019 Highest Score: 
49 Vs Sydney (AFLFantasy)
50 Vs Sydney (SuperCoach)

2019 Average: 

42 (AFLFantasy)
41.5 (SuperCoach)

SuperCoach Price: $202,800
AFLFantasy Price: 
$333,000
AFLDreamTeam Price: 
$273,300

WHY IS HE RELEVANT?

I like what the Kangaroos are doing with the addition of Aiden Bonar. In his draft year, he was viewed as one of the best athletic prospects in the pool. The Roos will be hoping he can continue his development from a powerful forward role player to a genuine inside bull.

Despite the injury issues the GWS Giants suffered throughout the season, Bonar found it almost impossible to get game time. From the 2 games, he did play he was used predominantly forward with minimal opportunities through the midfield. In those two games, he scored 49 & 35 in AFLFantasy/DreamTeam and 50 & 33 in SuperCoach.

Last year in the NEAFL he found himself playing in multiple roles and not being able to get settled through the midfield. In the NEAFL he averaged 18 disposals, 6 tackles, 3 marks & 4 inside 50.

The Kangaroos need to bring some fresh faces with Shaun Higgins (31) Ben Cunnington (28) and Jack Ziebell (28) the current midfield leaders. 

Bonar (20) along with Luke Davies-Uniake (20), Tarryn Thomas (19) and Jy Simpkin (21) are the future of North Melbourne. 2020 and 2021 are crucial years for the Roos, and a successful transition of responsibility in the midfield is critical.

MY TAKE

He moves from fantasy footy irrelevance at GWS into the conversation at North Melbourne. From his two games this season he averaged just over 40 across the formats. The key questions will be first, is he worth the premium cash cow price tag in our starting squads?

A few weeks ago, we spoke about this when Matt Rowell was featured in the 50 Most Relevant. For the selection to be worthwhile, the three key questions to answer will be… How many rookies will we get that are midfield and forward eligible? How are they priced? Do you forecast he will score approximately 15 points per game more than the lower-priced rookies?

Fantasy coaches have plenty of strong cash cows /midprice already entering 2020, so for him to be a good selection, he’ll need to outscore them.

Can he force his way into the Roos engine room which already boasts Cunnington, Ziebell, Davies-Uniake, Higgins, Anderson, Simpkin, Dumont and Thomas? This will be something fantasy coaches need to watch with great interest. If he can, based on his likely price point, he needs to be on your preseason watchlist.

We are yet to see some preseason games, but from track watchers at North Melbourne, he’s been a dominant force at stoppages matching it with the likes of Ben Cunnington and using his penetrating kick to move the ball deep inside 50.

If he stays through that Kanagaoo midfield, then we could have an extraordinary value MID/FWD candidate.

DRAFT DECISION

In a single season league, he’s worth a late-round selection given the risk at this point of the draft is non-existant. The upside could be that you get a forward option that is worth placing on the field.

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Patreon Only | Trade Review | Aiden Bonar
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Read Time:1 Minute, 58 Second

Impact on the new club: 

I like what the Kangaroos are doing with the addition of Aiden Bonar. In his draft year, he was viewed as one of the best athletic prospects in the pool. The Roos will be hoping he can continue his development from a powerful forward role player to a genuine inside bull.

The Kangaroos need to bring some fresh faces with Shaun Higgins (31) Ben Cunnington (28) and Jack Ziebell (28) the current midfield leaders. 

Bonar (20) along with Luke Davies-Uniake (20), Tarryn Thomas (19) and Jy Simpkin (21) are the future of North Melbourne. 2020 and 2021 are crucial years for the Roos, and a successful transition of responsibility in the midfield is critical.

Impact on the old club:

None, absolutely none! GWS are stacked to the ceiling with players capable of running through the midfield. Once injuries stuck this year to Callan WardJosh Kelly and even Stephen Coniglio players like Toby Greene and Zac Williams stepped up taking multiple rotations. 

However, the depth is even higher than this. Last years draft crop in Jackson Hately and Jye Caldwell will have developed over another preseason and deserve time through the guts. Then to top it off they’ll likely pick up the best inside midfielder in the draft Tom Green as an academy selection in the draft. 

In short, as talented as Bonar is, the Giants won’t miss him at all.

Fantasy Summary: 

He moves from fantasy footy irrelevance at GWS into the conversation at North Melbourne. From his two games this season he averaged just over 40 across the formats. The key questions will be first, is he worth the premium cash cow price tag in our starting squads? Fantasy coaches have plenty of strong cash cows already entering 2020, so for him to be a good selection, he’ll need to outscore them.

Can he force his way into the Roos engine room which already boasts Cunnington, Ziebell, Davies-Uniake, Higgins, Anderson, Simpkin, Dumont and Thomas? This will be something fantasy coaches need to watch with great interest? If he can, based on his likely price point, he needs to be on your preseason watchlist.

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SuperCoach and AFLFantasy Winners from the Trade Period
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Read Time:4 Minute, 36 Second

As soon as the AFL Trade window closes, media personalities and fans alike clamour to decide and define who the big winners were from the period. Instead of focussing on the ‘clubs’ who came out trumps, I decided to look at some players who ave increased their SuperCoach, DreamTeam and AFLFantasy value heading into the 2020 fantasy season.

Blake Acres

At St Kilda, has has been starved of opportunities to play as an inside midfielder. He’s been stuck behind the likes of Seb Ross, Jack Steele, Luke Dunstan and co all getting a gig ahead of him. On the occasions, he was allowed to use his hulking frame through the midfield his fantasy numbers showed plenty of promise. In 2018 his opening five scores in SuperCoach were 144, 90, 97, 92 & 107. In AFLFantasy it was 124, 92, 77, 83 and 100. 

Moving to Fremantle, they desperately need support for Nat Fyfe, and under a new coach, Blake could thrive if given the opportunities. Currently priced 13-15 points per game under what he achieved in 2018, so if he retains forward status, he looms as a genuine breakout candidate.

Marc Pittonet

Could we have our R3 locked away with this trade? Andrew Phillips trade to Essendon means the Frenchman as becomes the clear second choice ruck for Carlton. Pittonet should be cheap next year and should Matt Kruezer suffer an injury that rules him out then he could well be a handy cash cow. Last year in the VFL he averaged 39 hitouts, 16 disposals, three marks and three tackles a game.

Brandon Ellis

The significant variable here is about if Brandon holds onto his defensive eligibility. If he does, then he looms as a potential premium target we need to place seriously on our watchlists across all formats and platforms of the game. In 2014 and across the full season of 2015 we saw that when Ellis is played as a wingman, he can score well. During those two seasons, he played every game, averaged 99.3 and posted 23 tons in AFLFantasy. While during that same time in SuperCoach he averaged 98 and scored 22 hundred plus scores. Some of those 100+ scores were monsters too, with multiple games going well north of 130.  

If he plays wing for Gold Coast and is defensive eligible in fantasy footy, then he’s a serious preseason watchlist. However, as a midfielder, he’d need to elevate his current average (the mid-’80s) into the 100 range to make his selection just scraping worthwhile in the salary cap formats of the game. 

Jack Steven

If you’ve played any format of fantasy footy for multiple seasons, you’ll be fully aware of the scoring potential he owns. Before this season where he battled his mental health his AFLFantasy/DreamTeam averages have been 96, 93, 104 and 111. While for SuperCoach he was going at 94, 90, 102 and 103 and only missed two games during those four seasons. 

The questions shouldn’t be around can he score well, but rather can he get his body in a position to be back to his best. However, three vital determining factors will impact just how many select him. Firstly, with him playing only seven games will the formats award him a discount for games missed due to battling with his mental health? Secondly, can he get back to full health and fitness? One of Jack’s key weapons is his elite endurance and aerobic capacity. Something we failed to see much during the season. Finally, does he gain forward eligibility? In his three games, he played almost exclusively forward including one where he kicked three goals. 

If the answer is yes to all those, then he could be a highly popular starting squad option

Aiden Bonar

He moves from fantasy footy irrelevance at GWS into the conversation at North Melbourne. From his two games this season he averaged just over 40 across the formats. The key questions will be first, is he worth the premium price tag in our starting squads? Fantasy coaches have plenty of strong cash cows already entering 2020, so for him to be a good selection, he’ll need to outscore them.

Can he force his way into the Roos engine room which already boasts Cunnington, Ziebell, Davies-Uniake, Higgins, Anderson, Simpkin, Dumont and Thomas? This will be something fantasy coaches need to watch with great interest?

Billy Frampton

Stuck for opportunities behind a long list of Port Adelaide forward talls Billy saught a move for more opportunities at senior level. Those opportunities increased Josh Jenkins move to Geelong. Frampton has now given himself a chance at playing some senior footy for the side he grew up supporting as a kid. The bonus is he should be RUC/FWD eligible which could prove to be quite handy should he crack the Crows side. 

Will he score enough at his price point to give actual value? Will, he even fit the Crows new forward structures? Both are great questions, and for fantasy footy coaches ones we’ll get further clarity on once the preseason gets underway. However, it’s safe to say he moves from nobodies radar to providing a blip for fantasy footy coaches.

Are you looking for more in-depth player reviews?

Patreon supporters get a full breakdown and analysis of every trade, the impact to the clubs they arrive and depart plus the panels fantasy footy verdict for 2020. To become a Patreon army supporter, click here.

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