Yeah I think everyone can win from this.
He's got some really good qualities and his shortcomings should be easy to fix. He definitely made progress this year but his last 6 weeks or so were disappointing. Still, it was his second year. Plenty of growth to come.
If he can continue improving, no doubt Tasmania will overpay - especially if they struggle to attract others which I think they will. They will also need an early win in terms of recruitment and he could be that. As you mentioned, we'll be well compensated in this scenario, and he'll never be a player a club cannot afford to lose (i.e. Bont).
2025 List Management Thread
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Sanders is likely going to command probably $2m a season contract as one of the inaugural Devils marquee players - I'm quite sure his management knows this and so do the Dogs, and the AFEL will be doing their bit to attract established talent to their shiny new toy.
It is what it is - we will get handsomely compensated if that is what ultimately happens. Until then, hopefully he continues to improve and become a more dangerous offensive player (especially by foot) as we are in the contending window for the next 2-3 years, and he has the chance to further refine his game and get some silverware as a key cog in a premiership team before his Godfather offer inevitably comes.
There's no point trading him before this, as he won't get us anything much of value until he becomes a much better and rounded player. And here's no point Sanders wanting to be traded before this - he can work on his game and get better at a contending club before the Tassie Devils take flight. And even if he does improve to the extent that he is a top 10-20 player in the competition, the compensation from Tassie will dwarf anything another rival club may come up with.Last edited by Sedat; 04-09-2025, 10:19 AM.👍 4Leave a comment:
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I am still hoping Sanders can come good. He is a second year player and has shown some good signs (and bad), but he does have talent.Leave a comment:
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Not to attack or anything but that Sanders deal was a pretty simple win IMO
We gave up pick 10 & 17 which ended up stretching out to 13 & 23
and got pick 4 which stretched out to 6.
Croft ended up going at pick 15 which was after the Rogers bid at 14, so in terms of pick 10, Croft was basically bidded on at pick 11.
If we didn’t trade picks 10 & 17, I have no doubt Croft would have easily gone 2 picks higher by either Geelong or GWS and we would have ended up using our 2 1sts on CroftLeave a comment:
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I have a bad feeling about the whole Sanders situation.
I know part of the 3X1st rounders we gave up, included getting Croft, in a roundabout way, but it always felt like too much to give up.
We could have just drafted Croft with points, and the bid was quite late in the end, too.
Combine that with, the fact that he is developing into a nice player, but he is a long way off from developing into an elite player (You give up 3X1s, you better get an elite player), Tassie will offer twice the money, length and inside Mid time.
The go home factor....... It is great he and Trelor are close, but if he hasn't moved out with some mates by the end of this off-season, whether that be Dogs Mates or U18 mates, then you can bank it, he is going home.
If he leaves, what do we get back, combined with the 3 years of development we put in, shaping like an epic fail, unless we win a flag next year, with him playing as an above-average outside mid.
We gave up pick 10 & 17 which ended up stretching out to 13 & 23
and got pick 4 which stretched out to 6.
Croft ended up going at pick 15 which was after the Rogers bid at 14, so in terms of pick 10, Croft was basically bidded on at pick 11.
If we didn’t trade picks 10 & 17, I have no doubt Croft would have easily gone 2 picks higher by either Geelong or GWS and we would have ended up using our 2 1sts on Croft👍 6Leave a comment:
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I have a bad feeling about the whole Sanders situation.
I know part of the 3X1st rounders we gave up, included getting Croft, in a roundabout way, but it always felt like too much to give up.
We could have just drafted Croft with points, and the bid was quite late in the end, too.
Combine that with, the fact that he is developing into a nice player, but he is a long way off from developing into an elite player (You give up 3X1s, you better get an elite player), Tassie will offer twice the money, length and inside Mid time.
The go home factor....... It is great he and Trelor are close, but if he hasn't moved out with some mates by the end of this off-season, whether that be Dogs Mates or U18 mates, then you can bank it, he is going home.
If he leaves, what do we get back, combined with the 3 years of development we put in, shaping like an epic fail, unless we win a flag next year, with him playing as an above-average outside mid.
We just need to coach the shit out of him and he'll return the favour, either by sticking with us or getting good enough to command a raft of good picks for his services. Hopefully his line coach hammers into him the fact he got lucky in not missing out on finals due to his late season lapses, and that he just can't afford to not be super fit and able to carry form throughout a full year as a third year player.
We ask a lot of young blokes these days, guys like Daicos and Sheezel have ruined it for everyone else (even if they did get to run about in defence in their first years racking up easy stats)!
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SANDERS STATUS UPDATE
Ryley Sanders’ omission from the club’s round 24 team sets up an intriguing contract year for the Tasmanian-born product, with no talks likely to take place until next year.
The Dogs gave up picks 10, 17 and a future first-rounder to secure Sanders at pick six in the 2023 national draft but the club’s strong midfield meant at times this year he was pushed out to a flank.
After a quiet few weeks he was the sub in round 23 then was dropped altogether in the do-or-die clash against Fremantle.
With one more year on his contract he will be desperate to prove to the Dogs he is worthy of a lucrative extension like fellow Tasmanian Colby McKercher secured in recent months.
McKercher was paid as much as $850,000 a season for a two-year extension that takes him past the first Devils season in 2028 but comes out of contract in 2029.
The Dogs will have to broker a deal with Sanders that retains him but not on silly money, aware that there are more mouths to feed ahead of him in their midfield.
Young emerging prospects Joel Freijah and Jordan Croft are also out of contract next year so the club will be keen to sign them over summer.
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You’re so clever you tell more about this so called development.
There is no development left in Gardner. We knew what he was 5 years ago. As for developing others at training, it’s a mystery. Playing a sub standard afl player against guys we want to prosper at afl level. I suppose it gives them a false sense of confidence.
We can still pay him out, maybe another player might make it.
You can continue this thread with someone else.👍 7Leave a comment:
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That is 2 different arguments. "If we are aiming to win at training" is a simple comment, you clearly don't understand how players are developed.
You can complain about what has happened in the past, and disagree with Gradner, getting that contract. No issue with that.
But it doesn't change that he is contracted for next year, and he is a good citizen, well-liked and offers the team something, even if that isn't senior AFL level play.
He will be on the list next year, and it is pointless arguing otherwise.
Come up wiht a solution that works alongside that.
There is no development left in Gardner. We knew what he was 5 years ago. As for developing others at training, it’s a mystery. Playing a sub standard afl player against guys we want to prosper at afl level. I suppose it gives them a false sense of confidence.
We can still pay him out, maybe another player might make it.👎 1Leave a comment:
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SANDERS STATUS UPDATE
Ryley Sanders’ omission from the club’s round 24 team sets up an intriguing contract year for the Tasmanian-born product, with no talks likely to take place until next year.
The Dogs gave up picks 10, 17 and a future first-rounder to secure Sanders at pick six in the 2023 national draft but the club’s strong midfield meant at times this year he was pushed out to a flank.
After a quiet few weeks he was the sub in round 23 then was dropped altogether in the do-or-die clash against Fremantle.
With one more year on his contract he will be desperate to prove to the Dogs he is worthy of a lucrative extension like fellow Tasmanian Colby McKercher secured in recent months.
McKercher was paid as much as $850,000 a season for a two-year extension that takes him past the first Devils season in 2028 but comes out of contract in 2029.
The Dogs will have to broker a deal with Sanders that retains him but not on silly money, aware that there are more mouths to feed ahead of him in their midfield.
Young emerging prospects Joel Freijah and Jordan Croft are also out of contract next year so the club will be keen to sign them over summer.
I know part of the 3X1st rounders we gave up, included getting Croft, in a roundabout way, but it always felt like too much to give up.
We could have just drafted Croft with points, and the bid was quite late in the end, too.
Combine that with, the fact that he is developing into a nice player, but he is a long way off from developing into an elite player (You give up 3X1s, you better get an elite player), Tassie will offer twice the money, length and inside Mid time.
The go home factor....... It is great he and Trelor are close, but if he hasn't moved out with some mates by the end of this off-season, whether that be Dogs Mates or U18 mates, then you can bank it, he is going home.
If he leaves, what do we get back, combined with the 3 years of development we put in, shaping like an epic fail, unless we win a flag next year, with him playing as an above-average outside mid.
👍 5Leave a comment:
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