2025 Draft Watch

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  • Mofra
    replied
    Originally posted by GVGjr
    Thanks for the great list, Bulldogs201616
    Our 1st pick will get pushed back a lot so we are probably looking at around the 15 to 17 mark.
    Right in the Greeves / Dovaston range.

    If we keep the pick...

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  • GVGjr
    replied
    Thanks for the great list, Bulldogs201616
    Our 1st pick will get pushed back a lot so we are probably looking at around the 15 to 17 mark.

    Leave a comment:


  • GVGjr
    replied
    Originally posted by Bulldogs201616

    Purely the need for a defender.
    Okay, I thought it might be something specific about his game that appealed.
    I'm not sure how he would go against genuine KPP and he seems a lot undersized for that so he seems to be more of a mid defender like Cleary, Jaques and Sellwood.
    Just a preference of mine but a KP defender or one that provides a lot of run would be my preference.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bulldogs201616
    replied
    That's my power rankings so far obviously not an expert but it gives us a good idea on what players will be around our pick .

    1 Will Duursma (Power)
    2 Zeke Uwland (sun's)
    3 Cooper Duff Tytler (Calder)
    4 Dan Annable (Lions
    5 Dylan Patterson (sun's)
    6 Sullivan Robey (eastern)
    7 Dyson Sharp (Centrals)
    8 Josh Lindsay (falcons)
    9 Xavier Taylor (eastern)
    10 Mitch Marsh (West Adelaide)
    11 Harry Dean (Carlton)
    12 Sam Cumming (North Adelaide)
    13 Sam Grji (Oakleigh)
    14 Noah Hibbins Hargraves (Dandenong)
    15 Ollie Greeves(Eastern)
    16 Lachie Dovaston (Eastern)
    17 Jacob Farrow (West Perth)
    18 Aiden Schubert (Centrals)
    19 Louis Emmitt (Oakleigh)
    20 Max King (Sydney)
    21 Archie Ludowyke (Dragons)
    22 Jevan Phillipou ( WWT)
    23 Adam Sweid ( Essendon)
    24 Oskar Taylor (eastern)
    25 Harley Barker (Sturt)

    Leave a comment:


  • Bulldogs201616
    replied
    Originally posted by GVGjr

    What appeals to you the most about Taylor?
    He's had a good season for Metro and the Ranges. He seemed to have improved his contested footy work as well.

    My preference would be Sam Grlj. He reminds me of a fit Jye Caldwell.
    Purely the need for a defender.

    Leave a comment:


  • GVGjr
    replied
    Originally posted by Willow18
    I could see us grabbing Oskar Taylor over Jacob Farrow if both were available, even though Farrow is the more highly rated.

    Sullivan Robey is flying up draft boards as a potential 10-15 pick so could also fall around our range. I really don’t dislike this draft as much as others
    Same here, there are some good prospects that might be regarded as later picks.

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  • Willow18
    replied
    I could see us grabbing Oskar Taylor over Jacob Farrow if both were available, even though Farrow is the more highly rated.

    Sullivan Robey is flying up draft boards as a potential 10-15 pick so could also fall around our range. I really don’t dislike this draft as much as others

    Leave a comment:


  • GVGjr
    replied
    Originally posted by Dogs 24/7
    I've got a friend who insisted this guy doesn't get the attention he deserves
    Oskar Taylor. If we are looking for a small defender with pace and kicking skills then he might be worth Scouting.
    He apparently got a state combine invite
    I agree, he doesn't get mentioned like he should.

    Leave a comment:


  • Dogs 24/7
    replied
    I've got a friend who insisted this guy doesn't get the attention he deserves
    Oskar Taylor. If we are looking for a small defender with pace and kicking skills then he might be worth Scouting.
    He apparently got a state combine invite

    Leave a comment:


  • GVGjr
    replied
    Originally posted by lemmon
    Josh Lindsay is the one I've seen that I really like. Reminds me a bit of Josh Kelly in style. I think his kicking is outstanding
    Terrific player but should go early.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bornadog
    replied
    We need to find a Jack Buckley type in the draft and develop them for the future.

    Leave a comment:


  • lemmon
    replied
    Josh Lindsay is the one I've seen that I really like. Reminds me a bit of Josh Kelly in style. I think his kicking is outstanding

    Leave a comment:


  • GVGjr
    replied
    Originally posted by Bulldogs201616
    Xavier Taylor be perfect but he looks a top 10 lock.
    What appeals to you the most about Taylor?
    He's had a good season for Metro and the Ranges. He seemed to have improved his contested footy work as well.

    My preference would be Sam Grlj. He reminds me of a fit Jye Caldwell.

    Leave a comment:


  • Bulldogs201616
    replied
    Xavier Taylor be perfect but he looks a top 10 lock.

    Leave a comment:


  • Axe Man
    replied
    If we can't trade for a key defender we could do worse than this guy by the sounds of it. Has some Sam Davidson vibes about him as a late developer who has impressed in the VFL. Stands at 199cm.

    Werribee defender Ryan Eyers emerges as top mature-age AFL draft chance

    His VFL season was cut short by injury — but Werribee defender Ryan Eyers quelled some of the state league’s best forwards, emerging as a top mature-age draft hopeful.

    Week after week, he lined up on the VFL’s big forwards.

    Hugh Dixon of Southport in Round 1.

    Tyler Sellers of Essendon in Round 2.

    Jordan Croft of Footscray in Round 3.

    Logan McDonald of Sydney in Round 4.

    On it went for Werribee key defender Ryan Eyers.

    And, in the estimation of the Bees, he beat everyone he stood, right up until Round 12, when he suffered a season-ending hamstring injury against Geelong.

    Werribee was desperately disappointed to lose him.

    But no doubt a few goalkickers around the league didn’t share its upset.

    In his dozen matches, Eyers, in his first year at Chirnside Park, had proved himself among the best key defenders in the VFL.

    Bees coach Jimmy Allan calls him a “pure defender’’.

    “I know the modern game asks for defenders to intercept mark and be attacking and that sort of stuff, but I still think there’s a real place for a defender who can defend,’’ he says.

    “We were under the pump a fair bit this year and he stood up under immense pressure. He just finds a way. He’s got those Inspector Gadget arms. He’s lightly built but he’s strong enough and he’s got really good defensive craft. He uses his body well. He gets an arm in. He’s super-brave in the air.’’

    Despite Eyers missing the second half of the season, Werribee has nominated him for the Fothergill-Round-Mitchell Medal as the most likely Under 24 player in the VFL.

    The award will be presented on Monday night at the JJ Liston Trophy count.

    There is no clear favourite to win this year’s medal.

    Allan suspects it would be former Murray Bushrangers prospect Eyers if he hadn’t been injured.

    “Obviously we don’t see every team in the competition and we only get to see the other teams live once, apart from Southport and Willy, but his ability to shut down gun key forwards, I haven’t seen anyone else do that,’’ he says.

    “Jordan Croft for example. He’s a very good player and went up and played some good AFL footy. He had one touch against us – and the ball was going in there a fair bit as well. He was so valuable for us.’’

    The Bees had lost 2024 premiership defender Nathan Cooper. Allan came to regard Eyers as the “perfect replacement – and Nathan was the best in the business’’.

    This season Cooper returned to the Ovens and Murray league.

    Eyers, 22, hails from the same competition, calling Corowa home. “Born and bred Corowa,’’ he says.

    He played junior and senior football with Corowa-Rutherglen and with Murray Bushrangers during Covid, having his bottom-age year wiped out but sharing the best and fairest as a 19-year-old player in 2022. He also attended the state combine.

    That season was his first as a backman. Until then he had played as a forward and relieving ruckman. Bushies coach Mark Brown suggested the switch.

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    “It ended up a transition year. I was learning the role at the same time as trying to perform in the role,’’ he says.

    “I knew I probably wasn’t tall enough to be a ruckman and he (Brown) said, ‘We feel like you read the play pretty well, we’ll sit you behind the footy’. I became more comfortable. It was one of those years where you could see my development from the start of the season to the end of the season.’’

    Although Eyers put down a marker in his first year at Werribee, he is in fact a third-year VFL player.

    Having got into Deakin University to study radiology, he spent 2023 and ’24 at Geelong, but opportunities were scarce; he managed nine games as a Cat. Last year he was in the best players in one match, but dropped for the next.

    No dissection of selection is needed at clubs with their own reserves. The AFL-listed players get first dibs.

    In Eyers’ case, he had to bide his time behind AFL draftees Emerson Jecka and Connor O’Sullivan, both key defenders.

    “It pushed me out unfortunately,’’ he says.

    “The feedback throughout the year was, ‘You’re doing everything you can, we just don’t have a spot for you’. Frustrating but I understand that’s part of being at an AFL-aligned club.’’

    Eyers spent most of his 2024 season with Corowa-Rutherglen, which was making a comeback to football after dipping into recess in 2023.

    WHAT WERRIBEE SAID...
    Without a doubt the No. 1 full back in the competition. Having played on the best key forwards in the competition, Ryan was outstanding in nullifying their influence and was building his offence game nicely before being struck down with injury.

    As a defender, he saw a lot of the ball; his team won only one game. He won the best and fairest, represented the Ovens and Murray league, and was in the team of the year.

    The prospect of more openings and potentially replacing Cooper as a defensive pillar took him to Werribee.

    He says he gained confidence from being entrusted with the job of bringing down the opposition’s key forward.

    His approach was simple.

    “I don’t really judge my game based on my touches. It’s more about what my opponent does. I’m a defend-first kind of defender.’’

    When Eyers joined Werribee, Allan fell hard for him.

    “The thing I fell in love with straight away is that he’s so competitive and just hates losing,’’ Allan says.

    Eyers admits as much.

    “Yep, I do hate losing. Always have. I don’t know if it’s something my parents instilled in me but I’m extremely competitive. I absolutely hate losing. I’m that livid if I lose. That’s something I took into every game. I’m here not to get 20 touches. I’m here to play on the best forward, stop him having an impact on the game and helping the team.’’

    As for the hamstring injury, it was his first soft-tissue injury. “And I’m going to make sure it’s the last one,’’ he said.

    For all his admiration for Eyers’ defensive qualities, Allan says there is scope for his backman to spread his offensive wings.

    Bees assistant and former AFL player Kyle Hartigan was working with Eyers along those lines before he was injured.

    “It’s something he’ll continue to develop,’’ Allan says.

    “From my point of view, I’d much rather someone who can defend first and then build that part of their game. I think it’s harder to go the other way. It’s really exciting for him. The foundation’s there to be an outstanding player at this level and higher possibly.’’
    ​​

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