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The AFL is about to shake up the draft, and it’s set to cost the Blues a record price

Peter Ryan

Carlton and Port Adelaide are bracing to give up a record amount of draft capital to acquire top father-son and academy prospects this year as the AFL fine-tunes measures to increase the number of top-rated players available to clubs that finish near the bottom of the ladder.

Under the system being refined following last Wednesday’s AFL Commission meeting, the amount of points a club has to hand over under the recently revised draft-value index (DVI) is likely to be weighted according to where a club finishes on the ladder.

Cody Walker (left) with Charlie Curnow at Carlton training in July. Curnow’s trade to Sydney helped the Blues gain picks they’ll need to match a bid for Walker. Getty Images

Clubs will also only be allowed to use two picks to find enough points to match the bid under the complicated bidding system, although the proposed changes have an option for them to go into deficit.

The intent is to protect the integrity of the draft, which has moved away from the most talented youngsters being available to the clubs finishing on the bottom rungs of the ladder.

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The system will make it extremely difficult for teams that finish high on the ladder to have enough points to secure players who attract bids at the top of the draft – unless they have given up existing talent. The move is an attempt to decrease the likelihood of clubs being able to win a premiership and acquire a top six selection in the next draft.

The Brisbane Lions have done so in the past two seasons when father-son Levi Ashcroft and academy prospect Daniel Annable joined their list after the Lions matched bids at picks five and six respectively.

If the proposed weighting had been in place in 2025, the Lions might have had 25 per cent extra in points added to Annable’s price, making it harder for them to match the bid that came for him at pick six. They may have had to therefore trade out a good player to get another high draft pick to have enough points to add him to the list.

Harry Dean was taken at No.3 and looks a born competitor. He is the son of Blues’ premiership player Peter Dean.Justin McManus
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After Wednesday’s commission meeting, AFL chief executive Andrew Dillon confirmed the underlying principle in play – keep top 10 selections available to the teams that finish in the bottom 10. Last year, three of the top six players in the pool went to clubs which finished in the finals.

“The focus for us is that when you’re providing access outside the normal operation of the draft the fair price is paid,” Dillon said.

However, three club officials who spoke to this masthead on the condition they remained anonymous as they worked in recruiting said the horse had already bolted with the talent landing on the Lions’ and Suns’ lists before the changes were made.

Zak Butters might be the key to Port Adelaide securing Doug Cochrane. Getty Images

At Wednesday’s meeting, officials were told the new rules will apply this season, meaning Carlton will need to pay a higher price for Cody Walker (son of former Blues great Andrew) and Port Adelaide will have to stump up for Doug Cochrane, who was deemed eligible to be part of Port’s Next Generation academy. Essendon will also have to pay a high price to secure Koby Bewick when he is draft eligible in 2027 if he continues his strong form.

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Despite their disappointment the rule is not being grandfathered in, Carlton prepared for that likelihood when they nabbed Sydney’s first-round picks for the next two seasons as well as a couple of players in exchange for star forward Charlie Curnow.

It means they are well stocked with first-round picks if a bid is made on Walker inside the first three selections. Port Adelaide have an extra round-two pick in 2026 as well as their own first- and second-round pick and have been on the record as saying they weren’t active in the 2025 national draft or trade period to accumulate points to match expected bids on emerging talent.

Because of the change, however, they may have to find early selections to match an early bid for Cochrane – which is why a trade for free agent Zak Butters would be critical if the star midfielder decides to leave.

One club official said the proposals were almost daring teams not to add top-line players who were available to them via academies or the father-son rule.

Gold Coast youngster Zeke Uwland made his debut alongside brother Bodhi against Geelong on Friday night.Justin McManus
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Queensland- and NSW-based clubs argue that their academies have been a huge driver in overall interest in the game and that many of the players they have acquired through their academies would have played a sport other than Australian rules football if not for the academies.

Lions president Andrew Wellington also made it clear when he spoke at Wednesday’s season launch that the momentum gained in growing the game in non-traditional states should be fuelled further rather than introducing policies that rein in the academies. He tried to dismiss talk of a dynasty, saying the Lions had finished third and fifth on the ladder before winning flags in 2024 and 2025, respectively.

Carlton were defeated on Thursday night by Sydney, whose captain Callum Mills and vice captain Isaac Heeney are both academy graduates – as are two of the Swans’ star players, Errol Gulden and Nick Blakey.

Carlton had father-son Harry Dean playing his first match and three players who had been squeezed out of the Swans, George Hewett (who joined the Blues as a free agent), Will Hayward and Ollie Florent.

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The Suns thrashed Geelong on Friday night with several academy graduates in their team and coach Damien Hardwick said there would be selection headaches through the year because of the list’s quality.

Giants chief executive Dave Matthews said Greater Western Sydney should be treated differently to the other northern-based clubs as their academy has been nowhere near as bountiful as the other three teams.

Giants chairman Tim Reed presented to the commission and argued the AFL needed to be very strategic in its investment in the region to grow both participation and support in the NRL stronghold.

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Peter RyanPeter Ryan is a sports reporter with The Age.Connect via X or email.

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