The AFL debutants who thrilled and starred in round one

The AFL debutants who thrilled and starred in round one

It was almost impossible to miss Sam Lalor on Thursday night.

The No.1 draft pick was repeatedly involved in the biggest moments of Richmond’s stunning upset of Carlton – after being 41 points down – from kicking goals to Dustin Martin-like fend-offs and super-slick handballs.

Sam Lalor kicked two goals in an impressive debut for the Tigers.Credit: AFL Photos

The Bacchus Marsh bull barely played last year because of injuries, and his cricket talents contributed to him previously not completing a proper football pre-season, but the Tigers, headlined by the late Chris Toce, loved what they saw. Lalor overcame a broken jaw and concussion to play in round one, and showed enough to suggest Richmond have a future star in their midst.

Some talent scouts told this masthead ahead of last year’s draft that they may have delayed Lalor’s debut to give him an extended pre-season that would fortify his body for the AFL. However, the Tigers managed to unleash Lalor straight away, and the work he has put in is obvious, right down to the pre-draft puppy fat on his face being gone.

Richmond also picked two of their other 2024 first-round selections, tall defender Luke Trainor and key forward Harry Armstrong, who also looked promising, and the path forward is obvious for Adem Yze’s men.

Five of the first six players taken in last year’s draft, and nine of the top 20, made their debut this past round. That number would have been higher if not for injuries to Jagga Smith (ACL) – a popular pick to win the Rising Star award before his injury – Josh Smillie (hamstring), Leo Lombard (shoulder), Alix Tauru (back), Taj Hotton (ACL), Jonty Faull (back) and Bo Allan (illness).

The first-year crew not only played, but several others beyond Lalor also shone brightly.

Lion Levi Ashcroft gathered 25 disposals and four clearances to live up to his lofty expectations; Isaac Kako is a ready-made small forward with every trick in the book; Murphy Reid booted four goals in the third quarter to briefly give Fremantle hope of a comeback; and Xavier Lindsay oozed class in a 22-disposal debut. The Roos have a beauty in Finn O’Sullivan, too.

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It is premature to call this a super draft, but recruiters were bullish about this class last year – and the early evidence backs that up.

2024 AFL draft top 20 in round one

1. Sam Lalor (selected) 2. Finn O’Sullivan (selected) 3. Jagga Smith (not selected – ACL) 4. Sid Draper (selected) 5. Levi Ashcroft (selected) 6. Harvey Langford (selected) 7. Josh Smillie (not selected – hamstring) 8. Tobie Travaglia (not selected) 9. Leo Lombard (not selected – shoulder) 10. Alix Tauru (not selected – back) 11. Xavier Lindsay (selected) 12. Taj Hotton (not selected – ACL) 13. Isaac Kako (selected) 14. Jonty Faull (not selected – back) 15. Joe Berry (selected) 16. Bo Allan (not selected – illness) 17. Murphy Reid (selected) 18. Ollie Hannaford (emergency) 19. Harry Oliver (not selected) 20. Cooper Hynes (not selected)

Fresh feel for Dees

A lot of boxes were ticked on Melbourne’s bingo card within the first 60 seconds or so at the MCG on Sunday.

Max Gawn, Christian Petracca, Clayton Oliver and Jack Viney were the Demons’ starting centre-bounce combination. Tick. There was Petracca’s early involvement with a long kick inside 50. Tick. Spearhead Jacob van Rooyen could not quite mark the Sherrin off that pass, but brought it to ground for fellow first-round draftee Matt Jefferson – on debut – who snapped a goal with his first kick. Tick, tick.

At the ensuing centre bounce, Oliver dished a handball out of the middle. The tortured Demons faithful, who feared losing one or both of Petracca and Oliver mere months ago, roared. Another tick.

Clayton Oliver was a strong performer in round one.Credit: AFL Photos

Expectations, at least externally, are not what they once were for Melbourne, but coach Simon Goodwin was buoyant post-match despite a Giants team rated among the flag favourites running them down by three points.

As Goodwin acknowledged, there were issues in the final 25 minutes or so. GWS loomed as the winner for much of the fourth term, although another first-gamer, 25-year-old Aidan Johnson, could have been the hero if he kicked accurately on his set shot inside the last two minutes.

Five Demons made their AFL debut, and terrier-like ex-Lion recruit Harry Sharp – effectively new Crow Alex Neal-Bullen’s cheap-as-chips replacement – played his first game in red and blue, too.

There were eight different players in Melbourne’s side from round one last year, including Harry Petty returning to his more-familiar defensive post, where he had 12 intercept possessions.

Last year’s No.11 pick Lindsay lived up to his draft billing as a classy user on his left boot, while No.6 selection Harvey Langford, the substitute, started the fourth quarter at the centre bounce, alongside Petracca and Oliver, and won five disposals in 27 minutes’ game time.

Jefferson’s performance, 28 months since being the No.15 pick, could be the biggest positive. There were whispers across the league last year that he might be a bust, but he began flourishing in the second half of the season and looked like he belonged on Sunday, matched up against Harry Himmelberg and co.

“That was a big reason for playing Petty forward last year. We needed to support our front end just enough to let these guys develop at the right rate,” Goodwin said.

“We feel like we’ve got a young group of key forwards, and we think if we keep backing them in, and obviously Daniel Turner is a part of that as well, that they’re going to grow together.

Matt Jefferson kicked two goals for Melbourne in his first game.Credit: Getty Images

“[Jefferson] needed to develop physically first … he was a bit different to Jacob, but our recruiters said a couple of years ago, ‘We need to get some key-position players into our footy club’, and this is the reason – they take time to develop.

“It probably wasn’t until the back half of last year in the VFL that he really started to stand out and [for us to] say, ‘Oh, hang on, this guy’s going to be a bit of a player for us’.”

How much longer, Roos?

Most people expect North Melbourne to be better this season. The Kangaroos won only three games in 2024, to give them a grand total of 15 in five years. They received another high draft pick, which they used on skilful midfielder Finn O’Sullivan, who made a seamless transition to AFL ranks on Saturday night.

But will North even climb out of the bottom four this year? Adelaide finished 15th with eight wins last season, while Melbourne were one rung higher with 11.

Finn O’Sullivan was a bright spot in North Melbourne’s defeat.Credit: Getty Images

Alastair Clarkson’s side failed to beat a Western Bulldogs team missing Marcus Bontempelli, Liam Jones, Adam Treloar, Cody Weightman, Jamarra Ugle-Hagan and Jason Johannisen. Ed Richards, Bailey Dale, Laitham Vandermeer and Rhylee West had to pass fitness tests, too.

The Roos entered the final term only seven points down – after conceding six of the first seven goals – and having won the clearances comfortably to that point.

With the match on the line, the Dogs won the first three clearances of the last quarter and piled on three goals in six minutes. A 16-point defeat was the result for North Melbourne, who face Melbourne, Adelaide (away), Sydney, Gold Coast (Adelaide), Carlton and Port Adelaide (away) in the next six rounds.

There are green shoots, as Brendon Bolton once spruiked at Carlton, but this is becoming the never-ending rebuild.

Who was actually younger?

St Kilda coach Ross Lyon made several references to his Saints being “young” and having three debutants after copping a 63-point thumping from the Crows in Adelaide on Sunday.

They had excuses on the injury front, with Max King, Liam Henry, Mitch Owens, Cooper Sharman, Dan Butler, Dougal Howard and Mattaes Philippou being out, but the multiple mentions of how long Matthew Nicks’ Adelaide had been “building” was slightly odd.

The Saints leave the field after being thrashed by the Crows.Credit: Getty Images

St Kilda’s played one finals series in the past four years and two since 2011, while the Crows last qualified for September in their 2017 grand final season, so neither has been a consistently good team for a long time.

But the Saints were older on average age than Adelaide in Sunday’s match (25.82 years to 25.71) and averaged more games per player (92.5 to 90.8).

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