Australian Football League draft


The Australian Football League draft is the annual draft of unsigned players, especially new nominations, by Australian rules football teams that participate in the main competition of that sport, the Australian Football League.

History

When the competition was known as the Victorian Football League, the league introduced the first incarnation of a draft system in 1981, where teams had two selections each of interstate players determined by reverse finishing position order.
The draft was introduced as an equalisation strategy in response to the increasing transfer fees and player salaries at the time, which in combination with declining attendances threatened to derail the league. It was also a result of the failure of country zoning, introduced in 1967, which had led to a systematic inequality whereby the clubs with the best zones, like Carlton and Hawthorn, could dominate over clubs with poorer zones like Melbourne.
In 1986, the first of the modern VFL Drafts was held. The draft was run in conjunction with the existing zone system. Players from West Australian Football League and the new West Coast Eagles were excluded from the 1986 draft, with the Eagles able to recruit up to 35 West Australian players with no more than 6 players from any single WAFL club. The other new club for the 1987 VFL season, the Brisbane Bears, received 6 concessionary picks before the other clubs and exclusive access to all Queensland based players.
Since then, the rules associated with priority picks, zone allocations, the father–son rule, mid-year, pre-season and rookie drafts, expansion clubs concessions and trading of players and picks have been frequently changed, but the basic premise of draft being an equalisation measure to assist poorer performing teams has remained.

Draft

In the AFL draft, clubs receive picks based on the position in which they finish on the ladder during the season. The draft is held each year at the end of November, to allow the draftees to finish their school examinations before being drafted.

Eligibility

From the 2009 draft, players must be at least 18 years of age on 31 December in the year in which they are drafted, so that players who turn 18 during their first months of Year 12 will be able to finish studying without the pressure of AFL. This was increased over the past few years due to concerns about school age players potentially having to leave home to play football interstate.
A selection of approximately 50 players are chosen to attend the annual AFL Draft Combine at the conclusion of the AFL season, prior to the National Draft. Further smaller scale state screenings are held around the country in the weeks after the national combine.

Priority draft pick rule

The priority draft picks were first introduced in the 1993 AFL draft as a special assistance rule to aid teams that consistently perform poorly to obtain additional early draft selections.
Under the rules in place since the 2012 season, priority draft picks are given out to struggling teams at the discretion of the AFL Commission. This replaced a system in which a priority draft pick was automatically given to team whose win–loss record fell below a pre-defined value; this had become controversial, and there were accusations by commentators that teams out of finals contention would tank at the end of the season to gain access to the additional draft picks, although the AFL itself never brought such accusations against any club.

Zone Allocation rule

Northern Club Academies: Greater Western [Sydney Giants|GWS], Sydney, Gold Coast and Brisbane all have club-based academies that help develop talented athletes, sometimes from before they’re teenagers, into AFL prospects in markets where the code isn’t seen as the No. 1 sport. The four clubs have priority access to those players via a bidding system.
Next Generation Academies: Clubs outside of New South Wales and Queensland have established academies with players from multicultural and Indigenous backgrounds, meaning they have priority access to the players they’ve developed via a bidding system. Note: Clubs that have existing links to NGA players are now unable to match bids inside the top 40 selections on the prospects they’ve developed due to a recent AFL rule change.

Father–son rule

To continue the traditions of association that a family has with a particular club, sons of former players are able to be selected by the same club as their father played with under the father–son rule.
For clubs with an established history in the VFL/AFL, the father must have played at least 100 games for the club to be eligible for the father/son rule; clubs with no long term history in the league had different eligibility criteria based on their state leagues.
Under current rules, players eligible under the father–son rule are selected in a bidding system prior to the draft. Firstly, any club in the league may nominate a draft pick with which it intends to take the eligible son; then, if the father's club wishes to draft the son, it must use its next available draft pick, after the highest bidder.
Earlier versions of the father–son rule allowed the sons to be recruited automatically, without need for the draft, or allowed the club to recruit the son using a third round draft pick. The father–son rule itself was introduced in 1949, more than three decades prior to the draft, and it could be used to contravene zoning rules.

AFL Women's: Father–daughter rule and future rules for AFL Women's players

On 15 September 2016, an AFL women's competition, the AFLW, was founded to commence in 2017.
In its Draft, there is an equivalent father–daughter rule, where a daughter can be drafted if their father played one game at the club. The first use of this rule was in the 2017 Draft, when Carlton selected Abbie McKay, the daughter of Andrew McKay.
Criteria are also in place for mother–son and mother–daughter rules, from such time that the children of AFLW players reach draft eligible age.

Expansion clubs

Each time that the competition has an expansion team, the AFL has given special priority to the new club, with the new club receiving numerous high draft picks.

Host

For most of its existence, the National Draft has been held at a large function or convention centre with many of the predicted top draft selections in attendance.
Since 1993, the National draft has been televised live, pick-by-pick, while the mid-year, pre-season and rookie drafts have never been televised.
DraftDate heldHost cityVenue
19818 10 1981Melbourne, VictoriaVFL House
198219.10.1982Melbourne, VictoriaVFL House
198626.11.1986Melbourne, VictoriaVFL House
198711.11.1987Melbourne, VictoriaVFL House
19889 11 1988Melbourne, VictoriaVFL House
19899 11 1989Melbourne, VictoriaVFL House
19907 11 1990Melbourne, VictoriaAFL House
19916 11 1991Melbourne, VictoriaAFL House
199211.11.1992
199329.10.1993Melbourne, VictoriaRadisson President Hotel
199428.10.1994Melbourne, VictoriaRadisson President Hotel
19958 12 1995
199625.10.1996
199731.10.1997Adelaide, South AustraliaFootball Park
19981 11 1998Melbourne, VictoriaMelbourne Park Function Centre
199931.10.1999Melbourne, VictoriaMelbourne Park Function Centre
200029.10.2000
200125.11.2001Melbourne, VictoriaMelbourne Park Function Centre
200223.11.2002Melbourne, VictoriaMelbourne Park Function Centre
200322.11.2003Melbourne, VictoriaMelbourne Park Function Centre
200420.11.2004Melbourne, VictoriaMelbourne Park Function Centre
200526.11.2005Melbourne, VictoriaDocklands Stadium
200625.11.2006Melbourne, VictoriaDocklands Stadium
200724.11.2007Melbourne, VictoriaDocklands Stadium
200829.11.2008Melbourne, VictoriaDocklands Stadium
200926.11.2009Melbourne, VictoriaMelbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre
201018.11.2010Gold Coast, QueenslandGold Coast Convention and Exhibition Centre
201124.11.2011Sydney, New South WalesSydney Olympic Park Sports Centre
201222.11.2012Gold Coast, QueenslandGold Coast Convention and Exhibition Centre
201321.11.2013Gold Coast, QueenslandGold Coast Convention and Exhibition Centre
201427.11.2014Gold Coast, QueenslandGold Coast Convention and Exhibition Centre
201522.11.2015Adelaide, South AustraliaAdelaide Convention Centre
201625.11.2016Sydney, New South WalesHordern Pavilion
201724.11.2017Sydney, New South WalesHordern Pavilion
201822.11.2018Melbourne, VictoriaMarvel Stadium
201927.11.2019Melbourne, VictoriaMarvel Stadium
202124.11.2021Melbourne, VictoriaMarvel Stadium
202228.11.2022Melbourne, VictoriaMarvel Stadium
202320.11.2023Melbourne, VictoriaMarvel Stadium
202420.11.2024Melbourne, VictoriaMarvel Stadium

Number-one draft picks

Men's

As of 2025, the number one draft pick was taken by the last-placed team from the previous season, or an expansion team in its first draft, in 33 of the 42 drafts.
Years where this was not the case are:
  • Where the number one pick has been traded, for example when Fremantle traded the number one pick of the 2001 AFL draft to Hawthorn for Trent Croad. Other trades took place in 1988, 1990, 1992 and 2022.
  • In 1996, where West Coast were given the first draft pick for being the lowest-ranked team to have lost an uncontracted player to expansion team : the team that finished last, Fitzroy, had its AFL playing operations taken over by Brisbane at the end of 1996.
  • In 2002, where Carlton, who had finished last, lost their priority picks and their first and second round picks for salary cap breaches. St. Kilda, who had finished 15th of the 16 teams, received the first draft pick and selected Brendon Goddard.
  • In 2007, where, who had finished 15th of the 16 teams, received the number one draft pick by virtue of the priority pick rules at the time. The team that finished last, Richmond, received the second overall pick and also received a priority pick at the end of the first round.
  • In 2020, where, who had finished last, bid on Next Generation Academy member Jamarra Ugle-Hagan, and the Bulldogs matched the bid with picks 29, 33, 41, 42, 52 and 54. This made Ugle-Hagan the official first pick and Adelaide's eventual selection, Riley Thilthorpe, the second pick.
Despite the expectations of the number one pick, not all have forged successful VFL/AFL careers. Adam Cooney, the first pick of the 2003 AFL draft, was the first number one draft pick to be awarded the prestigious Brownlow Medal, and remains the only first pick Brownlow Medallist to date. In the same year, Luke Hodge, the number one pick in 2001, won the Norm Smith Medal with Hawthorn, and remains the only first-pick Norm Smith Medallist to date. No number one selection has yet been inducted into the Australian Football Hall of Fame. Only five number one picks have won a premiership.
Since 2023, the number one draft pick also receives the Allen Aylett Medal, with the first medal being awarded to Harley Reid who was drafted number one to the West Coast Eagles.
The following is a list of the number one overall draft picks since the draft's inception in 1981:
DraftPlayerSelected byRecruited fromLeague recruited from
1981MelbournePerthWAFL
1982FootscrayFremantle Football Club|East Fremantle]WAFL
1986Brisbane BearsPort [Adelaide Football Club|Port Adelaide Magpies]SANFL
1987RichmondCentral [District Football Club|Central District]SANFL
1988HawthornBallarat YCWBallarat Football League
1989RichmondWon Wron WoodsideAlberton Football League
1990GeelongPerth Football Club|East Perth]WAFL
1991Brisbane BearsClaremontWAFL
1992West Coast EaglesSubiacoWAFL
1993SydneySouth FremantleWAFL
1994FremantleDandenong StingraysTAC Cup
1995FremantlePort Adelaide MagpiesSANFL
1996West Coast EaglesClaremontWAFL
1997MelbourneDandenong StingraysTAC Cup
1998Brisbane LionsSubiacoWAFL
1999CollingwoodMurray BushrangersTAC Cup
2000St KildaSouthport SharksQAFL
2001HawthornGeelong FalconsTAC Cup
2002St KildaGippsland PowerTAC Cup
2003Western BulldogsWest AdelaideSANFL
2004RichmondMurray BushrangersTAC Cup
2005CarltonOakleigh ChargersTAC Cup
2006CarltonGlenelgSANFL
2007CarltonNorthern KnightsTAC Cup
2008MelbourneSandringham DragonsTAC Cup
2009MelbourneDandenong StingraysTAC Cup
2010Gold CoastEast Fremantle Football ClubWAFL
2011Greater Western SydneyEastern RangesTAC Cup
2012Greater Western SydneyDandenong StingraysTAC Cup
2013Greater Western SydneyEastern RangesTAC Cup
2014St KildaGeelong FalconsTAC Cup
2015CarltonDandenong StingraysTAC Cup
2016EssendonSandringham DragonsTAC Cup
2017Brisbane LionsWestern JetsTAC Cup
2018CarltonGeelong FalconsTAC Cup
2019Gold CoastOakleigh ChargersNAB League
2020Western BulldogsOakleigh ChargersNAB League
2021Melbourne Football Club|North Melbourne]South AdelaideSANFL
2022Greater Western SydneyGreater [Western Victoria Rebels]NAB League
2023West CoastBendigo PioneersTalent League
2024RichmondVictoria Rebels">Victoria (Australia)">Victoria RebelsTalent League
2025West CoastGippsland PowerTalent League

Women's

With the introduction of a women's competition in 2016, a draft was set up for the AFLW.
In 2016, the first draft pick was awarded to the GWS Giants by lot, though this selection would be taken after 16 selections were made for marquee players: Nicola Barr was the first player to be drafted in AFLW history.
In 2018, the first pick was awarded to Geelong as one of the expansion clubs for the 2019 season, and in 2022, the first pick awarded to Sydney as one of the expansion clubs for Season 7: in both years, this was determined by lot from the four expansion clubs.
As of 2022, five of the eight seasons have seen the first pick go to the club who finished last, or an expansion club in its first draft: in 2017, GWS traded the first pick to the Western Bulldogs; in 2019, expansion club Richmond traded the first pick to the Western Bulldogs; and in 2023 Sydney traded the first pick to Geelong in a once-off overage draft.
DraftPlayerSelected byRecruited fromLeague recruited from
2016Sydney UniversitySWAFL
2017Melbourne UniversityVFL Women's
2018Geelong FalconsTAC Cup Girls
2019Northern KnightsNAB League Girls
2020Northern KnightsNAB League Girls
2021Oakleigh ChargersNAB League Girls
2022Western JetsNAB League Girls
2023 sup.VFL Women's
2023Western JetsTalent League Girls
2024Gippsland PowerTalent League Girls
2025SubiacoWAFL Women's

Pre-season draft

Rookie draft

Held at the same time as the pre-season draft, the rookie draft is a chance for clubs to recruit players for their Rookie list. Rookies are usually picked as young, developing players and can be elevated from the rookie list during the year, if there is a long-term injury or retirement to a senior player in the team. Once the rookie is elevated, he remains that way until the end of the year, where they can be officially upgraded to the senior list, or placed back on the rookie list, or delisted/not offered a new contract. Teams are allowed to have four to six rookies, but the Queensland and NSW teams may have more. The first rookie draft was the 1997 rookie draft.

International rookies

Rookies are also available to be selected from overseas countries and players on the list do not count towards the salary cap. Notable examples are Irish Tommy Walsh of Sydney; Canadian Mike Pyke of Sydney, a former rugby union international; and Americans Seamus McNamara and Mason Cox, both former college basketball players who were rookie listed by Collingwood.
In 2006, the AFL introduced a new scheme where clubs can maintain two international rookies outside of the regular rookie list.
The rule was adjusted in 2010 to group international rookies with players recruited from other sports, and refers to them as Category B rookies. Up to three can be listed in addition to up to six Category A rookies.