2019 AFLX tournament

The 2019 AFL X tournament was the second and latter of the Australian Football League (AFL) pre-season series of matches played under the laws of AFLX, a variation of Australian rules football. The tournament took place on 22 February 2019 at Marvel Stadium.

Background

The league abandoned the AFLX tournament format adopted for the inaugural series which featured all 18 AFL clubs, and instead appointed four high-profile players as captains of their respective teams. Geelong midfielder and Brownlow Medallist Patrick Dangerfield captained the Bolts, Fremantle captain and fellow Brownlow winner Nat Fyfe captained the Flyers, Adelaide forward Eddie Betts captained the Deadlys, and Richmond forward and three-time Coleman Medallist Jack Riewoldt captained the Rampage.[1] Teams were live-drafted from a pool of available players by the captains – although by pre-agreement the Deadlys team was drawn entirely from Indigenous players. The teams had 14 players each, with eight on the field and six on the bench.[1][2]

In the grand final, Patrick Cripps (Rampage) humorously kicked a goal with a place kick, with Jack Riewoldt serving as holder in the style of a gridiron football field goal attempt. Place kicking (off the ground, rather than with a holder) had been obsolete in Australian rules football since the 1950s.[3][4][5]

Rule Changes

A new rule was added to the competition in which teams could nominate one of their players on the field to be the Gatorade Game Changer for the last five minutes of the game. The Game Changer had the ability to score double the points of any other player; a behind scored by him would be worth two points, a goal would be worth 12 points, and a super goal would be worth 20 points.

Teams

  Bolts
Name Club
Patrick Dangerfield (c) Geelong
Luke Hodge (vc) Brisbane Lions
Tom Hawkins Geelong
Steele Sidebottom Collingwood
Mark Blicavs Geelong
Tom Rockliff[1] Port Adelaide
Andrew Gaff West Coast
Luke Parker Sydney
Jaidyn Stephenson Collingwood
Andrew McGrath Essendon
Jack Billings St Kilda
Daniel Rich Brisbane Lions
Robbie Tarrant North Melbourne
Jack Steele St Kilda


  Rampage
Name Club
Jack Riewoldt (c) Richmond
Patrick Cripps (vc) Carlton
Lachie Whitfield Greater Western Sydney
Rory Sloane Adelaide
Phil Davis Greater Western Sydney
Dayne Zorko Brisbane Lions
Isaac Smith Hawthorn
Luke Breust Hawthorn
Easton Wood Western Bulldogs
Bayley Fritsch Melbourne
Dylan Shiel Essendon
Shaun Higgins North Melbourne
Tim Membrey St Kilda
Zac Fisher Carlton


  Flyers
Name Club
Nat Fyfe (c) Fremantle
Marcus Bontempelli (vc) Western Bulldogs
Scott Pendlebury Collingwood
Alex Rance Richmond
Callan Ward[2] Greater Western Sydney
Isaac Heeney Sydney
Stephen Coniglio Greater Western Sydney
Rory Laird Adelaide
Travis Boak Port Adelaide
Lachie Hunter Western Bulldogs
Aliir Aliir Sydney
Michael Hurley Essendon
Josh Kennedy Sydney
Jack Higgins Richmond


  Deadly
Name Club
Eddie Betts (c) Adelaide
Shaun Burgoyne (vc) Hawthorn
Bradley Hill Fremantle
Jarrod Harbrow Gold Coast
Tim Kelly Geelong
Jack Martin[3] Gold Coast
Travis Varcoe Collingwood
Lewis Jetta West Coast
Anthony McDonald-Tipungwuti Essendon
Nathan Wilson[4] Fremantle
Willie Rioli West Coast
Sam Powell-Pepper Port Adelaide
Cam Ellis-Yolmen Adelaide
Jade Gresham[5] St Kilda

Results

Ladder

Team Pld W D L PF PA PD Pts
Flyers 3 2 0 1 217 181 36 8
Rampage 3 2 0 1 223 196 27 8
Bolts 3 1 0 2 173 198 -25 4
Deadly 3 1 0 2 175 213 -38 4


Grand Final
Friday, 22 February (9:57 pm, AEDT) Rampage 84 def. Flyers 67 Marvel Stadium (crowd: 23,828)

[6]

Notes

1.^ Replaced Robbie Gray who withdrew due to injury.[7]
2.^ Replaced Chad Wingard who withdrew due to injury.[7]
3.^ Replaced Joel Hamling who withdrew due to injury.[7]
4.^ Replaced Steven May who withdrew due to injury.[8]
5.^ Replaced Jeremy Cameron who withdrew due to injury.[7]

Draft

A draft of 48 selections was broadcast on Wednesday 6 February by Network Seven and Fox Footy after being held in secret the previous day.[9][10]

The draft featured 12 selections by each captain with a snake draft order determined by random draw on the night of the draft. No more than four players from each AFL club, inclusive of the pre-selected captains and vice-captains, were eligible to play in the tournament.[10]

References

  1. ^ a b "AFLX 2019: The Deadlys, Bolt, Flyers and Rampage - logos and captains revealed". Sporting News. 16 December 2018.
  2. ^ "Nat Fyfe to captain Flyers side in revamped AFLX tournament, which includes player draft". Perth Now. 16 December 2018.
  3. ^ "A place kick from Cripps if you don't mind". afl.com.au. Retrieved 2 April 2023.
  4. ^ AFLX | Cripps with the place kick, retrieved 2 April 2023
  5. ^ "AFLX 2019: Jack Riewoldt sets up Patrick Cripps for rare place kick goal for Rampage team". Fox Sports. 22 February 2019. Retrieved 2 April 2023.
  6. ^ afl.com.au/alfx/broadcast-guide
  7. ^ a b c d Robinson, Chris; Hope, Shayne (13 February 2019). "Nathan Wilson to replace Fremantle Dockers teammates Joel Hamling in AFLX tournament". The West Australian. Retrieved 13 February 2019.
  8. ^ "Big Dee ruled out of AFLX, electrifying Saint gets call-up".
  9. ^ Niall, Jake (6 February 2019). "AFLX draft was held a day earlier than the broadcast". The Age. Retrieved 13 February 2019.
  10. ^ a b Black, Sarah (28 January 2019). "AFLX Draft: Date, rules and broadcast details revealed". AFL Media. Telstra Media. Retrieved 28 January 2019.

External links

  • Official website
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