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Depth Chart for West Coast

Key defenders

Darren Glass
Eric Mackenzie
Mitch Brown
Matt Spangher
Beau Maister
Will Schofield
Jordan Jones

Small Defenders

Shannon Hurn
Beau Waters
Scott Selwood Injured
Brett Jones
Tim Houlihan
Brad Sheppard
Ashley Smith

Key Forwards

Quinten Lynch
Josh J. Kennedy
Ben McKinley
Ashley Hansen
Tony Notte

Small Forwards

Mark LeCras
Mark Nicoski
Gerrick Weedon
 
 

Inside Midfielders

Daniel Kerr
Matt Priddis
Chris Masten
Brad Ebert
Thomas Swift
Luke Shuey
Patrick McGinnity

Outside Midfielders

Andrew Embley
Adam Selwood
Sam Butler
Matt Rosa
Bradd Dalziell
Koby Stevens
Ryan Neates

Rucks

Dean Cox
Nic Naitanui

Taggers

Adam Selwood
Tim Houlihan
Patrick McGinnity


Other Depth Charts
AdelaideBrisbaneCarltonCollingwood
EssendonFremantleGeelongHawthorn
MelbourneNorth MelbournePort AdelaideRichmond
SydneySt KildaWestern BulldogsWest Coast


FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions)

What is a depth chart?
The depth chart is a list of players sorted by position, and then sorted again by likelihood of playing in the next game for their AFL team, without reference to injury status. Thus the first player mentioned in each list is guaranteed of a game and is the best player that the club has in that position, whereas the last player is a fringe player at best, will rarely if ever get a game and is only on the club's list as a development player or veteran backup.

How are the rankings determined?
The rankings are purely subjective, determined by FanFooty in consultation with fans of each club, based on an assessment of the coaching staff's opinion of their own list, as evidenced by prior selection decisions. They are not based on fantasy pointscoring capabilities.

What are the positions?
The "key" in key forward and defender refers to the role that these players serve, roughly sticking to key positions on the ground such as centre half forward or full back. It does not refer specifically to tall players, though many of them are tall. Similarly, the small defenders and forwards may not necessarily be small, but they play in a more wide-ranging role up the ground pushing into midfield, suited to mostly smaller players. Inside midfielders typically get most of their possessions inside packs and at stoppages, whereas outside midfielders usually receive the clearance from the inside midfielders and run away from packs.

Why are there some names mentioned twice? What about utilities?
The first seven positions are exclusive of each other, i.e. players are mentioned on only one of those charts, and every player on the list is mentioned in one of those seven positions. The Tagger chart is different in that every player on that list is also mentioned in one of the other charts - tagging is a role, not a position as such. There are no utilities in this system, to make things simpler.

Why is this relevant?
The FanFooty AFL depth chart is intended for fantasy coaches in Dream Team, Super Coach and other fantasy football competitions to assist them in assessing draftees, rookies and fringe players in terms of who they have to beat out in their club's list to get a spot on the teamsheet.



Fan Tools

Fan ToolsCheck out an arsenal of advanced tools. Use the Boys on the Bubble DT/SC for players about to change in price. Ride the Rollercoaster DT/SC for price trends. Try the Breakdown DT/SC for club-vs-position histories. The Tribunal page lists players with points and/or loading from charges. See who’s hot in public Dream Teams and DT/SC popularity lists.

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