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Rookie Elevation..

Started by Luigi197, March 19, 2012, 11:04:49 PM

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Luigi197

Alright everybody, lets clear something up for me.

Rookie elevation; if a club has some vacant spots in its senior list, and looks to elevate some rookies to fill those spots, what does this mean exactly? They are now officially in the club list? Is that right?
How does it affect anything else? Does it mean they get more games?
And are there any pre-requisites one must follow to be elevated?

And most importantly, what does this mean for our SuperCoach teams!?!?

Thanks, Luigi :)

PS: This is also posted in the Main AFL Board and Coaches Board for the Coaches.

TheMailman

QuoteEach club is allowed to maintain a list of up to six eligible players, whilst Brisbane and Sydney can list a maximum of nine. Up to three rookies can be retained, with the players permission for a second or third season,[3] with the others having to be either delisted or elevated to the primary list at the time of the National Draft. Only half of the salary paid by a club to players on the rookie list counts towards the league's salary cap.

Generally speaking, a rookie-listed player cannot be selected to play in the senior AFL competition, and must play in state-level affiliated teams, except in two circumstances:

    At the start of a season, a club can nominate up to two veterans from its senior list for salary cap reasons; if a team does not have a full quota of veterans, it can make up the balance by nominating rookies to be eligible for senior selection. These players are known as nominated rookies.
    If a senior-listed player is moved onto the long-term injury list, a rookie-listed player can be temporarily elevated in his place, becoming eligible for senior selection, while the senior player remains injured.

There are usually plenty of opportunities to enact either of these rules, so rookie-listed players who are playing well enough for senior selection are seldom deprived of the opportunity by list management constraints.

Copied from Wikipedia

It helps a bit