Each year AFL clubs decide their list strategies and assess whether a strong draft hand is likely to yield benefits comparable to the trade assets the picks are worth.

As clubs push higher up the draft board they gain the security that they can draft the players they rate the highest before other clubs and, consequently, increase their chance of securing successful long-term recruits.

Nonetheless, this strategy is not foolproof and hindsight exposes the difficult reality of ranking the ability and potential of players before they have been introduced to an AFL environment.

In this list, the first round of the 2016 National Draft will be reassessed with the benefit of six years of AFL data.

Below is the original 2016 first round:

  1. Andrew McGrath
  2. Tim Taranto
  3. Hugh McCluggage
  4. Ben Ainsworth
  5. Will Setterfield
  6. Sam Petrevski-Seton
  7. Jack Scrimshaw
  8. Griffin Logue
  9. Will Brodie
  10. Jack Bowes
  11. Oliver Florent
  12. Jy Simpkin
  13. Daniel Venables
  14. Harry Perryman
  15. Jordan Gallucci
  16. Todd Marshall
  17. Jarrod Berry
  18. Sam Powell-Pepper
  19. Tim English
  20. Isaac Cumming
  21. Will Hayward

In this draft year, a number of players were taken as father-son and academy selections (eg. Will Setterfield, Jack Bowes, Harry Perryman). The nominal draft order will be adjusted to reflect what clubs would have actually taken into this hypothetical draft.

Where these players are selected it will be assumed that the clubs that matched their bids in the original 2016 draft will continue to do so regardless of where they land in this order.

9. Pick Nine: Isaac Cumming - GWS (Original position - Pick 20)

It is difficult to imagine a scenario where GWS fail to match a bid for prized academy player Isaac Cumming.

In the original draft GWS matched a bid from cross-town rivals Sydney at pick 20 for Cumming, and in this re-draft their hand is forced at an earlier stage of the draft.

Since being drafted the six-foot defender with genuine pace and a cool head has put his skills to good use as an important intercept defender.

Cumming has been a regular fixture for the Giants after breaking out in 2021, having now achieved consecutive best-and-fairest finishes within the top 10.

ADELAIDE, AUSTRALIA - APRIL 30: Isaac Cumming of the Giants is tackled by Lachlan Murphy of the Crows during the 2022 AFL Round 07 match between the Adelaide Crows and the GWS Giants at Adelaide Oval on April 30, 2022 in Adelaide, Australia. (Photo by James Elsby/AFL Photos via Getty Images)