The 2019 National Draft has already provided a plethora of exciting talent, with many quickly rising to prominence or reaching star-of-the-competition status just a few years into their careers.

As with any AFL draft, there were players taken highly in 2019 whose careers haven't quite panned out to date, however, there are also plenty of later picks who have made meteoric rises to stardom.

For context, these were the original first 18 draft picks in 2019:

  1. Matt Rowell (Gold Coast Suns).
  2. Noah Anderson (Gold Coast Suns).
  3. Luke Jackson (Melbourne).
  4. Lachlan Ash (GWS Giants).
  5. Dylan Stephens (Sydney Swans).
  6. Fischer McAsey (Adelaide Crows).
  7. Hayden Young (Fremantle).
  8. Caleb Serong (Fremantle).
  9. Liam Henry (Fremantle).
  10. Tom Green (GWS Giants).
  11. Sam Flanders (Gold Coast Suns).
  12. Kysaiah Pickett (Melbourne).
  13. Will Day (Hawthorn).
  14. Miles Bergman (Port Adelaide).
  15. Cody Weightman (Western Bulldogs).
  16. Cooper Stephens (Geelong Cats).
  17. Brodie Kemp (Carlton).
  18. Mitchell Georgiades (Port Adelaide).

Note: all matched bids for Academy and Next Generation Academy prospects in this re-draft are based on what we know about how those players' careers have panned out, to date.

So, without further ado, here is the 2019 National Draft, re-done.

4. GWS Giants: Noah Anderson (Originally: Pick 2, Gold Coast Suns)

Knowing they will soon be forced to match a bid for impressive Academy prospect Tom Green, the Giants choose to double-up on midfielders by selecting Noah Anderson at No. 4 in our re-draft.

Anderson had something of a breakout season with the Suns in 2022, averaging almost four more possessions per game this season than in 2021, as well as averaging more marks, tackles, and goals per contest in a midfield that also included Touk Miller and fellow draftee Matt Rowell.

GOLD COAST, AUSTRALIA - JULY 09: Noah Anderson of the Suns celebrates kicking a goal during the round 17 AFL match between the Gold Coast Suns and the Richmond Tigers at Metricon Stadium on July 09, 2022 in Gold Coast, Australia. (Photo by Matt Roberts/AFL Photos/via Getty Images )