Rookie list
The rookie list is a means for Australian Football League clubs to maintain additional players outside the 38-man primary or senior list. Rookie listed players are not eligible to play in AFL home-and-away or finals matches unless they are elevated to the senior list, either to replace a retired player or a player with a long-term injury.
Recruitment
There are two categories of rookie: Category A and Category B. Category A primarily represents players with a traditional Australian rules football development; Category B rookies are players from non-traditional recruiting backgrounds. Category A rookies are usually placed on the list via the rookie draft, which occurs annually during the off-season, immediately after the pre-season draft. As is the case with the AFL's other drafts, clubs are given the opportunity to select rookies in reverse ladder order, based on the previous season's results.Several types of Category A rookies may be recruited directly by the clubs, without the need to put up for draft. This includes:
- International rookies
- Father-son selections – which are permitted only if the player has nominated for and not been selected in a National Draft
Category B rookies
- International players, who are neither Australian citizens nor residents
- Players from the New South Wales scholarship program
- Players from the International scholarship program
- Zone selections by and from New South Wales or the ACT
- Zone selections by and from Queensland
- Players from other sports, who have not been registered with an Australian rules football club for three years
- Indigenous and multicultural players through their Next Generation Academy zones
List maintenance
Each club is allowed to maintain a list of up to six eligible Category A rookies and three Category B rookies. Up to three rookies can be retained, with the player's permission for a second or third season, 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.
History
The rookie list was established in 1997. It was initially aimed at providing recruitment opportunities for young players, in part filling a gap which had been left by the reduction in size of AFL lists from 52 to 42 players in 1994. At that time, rookie players must have been between the ages of 18 and 23 to qualify. In 2006, this was relaxed to allow each club to recruit a rookie older than 23 if he had never previously been on an AFL list. This has since been relaxed further, and now there no upper age or experience restrictions on Category A rookies.In 2006, "International rookies" were identified for the first time as a separate class of rookie, covering international players from any countries except Ireland, in order to protect the AFL's relationship with the Gaelic Athletic Association. The "International rookie" category has since been expanded to the broader Category B.
The relaxing of eligibility criteria have resulted a notable semantic anomaly with the rookie list: that highly experienced players may serve on a club's rookie list, even though the word "rookie" is widely understood in most sports and professions to refer to a new or inexperienced person. For example, 's Heath Scotland spent his sixteenth and final AFL season on Carlton's rookie list, mostly to free up space on the club's primary list.
Before eligibility criteria were relaxed, special dispensation was granted for Adam Ramanauskas to be played on Essendon's rookie list in 2006. Ramanauskas had played over 100 AFL games for the club, but there was uncertainty over his playing future as he underwent treatment and recovery for cancer.
Future
The Australian Football League Players' Association has stated a desire to abolish the rookie list, in favour of an expanded 46 player roster. The AFLPA's main argument is that rookies now have the same workload as senior players - which was not necessarily true in the early days of the rookie list - but that their pay and opportunities are much lower than that of senior players.Most successful rookies
Some of the most successful players originally drafted into the AFL via the rookie system are:- Michael Barlow
- Nathan Bassett
- Jarryd Blair
- Nathan Bock
- Matthew Boyd
- Luke Breust
- Dean Brogan
- Greg Broughton
- Shannon Byrnes
- Andrew Carrazzo
- Robert Copeland
- Dean Cox
- Stewart Crameri
- Aaron Davey
- Matt de Boer
- Michael Doughty
- Paul Duffield
- Aaron Edwards
- Michael Firrito
- Chad Fletcher
- Nathan Foley
- Josh Gibson
- Antoni Grover
- Heath Grundy
- Jarrod Harbrow
- Pearce Hanley
- Leigh Harding
- Roger Hayden
- Kieren Jack
- Sam Jacobs
- Mark Jamar
- Mark Johnson
- Darren Jolly
- Brett Jones
- Tadhg Kennelly
- Brett Kirk
- Tarkyn Lockyer
- Nathan Lovett-Murray
- Heritier Lumumba
- Quinten Lynch
- Rowan Marshall
- Martin Mattner
- Nick Maxwell
- James McDonald
- Ben McGlynn
- Mal Michael
- Stephen Milne
- Dale Morris
- Shane Mumford
- Mark Nicoski
- Michael Osborne
- Joel Patfull
- Danyle Pearce
- Damien Peverill
- Liam Picken
- James Podsiadly
- Jason Porplyzia
- Matt Priddis
- Dean Rioli
- Russell Robertson
- Max Rooke
- Ben Rutten
- Aaron Sandilands
- Brad Sewell
- Cheynee Stiller
- Bret Thornton
- Greg Tivendale
- Shane Tuck
- Clinton Young
- Ed Curnow
- Levi Casboult