November 25, 2024

Bombers enter 2024 with a host of out-of-contract talent

Essendon are poised to enter a season of great importance with more than half their playing list out of contract, including Andy McGrath, Jake Stringer, Archie Perkins and several young guns.

The Bombers missed the finals for the second straight year in 2023, and third time in the past four seasons, after fading badly from an 8-5 start under new coach Brad Scott to finish 11th with a sub-90 percentage.

They loaded up in the off-season, signing free agents Ben McKay, Jade Gresham and Todd Goldstein and trading for Xavier Duursma, with Brandon Zerk-Thatcher (Port Adelaide) and Massimo D’Ambrosio (Hawthorn) departing.

Other interesting names among Essendon’s 22 out-of-contract players are ex-Giant Jye Caldwell and fellow first-round draftees Elijah Tsatas and Nik Cox, as well as Sam Durham, Jake Kelly and ex-skipper Dyson Heppell.

Only Richmond, with a first-year coach in Adem Yze and still transitioning to a new era after their premiership success, have more footballers without a deal beyond this year.

Geelong, Gold Coast, North Melbourne and St Kilda are the other clubs with at least 20 out-of-contract players.

The 22 out-of-contract Bombers

Kaine Baldwin, Jye Caldwell, Nik Cox, Jayden Davey, Sam Durham, Todd Goldstein, Matt Guelfi, Lewis Hayes, Dyson Heppell, Nick Hind, Jaiden Hunter, Harrison Jones, Jake Kelly, Andy McGrath, Jye Menzie, Archie Perkins, Will Setterfield, Jake Stringer, Elijah Tsatas, Vigo Visentini, Tex Wanganeen, Sam Weideman

There were spectacular results the last time Stringer was on an expiring deal. The Bombers secured the match-winner’s signature back then for three years, following him kicking 29 goals in his first 13 games in 2021, to go with 52 clearances, in clear evidence of his rare one-two punch.

Another veteran Bomber, Dylan Shiel, is under contract until the end of 2025 but St Kilda were interested in him last year. Both Stringer, who turns 30 in April, and Shiel, 31 next month, are Paul Connors clients.

Connors told SEN post-trade period that Shiel “would have looked at it” if Essendon’s then-list boss Adrian Dodoro had not rejected the Saints’ advances. A move to St Kilda would have been Shiel’s third AFL stop after starting at GWS.

Duursma’s arrival adds to a midfield logjam that already included captain Zach Merrett, Darcy Parish, Shiel, Caldwell, Will Setterfield, Perkins, Ben Hobbs and Tsatas, not to mention Stringer’s centre-bounce cameos.

“These things just get floated. I think in the business world we’re in; you’ve got to be up for anything,” Connors said. “Although Dylan’s been injured; I think he’s got a point to prove to say, ‘Hey, I’m a pretty good player’.”

The sheer volume of Bombers without their future decided owes to various factors. Essendon are at a fascinating stage under Scott, whose side lost seven of its last 10 games, with two of the wins narrow ones over cellar-dwellers North Melbourne and West Coast. They suffered defeats by a combined 196 points in rounds 23 and 24.

A continuation of the second half of last season could lead to the Bombers being more willing to part with 30-somethings such as Stringer, Shiel and Heppell, particularly if they fail to fire individually.

Heppell, 32 in May, was the only one of that trio to finish in the top 10 of last year’s Crichton Medal, and the average age of the other nine players entering the coming season is less than 25.

Three of the five players not in that group who played at least 20 matches in 2023 are 22 or younger, and also out of contract – Perkins, Durham and Jye Menzie – while the other two, Zerk-Thatcher (Port Adelaide) and Andrew Phillips (retired), are no longer at Tullamarine.

They have a good mid-to-late 20s group, including Merrett, Parish, Kyle Langford, Mason Redman, McGrath, Jordan Ridley, Sam Draper, Peter Wright and recruits McKay and Gresham, so they do not lack experience.

Matt Rosa, who played 207 games for West Coast and Gold Coast, has taken over as the club’s list boss from Dodoro, but the latter is sticking around for an indefinite period.

Essendon rarely rush to sign their young players, so it is no surprise – or cause for alarm – that some of their best prospects remain out of contract. It was a similar story with Hobbs last year, while Cox, Perkins and Zach Reid were among the last first-rounders from the 2020 draft to extend their rookie deals.

Top-10 pick Reid, who has endured an injury-cursed run to date, is under contract through next year.

The Bombers have also already locked away key members Langford and Ridley (2026), Nic Martin, Merrett and Wright (2027), and Parish and Redman (2028) for the long term.

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