bornadog
05-07-2016, 09:30 AM
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IN the lead-up to the 2010 rookie draft, a power struggle broke out at Western Bulldogs.
On one side was chief *!recruiter Simon Dalrymple, desperate to pluck two raw youngsters he believed could be stars of the future.
One stood just 170cm and sported dreadlocks and the other grew up in South Africa playing rugby union.
But pressure was placed on Dalrymple to give priority to Sydney reject Ed Barlow and to relist Mitch Hahn.
The Dogs would rookie all four, but Dalrymple called his players first.
Their names? Luke Dahlhaus and Jason Johannisen.
Bulldog fans must be thanking their lucky stars Dalrymple held his nerve.
Barlow (eight games) and Hahn (zero) were gone after one season as the Dogs plummeted down the ladder after three straight preliminary finals.
But in Dahlhaus and Johannisen — the hero on Saturday night in Sydney — the seeds of a meticulous rebuild were planted.
The pair rounded out a draft package that began with *!father-son selections Tom Liberatore and Mitch Wallis.
Six years on and the injured Dahlhaus might be leading the Dogs’ best-and-fairest while Johannisen put his name in club folklore with that match-winner against the Swans.
With heavy legs and after 11 weeks out of the game because of a hamstring injury, Johannisen slotted the goal from 50m, rekindling his All-Australian form at the start of the season.
Dalrymple knew he held a pair of aces in 2010.
In 2011 he turned that hand into a full house by taking ruckman Tom Campbell, tough midfielder Lin Jong and old-fashioned full-forward Jack Redpath in the rookie draft.
The Dogs’ super strike-rate at the top of the draft is well publicised, but their talent spotting stands the test of time at both ends.
Overlooked after a brilliant TAC Cup season, Dahlhaus was invited to train with *!Geelong before the rookie draft, but the Bulldogs swooped one pick earlier than the Cats could have.
To trace how Dalrymple unearthed Johannisen you have to go back to the East Fremantle Colts program.
Recruiters filed into WAFL grounds for a glimpse of bottom-age stars Brad Hill, Shane Kersten and Jaeger O’Meara.
Johannisen played in a flag that year but averaged just 10 disposals and was rarely a standout. Still, his sizzling pace attracted the eye of the Dogs’ spotter.
“JJ just took (Dalrymple’s) eye with his speed,” Dogs list manager Jason McCartney once told the Herald Sun.
“That’s the art of recruiting. It might not be the guy who’s getting it 20 times, it’s just seeing an attribute.”
When McCartney started at Whitten Oval, he thought a young, fresh-faced Johannisen was the work experience kid.
One of McCartney’s next key tasks will be to re-sign Johannisen, who is out of contract next season and set to command big dollars.
Those rookie hits helped turbocharge the Dogs’ rebuild, while top-10 gems Marcus Bontempelli and Jake Stringer were read out earlier than most clubs expected.
It is often joked Geelong should erect a statue in honour of its recruiter, Stephen Wells.
If the Bulldogs break their flag drought soon, a petition might be passed around for Dalrymple to be in bronze.
How the Dogs turbocharged their rebuild in five rookie picks
2010: Luke Dahlhaus (No.22); Jason Johannisen (No.39)
2011: Lin Jong (No.9); Tom Campbell (No.27); Jack (No.62)
... And one to watch ...
2015: Roarke Smith (No.5)
Chief recruiter Simon Dalrymple’s smartest six picks
1. Marcus Bontempelli (No.4 in 2013)
2. Luke Dahlhaus (Rookie in 2010)
3. Jake Stringer (No.5 in 2012)
4. Jason Johannisen (Rookie in 2010)
5. Caleb Daniel (No.46 in 2014)
6. Marcus Adams (No.35 in 2015)
* Excludes father-son guns
Link (http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/teams/western-bulldogs/western-bulldogs-fasttrack-rebuild-with-rookie-wonders/news-story/8ae8d29b65b1e098e256df378985c6ee)
IN the lead-up to the 2010 rookie draft, a power struggle broke out at Western Bulldogs.
On one side was chief *!recruiter Simon Dalrymple, desperate to pluck two raw youngsters he believed could be stars of the future.
One stood just 170cm and sported dreadlocks and the other grew up in South Africa playing rugby union.
But pressure was placed on Dalrymple to give priority to Sydney reject Ed Barlow and to relist Mitch Hahn.
The Dogs would rookie all four, but Dalrymple called his players first.
Their names? Luke Dahlhaus and Jason Johannisen.
Bulldog fans must be thanking their lucky stars Dalrymple held his nerve.
Barlow (eight games) and Hahn (zero) were gone after one season as the Dogs plummeted down the ladder after three straight preliminary finals.
But in Dahlhaus and Johannisen — the hero on Saturday night in Sydney — the seeds of a meticulous rebuild were planted.
The pair rounded out a draft package that began with *!father-son selections Tom Liberatore and Mitch Wallis.
Six years on and the injured Dahlhaus might be leading the Dogs’ best-and-fairest while Johannisen put his name in club folklore with that match-winner against the Swans.
With heavy legs and after 11 weeks out of the game because of a hamstring injury, Johannisen slotted the goal from 50m, rekindling his All-Australian form at the start of the season.
Dalrymple knew he held a pair of aces in 2010.
In 2011 he turned that hand into a full house by taking ruckman Tom Campbell, tough midfielder Lin Jong and old-fashioned full-forward Jack Redpath in the rookie draft.
The Dogs’ super strike-rate at the top of the draft is well publicised, but their talent spotting stands the test of time at both ends.
Overlooked after a brilliant TAC Cup season, Dahlhaus was invited to train with *!Geelong before the rookie draft, but the Bulldogs swooped one pick earlier than the Cats could have.
To trace how Dalrymple unearthed Johannisen you have to go back to the East Fremantle Colts program.
Recruiters filed into WAFL grounds for a glimpse of bottom-age stars Brad Hill, Shane Kersten and Jaeger O’Meara.
Johannisen played in a flag that year but averaged just 10 disposals and was rarely a standout. Still, his sizzling pace attracted the eye of the Dogs’ spotter.
“JJ just took (Dalrymple’s) eye with his speed,” Dogs list manager Jason McCartney once told the Herald Sun.
“That’s the art of recruiting. It might not be the guy who’s getting it 20 times, it’s just seeing an attribute.”
When McCartney started at Whitten Oval, he thought a young, fresh-faced Johannisen was the work experience kid.
One of McCartney’s next key tasks will be to re-sign Johannisen, who is out of contract next season and set to command big dollars.
Those rookie hits helped turbocharge the Dogs’ rebuild, while top-10 gems Marcus Bontempelli and Jake Stringer were read out earlier than most clubs expected.
It is often joked Geelong should erect a statue in honour of its recruiter, Stephen Wells.
If the Bulldogs break their flag drought soon, a petition might be passed around for Dalrymple to be in bronze.
How the Dogs turbocharged their rebuild in five rookie picks
2010: Luke Dahlhaus (No.22); Jason Johannisen (No.39)
2011: Lin Jong (No.9); Tom Campbell (No.27); Jack (No.62)
... And one to watch ...
2015: Roarke Smith (No.5)
Chief recruiter Simon Dalrymple’s smartest six picks
1. Marcus Bontempelli (No.4 in 2013)
2. Luke Dahlhaus (Rookie in 2010)
3. Jake Stringer (No.5 in 2012)
4. Jason Johannisen (Rookie in 2010)
5. Caleb Daniel (No.46 in 2014)
6. Marcus Adams (No.35 in 2015)
* Excludes father-son guns
Link (http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/teams/western-bulldogs/western-bulldogs-fasttrack-rebuild-with-rookie-wonders/news-story/8ae8d29b65b1e098e256df378985c6ee)