Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

KEEPING IT LOCAL

SIX SUNS ACADEMY PLAYERS POISED TO TACKLE HAWTHORN

- Callum Dick

Gold Coast will roll out on Saturday night with six of its homegrown Suns Academy products in Damien Hardwick’s starting 22.

Jed Walter, Ethan Read, Will Graham, Sam Clohesy, Malcolm Rosas Jr and Bodhi Uwland will face Hawthorn at People First Stadium.

They are six of a staggering 14 Suns Academy graduates on the club’s AFL list of 46 players – and Gold Coast wants to push that number even higher.

Among the most prolific of the Northern Academies in terms of translatin­g graduates into AFL players, the Suns have only scratched the surface of what they hope to achieve over the next decade and beyond.

Twenty-four Suns Academy graduates have gone on to play at least one AFL game but unlike the Swans, Giants and Lions, who have spat out toptier talent in the form of Isaac Heeney, Callum Mills, Nick Blakey, Errol Gulden (Swans), Tom Green, Jack Steele, Jacob Hopper (Giants), Harris Andrews, Eric Hipwood and Jack Payne (Lions) to name a few, Gold Coast’s list has historical­ly been light on quality.

Lachie Weller and Jack Bowes are the only products to have eclipsed 100 AFL games. Both first-round draft picks, Weller did not meet the length of residency requiremen­ts to qualify as a priority academy selection and went to Fremantle with pick No.13 in 2014, while Bowes, now at Geelong, was taken by the Suns at No.10 in 2016.

Transition­ing promising academy talent into premiere AFL players had been a slow burn on the Glitter Strip – until last year.

First-round talents Walter, Read, Graham and Jake Rogers all transition­ed directly from the Suns Academy onto the club’s AFL list via the 2023 draft. Suddenly the program was placed under an Afl-wide microscope. But those four players did not fall into the club’s lap by happenstan­ce.

They are the first wave of players who reaped the rewards of a revamped Suns Academy system that has undergone two transforma­tional changes over the past six years – first in 2018 and again in 2021.

If all goes according to plan, the Suns’ crop of 2023 draftees will become the cornerston­e on which it builds a premiershi­p-contending list.

So how did it happen?

THE BEGINNING

The first Suns Academy intake occurred in 2011, with roughly 120 boys across Queensland overseen by a single full-time staff member.

In 2017 the Suns Academy welcomed its first crop of 26 female players, taking the total to just over 200 and overseen by two full-time staff – an Academy manager and head coach. In the span of six years the club had expanded its academy program by one full-time staff member and 90 players.

Academy Manager Jason Torney and head coach Andrew Raines worked tirelessly within a network lacking significan­t resources that relied on volunteers across the state to help deliver the program.

At the end of 2018, the Gold Coast board made a submission to the AFL to significan­tly bolster its academy program. To that point the club’s homegrown talent had mostly arrived via the rookie draft, as the program was not well-equipped to identify, develop and produce top-end Afl-ready talent.

Using the Swans’ highly successful academy model as a blueprint, the Suns made a significan­t financial and material investment, which as of 2024 sits at well above $1m per year and includes eight full-time coaching/admin staff, four part-time North Queensland staff, 10 medical/strength and conditioni­ng staff and 50 volunteer coaches across 11 hubs.

The club took sole responsibi­lity for the academy program, which had previously been predominan­tly run by AFL Queensland and slapped with Suns branding. Academy staff moved into the club’s Carrara base at the Austworld Centre and were properly integrated into day-to-day operations.

By the end of 2019 the club had installed a full-time co-ordinator in North Queensland and the program had grown to above 400 players – almost double the figure only two years earlier.

THE FUTURE

At the end of 2021 the club made another substantia­l change to the academy set-up. It took control of the junior pathways, U13s – U15s, which had previously still been run by AFL Queensland.

Academy Manager Kath Newman, U19 Academy Coach Jarrod Cotton and Academy Coordinato­r Casey Haw were installed and the trio set about reconstruc­ting the program from the ground up.

With the junior grades now also under the club’s eye, talent identifica­tion and cultivatio­n could begin even earlier.

By 2022 the male program totalled 962 players – 644 boys and 318 girls – and the club had circled the academy as a longterm investment for both onfield success and community cohesion.

The next move that seriously signalled the Suns’ intent was list boss Craig Cameron’s decision to relocate to the Gold Coast so he could work as close as possible with the academy program.

He is the only list boss in the AFL not based in Melbourne.

“It means I get to understand the talent coming through both the men’s and women’s pathways,” Cameron told this masthead.

“I’m able to build strong relationsh­ips with our academy coaches which is really important.

“Last year we took four academy players (in the draft). That’s not going to happen every year, but our aim is to build out the percentage of our list as local talent as much as we can.”

This year the club moved Rhyce Shaw into the newlycreat­ed role of Director of Coaching. He now works alongside the academy coaches and within communitie­s at the 11 hubs across Queensland to improve the quality of coaching across the board.

Placing a former AFL senior coach in such a role signalled the seriousnes­s of the Suns’ investment in the academy pathway. “We could see there was a gap but our coaches were busy coaching the players and didn’t have the time or resources to coach the coaches,” Newman said.

“We decided if we were going to produce better players we had to produce better coaches and that’s where Shawy comes in.

“I truly believe it’s going to be a game changer for Queensland footy. It’s a commitment by us because we think the more you can improve local coaching the better the players are going to be once they get to the academy stage,” Cameron added.

For every Jed Walter taken No. 3 in the national draft there might be 100 of his Academy peers whose names are not called.

But it’s not wasted investment as far as the club is concerned.

In North Queensland, rugby league boasts a sizeable strangleho­ld on the junior sporting landscape.

If the AFL wants to compete in that market, it needs the Suns – and Lions – Academy to function and flourish.

 ?? ?? Greater Western Sydney’s Jack Buckley and Gold Coast’s Jed Walter battle for the ball at Adelaide Hills. Picture: Dylan Burns/afl Photos via Getty Images
Greater Western Sydney’s Jack Buckley and Gold Coast’s Jed Walter battle for the ball at Adelaide Hills. Picture: Dylan Burns/afl Photos via Getty Images

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia