Clubs allowed to ‘salary dump’ in a major change to AFL trade rules

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The AFL has made a major shift in player trading this year, officially allowing clubs to “salary dump”, or trade out players on big contracts for minimal draft return. | mickgleeson

- to use their salary cap space as a tool to effectively buy themselves a draft pick. That is, to get a good draft pick you have to take the expensive player.

The AFL would previously have seen this as an unfair trade and blocked it, but now recognise the value to clubs in getting a player’s salary off the books.The AFL’s changes acknowledge that how clubs manage their salary cap is as important to their chances of success on the field as trading in players or getting high draft picks.The effect will be that clubs will have greater flexibility to trade players who are on big contracts and not forced to take years to try to address salary cap problems.

Players are often eager to leave clubs once they find themselves out of favour in a developing team or once new players come in and are preferred ahead of them -- but find the options to move blocked because clubs will not give up quality picks to get players on big money deals. In these cases, the new club would most likely renegotiate new contract terms for the player, spreading the contract payment out over a longer period.

 

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