The AFL is set to announce the significant changes to the draft and its bidding system.
Where will Gather Round be held beyond 2026? Will the AFLW earn a chance to host the weekend festival of football?
And where does Bailey Smith's contract sit?
All that and more from media buzz.
AFL draft bidding changes close to verification
Significant changes to the AFL draft and its bidding is set to take effect sooner rather than later, with the news on how it will look in 2026 all but confirmed on Footy Classified.
A loading will be applied to clubs who finish in the top four, with the minor premiers and second place set to pay an extra 25 percent for players linked to their club, while third and fourth will add 20 percent to the figure.
The discount will be removed, while clubs must match bids on father son and academy prospects with two picks, maximum.
Carlton, Essendon and Port Adelaide will feel the pinch the most given their father-son and academy guns set to join their clubs in 2026 and 2027.
"They're going to have to pay the highest price ever paid for a father-son"@CalTwomey reveals the expected changes to the draft's bidding system, & the ramifications for the Blues, Bombers, & Power. #9FootyClassified | Watch on 9 & 9Now 🖥️ pic.twitter.com/HPepUCFZYe
— Footy on Nine (@FootyonNine) March 31, 2026
Star Cat purring his way to improved contract
Geelong gun Bailey Smith is set for a big payday despite already being contracted until the end of 2030.
Smith's return at the Cats has been fruitful to day, earning the AFLCA award and an All-Australian blazer last year, whilst his strong form in 2026 has continued.
On Footy Classified, it was revealed that the former Bulldog will be close to earning top dollar.
"They're close to agreeing to a pay rise that will take him to the game's best-paid midfielders."@CalTwomey reports Bailey Smith is set for a big raise, despite already being contracted to the end of 2030.#9FootyClassified | Watch on 9 & 9Now 🖥️ pic.twitter.com/XbJzfh4Rvx
— Footy on Nine (@FootyonNine) March 31, 2026
Pie unsure why club walked out pair of forwards
Collingwood heart-and-soul player Brayden Maynard is still unsure why the club got rid of forwards Brody Mihocek and Mason Cox.
"We obviously got rid of a five-time leading goalkicker in ‘Checkers'," Maynard said to News Corp.
"No-one wanted him gone, I don't know what happened there, but anyway. Then Coxy (Mason Cox) went (to Fremantle) and we had to figure out a way to score and we do have boys down there that can score.
"I do miss him a lot, I had a really good relationship with ‘Checkers', a real unique one. I love him very much, so did everyone. But that is football, that is the industry we live in and he is doing really well at Melbourne and it's good to see."
Gather Round in SA? And will we see it in the AFLW?
South Australia is tipped to earn an extension of Gather Round beyond the initial four years since owning the concept from 2023.
The raging success of the festival of football has seen fans and supporters turn up in droves across the state, with games played across multiple eye-catching venues, including the Barossa Valley and the famous Norwood Oval.
A Sydney-based AFLW Gather Round is in the works, per Caroline Wilson 👀 pic.twitter.com/K3wJ6K4PWv
— 7AFL (@7AFL) March 31, 2026
Former Carlton captain reveals painful truth
Sam Docherty has taken to 3AW to reveal the hidden pain behind Carlton's poor record, and it simply relies on one statistic.
The former Blues captain spoke about the contested possession, saying that when Carlton wins the category, they win 70 percent of games. That number is close to consistent contenders such as Brisbane, Geelong and Collingwood.
When those three teams lose contested possessions, their win rate drops to 50-60 percent, says Docherty.
"Carlton's drops to seven percent. It highlights the importance of winning the contest for Carlton."
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Fix one problem, cause plenty more
Former AFL umpire Ray 'Razor' Chamberlain says the introduction of the new rules has set the game on the right path, but the microscopic lens to ensure every call is correct is causing more harm than good.
In the wake of the 'lasso' rule and subsequent use, or non-use of the ARC in Round 3, Chamberlain said that the need to intervene is becoming an issue.
"There's prior, there's reasonable time, genuine attempt, you can mount arguments for everything," he said on AFL360.
"There will be error – there will be player error, there will be coach error, there will be umpire error … that's part of sport.
"I think we spend way too much time trying to solve one thing and we create 50 other things.
"It seems that's how it's unravelling at this stage."






















