For some people, the off-season proves to be more exciting than any of the 27 weeks of the fixtured year.
Player movements and rumours get everyone excited – us included – as they offer clean slates, new leaves, and a myriad of other clichés for fans and footballers alike.
Every club will contemporarily claim that their trade and draft hauls are of an elite standard, however, time and statistics are the true revealers of quality.
Although some teams are notoriously poor drafters and have a penchant for purchasing players well beyond their use by date, you won't find any of them on this list.
With many thanks to the statistical records of Draftguru, here are, by year, the top ten best recruitment class from clubs in the AFL era based off averaged games played across respective crops.
For example, Hawthorn's 2004 crop of Lance Franklin, Jarryd Roughead and Jordan Lewis is weighed down by five players from the same draft class playing a combined five matches.
2. West Coast (2005)
| Number of Players Recruited | Combined Games Played | Average Games |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | 634 | 127 |
Taking out the silver medal after topping their 1999 off-season are the West Coast Eagles.
The hits outweighed the misses for the Western Australian powerhouse, with future Premiership captain Shannon Hurn (currently on 286 games) and soon to be Brownlow Medalist Matt Priddis (240) leading the pack.

Joining this pair were key forward Ben McKinley (46), future Premiership Eagle Steven Armstrong (36) and cult hero Matthew Spangher (26).

















