Season eight for Brendon Ah Chee looked like a carbon copy of the first seven: middling form at the lower level punctuated by a brief and forgettable senior appearance. Ah Chee hit his ceiling long ago and is strictly on the club list for depth. If he's in the senior team, you know the injury list is getting rather long.
BAC again, Brendon's back
Season eight for Brendon Ah Chee looked like a carbon copy of the first seven: middling form at the lower level punctuated by a brief and forgettable senior appearance. Ah Chee hit his ceiling long ago and is strictly on the club list for depth. If he's in the senior team, you know the injury list is getting rather long.
Ah Chee or Jughead?
Much in the manner of his six-year career at Port Adelaide, Brendon Ah Chee played a handful of senior games for West Coast after transferring in the off season without ever accumulating enough possessions to jump into the best 22. Some players never find the knack of translating stellar form at lower levels to consistent output in the big league, and if Ah Chee doesn't get a wriggle on he will join that long list. There is no justification for drafting him in a fantasy league.
Ah Chee's gold & blue vein
Six years at Port Adelaide produced two half-seasons of senior action and only five games in 2017, so Brendon Ah Chee will look for more opportunity at West Coast. He played on a HFF last season, winning the Magpies' best & fairest and finishing second in the Margarey Medal. Ah Chee's fantasy value, if he looks like making the round 1 side, is tied to his job security and his role. Does he play as a flanker, which would mean more scores below baseline level? Or does he shift back to central midfield, where he can score well enough to merit a late-round pick? The JLT should sort him out.