AFL Rising Star

Last updated

AFL Rising Star
AFL Rising Star logo.png
Awarded forThe best young player in the Australian Football League
Sponsored by Norwich Union Australia (1993–2000)
Ansett Australia (2001)
National Australia Bank (2002–2022)
Presented by Australian Football League
History
First award 1993
First winner Nathan Buckley
Most recent Harry Sheezel (2023)
Website afl.com.au/rising-star

The AFL Rising Star is an Australian rules football award presented annually to the player adjudged the best young player in the Australian Football League (AFL) for the year. It was first presented in the 1993 season, and was won by Nathan Buckley, playing for the Brisbane Bears. [1] The recipient of the AFL Rising Star has been awarded the Ron Evans Medal since 2007, named in honour of the former AFL Commission chairman following his death that year. [1]

Contents

The award was sponsored by Norwich Union Australia from its inception in 1993 until 2000. [2] The AFL then secured a six-year sponsorship deal with Ansett Australia in 2001 that included the Rising Star award; [2] however, this agreement only lasted the one season following the collapse of Ansett in September 2001. [3] National Australia Bank sponsored the award for two decades from 2002 to 2022, marking the longest commercial partnership in the award's history; [4] [5] they were not replaced by any sponsor for the 2023 edition. [6] An equivalent award has existed in the AFL Women's league since its inception in 2017. [7]

The clubs with the most AFL Rising Star awards are Fremantle, Melbourne and Sydney, with three awards won by players representing these teams. Greater Western Sydney's eight nominations in the 2012 season is the most any club has achieved in a season. [8] The most recent recipient of the award is North Melbourne's Harry Sheezel, winning in 2023. [9]

Eligibility and nominations

A player is nominated for the award each round during the AFL season by a panel of experts. [10] The nominee is usually chosen based on their performance in that particular round; however, for nominations closer to the end of the year, the player's performance over the whole season is taken into consideration. [11] To be eligible for nomination, the player must be under the age of 21 at 1 January that year, and have played ten or fewer AFL games as of the start of the season. [10] A player can only be nominated once per season; if a player is suspended during the season, he may be nominated, but will not be eligible to win the award. [nb 1] [13] At the completion of the regular season, each member of the voting panel independently awards five votes, four votes, three votes, two votes and one vote to the nominated players they regard as the best to fifth-best during the season; the player with the highest total of votes wins the medal. [14]

As the number of voting members varies between seasons, the maximum number of votes a player can poll is not consistent. There have been only four winners who have accumulated the maximum votes in their season: Jared Rivers (2004), Daniel Rich (2009), Dan Hannebery (2010) and Nick Daicos (2022). [15] [16]

It is possible for a player to be nominated in multiple seasons, as long as he still satisfies the age and experience criteria in each year. Sixteen players have been nominated twice for a Rising Star award: [17]

Recipients

Nathan Buckley was the inaugural AFL Rising Star in 1993. Nathan Buckley 2017.jpg
Nathan Buckley was the inaugural AFL Rising Star in 1993.
Nick Riewoldt was the 2002 AFL Rising Star. Nick Riewoldt 2017.1.jpg
Nick Riewoldt was the 2002 AFL Rising Star.
Dan Hannebery polled the maximum votes possible in the 2010 AFL Rising Star. Dan Hannebery 2017.2.jpg
Dan Hannebery polled the maximum votes possible in the 2010 AFL Rising Star.
Jaeger O'Meara was the 2013 AFL Rising Star. Jaeger O'Meara 2018.1.jpg
Jaeger O'Meara was the 2013 AFL Rising Star.
Table key
^Player polled maximum votes
Table of recipients
RecipientYearClubVotesRef.
Nathan Buckley 1993 Brisbane Bears Unknown [nb 2] [18]
Chris Scott 1994 Brisbane Bears [21]
Nick Holland 1995 Hawthorn [22]
Ben Cousins 1996 West Coast 15 [23]
Michael Wilson 1997 Port Adelaide 27 [24]
Byron Pickett 1998 North Melbourne 30 [25]
Adam Goodes 1999 Sydney 33 [26]
Paul Hasleby 2000 Fremantle 33 [27]
Justin Koschitzke 2001 St Kilda 31 [28]
Nick Riewoldt 2002 St Kilda 34 [19]
Sam Mitchell 2003 Hawthorn 33 [29]
Jared Rivers 2004 Melbourne 45^ [30]
Brett Deledio 2005 Richmond 43 [31]
Danyle Pearce 2006 Port Adelaide 43 [32]
Joel Selwood 2007 Geelong 44 [33]
Rhys Palmer 2008 Fremantle 44 [34]
Daniel Rich 2009 Brisbane Lions 45^ [15]
Dan Hannebery 2010 Sydney 45^ [16]
Dyson Heppell 2011 Essendon 44 [35]
Daniel Talia 2012 Adelaide 43 [36]
Jaeger O'Meara 2013 Gold Coast 44 [20]
Lewis Taylor 2014 Brisbane Lions 39 [37]
Jesse Hogan 2015 Melbourne 49 [38]
Callum Mills 2016 Sydney 49 [39]
Andrew McGrath 2017 Essendon 51 [40]
Jaidyn Stephenson 2018 Collingwood 52 [41]
Sam Walsh 2019 Carlton 54 [42]
Caleb Serong 2020 Fremantle 48 [43]
Luke Jackson 2021 Melbourne 51 [44]
Nick Daicos 2022 Collingwood 60^ [45]
Harry Sheezel 2023 North Melbourne 54 [9]

Club totals

Table key
Club no longer participates in the AFL
Table of clubs' totals
ClubTotalYears
Sydney 3 1999, 2010, 2016
Fremantle 3 2000, 2008, 2020
Melbourne 3 2004, 2015, 2021
Brisbane Bears 2 1993, 1994
St Kilda 2 2001, 2002
Hawthorn 2 1995, 2003
Port Adelaide 2 1997, 2006
Brisbane Lions 2 2009, 2014
Essendon 2 2011, 2017
Collingwood 2 2018, 2022
North Melbourne 2 1998, 2023
West Coast 1 1996
Richmond 1 2005
Geelong 1 2007
Adelaide 1 2012
Gold Coast 1 2013
Carlton 1 2019
Greater Western Sydney 0
Western Bulldogs 0
Fitzroy 0

See also

Notes

  1. Under the 2005–2014 match review panel system, a player was ineligible if he was given a base sanction of 100 or more demerit points by the tribunal or match review panel, equivalent to a one-week suspension. Under some circumstances, a player could reduce a penalty from a one-week suspension (125 demerit points) to a reprimand without suspension (92.75 points) by accepting a 25 per cent reduction with an early guilty plea; as the base points sanction in this case exceeds 100, he would become ineligible for the award, despite not being suspended. This was the same eligibility criterion used in the Brownlow Medal. Since 2015, if a player is suspended for more than one match after an early plea or tribunal case, then he is ineligible to win the award. [12]
  2. Voting was not made public for awards prior to 1996. [15]

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