YES
The average length of a footballer's playing career is six years. That isn't a long time for anyone, let alone a young man in his early 20s that has thought about nothing but football since he was a teenager. If the draft age was raised by a year, young players would have more time and less distraction when it came to their year 12 studies. They wouldn't have to participate in combines and testing and interviews in the lead up to their exams, and instead could focus solely on getting the best out of themselves academically when it mattered most. Then, a year off would give them the opportunity to experience university or the first year of an apprenticeship in the real world, like other kids their age. It's something that could give them the beginnings of what direction their life could take if football didn't work out. The argument it would turn into a "gap year" is fair but at the same time, so what if it did? Travelling, working part-time, being young without any significant responsibilities could all help prepare a draftee for life at a football club where suddenly they're met with rules and restrictions and constant standards they're expected to exceed. And, if they lose their way and suddenly aren't considered suitable to be drafted, perhaps it wasn't supposed to happen anyway. Yes, some draftees make an impact in their first year at clubs, some even while they are still at high school. But some struggle with the sudden step up from school life to an elite sporting environment, or with moving interstate. Some are physically ready to play but the large majority are not. An extra year of natural development and training would help them adjust quicker to life as a professional sportsman – and allow more of them to have a bigger impact, sooner. A year is a long time, and the difference between a kid who's just finished his final exam and one year into adult life – with a potential start on a non-footballing career that could end up being a reality sooner than they expect – could be significant. - Jennifer Phelan
Hot topics: Is it time to raise the draft age?
Callum Twomey and Jennifer Phelan argue both sides