FORWARDS Travis Cloke and Stewart Crameri may have played their last games for the Western Bulldogs, with Luke Beveridge unable to guarantee the duo's future at the club.
Cloke, who has battled mental health problems and form slumps this season, will miss Friday night's clash with Hawthorn due to soreness following a six-day break.
The 30-year-old has kicked 11 goals from 10 matches this season since crossing from Collingwood on a two-year deal at the end of 2016, and could possibly join Robert Murphy and Matthew Boyd in retirement.
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Crameri, out of contract at season's end, defected from Essendon to Whitten Oval on a four-year deal at the end of 2013.
A hip injury has restricted the 29-year-old to just two games this season, while his 2016 season was wiped out by the year-long ban for his part in the Essendon supplements scandal.
With the Bulldogs likely to become the first premier since Hawthorn in 2009 to miss finals the following year, Beveridge was unable to guarantee the high-profile pair would be wearing red, white and blue next season.
(Travis is) contracted, so we'd assume (he'd play on)," Beveridge said on Thursday.
"We're working through all of that decision making at the moment, and Stewart is one of the players that is uncontracted, but there is ongoing talks with his management and other (players').
"We don't want to delist or exit a lot of players, we want to make sure we make good decisions around what's available in the upcoming draft.
"There's a bit of water to go under the bridge as far as processing list management stuff between now and (list lodgements).
"There's too much up in the air."
While Cloke and Crameri's future is uncertain, veteran Dale Morris is almost certain to play on into a 14th season.
The coach believes the durable defender has more to offer to a young Bulldogs backline that will be without Murphy and Matthew Boyd in 2018.
Another area Beveridge will need to address is his side's inability to score from an abundance of inside 50s this season.
The Dogs sit fourth in the AFL in forward forays with 1,154 at an average of 55 per game, but have been plagued by inefficiency in attack, and are clear last when it comes to goal accuracy (42.8).
The premiership coach once again acknowledged the glaring deficiency and said improvement would be sought from outside the club.
The Dogs are likely to have a top-ten pick for the first time since the 2014 NAB AFL Draft, and that could be used to attract some more class from another team to compliment the club's array of inside midfielders.
"(We'll look trade and free agency), but there'll be some organic improvement within the club," Beveridge said.
"Our efficiency, skill, and decision making hasn't been where we'd like it to be, and that's linked to things other than just raw skill.
"It's running capacity, opposition pressure and so many other things, so we've trained that and (must) deal with it better.
"It's still a significant work in progress."