AFLW PREMIERSHIP coach Bec Goddard's persuasive skills are so powerful she talked her latest Olympic recruit out of trying to make the 2020 Tokyo Games.

The 2017 football woman of the year led Adelaide to the inaugural NAB AFL Women's flag, with dual Olympic basketballer Erin Phillips taking all before her.

Phillips was the competition’s best and fairest, won the player-voted MVP award, was best on ground in the Grand Final and even kicked goal of the year.

The Crows' newest Olympian, South Australian beach volleyballer Becchara Palmer, arrived at Friday's AFLW induction day in Melbourne knowing she had plenty to live up to. 

"That's setting the bar pretty high. If I could do half as much as what Erin did last season, then I'd be pretty stoked," the 29-year-old said with a laugh.

"But I'm going in without any expectation, to be honest. 

"That's probably how I work best, and I plan on working really hard. We have already been working really hard and will continue working really hard, and that's what's going to sail things through – and what will be, will be."

Palmer spent 13 years playing beach volleyball, and competed at the 2012 London Olympics and was a reserve at last year's Rio event.

She watched the first AFLW season with admiration, evoking memories of her own high school football days, including breaking ribs in her last match, more than a decade ago.

Palmer was still contemplating pushing on to the Tokyo Olympics when a conversation with Goddard convinced her that football was her sporting future. 

And, remarkably, the prospect of running onto the field with Adelaide is even more daunting than preparing for her first Olympics five years ago, according to Palmer.

"I'd heard Bec was a pretty cool chick and I thought, 'All right, well, we'll have a conversation'," she said.

"But, in my mind, the first conversation we had, I was still set for Tokyo 2020 and playing beach volleyball. 

"After talking to her, I think it made me realise how uncomfortable I was where I was and that maybe a change would be a really good thing."

Joining Palmer among the 80 AFLW inductees was Carlton draftee Georgia Gee, the Blues' first selection this year at No. 12. 

Gee, a 158cm midfielder-forward, started playing alongside boys at Beaconsfield in Melbourne’s outer south-east transitioned to youth girls' level and was part of the Dandenong Stingrays and Vic Metro pathways.

"I'm excited to get started and … play alongside the likes of Darcy Vescio and Bri Davey and learn off them," Gee said. 

"I was actually at the first game, Carlton-Collingwood. Just watching [gave me] goosebumps. 

"To think we have that opportunity now is incredible and to be part of it now … is even more exciting."