DYLAN Shiel's titanic decision was made.

The 2017 All Australian midfielder was leaving Greater Western Sydney to head home to Victoria after seven years as an inaugural Giant.

A potentially awkward exchange last October instead became a fascinating discussion, over multiple hours, about which club Shiel should play for next.

Essendon won the race for Dylan Shiel, but that doesn't mean the Giants lost. Picture: AFL Photos

Joining Shiel at breakfast was GWS coach Leon Cameron and football boss Wayne Campbell.

"Dylan saw an opportunity to go back to Melbourne – and that's OK," Campbell told AFL.com.au this week.

"He doesn't like us any less and we don't like him any less, so you might as well sit down and have a good chat about it. (Shiel's manager) Paul Connors said that's never happened before.

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"You'd have to ask Dylan (whether the Giants played a part in him choosing Essendon), but he was certainly interested in what we had to say.

"My point is that we know we're a bit different and we know we have to be different."

THE 2018 TRADE PERIOD

Shiel was the centrepiece of what from the outside was a disastrous Trade Period for GWS, with Tom Scully, Rory Lobb and Will Setterfield also heading out the door.

Some media, including AFL.com.au, questioned whether the dramatic exodus would spell the end of the Giants' status as a perennial contender, ahead of their first taste of free agency in 2019.

Hindsight is a wonderful thing.

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"We knew that wasn't the case. We were really confident we could put together a list that could contend over a short period, whether that's three, four or five years," Campbell said.

"But we certainly thought in 2019 we would have a list that was capable of contending, although you have to have most things go your way as well."

THE BEST GIANTS WHO LEFT

YEAR

PLAYER

CURRENT CLUB

2013

Taylor Adams

Collingwood

2013

Josh Bruce

St Kilda

2013

Dom Tyson

North Melbourne

2014

Tom Boyd

Western Bulldogs

2015

Lachie Plowman

Carlton

2015

Adam Treloar

Collingwood

2016

Will Hoskin-Elliott

Collingwood

2016

Caleb Marchbank

Carlton

2016

Jack Steele

St Kilda

2017

Devon Smith

Essendon

2017

Nathan Wilson

Fremantle

2018

Rory Lobb

Fremantle

2018

Tom Scully

Hawthorn

2018

Will Setterfield

Carlton

2018

Dylan Shiel

Essendon 


So bursting at the seams was the Giants' salary cap that Jon Patton and Jeremy Finlayson also came up in trade negotiations last year before staying put.

Almost a year on, Finlayson has enjoyed a breakout season and is a key part of the club's forward line – after previously being a defender – while Patton sat out the entire campaign and is headed for Hawthorn.

These are the typical swings and roundabouts at GWS, which will contest its first AFL Grand Final against 2017 premier Richmond on Saturday at the MCG.

THE TRIPLE-TREAT RE-SIGNING COUP

Free agent Adam Tomlinson will likely end up at Melbourne, but Greater Western Sydney had enormous wins when Nick Haynes, Josh Kelly, then Stephen Coniglio re-committed this year.

The Giants haven't lost, coincidentally or not, in the three games since Coniglio's announcement on finals eve that he was hanging around for a further seven seasons.

"I don't think you can overstate it," Campbell said of securing the signatures of the star trio.

"Given the transient nature of players now, given where we are, and the fact other clubs come hard at our players.

"For those guys to turn their back on significantly more money and other things elsewhere, it means we've developed a pretty special footy club, I reckon."

In another tick for their retention success, former No.5 draft pick and free agent Matt Buntine also re-signed for two years this week.

There are more challenges on the horizon, with Lachie Whitfield, Jeremy Cameron and Zac Williams entering free agency next season.

THE MECHANICS BEHIND THE FERRARI

There was a huge advantage in how the AFL loaded the Giants with priority player access and high draft picks, but with that came the complication of turning blue-chip investments into a successful team.

Gold Coast has so far failed despite many of the same start-up handouts – and an AFL Commission meeting this week debated and ticked off on more help.

GWS is one victory away from its maiden premiership in the same season the Suns claimed their first wooden spoon, in the ultimate example of how wildly their fortunes have contrasted.

By design but with some luck, the Giants incorporated more role players into their senior side – many of them rival clubs' discards – in recent seasons to strike a better balance.

AFL LIST DEMOGRAPHICS IN 2019

CLUB

AVE. AGE

AVE. GAMES

Hawthorn

24.1

88.9

Collingwood

24.0

88.0

Adelaide

24.0

82.4

Geelong

23.5

81.1

West Coast

23.5

78.8

GWS Giants

23.4

75.1

Essendon

23.4

66.0

North Melbourne

23.3

73.7

Richmond

23.2

79.1

Western Bulldogs

23.2

68.8

St Kilda

23.2

65.6

Port Adelaide

23.1

79.9

Sydney

23.1

74.7

Melbourne

23.0

65.7

Fremantle

22.9

67.6

Carlton

22.7

63.4

Brisbane

22.6

66.6

Gold Coast

22.4

58.1 


Matt de Boer, the best of their bargain-basement recruits, spoke to AFL.com.au about this dynamic last year, likening them to the mechanics so necessary in keeping a Ferrari purring.

"Your draft pick isn't a prerequisite for playing in this team," de Boer said at the time.

Matt de Boer is becoming the unlikeliest of heroes. Picture: AFL Photos

The former Docker, who's risen to become the game's No.1 tagger, headlines an unheralded group that includes Brent Daniels, Sam Reid, Adam Kennedy, Daniel Lloyd and Lachie Keeffe.

Harry Perryman, Tomlinson and Buntine are first-round draft picks but belong somewhere in this category, too.

THE RECRUITING MASTERSTROKES

Campbell readily admits, with an accompanying chuckle of satisfaction, that de Boer's extraordinary second life as an AFL footballer at GWS has exceeded all expectations.

However, a rival recruiter this week suggested it was no accident. Rather than simplistically highlighting the Giants' draft riches, he went down a different route.

The recruiter pointed out the team-based running – saying one high-profile ex-GWS player didn't fit that requirement – and how so many of their footballers were competitive beasts who thrived in the contest.

Much of that owes to one of the best recruiting men around, Adrian Caruso, who is in his fourth year in the job, as well as list manager Jason McCartney.

Caruso's first-round hits include Tim Taranto, Perryman (matching Adelaide's bid) and Will Setterfield, while there is great hope for Jye Caldwell, Jackson Hately, Aiden Bonar and Isaac Cumming.


Adrian Caruso studies his notes at the 2018 NAB AFL Draft. Picture: AFL Photos

Equally as impressive were later selections such as Daniels, second-year key defender Sam Taylor, Bobby Hill and fellow goalsneak Zac Langdon.

It was supposedly luck again that played a role in Daniels landing at the Giants with pick 27 in the 2017 AFL Draft, despite other clubs baulking at his 170cm size.

"I still feel we got a little bit lucky that year to get a player who you rate so highly on your talent board, but also who fills the specific one need that we had," Caruso told AFL.com.au's Road to the Draft podcast last week.

GAINING HIGH-END COMPENSATION

Campbell laughed again at the lack of retirees at the club.

Instead, GWS is often left shipping off players still in their prime, but usually with top-end draft picks in return.

The Adam Treloar and Shiel deals were quite similar, with both delivering the Giants first-round selections across two years, while a second-round choice went to Collingwood and Essendon, respectively.

Tom Boyd fetched Ryan Griffen and the Western Bulldogs' pick six, while Lobb and Devon Smith also added to GWS's first-round draft hauls.

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The much-discussed, pick-heavy Dom Tyson trade with Melbourne saw the Giants rise to No.2 in the 2013 AFL Draft, which was famously used on emerging superstar Kelly.

One exception was Taylor Adams, who was a straight swap for Heath Shaw, although Collingwood also paid a percentage of Shaw's contract the following year.

Regularly losing players of this calibre isn't ideal, regardless of depth, but the compensation ensures GWS remains a contender – so long as Caruso and co. can continue to unearth gems.

"Does Jye Caldwell instantly replace Dylan Shiel? No, of course he doesn't, because he's an 18-year-old replacing a 24 or 25-year-old," Campbell said.

"But we always felt that that would give (Jacob) Hopper and Taranto more time in the midfield … and we hope Caldwell will reach that level in the coming years."

Hopper and Taranto were subsequently two of the AFL's breakout midfield stars in 2019 and have been outstanding in the finals.

Hopper ranks first at the club for disposals, contested possessions and clearances in its three September games, while Taranto leads the coach-voted Gary Ayres Award for the best finals player.

And on and on it goes. The Giants do it differently – they have to – but they do it very, very well.