Key Glenelg forward James Sellar says the focus placed on teammate - and one of his best friends Bryce Gibbs - has taken the load off him somewhat in terms of being talked up as one of this year's top draft prospects.Although Sellar is regarded as one of the best youngsters in the country - he is likely to be selected in the top half-a-dozen players in the November NAB AFL Draft - the 195cm tall said the greater expectation on Gibbs, who is the likely No.1 draftee, eases the pressure on him a fraction."It's a lot easier coming from South Australia, where Brycey takes most of it for me, which is fantastic … but if he gets 100 bits of media, I'll get 15 or 16, so he gets a fair more than what I get," Sellar said at the NAB AFL Draft Camp in Canberra."I think the most important thing is just to enjoy it and remember why you started playing the game and try and hold onto the love of the game and enjoy it as much as you can.""The best way to deal with it is to not think about it and concentrate on the game and take it as it comes … but it's exciting, nerve-racking and stressful and it's everything rolled into one, but I think you've got to enjoy it as much as you can."A lot of it is out of your control, in terms of where you go - whether it's number one or 61 or at all."Interestingly, Sellar and Gibbs, along with fellow Glenelg, AIS/AFL Academy and Draft Camp member Mark Austin, are all great friends off the field, as Sellar takes up the story."Me and Bryce … we played against each other in under nines and we used to play against each other … we had some great duels and I really enjoyed playing against him," Sellar said."Even before I met him, we had that mutual respect from playing against each other and it must have been in about under 13s when we started playing with each other in the Glenelg development squad and then we went through under 15s, 16s and 17s together."In the under 18s, Bryce's old man (Ross) coached us for a while, which was pretty good."Mark is from Jeparit in country Victoria and he ended up coming down around under 16s or 17s and played with us from then on, so we've ended up at school together and through the AIS together and it's all been fantastic to share the experience with two of your best mates … which has been awesome."But the fact that Gibbs and Sellar are more than likely to be heading to different AFL clubs next year has also got the pair thinking how they can still keep in close contact in 2007 and beyond."We've always said that hopefully we'd end up in Melbourne, so we can still move in together and we can go on like that, but it is going to be weird," Sellar said."It has always been our dream to play AFL and it'd be amazing lining up on him or next to him or whatever it would be - it'd be something to remember."We keep trying to tick off the milestones and I guess one of the reasons why we've been successful has been because we push each other hard at training and I always do my weights or extra skills sessions with him, so it's good we can push each other and learn from each other."