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SuperCoach AFL 2025: Winners and losers from round 19, early trade advice

Port Adelaide ruckman Jordon Sweet hit 200 SuperCoach points, and he wasn’t the only player who went big in round 19. And there could be more huge scores to come.

A week of SuperCoach carnage was followed by a weekend of monster scores, including the first player to crack 200 for the year.

But not everything went to plan.

Here are the key scores you need to know, and players to watch if you do have trades remaining.

WHO’S HOT

Jordan Sweet – 200 points

The first 200 score this season came from an unlikely source – the Port Adelaide ruckman was averaging 74 heading into Saturday’s clash against the Hawks. Sweet won nine stoppage clearances, 12 hitouts to advantage and laid seven tackles to go with 22 disposals in the biggest SuperCoach game for 2025. Absolutely massive for his 2089 owners.

Isaac Heeney – 197 points

All eyes were on Brodie Grundy in a match-up against a Tristan Xerri-less North Melbourne, and he delivered with another 150-plus score. But he was put in the shade by a Heeney masterclass - 34 disposals, five goals and a whisker off becoming the second 200 scorer for the weekend.

Jordon Sweet warms up before his 200-point game. Picture: Michael Willson/AFL Photos via Getty Images
Jordon Sweet warms up before his 200-point game. Picture: Michael Willson/AFL Photos via Getty Images

Nick Daicos – 169 points

If one Daicos doesn’t get you, the other will. This week it was Nick’s turn to shine as he played in defence, on the ball and pretty much everywhere on Sunday to shake tagger Corey Wagner and rack up 43 disposals, seven inside-50s, six rebound-50s and a goal.

Matt Rowell – 161 points

At halftime Gold Coast had four behinds and Rowell had 88 SuperCoach points. He had 16 disposals at that stage and finished with 30 along with nine tackles and 12 clearances. After some early-season wobbles, he hasn’t gone under 97 for nine weeks and has a five-round average of 133.

Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera – 149 points

Has exploded in the second half of the season and dominated in a new role as a full-time midfielder against the Cats. Don’t expect him to slow down any time soon – his next four games are against Melbourne, North Melbourne, Richmond and Essendon.

Dan Curtin – 132 points

Second-year Crow is having a huge post-bye breakout, with scores of 153, 117 and 132 in his past four games. That has him sitting third for three-round average among all forwards. He has added a whopping $316k to his $158k starting price.

Max Gawn – 128 points

Not a remarkable score for Max, until you realise he had 20 points at halftime before taking over against Carlton’s dual ruck set-up. Logged 11 hitouts to advantage to go with 19 touches and six marks.

Harley Reid – 121 points

One for the 2026 watch list. Reid had 20 disposals at halftime before Jack Ross put the brakes on in the second half. You wouldn’t bring him in now, but he will feature prominently in the mid-price conversation next pre-season.

Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera is in red-hot form. Picture: Paul Kane/Getty Images
Nasiah Wanganeen-Milera is in red-hot form. Picture: Paul Kane/Getty Images

Chad Warner – 105 points

It’s been a long time between drinks for Warner, who hasn’t hit three figures in SuperCoach since round 8. His centre bounces are well down from earlier in the season but he still found the footy 26 times and kicked 1.3.

Matt Carroll – 105 points

Brilliant timing for the Blues rookie to deliver the first SuperCoach ton of his career if you needed him to cover for Connor Rozee this week. Fifteen disposals - all kicks - and a big late goal capped a big night for the running defender.

Lachie Blakiston – 84 points

Huge win for the 2800 owners of the former $99k rookie, who provided more than adequate cover for Tristan Xerri, who had 15 disposals in six marks playing as a key defender for the Bombers.

WHO’S COLD

Christian Petracca – 89 points

A big first half but couldn’t maintain the rage, and the must-have forward now has a five-round average of 84.8 – ranked 32nd in his position behind players like Sam Switkowski, Jack Ross and Max Hall.

Lachie Neale – 85 points

Five-round average dipped under 100 – ranked 34th in the midfield. There was no hard tag this week, just another underwhelming score by a genuine star who has to share points with a midfield full of them. Josh Dunkley, Will Ashcroft and Hugh McCluggage all went big again this week which means less of the load falls on Neale – good for Brisbane, not so good for SuperCoach.

Bailey Smith – 81 points

When Smith was a late out in round 16 about 3000 coaches pulled the trigger and traded him out. That seemed like a huge risk on the season’s No.1 forward, but in the three weeks since he has gone DNP, 73, 81. Non-owners will be nervous this week though when the Cats face North Melbourne.

Tom De Koning – 59 points

We know the story now. Marc Pittonet is Carlton’s No.1 ruck and De Koning is playing as a forward, and in that role he just is not a good SuperCoach scorer – even with a crucial grab in the last quarter.

Colby McKercher’s run of three straight SuperCoach tons ended on Saturday . Picture: Dylan Burns/AFL Photos via Getty Images
Colby McKercher’s run of three straight SuperCoach tons ended on Saturday . Picture: Dylan Burns/AFL Photos via Getty Images

Colby McKercher – 58 points

Started like a house on fire but copped the dreaded James Jordon tag after quarter-time, and his scoring almost stopped dead. Lachie Whitfield might be in the Swan stopper’s sights this week.

Shai Bolton – 58 points

Had the chance to boost his score with the matchwinning goal but unfortunately even a matchwinning point is classified as an ineffective kick. Five-round average of 69 is not what coaches were hoping for.

Manny Liddy – 14 points

Port Adelaide’s mid-season draft pick has been providing solid bench cover but hopefully no one needed him for that this week. he was subbed off with just four disposals to his name.

Callum Coleman-Jones – 1 point

Picked for his first game of the season and lasted 20 minutes before copping a game-ending injury. In that time he laid a tackle, won two hitouts and gave away a free kick.

Originally published as SuperCoach AFL 2025: Winners and losers from round 19, early trade advice

Original URL: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/supercoach-news/supercoach-afl-2025-winners-and-losers-from-round-19-early-trade-advice/news-story/875654001290b0a8b051071986bc96b2