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Fixture Analysis for the 2026 SuperCoach Run Home

Complete fixture breakdown for the SuperCoach 2026 run home. Geelong’s dream schedule, other favourable teams, rest risks, DPP timing, and how to use draw analysis to guide your final trades and captaincy decisions.

Marcus Webb · Chief Analyst3 min read

Fixture Analysis for the 2026 SuperCoach Run Home

The draw is no longer background noise. From Round 15 onward, it is one of the primary decision-making inputs.

Most coaches still pick players based on price, breakeven, and ownership. The top 1,000 coaches add fixture analysis as a core filter — and right now, that filter points heavily toward Geelong.

The Current Consensus: Geelong’s “Dream Run”

X and SuperCoach community discussion in mid-June is dominated by one takeaway: Geelong has one of the most favourable remaining schedules for SuperCoach scoring.

Key factors driving the narrative:

  • Multiple matchups against teams that allow high inside-50s and uncontested possessions
  • Home games that historically produce big scores for mids and forwards
  • Brownlow and Coleman contenders who remain motivated even if the team secures a high ladder position
  • Strong team structure creating scoring avenues across multiple positions

Geelong assets currently benefiting most in discussion:

  • Bailey Smith (“Baz”) — consistent high scores + captaincy appeal
  • Jeremy Cameron — value forward target with goal-kicking upside
  • Max Holmes — proven premium with system fit

Other Teams Receiving Positive Mentions

While Geelong dominates the conversation, two other clubs are frequently noted:

  • St Kilda — soft remaining schedule, Wilkie expected to remain fit and available
  • Brisbane — viewed favourably in several analyses

Actionable takeaway: Before any trade, write down the remaining opponents for every player under consideration. If three of your targets share the same difficult opponent in the same round, you have a structural problem.

Rest Risk & Late-Season Management

The biggest caveat repeated across recent discussion: resting risk increases once teams lock in finals positions.

  • Chris Scott may rest stars (especially Brownlow/Coleman contenders) in the final 2–3 rounds if Geelong’s position is secure
  • Other top teams will do the same
  • This makes “buy and hold for the whole run home” riskier than it appears

Mitigation strategies:

  • Prioritise players with strong role security and no history of late management
  • Monitor ladder position and club statements weekly
  • Have bench depth (including $99k rookies) ready to cover any sudden rests

Tagging & Specific Matchup Risks

Not every Geelong game is automatically a high-scoring one. Recent analysis flags:

  • Potential tagging in specific late rounds (North Melbourne in R23 mentioned)
  • Opponents with strong defensive structures that suppress midfield scoring

Rule: Never assume “good fixture = automatic captain” without checking the actual opponent and historical data for that matchup.

How to Use Fixture Analysis in Practice

For Trading

  1. Rank every target by remaining fixture difficulty (Geelong-heavy portfolios currently score highest)
  2. Cross-reference with rest risk
  3. Only then consider price and breakeven
  4. Time final trades around post-R17 DPP changes

For Captaincy

  • Geelong home games against “leaky” opponents = Tier 2 captaincy opportunities
  • Early-game Geelong assets become high-value loophole options
  • Avoid captaining players on difficult remaining fixtures or with rest concerns

For Bench & Emergencies

  • Favourable fixtures increase the value of cheap, playable rookies on those teams
  • Use the current $99k rookie wave (Hall-Kahan, Fitzgerald, Annand, etc.) to build depth around the Geelong run

DPP Timing Overlay

Several players are on track for forward eligibility after Round 17:

  • Sam Cumming (40.5% FWD)
  • Angus Anderson (47% FWD)
  • Paddy Cross (51% FWD)

Borderline: Nik Cox, Jake Soligo

These changes add another layer to fixture analysis — a player with a great run home who also gains DPP status becomes significantly more valuable.

Execution Timeline

  • Now – Round 16: Identify and execute 1–2 high-conviction trades into favourable fixtures (Geelong priority)
  • Round 17: Lock DPP eligibility decisions
  • Round 18–20: Monitor resting signals and adjust captaincy accordingly
  • Round 21–23: Protect roster, use bench depth, minimise risk

The coaches who treat fixture analysis as a core input — not an afterthought — will have a measurable edge in the run home and finals.

View the latest fixture graphics and community consensus →


Fixture sentiment and specific examples drawn from current X/SuperCoach community discussion (mid-June 2026). Always verify official remaining schedules, team news, and ladder implications before making roster decisions.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Why is everyone talking about Geelong’s fixture?+

Community analysis (including recent X discussion) describes Geelong’s remaining schedule as one of the most favourable — “crazy” or “dream run” in positive terms. High inside-50 opportunities, motivated players, and multiple home games create a structural scoring edge for their assets.

Which other teams have favourable run homes?+

St Kilda and Brisbane are also receiving positive mentions for softer remaining schedules. Wilkie (St Kilda) is expected to be fine. Always verify the exact opponents and any bye/rest overlaps before committing trades.

How should rest risk affect my trading?+

Once teams lock in top-four or finals positions, resting becomes real — especially for Brownlow/Coleman contenders. Factor this into any multi-week Geelong or other premium holds. Cross-check latest club statements and ladder position weekly.

What about tagging or tough matchups late in the season?+

Specific late games (e.g., North Melbourne vs Geelong in R23) are flagged for potential tagging. Not every Geelong game is automatically a high-scoring one. Always check the specific opponent and historical data.

How does fixture analysis tie into DPP changes?+

Players gaining forward eligibility after Round 17 (Cumming, Anderson, Cross and borderline cases) become more valuable for bye cover and finals flexibility. Plan your final trades around both the fixture and these eligibility updates.

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