Critics from rival clubs would say the Bombers had not traded picks because they were harder to deal with than the Senate crossbench. Alternatively, one could say they valued their picks too highly to part with them. Whatever the cause, they did not trade in seasoned quality (Brendon Goddard was a free agent). But 2017 brought a sea change. By then, the Bombers – with clear air – had recognised that there was now a mixed economy, and that, in a liberalised player market, teams could not solely draft and, further, that the blockbuster clubs could sell the likes of the Anzac Day and Dreamtime games to homecoming Giants and Suns. Thompson's old club, the Cats, had shifted 180 degrees from drafting to trading, often targeting locals with a yearning for home such as Patrick Dangerfield. So, in 2017, Essendon traded their first pick to Greater Western Sydney for Devon Smith (Geelong unable to afford him), rolled the dice on the talented, trouble-prone Jake Stringer and beat off Carlton to sign Adam Saad from the Suns. Last year, they doubled down on needs-based trading, winning the frenzied scramble for GWS star Dylan Shiel, paying the un-Essendon-like premium of two first-round choices for the midfielder. Of the storylines that were drowned out by the graceless post-game booing, the most consequential were these: that the Essendon Football Club, mired in mediocrity for a long time, appears back in the hunt, and that their conversion to Hawthorn-like trading has hastened their recovery from the debilitating impact of the saga.

Shiel, Saad and Stringer were dynamic on Anzac Day. Saad's willingness to take the game on from half-back and ability to run down opponents were notable, as was Stringer's mercurial talent around goal. Essendon identified the upside in troubled Bulldog Jake Stringer (right). Credit:Eddie Jim While it's true that Shiel butchered several long kicks, he also gained enormous territory – like a punter in American football, he gave them field position, when the ball had been largely confined to Collingwood's front half. Saad and Shiel provide a point of difference in comparison with other sides: extreme speed in each third of the field. Behind the ball, there's Saad and Conor McKenna, in the middle, Shiel and quickish Zach Merrett, with Andy McGrath mixing defence and midfield. In attack, Fantasia – the major absentee on Thursday – forms a speedy tandem with Anthony McDonald-Tipungwuti. Stringer, too, has a burst of pace that can find him space.

No team has every positional base covered and Essendon's limited depth will not permit too many injuries to their best 20. But they have a sound spine, beginning with Cale Hooker and Michael Hurley and, in Joe Daniher, an athletic 200-centimetre forward who can win games. Premierships have been claimed lately by clubs that fashion a game style or method around their unique personnel. Richmond, small in attack in 2017, improvised with quick small forwards and a predatory pressure game. The Dogs, without key position quality, swarmed the contest and used quick hands to spread. West Coast played a "kick-and-catch" style and defensive plan that maximised Jeremy McGovern, Tom Barrass and Shannon Hurn's intercepting skills and a multi-threat forward line. For John Worsfold, the challenge is to create a style that takes full toll of Essendon's speed, offensively and especially defensively. The pressuring of Collingwood from late in the second quarter was instrumental in the fightback. They ran them down, literally and on the scoreboard. The Bombers have a natural aptitude for taking the game on through the corridor; today, they are in the throes of training a new defensive system, imported from the Tigers via assistant coach Ben Rutten.

Essendon players seemed confused and deprived of ball-getting instincts in the opening two games, losing their bearings on Rutten's road map. Since then, defensive actions have gradually improved. The extent of that improvement, like Richmond in 2017 and Collingwood last year, will determine how high they ascend. Gotcha: Adam Saad runs down Josh Thomas on Anzac Day. Credit:AAP One small additional cost of the saga was that, in the interests of player welfare and with a debt of obligation, the Bombers offered all of the suspended players contracts for at least a season. Fringe players were retained when most clubs would have cut them. Conversely, the suspensions fast-tracked McDonald-Tipungwuti, Merrett, Fantasia and Darcy Parish, while also enabling them to gain the first pick in the draft in McGrath. The club also negotiated a salary cap top-up arrangement (about $1.7 million) with the AFL in 2016 – had those extra payments been inside the 2016 cap, the Dons would not have recovered for years. The signature of Hooker was a catalyst for others to stick. Had he taken up a massive Fremantle offer – following the exits of Paddy Ryder, Jake Carlisle and Jake Melksham – the Bombers likely would have been forced in to rebuild mode with a mass of early picks, as some commentators urged. Of the suspended dozen, only Michael Hibberd was lost (to Melbourne).

That the players acquired since 2017 are in the same mid-twenties age bracket as Merrett, Daniher and Fantasia was by design. They have a base to compete for the premiership, if not this year, then in 2020 and 2021, given the requisite pluck, luck and coaching acumen. Geelong next weekend will be a test equal to Collingwood. Regardless of where the Bombers land, on the field, they're out of the red and into the black.