Adelaide will have eight new Crows joining the Club after the 2019 AFL Women’s Draft on Tuesday, October 22.

The draft is being held at the Melbourne Showgrounds and will be live streamed on womens.afl, the AFLW App and the AFLW Facebook page from 10:10am CDT.

You can also follow all the picks on the Crows AFLW TwitterFacebook and Instagram.

Adelaide has picks 14, 37, 46, 53, 68, 83, 100 and 102.

For the first time, there will be 14 teams involved in the AFLW draft, with Gold Coast, Richmond, St Kilda and West Coast joining existing clubs Adelaide, Brisbane, Carlton, Collingwood, Fremantle, Geelong, GWS, Melbourne, North Melbourne and Western Bulldogs.

The Bulldogs have the first pick, with the draft order being decided by the reverse of the 2019 ladder, with changes made through trades and additional picks granted to the new clubs to help with their list builds.

Compensation picks were also given to some clubs who lost players to expansion sides.

In all, there are 102 live draft selections, but clubs have the option to not use its final pick and filling the list spot with an undrafted free agent at the end of the draft and there will be 30 players on each squad at final list lodgement.

Due to the part-time nature of the competition, players can nominate the region where they wish to be drafted.

Tasmania is aligned with North Melbourne, while Victoria is divided into three draft categories – Victoria (all eight clubs), Melbourne metro (seven clubs minus Geelong) and solely Geelong.

Queensland is also split into two zones between Brisbane and Gold Coast, with players able to nominate their zone of residence or the entire state.

Ahead of the draft, Crows AFLW coach Matthew Clarke said the Club was looking to add to their depth with South Australian talent.

“We’re really fortunate that it is a state-based draft and we have had some really strong SANFLW performances earlier in the year,” Clarke said.

“The majority of the list will come out of that, which is great because it will enable us to pick a diverse group.

"We've got a few over 30s and we've got some exciting young talent, but there probably is a little gap.

"The SANFLW allows us to address that and balances out the list a little bit."