Collingwood has officially nominated Darcy Moore, son of club champion Peter, as a potential father-son selection ahead of Monday's bidding meeting.

Moore played 13 games for the Oakleigh Chargers in the TAC Cup competition in 2014, captaining the club to a premiership against the Calder Cannons.

In his 13 games, he kicked 15 goals from 29 scoring shots, as well as averaging 11.2 disposals, 5.2 marks (2.1 contested) and 1.5 tackles per game.

Moore kicked five goals in his last two finals, including two against the Cannons on Grand Final day.

He also played a single game for Collingwood's VFL team as its 23rd man against Essendon in round 18, when he collected eight disposals, one mark and two tackles while spending time at either end of the ground.

Darcy's famous father, Peter, played 172 games for Collingwood between 1974 and 1982, before making a further 77 appearances for Melbourne between 1983 and 1987.

He won the 1979 Brownlow Medal while wearing the Black and White before adding his second in his new guise as a Demon in 1984.

How the father-son bidding process works
The bidding meeting for nominated players will held at 10am on Monday, immediately before the commencement of the trade period.

Each other club in the competition has the option to bid, in reverse ladder order, for the nominated players.

If a bid is made, the club that nominated the father-son player must use its next available selection if it wishes to retain its hold on the player.

If a club nominating the father-son player declines to match the selection nominated, the club with the successful bid must use that selection at the National Draft to select the player.

Any club that makes a successful bid on a father-son selection is bound to the selection they nominate.

If no bid is made by another club, the club that nominated the father-son player will forfeit its last selection in the National Draft to select the player.

Collingwood currently holds three selections (No. 8, No. 28, No. 45) within the top 50.

Note: The compensation selections that have been activated by the clubs for the upcoming 2014 National Draft are not part of the bidding process.