Each club's most influential figure over your time

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  • 1eyedog
    Hall of Fame
    • Mar 2008
    • 13235

    #16
    Re: Each club's most influential figure over your time

    Mine are just the first one or two players that come into my head when I think of that club.

    Adelaide - Tony Modra
    Brisbane - Roger Merrett, John Gastev
    Carlton - Bruce Doull, Rod Ashman
    Collingwood - Peter Daicos
    Essendon - Terry Daniher, Simon Madden
    Fremantle - Clive Waterhouse
    Geelong - Gary Marlarkey, Gary Ablett Snr
    Hawthorn - Chris Langford, John Platten
    Melbourne - Robbie Flower
    North Melbourne - Wayne Carey, Keith Greg
    Port Adelaide - Chad Cornes
    Richmond - Mark Lee, Michael Roach
    St.Kilda - Trevor Barker, Tony Lockett
    Sydney - Barry Round, Rod Carter
    West Coast - John Worsfold
    Western Bulldogs - Kelvin Templeton, Chris Grant

    Templeton for me. He was the reason I went to the footy in the late 70s to early 80s and was a beacon for the club and the western suburbs during a very unsuccessful decade for the club. Every single kid had 31 on the back of their duffle coats in those days. He was the best player I have seen at our club and with Ablett Snr and perhaps Carey the best player I have seen over the 3 years that he dominated.
    But then again, I'm an Internet poster and Bevo is a premiership coach so draw your own conclusions.

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    • LostDoggy
      WOOF Member
      • Jan 2007
      • 8307

      #17
      Re: Each club's most influential figure over your time

      No one had any space for Warwick Capper? He's the first person I think of when I hear Brisbane and AFL in the same sentence.

      Lockett would be my pick for Sydney. He was the biggest name in the AFL for a while there and basically cemented the club's position in NSW when it wasn't looking all that flash.

      There's no doubt Smorgon/Rose have been the most influential figures at the Dogs over the last 20 years. No disrespect to any of our playing group over that time, but our biggest changes have been off-field: they changed the name of the club, landed our biggest sponsorship deals, massively updated our facilities, landed an expensive big name coach, attracted superstars to the Dogs... I'm not saying all of these moves have been great, but they have been incredibly influential.

      Comment

      • Missing Dog
        WOOF Member
        • Jan 2007
        • 8501

        #18
        Re: Each club's most influential figure over your time

        Originally posted by The Coon Dog
        I'm a bit older (well alot older) than Rocco, so I go back to the early 70's & have done a 3,2 & 1 for each of the 16 clubs (not the newbies). Mainly off the top of my head so romance, the first thought & their contribution.

        Freo probably the hardest for lack of quality & Hawthorn too just to limit it to three. Probably a bit contraversial with Plough, but he played, coached the reserves & seniors, won multiple B & F's & is a Life Member.


        Adelaide - Malcolm Blight, Mark Riccuito, Mark Bickley
        Brisbane - Michael Voss, Leigh Matthews, Jonathan Brown
        Carlton - Stephen Kernahan, Ron Barrassi, Bruce Doull
        Collingwood - Bob Rose, Nathan Buckley, Tony Shaw
        Essendon - Kevin Sheedy, James Hird, Simon Madden
        Fremantle - Matthew Pavlich, Mark Harvey, Aaron Sandilands
        Geelong - Mark Thompson, Frank Costa, Malcolm Blight
        Hawthorn - John Kennedy Snr, Alan Jeans, Leigh Matthews
        Melbourne - Jim Stynes, Robert Flower, Gary Lyon
        North Melbourne - Wayne Carey, Dennis Pagan, Ron Barrassi
        Port Adelaide - Mark Williams, Warren Treadrea, Gavin Wanganeen
        Richmond - Tom Hafey, Kevin Bartlett, Royce Hart
        St.Kilda - Trevor Barker, Robert Harvey, Nathan Bourke
        Sydney - Paul Kelly, Tony Lockett, Paul Roos
        West Coast - John Worsfold, Michael Malthouse, Glenn Jakovich
        Western Bulldogs - Chris Grant, Brad Johnson, Terry Wallace
        I would have Bob skilton there as number one never bagged the club when they headed north like so many others including my very own family he is the only glaring mistake you made Coon Dog

        Comment

        • The Coon Dog
          Bulldog Team of the Century
          • Jan 2007
          • 7579

          #19
          Re: Each club's most influential figure over your time

          Originally posted by strebla
          I would have Bob skilton there as number one never bagged the club when they headed north like so many others including my very own family he is the only glaring mistake you made Coon Dog
          He was before my time tho, otherwise I would have put in EJ, or Jock McHale, or John Coleman...
          [COLOR="Red"][B][U][COLOR="Blue"]85, 92, 97, 98, 08, 09, 10... Break the curse![/COLOR][/U][/B][/COLOR]

          Comment

          • Missing Dog
            WOOF Member
            • Jan 2007
            • 8501

            #20
            Re: Each club's most influential figure over your time

            Originally posted by The Coon Dog
            He was before my time tho, otherwise I would have put in EJ, or Jock McHale, or John Coleman...
            fair call but he always has been a part of that club which is why I would have him as an influential figure.

            Comment

            • Doc26
              Coaching Staff
              • Sep 2009
              • 3087

              #21
              Re: Each club's most influential figure over your time

              Originally posted by The Coon Dog
              I'm a bit older (well alot older) than Rocco, so I go back to the early 70's & have done a 3,2 & 1 for each of the 16 clubs (not the newbies). Mainly off the top of my head so romance, the first thought & their contribution.

              Freo probably the hardest for lack of quality & Hawthorn too just to limit it to three. Probably a bit contraversial with Plough, but he played, coached the reserves & seniors, won multiple B & F's & is a Life Member.


              Adelaide - Malcolm Blight, Mark Riccuito, Mark Bickley
              Brisbane - Michael Voss, Leigh Matthews, Jonathan Brown
              Carlton - Stephen Kernahan, Ron Barrassi, Bruce Doull
              Collingwood - Bob Rose, Nathan Buckley, Tony Shaw
              Essendon - Kevin Sheedy, James Hird, Simon Madden
              Fremantle - Matthew Pavlich, Mark Harvey, Aaron Sandilands
              Geelong - Mark Thompson, Frank Costa, Malcolm Blight
              Hawthorn - John Kennedy Snr, Alan Jeans, Leigh Matthews
              Melbourne - Jim Stynes, Robert Flower, Gary Lyon
              North Melbourne - Wayne Carey, Dennis Pagan, Ron Barrassi
              Port Adelaide - Mark Williams, Warren Treadrea, Gavin Wanganeen
              Richmond - Tom Hafey, Kevin Bartlett, Royce Hart
              St.Kilda - Trevor Barker, Robert Harvey, Nathan Bourke
              Sydney - Paul Kelly, Tony Lockett, Paul Roos
              West Coast - John Worsfold, Michael Malthouse, Glenn Jakovich
              Western Bulldogs - Chris Grant, Brad Johnson, Terry Wallace
              TCD, looking from the 70s onwards I find your list difficult to fault, we're obviously from a similar generation. I can even support your case for Wallets.

              Based on Rocco's criteria of
              * Onfield success
              * Lenth of service/multiple roles
              * Contribution to fiannces/marketing/promotion/club's overal success
              * 'Heart/romance

              My marginally adjusted list is:

              Adelaide - Malcolm Blight, Mark Riccuito, Andrew McLeod (big game player, 2 Norm Smith's, all class)
              Brisbane - Michael Voss, Leigh Matthews, Jonathan Brown
              Carlton - Stephen Kernahan, Alex Jesaulenko (Jezza was synonymous to me with Carlton), John Elliott (for bringing them success at any price)
              Collingwood - Nathan Buckley, Peter Daicos (like Jezza above, personified Collingwood to me), Eddie Maguire/Michael Malthouse
              Essendon - Kevin Sheedy, James Hird, Simon Madden
              Fremantle - Matthew Pavlich, Mark Harvey, Aaron Sandilands
              Geelong - Thompson/Costa/Cook (the great turnaround), Gary Ablett Snr, Gary Ablett Jnr (the Ablett's personify Geelong over the past two decades)
              Hawthorn - Agree, where do you start - Alan Jeans, Leigh Matthews, Lance Franklin (more for current day influence, just attend a Hawks family day to see his impact)
              Melbourne - Jim Stynes, Robert Flower, Gary Lyon
              North Melbourne - Wayne Carey, Dennis Pagan, Ron Barrassi
              Port Adelaide - Mark Williams, Warren Treadrea, Gavin Wanganeen
              Richmond - Tom Hafey, Kevin Bartlett, Royce Hart
              St.Kilda - Trevor Barker, Robert Harvey, Nick Riewoldt (more for his influence on games over the past ~10 years)
              Sydney - Paul Kelly, Tony Lockett, Paul Roos
              West Coast - Michael Malthouse, Glenn Jakovich, Chris Judd
              Western Bulldogs - Chris Grant, Doug Hawkins (for heart, soul & skill, for being a Braybrook boy and for being my favourite as a youngin), David Smorgon (for leading us to be a professional outfit)
              Last edited by Doc26; 22-08-2011, 12:01 PM.

              Comment

              • The Coon Dog
                Bulldog Team of the Century
                • Jan 2007
                • 7579

                #22
                Re: Each club's most influential figure over your time

                Originally posted by Doc26
                TCD, looking from the 70s onwards I find your list difficult to fault, we're obviously from a similar generation.
                AKA as a pair of old bastards!
                [COLOR="Red"][B][U][COLOR="Blue"]85, 92, 97, 98, 08, 09, 10... Break the curse![/COLOR][/U][/B][/COLOR]

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