Quality AFL Trading Cards
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Australian Football Cards For Sale
QUALITY AFL TRADING CARDS currently has in excess of 10,000 Scanlens Cards in stock which are not yet listed on the web as Store Stock Items.
If you are seeking to Complete Scanlens Sets, particularly between the years 1967 – 1987, and you cant find the cards you need on the site, please email us at peircefamily_aus@hotmail.com with your ” Cards Wanted List “. We will respond quickly with details of the Cards we can offer.
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Trust you enjoy the Australian Football Cards Collecting Hobby as much as we do .
Regards From JEFF & CAROL PEIRCE.
QUALITY AFL TRADING CARDS.
GUY McKENNA was recruited from the Claremont Football Club ( West Australian Football League ) in 1988 by the West Coast Eagles. He played 267 Games, kicking 28 Goals until his retirement as a player at the completion of the 2000 AFL Season. McKenna was the epitome of the modern Half Back Flanker , who transformed defence into attack with pinpoint disposals to team-mates upfield. He was a superbly balanced athlete who showed spontaneous anticipation to quell opposition forward thrusts, was unruffled by pressures throughout a game and was a very safe and sure contested mark. McKenna was highly durable and missed very few games during his career, due to injury.
Guy McKenna won many honours and awards in his playing career, including:- West Coast Eagles Rookie of the Year Award in 1988 ( also finished Runner-up in the Club Champion Award in the same year ), twice won the Eagles Club Champion Player Award in 1989 and 1999 ( also finished in the Top 3 on 5 other occasions ), won the Eagles Best Clubman Award in 1994, played in the 1992 and 1994 West Coast Eagles Premiership Teams ( also part of the 1991 losing Grand Final side ), was appointed Captain of the Eagles for the 1999 and 2000 Seasons, holds the honour of being the First Eagles Player to play 200 Games for the Club, made 24 Finals appearances for the Eagles, won selection in the 1989 VFL Team of the Year, was appointed Western Australia’s State of Origin Captain in 1996 and 1997, won selection in the All Australian Teams of 1989, 1991, 1993 and 1994, and was inducted to the Australian Football League Hall of Fame in 2009.
Following his retirement as a player, McKenna was enticed by the then Eagles Senior Coach, Michael Malthouse, to accept a role as an Assistant Coach at the Eagles for Seasons 2001 and 2002. He was then appointed Senior Coach at the Claremont Football Club ( West Australian Football League ) for the 2003 and 2004 Seasons. He took over this Club after they had been struggling for some time, and turned the Club’s fortunes around almost immediately. He guided the Club to the 2004 Grand Final, with considerable improvement in all aspects of their game, however Claremont were defeated on the day by a red hot Subiaco Football Club.
Then with 4 Seasons of Coaching experience under his belt, and with former Eagles Coach Michael Malthouse now seeking to add further expertise to his Collingwood Coaching Panel, McKenna accepted an Assistant Coaches role with the Magpies for the 2005 Season. He had a significant impact on Player Development through to the end of the 2008 Season. Flow-on benefits from his input were integral to the success of Collingwood’s 2010 Premiership winning Team.
During 2008, the Australian Football League ruled that a 17th Club ( from the Queensland Gold Coast ), was to enter the AFL Competition from the 2011 Season. This Plan included the need to build a talented playing list of youngsters, who were to play in the Under 18 Years Competition in the 2009 Season, then transfer to Senior Football Competition in the Victorian Football League for the 2010 Season, then complete effective assimilation to the Senior AFL Competition for the 2011 Season. The Gold Coast Suns Board selected Guy McKenna for this demanding Coaching Role from a high quality list of 4 candidates. After the Club’s 2 Development Seasons, the Suns Board had no hesitation in selecting McKenna as their inaugural Senior Coach for their launch into the 2011 AFL Season. McKenna had continued to impress Australian Football followers with his performances in completing the Club’s negotiation through the lower-tier Competitions in the 2009 and 2010 Seasons.
Guy McKenna has now completed a very challenging 2011 AFL Season in charge of the Gold Coast Suns unit, and has continued to respond in a professional and dignified manner. With 3 wins and 19 Losses, a number of close games and some comprehensive defeats, some AFL critics have questioned the Club’s overall performance. When you analyse the steady improvement shown by the majority of the young guns and the accumulating benefits of their exposure to Senior AFL Football, the Gold Coast Suns should be far more competitive in a greater number of games in the 2012 Season.
Guy McKenna, with his incredible Player Lieutenant, Gary Ablett, will demand and expect more , for longer periods of time in each Match, and at the required higher intensity levels, for all games in the upcoming 2012 AFL season. We can expect some surprising wins for the Gold Coast Suns, and trust they can arouse the supporter fraternity to fill all seats at the state of the art Metricon Stadium . Should a Premiership Victory prevail during his reign, we may see a re-naming of the facility to the Guy “Bluey” McKenna Stadium.
JOHN LONGMIRE was recruited from the Corowa/Rutherglen Football Club ( Ovens & Murray Football League, Victoria ) by the North Melbourne Kangaroos in 1988. He played 200 Games, kicking 511 Goals until his retirement as a player at the conclusion of the 1999 AFL Season.
The Kangaroos had identified Longmire as a powerful, well-built goal-kicking Full Forward after he had won the Country League’s Leading Goalkicker Award at the age of 17 years. He struggled to achieve his potential in his first 2 Seasons at the Roos in 1988 and 1989, due to the quicker intensity of games and the heavier defensive checking techniques employed by opposing backmen which were successfully restricting his impact.
John Longmire duly fulfilled his early promise with 2 outstanding Seasons in 1990 and 1991 when he kicked 98 Goals and 91 Goals for the respective Seasons. He formed part of a match-winning Goal Kicking partnership withh fellow North Melbourne Champion, Wayne Carey, which prevailled until the end of the 1995 Season. Longmire’s dominance in the 1990 Season is evidenced by his winning of the Coleman Medal as Leading Goalkicker in the League, winner of the Syd Barker Medal as Best and Fairest Player at the Kangaroos, and selection for both the New South Wales and Victorian Interstate Representative Teams.
Longmire was only 19 years of age in 1990, with individual Games Goal tallies of 12 and 14 during the Season clearly demonstrating his class. He was a very accurate and lengthy drop punt kick for goal, was quick and decisive on the lead and had a very strong pair of hands. There are only a small number of players in VFL/AFL history who have achieved Longmire’s feat of 5 Goals or more on 56 occasions in his career. He was the North Melbourne Kangaroos Leading Goalkicker for the 1990-1994 Seasons inclusive.
John Longmire had missed very few Games through injury from 1990-1995, and even after his standout seasons of 1990/91 continued to average 3-4 Goals per game played. Disaster struck in the form of a serious knee injury, which required a Total Reconstruction, causing him to miss all games for the 1996 Season. He was therefore unable to play an on-field role in the North Melbourne Premiership victory in 1996, but as a preview of things to come, he proved of invaluable assistance in maintaining a good rapport between the players and Coach Denis Pagan.
When Longmire returned to the playing field in Season 1997, after working intensely on improving his aerobic capacity, he found a niche at Centre Half Back, and played a number of support roles, including that as a back-up Ruckman. A number of injuries curtailed his game day influence in his final 2 seasons as a player in 1998 and 1999, however he achieved just reward by playing his part in the 1999 North Melbourne Premiership Victory ( the Grand Final was to be his final career match ).
John Longmire ventured into the Media after his retirement as a player and succeeded in the role as Host of an Australian Football Television Show during the 2000 and 2001 Seasons. The Sydney Swans then contracted Longmire as an Assistant Coach from the 2002 AFL Season. He became a successful and crucial cog in the Swans Coaching group that developed a highly competitive outfit, which included victory in the 2005 Season Grand Final and a heart-breakiing loss to the West Coast Eagles in the 2006 AFL Season Grand Final.
Prior to the 2008 AFL Season, incumbent Sydney Swans Coach, Paul Roos, appointed Longmire to the role as the Swans Coaching Co-ordinator. This move pre-empted the Coaching Succession Plan which culminated in Longmire’s appointment to the Swans Senior Coaching role on the retirement of Paul Roos at the end of the 2010 AFL Season.
John Longmire has contributed strongly to a highly consistent period in the Sydney/South Melbourne Swans Club History with Finals appearances becoming the norm over the past decade. He has special qualities to extract the maximum performance from all players in his Team on special occasions. During the recent 2011 AFL Season, victories over the Geelong Cats and the West Coast Eagles at their Home Grounds are 2 examples of Longmire’s tactical nouse. Finals victory over the St Kilda Saints and a narrow loss to the Hawthorn Hawks indicate continued improvement can be expected.
John Longmire has demonstrated astute Game Planning, incisive game day player allocation and appears to enjoy wide-spread Player respect. The Sydney Swans will enjoy further Finals action at the business end of the 2012 AFL Season. The Club’s mid-range players need to develop commensurately with the First and Second Year Players from the 2011 Season, to allow Longmire to take the Swans to a Preliminary Final or a Grand Final appointment in 2012.
( Image courtesy of dailytelegraph.com.au ).
SCOTT WATTERS was recruited from the South Fremantle Football Club ( West Australian Football League ), by the West Coast Eagles in 1989. Watters had won the Best and fairest Player Award at South Fremantle in 1987 after earlier being part of Western Australia’s First Teal Cup winning side in 1985. He played 46 Games, kicking 13 Goals for the Eagles from 1989 to 1992, having been part of the losing Eagles Grand Final side of 1991. Watters was unlucky to incur a late season injury in 1992 which prevented him from taking his place in the Eagles First Premiership winning team.
Scott Watters was drafted to the Sydney Swans for the 1993 Season as part of the deal that secured West Coast the No. 1 Draft Pick, Drew Banfield. Watters enjoyed the lower profile that players had in Sydney, and aided by an injury-free season, played many games which were equal to the best football of his career. He played 37 Games, kicking 11 Goals for the Swans during the 1993-1994 Seasons and was runner-up in the Sydney Best and Fairest Player Award for the 1993 Season.
Watters was enticed home to Western Australia with appointment as the inaugural Club Vice Captain at the Frementle Dockers for the 1995 Season. He played 26 Games, kicking 6 Goals for the Dockers until a number of injuries caused him to announce his retirement as an AFL player at the completion of the 1996 Season. Watters then chose to play for the South Fremantle Football Club in the W.A.F.L until the 1998 Season. Scott Watters had good pace, being quick off the mark, was very elusive in avoiding tackles from opposition players and wrong-footing them, as well as being a slick and accurate disposer of the ball with either hand or foot, on both sides of his body. He was also a surprisingly strong and safe overhead mark of the ball for his smaller stature.
Post his Australian Football playing career, Watters began cutting his teeth as a Radio Commentator with Perth Station 6PR and worked for Melbourne Sports Radio Station SEN. He first ventured into the Coaching ranks when he was appointed Coach of the Subiaco Colts Team for Season 2006. He immediately displayed the knowledge and passion that convinced the Subiaco Football Club to offer him the Senior Coaches role for Season 2007. Watters piloted Subiaco to Grand Final victories in his first 2 years of 2007 and 2008, before failing to win a treble with the Club, with a loss in the 2009 Grand Final. His status as a potential Senior Coach at AFL level was strongly enhanced with his achievement of a 78% win/loss record whilst in the Subiaco Senior Coaching role.
The Collingwood Magpies secured Watters as an Assistant Coach for the 2010 and 2011 Seasons, where he was primarily responsible for the development of their defensive lines and game strategies. Premiership success for the Magpies in 2010 and Grand Final runners-up for the 2011 Season, appeared to put the finishing touches on Scott Watters preparation for selection as an AFL Senior Club Coach. Departing Magpies Senior Coach, Michael Malthouse, had expressed the strengths of Watters coaching abilities in a number of interviews during his last 2 Seasons at the Magpies.
On 15 October 2011 , the St Kilda Saints Football Club confirmed Scott Watters as their appointment to their Senior Coaches Role, having won the job in a close contest against ex Geelong/Fitzroy player, Ken Hinkley. The St Kilda vacancy was created by the defection of existing contracted Senior Coach Ross Lyon to the Fremantle Dockers, after their sacking of Mark Harvey.
Scott Watters seems to have inherited one of the toughest Coaching Roles for the upcoming 2012 AFL Season, with the Saints playing list , as a whole, appearing to be on the wane. There would need to be significant improvement across the Current Squad , should the Saints be considered to be certain of 2012 finals action. Watters has a proven track record of success, and his special qualities will surely need to be utilized to the limit.
( Image courtesy of afl.com.au ).
BRENTON SANDERSON was recruited from the Sturt ( South Australian National Football League ) Football Club by the Adelaide Crows in 1992, playing 6 Games, kicking 4 Goals in the 1992- 1993 Seasons. The Collingwood Magpies recruited Sanderson for Season 1994, however hamstring injuries restricted him to only 4 Games , kicking 1 Goal . He acknowledges that sharing a home with Nathan Buckley during 1994, was a defining moment in raising his awareness to the need to develop a more professional attitude towards training and preparation for Games. Sanderson transferred to the Geelong Cats for Season 1995, where he proved his worth by playing 199 Games, kicking 29 Goals, until his retirement as a player at the completion of the 2005 Season.
Brenton Sanderson developed into a very fine and reliable half-back flanker for the Cats, being a sure and safe ball-handler, a precise disposer of the ball by hand and foot, and was renowned for generating a lot of run from the defensive half. He had his best Season in 2001, when he not only won the Geelong Cats Best and Fairest Player Award ( Carji Greeves Medal ), but gained selection in the Australian Team for the International Series. The Cats narrow loss to the Sydney Swans in the 2005 Semi- Final sadly brought down the curtain on a fine playing career at the Cattery.
Port Power Football Club signed Sanderson as an Assistant/ Deveopment Coach for the 2006 Season prior to the Geelong Cats appointing him as one of their Assistant Coaches for Season 2007. He was primarily responsible for the Geelong defence, and the true measure of his success in the role is enveloped in the 2007, 2009 and 2011 Premiership- winning Geelong Cats performances. During the 2007 – 2011 Seasons Brenton Sanderson also played an integral role in co-ordinating the Cats training programs.
On 19 September 2011 the Adelaide Crows Football Club appointed Brenton Sanderson as their Senior Coach for 3 Seasons from 2012. He becomes the first Crows ex-player to gain appointment as the Senior Coach. The timing of the appointment meant Sanderson was unable to complete the 2011 Season with the Geelong Cats, and it was touching to see players and coaches acknowledge his presence in the crowd shortly after the Cats Grand Final victory.
Brenton Sanderson presented an impeccable Coaching Application interview to the Adelaide Crows selection panel which included Crows CEO Steven Trigg, premiership Player Nigel Smart and Special Appointee, AFL Player of the Century, Leigh Matthews. The commitment he has displayed throughout his involvement as a player and Coach, together with his comprehensive understanding of the modern game, and the inherently strong player list he has available at the Crows, should see a corresponding rise up the AFL Ladder in Season 2012. It is the authors opinion that the Crows will be very competitive in the 2012 Finals Series and potential AFL Premiers within 5 years.
(Image courtesy of news.com.au.)
BRENDAN McCARTNEY was officially appointed on 19 September 2011 to a 3 year contract as the Senior Coach at the Western Bulldogs. He is one of the few exceptions to the rule, whereby he does not have a playing history at the highest AFL level. However, when his Australian Rules Football history of involvement is closely examined, he brings very high qualities and work ethics to the table.
McCartney played 87 Games for the Newtown Football Club in the Geelong Football League prior to injury cutting short his playing career. His thirst for the game stimulated his early involvement in Coaching the Newtown Reserves Team in the 1990 Season. McCartney’s first Senior Coaching challenge evolved at the Ocean Grove Football Club in the Bellarine Peninsula League, outside of Geelong. His ability to develop players into a cohesive unit succeeded in delivering the Club as runners-up in Season 1993, then an amazing run of 4 successive Premierships from 1994 – 1997.
Brendan McCartney had impressed Geoff Gieschen with his knowledge, determination and Coaching skills which led to the Richmond Tigers Football Club appointing him to an Assistant Coach and Football Development role , where he performed admirably for Seasons 1998 and 1999. His reputation for dedication to his Players and the Club alerted the Geelong Cats to the enormous local talent that they had temporarily let slip through their fingers, so they approached him, then confirmed McCartney’s appointment as an Assistant Coach for Season 2000.
He was to spend the next 11 years at Geelong, where he initially built a powerful defensive unit , which retains much of its structure today. Star defender Matthew Scarlett and Dual Premiership Captain Tom Harley are 2 products of the McCartney school of Coaching. He was later to assume responsibility for the Cats all powerful midfield structure. Brendan McCartney spent countless hours getting to know his players, which strongly aided their progress both on and off the field. He was instrumental in guiding younger players like Corey Enright and Joel Corey through the mire and rigours of a balanced Australian Rules Football Career, and personal fulfilment away from the pressures of football at the highest level.
McCartney was widely acclaimed for his devotion and compassion at Geelong, which was integral to the powerful Cats performances over the past decade, and it was no surprise when the Essendon Bombers contracted him as an Assistant Coach, responsible for the forward line, for the 2011 Season. He had won the prestigious AFL Assistant Coach of the Year Award for 2010 ( voted by the AFL Coaches Association ), and his friend Mark Thompson had returned to the Essendon Bombers in an Assistant Coaches role.
In a recent interview, McCartney inspired confidence for the Western Bulldogs faithful, with his self-assuredness and the methodology he will utilise to meld the Club into a Premiership threat once again. For those of us who had not been fully aware of McCartney’s contributions as a Development Coach over many Seasons, we need only look at Essendon Bombers great James Hird and his reference to Brendan McCartney in an interview on the Foxtel Network early in 2011, when he said ” I can’t imagine there is a better Coach in Australia in the way he develops players and teaches them to play football. I’m surprised someone like that hasn’t had a chance at Senior Level, because in my time in footy I don’t think I have met a better Coach”.
MARK NEELD was recruited from the St Josephs Geelong ( Victoria ) Football Club by the Geelong Cats in 1990. He played 48 Games kicking 17 Goals for the Cats during the 1990-1993 Seasons before being traded to the Richmond Tigers. Neeld spent the 1994-1996 Seasons at Richmond where he played 26 Games kicking 16 Goals. He had his best season in 1991 when he played 21 Games for the Cats, including 3 Finals Matches. Neeld was regarded as a handy spare parts player, who could be relied upon to perform admirably in either attacking or defensive roles.
Mark Neeld was appointed as Captain Coach of the Old Geelong Football Club in the Victorian Amateur Football Association in 1997. He plied this role for a second season in 1998, before settling solely on the Coaches role for season 1999. Neeld then began an incredible 4 Season stint from 2000- 2003 as Coach of the Ocean Grove Football Club ( Bellarine Football League , Country Victoria ), where his developing Coaching expertise delivered 4 Premierships in succession, an amazing feat. Ironically, he then returned to Coach the St Josephs Football Club ( the same Club he played for prior to recruitment by the Geelong Cats ) for Season 2004.
Seasons 2005- 2007 saw Neeld fast track his Development as a potential Senior AFL Coach, when he succeeded in the role as Senior Coach at the Western Jets in the TAC ( Transport Accident Commission sponsorship ) Cup competition for players aged Under 18 . His reputation for producing quality young footballers, who graduated to Senior AFL Football, attracted the Collingwood Magpies to appoint him as an Assistant Coach for Season 2008. Neeld spent the 2008 and 2009 Seasons moulding a cohesive, efficient and miserly defence prior to gaining the crucial role as Coach of the engine room mid-field for Season 2010. The stellar seasons enjoyed by Dane Swan, Scott Pendlebury and Alan Didak, who were all selected as All Australians, further confirmed Neeld’s potential as a Senior AFL Coach in-waiting. There is no doubt that Neeld’s influences in both the defensive and mid-field areas were instrumental in the Collingwood Magpies 2010 Season Premiership victory.
The Collingwood Magpies completed an outstanding 2011 Home and Away Season by clearly finishing on top of the AFL Ladder. During the latter part of the Season, a number of AFL Clubs were actively seeking new Senior Coaches for the 2012 Season, and Neeld’s name was continually put forward by the Media as a major person of interest. On the 17 September 2011, the Melbourne Demons Football Club confirmed the appointment of Mark Neeld as their Senior Coach on a 3 year contract from the 2012 Season. As is customary in present AFL Club protocol, Neeld was asked to vacate his Collingwood position immediately, thereby missing the rest of the 2011 Finals Series with the Magpies.
Mark Neeld has completed a lengthy and successful apprenticeship as an Australian Football Coach, and his impact on the youthfully talented Melbourne Demons Team will bear close inspection by all AFL followers from the First Game of the 2012 AFL Season.
BOB PRATT was recruited from Mitcham ( Victoria ) Football Club in 1929 by the South Melbourne Swans ( now known as Sydney Swans ). Pratt played 158 Games, kicking 681 Goals from 1930 to 1939 and is acknowledged as one of the VFL/AFL’s greatest ever Goal Kicking Forwards. His Australian Football League Hall of Fame card is available at qualityafltradingcards.com.
Pratt began his Senior career at South Melbourne in 1930 as a Centre Half Forward, and it was not until the second match of the 1932 Season that he was selected as the Swans Full Forward, a position he was to dominate for the balance of his playing career. He quickly became a resounding success in the key forward role, with all spectators becoming excited and enthralled at his pure athleticism and high marking exploits , which stamped his authority on many games. Pratt was also very capable at ground level and used his sharp turn of speed to beat opponents to the ball.
Bob Pratt was a long and very accurate set shot kick for Goal, however he also kicked many goals on the run, or while turning, and displayed remarkable snap-shooting accuracy closer to goals and on tight angles. He gained immediate status as the focal point for South Melbourne’s forward thrusts, but it was his individual class, talent and skills that won him many goals, rather than being spoon-fed on leads by his team-mates. Pratt ended the 1932 Season as the Leading Goalkicker for the Swans with 71 Goals ( having kicked 7 goals in his first game as Full Forward ).
Bob Pratt’s stature was increasing rapidly in 1933 when he kicked 109 Goals to be the VFL Leading Goalkicker for the Season, won selection in the Victorian State Team , and contributed strongly to the South Melbourne Swans Grand Final winning Premiership Team. Pratt underlined his standing as one of the greatest Australian Football Players in history by winning further VFL Leading Goalkicker Awards in both the 1934 and 1935 Seasons, although the Swans, as favourites, lost both Season’s Grand Finals.
Pratt’s Goal Kicking tally of 150 Goals in the 1934 Season is the all-time VFL/AFL Goal Kicking Record Tally ( equalled only by Hawthorn’s Peter Hudson in the 1971 Season ). In 1934 Pratt scored individual goal tallies of 15 .v. Essendon, 12 . v. Footscray, 11 . v. Carlton and another 11 Goals in the return match against Essendon. Bob Pratt scored a further 103 Goals in the 1935 Season, and 2 days prior to the Grand Final he was struck by a truck, resulting in injuries that prevented him from playing, and the Swans , who were hot favourites for the Flag, were defeated by the Collingwood Magpies for the Premiership.
Bob Pratt suffered a number of persistent injuries during the 1936, 1937 and 1938 Seasons during which he was restricted to a handful of games. A serious ankle injury was thought to have brought his career to a premature end in 1938, but he returned for the 1939 Season in which he played 16 Games, kicking 72 Goals. Pratt controversially transferred to the Victorian Football Association Club, Coburg in 1940, kicking 80 Goals in his first Season, before kicking an incredible 183 Goals in the 1941 Season. Pratt’s Australian Football Career was effectively ended when he enlisted in the Royal Australian Air Force in 1942, and saw Overseas War Service in the Pacific and Borneo.
Bob Pratt was an inaugural inductee to the Australian Football League Hall of Fame in 1996, and was subsequently elevated to the status of AFL Hall of Fame Legend. He was selected in the South Melbourne/Sydney Swans Team of the Century, appointed as an Official Swans Legend in 2009, and has the Sydney Swans Leading Goalkicker Award named in his honour ( The Bob Pratt Trophy ). In 2009, the Australian Newspaper nominated Pratt as one of the 25 greatest VFL/AFL footballers to have never won the Brownlow Medal.
Bob Pratt passed away in early 2001 at the age of 88 years, and had not experienced a second Premiership victory in his lifetime ( Sydney Swans/South Melbourne under the astute coaching of Paul Roos eventually winning that additional elusive Premiership in 2005).
PERCY BEAMES was recruited from the Ballarat ( Victoria ) Football Club by the Melbourne Demons in 1931, and played 213 Games kicking 323 Goals until his retirement as a Player at the end of the 1944 Season. The Beames 1996 Australian Football League Hall of Fame card is available at qualityafltradingcards.com. He is regarded as one of the Demons greatest ever players and was an outstanding all round sportsman. Beames has the distinction of being the only Australian Football Player to have played more then 200 Games of VFL/AFL Football and more than 200 Games of First Class Cricket.
Percy Beames was a stockily built Rover who was acknowledged as being most gifted and highly talented, with impeccable disposal skills on both sides of his body. His consistency is best demonstrated by his naming as one of the Demons Best Players on 132 occasions in his 213 Games played for the Club. He was never dropped from the League side, and only ever missed matches due to injury. Beames was the First Melbourne Demons footballer in their history to have played 200 Senior Games and was awarded Life Membership of the Club.
He played in an era of outstanding on-ballers, and testimony to his extraordinary talents were his selection in the Victorian State Teams of 1932, 1934, 1935, 1937 and 1938. Further proof of his reputation as a big-game player is obvious when we refer to the Melbourne Demons website summaries of the Demons Premiership Years of 1939, 1940 and 1941 in which he was a leading contributor ; his Grand Final winning performances were - 1939- Best Player- P. Beames ( 4 Goals ), 1940- Best Player- P. Beames ( 2 Goals ), and 1941- Best Player – P. Beames ( 6 Goals ). If the equivalent of the Norm Smith Medal were to be awarded in his playing days, Percy Beames would have won 3 Medals in succession, an astonishing achievement.
Due to the exodus of many quality footballers who had volunteered for active service in the Second World War, Melbourne dropped from their pinnacles of success of 1939-1941, to that of an an average performer for the balance of the war years. This period coincided with the last 3 years of the Beames playing career, which he spent as the Playing Coach of the Melbourne Demons. Percy Beames was an inaugural inductee to the Australian Football League Hall of Fame in 1996, and was selected in the Melbourne Demons Team of the Century as a Forward Pocket/Rover in 2000.
Percy Beames also played Cricket for the Melbourne Club in the Victorian Cricket Association from 1931 to 1947, which included 4 Premiership-winning Teams and had an overall Career Batting Average of 47.44. During this period he also played 18 Matches for Victoria, scoring 1186 runs at an average of 51.56. He scored 3 First Class Centuries for Victoria in Interstate Cricket and was the State Captain for the 1945-1946 Season.
Beames accepted an appointment as the Chief Sports writer for the Melbourne Age Newspaper in 1946 and covered Australian Rules Football and Australian Cricket for over 30 years. This role also encompassed International Tours covering the Australian Cricket Team’s performances at the major venues for World Cricket.
Percy Beames is a Champion in Australian folklore, achieving the highest of recognition for his sporting prowess and delivering precise commentary and judgements on Australia’s two leading sports of his generation, with unwavering honesty and integrity.
Vale Percy Beames who passed away in 2004 at the age of 92 years.
( image courtesy of Select Australia 1996 AFL Hall of Fame Football Card Series ).
BILL HUTCHISON was recruited from Westmeadows Football Club ( Victoria ) by the Essendon Bombers in 1942, and played 290 Games kicking 496 Goals until his retirement as a player at the end of the 1957 Season. He is acknowledged as one of the finest rovers ever and one of the greatest Australian Football Players in the history of the game. Football Cards for Hutchison and many Essendon Bombers players are available at qualityafltradingcards.com.
Hutchison displayed blistering pace over the ground, had exceptional agility in easily baulking around bigger opponents, and ran out every game in what seemed a tireless manner. His high levels of fitness, skilful anticipation and judgement, allowed Hutchison to find space regularly throughout a game, and when in attack, he was a very accurate Goal-Kicker. The Legendary Essendon Champion, Dick Reynolds stated that Bill Hutchison was the ” Greatest Essendon Player of all time “.
Almost every accolade was bestowed upon Hutchison during his lengthy career, and includes the following individual Honours and Awards; Essendon Club Leading Goalkicker in 1948, Essendon Best and Fairest Player Awards ( W.S. Crichton Medal ) in 1946, 1948, 1950, 1952, 1953, 1955 and 1956, Member of Bombers Premiership sides in 1942, 1946, 1949 and 1950, Essendon Club Captain from 1951 to 1957, played 28 Finals Games for Essendon, selection in the Essendon Team of the Century, selection as a Victorian Representative in years 1945 through to 1954 and again in 1956 ( Captain in 1953 and 1956 ), selection as an All Australian in 1953 and 1956, Dual Winner of the Brownlow Medal in years 1952 and 1953, selection as an inaugural inductee to the Australian Football League Hall of Fame in 1996 and confirmed as Legend Status.
Bill Hutchison was a dominating and inspirational player for the Bombers, despite being only 174 cm tall and lightly framed at 70kgs. His standing in the game is clearly demonstrated with his consistently high Brownlow Medal Voting performances which saw him finish as runner-up in 1955, third in both 1948 and 1951, as well as sixth in 1950. His record at Essendon includes 7 Best and Fairest Player Awards ( equal with Dick Reynolds ) , and he was runner-up in this awrd in both 1949 and 1954. At one point in his career he played 97 Games in succession, which is testament to his fitness and toughness.
“Hutchy” as he was affectionately known, always played the game in a scrupulously fair manner, and remained a very humble and modest man throughout his career. He was an ornament to the Game of Australian Rules Football and his early death in 1982, at the age of 59 Years, was a tragic loss for the Essendon Bombers and for the sport as a whole. Bill Hutchison was a finely tuned athlete who worked very hard at the skills of the game, his quality and class illuminated both on and off the field, and all of his attributes could clearly be followed as the blueprint for success. He was the Heart and Soul of the Essendon Bombers in his era.
( Image courtesy of bhf.org.au )