Norm Smith Medal – Collingwood Forever https://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au The complete history of Australia's greatest sporting club Tue, 30 Jan 2024 23:13:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.0.21 Scott Pendlebury https://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/players/scott-pendlebury/ Wed, 16 Jul 2014 12:02:49 +0000 http://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/players/scott-pendlebury/ Nathan Buckley https://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/players/nathan-buckley/ Wed, 16 Jul 2014 12:01:59 +0000 http://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/players/nathan-buckley/ He overcame the burden of expectation and from his earliest days was central to the Collingwood game plan with strategies built over his magnificent kicking in after behinds were scored. Under state of origin rules he was bound to the Allies team and at times in these games it seemed that he was one of the few men who could build passion about the concept. Collingwood jealously guarded its hottest property and was relieved when he re-signed with the Pies after Port Adelaide had tried to woo him back to Adelaide when his contract ran out at the end of 1996. Similarly at the end of 1999 Collingwood made no secret of the fact that it wanted to sign him for life. Buckley had to work against a public perception in his early years that he was self-centred and arrogant, but to the contrary his coach Leigh Matthews said that early in his career he tried to short-pass too often. Buckley has also admitted that he tried to hide his own feelings of insecurity behind a facade of self-assurance. When rumors were flying in 1993 that he would cross from Brisbane to Collingwood, the Magpie players gave him a hard time when the teams met. As a result Buckley played his worst game for the year. Ironically one of the players giving him a serve that day was Craig Kelly who later became his manager. Even when Buckley became captain of the Magpies in 1999 he realised that he had to tone down his on-field criticism of teammates and remain positive and at the start of 2001 took part in a special leadership course to modify his approach. If the football public needed any reminder that Nathan Buckley was one of the most talented players in the AFL competition it came during the international series played between Australia and Ireland at the end of the 1999 season. Buckley, the captain of Australia, adapted better than any other Australian player to the vagaries of a lighter, round ball. In 1999 Buckley was Collingwood’s leader in more ways than one. Despite missing five games after he fractured a jaw, Buckley was a runaway winner in the club’s best and fairest award and finished equal third in the Brownlow with 20 votes. His powerful kicking, strong and clearcut ball handling and possession winning ability were a constant menace against opposing sides. Buckley was in sensational form for most of the 2000 season, then injured a knee against Port Adelaide in Round 13 and although he missed just the one match, his form tapered. Even so, Buckley’s extraordinary ability to win the ball saw him dominate many games and he eventually polled 18 Brownlow votes, just six behind Melbourne’s Shane Woewodin. He won All Australian honours for a fifth consecutive year and as expected, romped away with Collingwood’s best and fairest for 2000. He was so dominant as a player that the fact he came third in the 2001 best and fairest made news in its own right. Over the summer of 2001-2002 Buckley reduced his weight to 90 kg after having usually played at 95 kgs. He later led the Magpies brilliantly in their narrow 2002 grand final loss to Brisbane. His consolation was a Norm Smith Medal as best on the ground. Buckley had a wonderful 2003 season, culminating in a Brownlow Medal triumph. He polled 22 votes to share honours with Sydney’s Adam Goodes and Adelaide’s Mark Ricciuto. Buckley also led the Magpies to another grand final in 2003, but again they went down to the Lions. The Collingwood star was again selected as an All-Australian in 2004 and he won his sixth Copeland Trophy adding to the best and fairests he won in 1994, 1996, 1998, 1999 and 2000. In 2004 he began fairly well, but a hamstring injury sidelined him for the best part of two months. Despite the setback he still ran seventh in the club championship and was an effective player. The hamstring problems re-occurred early in 2005 and there was even doubt over whether he would continue, but he came back strongly in the second half of the year. By 2006 his role had been modified with more time on the bench and less on the ball, but he remained a potent force and the man to whom Collingwood looked when things were going badly. Buckley retired when it was clear to all that his body was finally wearing down in 2007. After two years in the football media, Buckley became a key cog in Collingwood’s coaching succession plan when, in July 2009, it was announced he would learn the ropes for two years as an assistant to Mick Malthouse before taking the reigns in his own right in 2012. While the intention was for Malthouse to remain as Director of Coaching, he left the club after his coaching tenure ended after the 2011 Grand Final. Buckley led the Magpies into a Preliminary Final in his first year at the helm before guiding his young side into the Elimination Final the following year.]]> Tony Shaw https://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/players/tony-shaw/ Wed, 16 Jul 2014 12:00:56 +0000 http://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/players/tony-shaw/ Len Thompson https://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/players/len-thompson/ Wed, 16 Jul 2014 12:00:08 +0000 http://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/players/len-thompson/ reallyset him apart – was his agility. He moved like a rover at times, and his ground play and ball skills were astonishing for one so tall. He could pick the ball up on the run, sidestep, handball beautifully, short pass or kick long. He could do it all. If you doubt this, search YouTube for footage of Collingwood’s 1973 preliminary final over Richmond and look for his first goal, about halfway into the opening term. Max Richardson taps the ball out to him and Thommo speeds away from Tiger wingman Francis Bourke and sinks a long goal from centre half-forward. Then remind yourself that this bloke is nearly 200cm tall – and he’s playing like a midfielder. Despite his placid nature – Thommo really was the classic gentle giant on the field – he had an unhappy knack of courting controversy. The most famous instance of that, of course, came during the 1970 pre-season, when he and Des Tuddenham went on ‘strike’ for a few weeks in a fight for better pay and conditions, sparked by the club’s decision to spend big on WA recruit Peter Eakins. The strike was front page news for weeks. It was eventually resolved, but the pair’s actions left a bitter aftertaste. To make matters worse, that 1970 incident set a trend: seemingly every second year or so Thommo would threaten to leave, or announce he was leaving, if his latest wage demands weren’t met. The result was that, despite winning three more Copelands in the 1970s and the Brownlow Medal in 1972, Big Len often felt that he was resented by some fans, and certainly by some officials. That feeling was exacerbated when Collingwood pushed him out at the end of the 1978 season. He had finally been named skipper that year but Tommy Hafey decided to off-load him as part of a major clearout at season’s end. Thommo desperately wanted to stay and become the club’s first 15-year player since Lou Richards, but instead he had to end his career at South Melbourne, then Fitzroy, eventually finishing with a grand total of 305 games. He returned to Victoria Park briefly in the mid-1980s as part of the ill-fated New Magpies regime. Len Thompson’s stellar career stamps him as one of the greatest Collingwood footballers of all time. Yet he still felt there was resentment towards him even after retirement, and he admitted to feeling uncomfortable or ‘on edge’ at club functions. But all that changed after Eddie McGuire took over as president. His whole-hearted attempts to bring disenchanted former players back into the fold had perhaps their greatest success with Thommo, who finally found his way back to widespread acclamation in the early 2000s. When he died of a heart attack in 2007, aged just 60, the club mourned. But Thommo’s journey with Collingwood wasn’t quite finished yet. In 2014, his Brownlow Medal and three of his Copelands were donated to the club by an anonymous benefactor. They now form part of the club’s archives, where they will forever remain as testament to an extraordinary and yet perhaps still undervalued career. – Michael Roberts]]>