alan didak – 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 Collingwood Cult Figures: Alan Didak https://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/collingwood-cult-figures-alan-didak/ Wed, 22 Jun 2016 08:42:04 +0000 http://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/?p=10546 GLENN McFARLANE, of the Herald Sun Footballers who own the clutch moments – those who almost crave it – are so often the ones that resonate the most with the fans. Alan Didak was a perfect case in point. A football showman, the man the fans dubbed ‘Dids’ always seemed to be able to back up his bravado with the sort of brilliance at precisely the right time that set him apart from so many of his contemporaries. On the field, he was sublimely skilled, with a raking left foot, deadly in its accuracy and dynamic in its impact. At times he was compared to the incomparable Peter Daicos, which only served to show just how good the ‘Macedonian Marvel’ actually was. For Didak, the kid with Croatian heritage was some player. The fact that there were similarities between the two Magpies of different generations was good enough, even if few could have ever hoped to reach the lofty status that Daicos has in the Collingwood pantheon. Off the field, Didak’s sense of confidence, some might say cockiness, sometimes landed him in trouble. Through it all, his breathtakingly moments in Black and White always seemed to overshadow the negatives. As The Age’s Greg Baum so perfectly put it: “What Alan Didak had, he flaunted. A shimmy here, a waggle of his forefinger there, a cocky, mouthguardy grin; Didak didn’t just kick goals, he made a production of them.” And those productions made him one of the most popular players of his generation, and the passion for you from the fans stretched from the start to the finish of his 218-game career. That swagger was there almost from the start. Didak was brought up in Whyalla, on South Australia’s Eyre Peninsula, and he cut his teeth with Port Adelaide in the SANFL, making his senior debut at 17. In that same season he captained an under 18s side to Ireland. Collingwood liked what it saw in the talented forward/midfielder and had no hesitation taking him with pick 3 in the 2000 national draft. Fittingly, Didak scored a goal with his first kick in AFL football, in the Round 7 match against North Melbourne in 2001. That was the first of 274 goals kicked in black and white, and so many of them are on automatic recall for Collingwood fans lucky enough to have witnessed some of his finest moments. 160622_didak1 A young Didak celebrates kicking a goal with his first kick in AFL football. Where do you start? There was the sealer he kicked in the 2003 qualifying final against the Brisbane Lions, when he was on the wrong side for a left-footer, tucked up against the boundary line 50m out. With the crowd roaring, and a goal required to sink the Lions, his captain, Nathan Buckley, ran over to ask him: ‘Are you going to kick it, or are you going to pass it off.” Didak’s answer was simple. “I’m going to kick it”, and he did. There was the scissor-kick goal he managed against Geelong in the 2007 preliminary final that almost defied logic, and another failed attempt against Melbourne that proved that audacity doesn’t always pay. There was the clutch goal he kicked in the dying seconds of the game against Port Adelaide at AAMI Stadium in 2006, to win the match. Collectively, there were the highlights of the 2010 season, in which Didak won the club goalkicking award with 41 majors, producing some of the most special moments in that remarkable season for the club. Three goals came in the space of one minute (yes, one minute) against West Coast in Round 14. The first was a beautifully measured snap that he bounced through from the boundary line. Thirty seconds later, he soccered the ball off the ground from 25 metres, and from the restart of play, he took the ball from Jarryd Blair and slotted it through a third from 40 metres. Fans, and even Didak himself, barely had time to draw a breath. 160622_didak2 Didak celebrates a remarkable game against West Coast in round 14, 2010. Three weeks later came what would be his trademark shimmy. He goaled against Richmond after using his footwork and evasive skills to baulk two hapless Tigers before closing the deal, as he so often did. That moment prompted the great Malcolm Blight to say that Didak had been “born with a footy in his mind.” Then, in the Grand Final Replay against St Kilda, he produced the second most famous smother of that game, when he stopped Jason Blake in his tracks during the third quarter, and turned around a right-foot snap that effectively snuffed out the Saints’ hopes. It was vintage Didak, and all the more memorable because he was doing it under sufferance. He had badly damaged his pectoral muscle late in the season, but kept playing. Collingwood supporters loved him from the outset, even if there was a fear early that he might be a part of a trade with Port Adelaide for Nick Stevens. Fortunately, it never happened. By the time he had turned 21, he was a bona fide Collingwood cult hero, having a supporters’ group create a website in his honour, as well as strike the ‘Alan Didak Medal’, for their own best-and-fairest award. It wasn’t just his goalkicking nous that attracted support; for a time a rat’s tail haircut did the trick. Sure, Didak had a few moments where he tested the patience of the club, not to mention the fans. In 2007, a year after he won the 2006 Copeland Trophy, he was embroiled in controversy regarding the company that kept away from football, and then a year later he and Heath Shaw were suspended by the club for the remainder of the 2008 season after Shaw crashed his car and lied to protect Didak, by saying he wasn’t a passenger. Both worked to regain the respect of their teammates and their club. 160622_didak3 CEO Gary Pert and then-football manager Geoff Walsh announce the suspension of Heath Shaw and Alan Didak in 2008. Statistically, Didak’s best season was in the 2010 premiership year. He had a career-best 590 disposals and kicked 41.21 – just two behinds fewer than his 2006 tally – and won a second All-Australian jumper that season. He played 20 games in 2011, but unfortunately his body was starting to fail him. His return in 2012 and 2013 – his last two years in black and white – meant he only played 16 games across those two seasons. When he returned to the senior team against West Coast in Round 22, 2013 – almost as much by persuasive powers of his teammates as anything else – he kicked his penultimate goal in black and white. And when he did, the entire Collingwood team left their stations, and rushed to him. It was a measure of what he meant to them. If the fans could have done the same, they would have. His 218th and last game came in the elimination final loss to Port Adelaide. And when he was delisted a few weeks later, it wasn’t the farewell that anyone wanted. He briefly flirted with the idea of trying to reprise his magic for another season at Greater Western Sydney, but the deal fell though. Collingwood fans were happy about that. For just as Daicos remained a one-club player after the club called an end to his career almost two decades earlier, Didak would forever be associated with the Magpie Army. As he said at the time, “I’ve always had great support, and this year it was really overwhelming. At times it was a bit embarrassing, but it is something I’ll always be grateful for. “I am going to miss playing in front of them because it has been such a big part of my life. And they were definitely on my side, which was great.” 160622_didak4 Didak after becoming a premiership player in 2010.]]> “This is the game right here” https://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/this-is-the-game-right-here/ Tue, 31 May 2016 22:51:45 +0000 http://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/?p=10494 By: Glenn McFarlane of the Herald Sun Alan Didak had never experienced a moment like it; even if the thought had crossed his mind since he was a kid. He had the ball about 35m out from goal with less than a minute remaining. His kick would likely determine the outcome of a match, but also whether his team could lock in a finals spot. Time was running out. It was round 20, 2006, and Collingwood trailed Port Adelaide by three points when a neat chip kick from Anthony Rocca landed in Didak’s arms. It was one of the few times he had been able to get away from his shadow, Dom Cassisi, on a night at AAMI Stadium that had more than 30,000 fans on the edge of their seats. Didak, playing his 99th game, had the ball, but would he have the nerve to seal the deal? The scenario was simple. Kick the goal and it was almost certain that Collingwood would score a remarkable come-from-behind victory; miss it, and he would be seen to be responsible for a game that got away. This match was always going to noteworthy for a number of reasons. For Port Adelaide, it was meant to be Gavin Wanganeen’s farewell match as a player. But a knee injury brought an end earlier than he had intended. He would say: “Not being able to play that last game is disappointing … Still, I get a special moment with the fans, a chance to say goodbye to those who have been there over the 17 years.” 160601_forever600c Heritier Lumumba leaves the field with an injured leg, early in the night. Nathan Buckley wasn’t saying goodbye yet. But as fate would it, this would be the final time he would play against Port Adelaide, a franchise that had courted him unsuccessfully when it was sought to join the AFL in late 1996. He knocked them back, and stayed loyal to Collingwood, and this particular night, he was also creating a part of Black and White history. The 34-year-old skipper, in his 273rd AFL match, was breaking a long-standing club record that stretched back to the 1934 season. On that night Buckley passed Syd Coventry‘s record of 153 games as Collingwood captain, and his match would be defined by one moment in the last quarter that kept his team in the contest when it looked over. Collingwood started well, kicking six goals to three, to lead by 19 points at the first change. Injuries to Heritier Lumumba (then known as Harry O’Brien) and Shane Wakelin were a concern though. Two of the Magpies’ opening term goals came from eighth-gamer Sean Rusling who looked unstoppable for a period of time. He would end up with three goals for the match. By halfway through the second term, the difference shot out to 33 points, after the extremely busy Ben Johnson slotted through a nice goal. But then things tightened considerably. The Power had cut the margin back to 10 points at half-time. And when the Magpies failed to score goal during the third term, things were beginning to look bleak. Port Adelaide led by seven points headed into the final term and with the support of the parochial South Australian crowd behind them, it was going to be a real challenge for the visitors. 160601_forever600d Sean Rusling kicked three goals from five scoring shots. Strangely enough, Buckley started the final term on the pine. The Herald Sun noted that he “engaging in a spirited conversation with coach Mick Malthouse as he walked from the field after the three-quarter time huddle.” Goals were hard to come in the final term. Port Adelaide couldn’t nail one, and Collingwood found it just as difficult. The Power was nine points in front with four minutes left, as the goal drought rolled on. It was left to Buckley to break the deadlock. Shifted forward, he launched on the back of Troy Chaplin and dragged down one of the best marks he had taken in his career. 160601_forever600b Heath Shaw won a team-high 33 disposals and earned two Brownlow votes for his troubles. Dennis Cometti screamed: “Buckley, what a mark by the champ.” From point blank range, he did not miss, and the game was suddenly alive. It was a skipper’s goal on the night he broke the club captaincy record. The difference was three points with less than four minutes left. Scott Burns was just as important as Buckley in the last term. He went back against the flow of play to drag in a courageous mark, but soon after missed a chance to steal the lead back, to the frustration of his coach. Stuart Dew had kicked the ball across goal. Burns intercepted, but inexplicably missed – hitting the post – from just metres out. Vision of Mick Malthouse slamming his hands on the desk in the coaches’ box, and then flinging off his head-set and leaving his seat in frustration showed just how tense the moment was. The ball ended up at the other end, with Brett Ebert having a shot at goal as the time remaining went under two minutes. His shot fell short, but Chaplin snapped a behind, with the difference now three points. This provided Collingwood one last chance with 85 seconds left. The Magpies got the quick escape and took the ball around the boundary line towards the attacking zone. A Chaplin punch pushed the ball loose to half forward, with Johnson handballing off to Rocca. A clever kick found the right target. Garry Lyon declared on Channel Nine: “This is the game right here” as Didak moved in and slotted through the match-winning goal with cool aplomb. The Magpies were in front with only 19 seconds remaining. Didak gestured to the crowd in delight, in the crowd President Eddie McGuire leapt from his seat and Malthouse almost signalled the goal from the coaches’ box. But it wasn’t the end of the drama. The centre bounce saw Burns gather the ball on the ground and shoot off an errant handball. It ended up with Brendon Lade who barrelled the ball deep into attack. The ball sailed long, but deviated late to go through for a behind. The siren sounded and the Pies had won a remarkable match by two points. 160601_forever600a James Clement arrives in the nick of time to spoil Chad Cornes. Interviewed on the ground after the game, Didak said: “My legs are about 50 kilos each as it is, and they went to about 100. Look, it was a 50-50 chance and I kicked it straight and it went through.” Malthouse was more composed in the press conference, praising Didak’s maturity. “I think it’s a testament of (the) maturity of Alan. I thought Cassisi did a terrific job (but) Alan remained disciplined,” he said “He sacrificed a lot of his own play to tie up a few of the defensive mechanisms of Port. It’s probably fitting at the end that he was able to slot one through. “Was it defining? Well, it’s put us in the eight. That’s fairly defining, isn’t it? Especially when (we) were 15th last year.” And he praised Buckley’s leadership, his mark and his late goal, saying: “I think Nathan Buckley’s mark was pretty handy, I’ll give you the tip.” Asked about his own histrionics, Malthouse could only say: “I didn’t think the clock was doing us any favours.” The jubilant Collingwood players got to re-live Didak’s goal and Malthouse’s mini-meltdown when they watched the last few minutes in a small meeting room deep beneath AAMI Stadium after the game. “When we were watching the replay in the rooms, I was thinking that in my whole football life I had never had a kick after the siren or even just before the siren to win a game,” Didak said. “This was a first for me. It’s an incredible feeling. It will be memorable for the rest of my life.” And so it remains in the minds of Collingwood supporters.]]>