sport.wikisort.org - AthleteChristopher Stephen McDermott [4] (born 4 November 1963) is a former professional Australian rules footballer who played for the Adelaide Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL), and the Glenelg Football Club and North Adelaide Football Club in the South Australian National Football League (SANFL).
Australian rules footballer
For the British handball player, see Christopher McDermott.
Australian rules footballer
Chris McDermott |
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Nickname(s) |
Bone |
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Date of birth |
(1963-11-04) 4 November 1963 (age 58)[1][2] |
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Original team(s) |
Glenelg (SANFL) |
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Draft |
No. 21, 1981 interstate draft No. 2, 1987 national draft |
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Height |
182 cm (6 ft 0 in) |
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Weight |
92 kg (203 lb) |
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Years |
Club |
Games (Goals) |
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1981–1996 |
Glenelg |
227 (154)[3] |
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1991–1996 |
Adelaide |
117 (25) |
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1997 |
North Adelaide |
10 (0) |
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Total |
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354 (179) |
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Years |
Team |
Games (Goals) |
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South Australia |
14 |
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Years |
Club |
Games (W–L–D) |
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1997–2000 |
North Adelaide |
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1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1997. |
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Club
- 3x All-Australian team: 1986, 1987, 1992 (captain)
- 3x Glenelg best and fairest: 1986–1988
- Malcolm Blight Medal: 1992
- Adelaide captain: 1991–1994
- Glenelg captain: 1988–1990
- Adelaide Team of the Decade - Follower
- South Australian Football Hall of Fame (inaugural)
- Glenelg Hall of Fame
- Adelaide life member (inaugural)
- Adelaide Football Club Hall Of Fame
Representative
- 2x National Football Carnival championship: 1988, 1993
- Fos Williams Medal: 1987
- Simpson Medal: 1987
- 8x South Australia captain
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Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com |
He was an inaugural inductee into the South Australian Football Hall of Fame in 2002.[5]
Playing career
He was initially signed by the VFL team Fitzroy in 1981,[2] but stayed in the SANFL with Glenelg after the South Australian player retention scheme was developed to pay top players to remain in South Australia.[6]
He was also chased by Carlton,[2] and eventually drafted by Brisbane in 1986,[7] but still did not make his VFL debut. He ultimately played 227 premiership games and 49 pre-season/night series matches for Glenelg.
In 1990, with talks of Port Adelaide becoming the South Australian team in the national competition, that McDermott looked to Victoria for another club. However, when it became clear that the Adelaide Crows were going to be South Australia's entry into the AFL, he remained in his home state and became the inaugural captain of the Crows.[2]
McDermott is commonly referred to as "Bone",[2] a nickname referring to the damage done to his nose due to excessive facial trauma experienced whilst playing in both the SANFL and AFL.
Coaching career
McDermott served as playing coach for North Adelaide in 1997, playing ten games for the club, and then as non-playing coach from 1998 to 2000.[2]
Other matches and records
At the time of his retirement, McDermott's career total of 354 premiership matches was ranked fourth in South Australian elite football behind Glenelg teammate Peter Carey (423), Russell Ebert (373) and longtime coach Graham Cornes (361): as of 2022, he is ranked sixth behind them, as well as Tyson Edwards and Andrew McLeod (both 363).
McDermott also played 14 State of Origin matches for South Australia and a total of 61 pre-season/night series matches, 49 for Glenelg and 12 for Adelaide (these are counted as senior by the SANFL but not the VFL/AFL). If these are included, McDermott played a total of 429 senior career games.
The VFL/AFL lists McDermott's total as 417, excluding his pre-season/night series matches for Adelaide. Depending on the viewpoint taken, his total career senior games ranks either ninth (using the AFL's total) or tenth (using his overall total) in elite Australian rules football, and ranks either third behind Carey (467) and Ebert (421) or second behind Carey in South Australian elite football.
McDermott set up the McGuinness-McDermott Foundation, which raises funds to provide oncology treatment for South Australian children, with fellow former Crows team-mate Tony McGuinness.
In July 2014 McDermott became a football and sports commentator for Adelaide talkback radio station FIVEaa and hosted the station's weekday drive-time sports show with another former Adelaide Crows player, Stephen Rowe. In November 2014 McDermott was replaced on FIVEaa by former Adelaide Crows dual premiership captain, Mark Bickley.[8]
Personal life
Australian stand up comedian and host of the Channel 10 program Good News Week, Paul McDermott is his first cousin.[2] His grandfather was Les Dayman, an inductee into the SANFL Hall of Fame.
References
External links
Fos Williams Medal winners |
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State of Origin | |
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State Interleague |
- 1991: Naley
- 1992: McIntosh
- 1993: Lynn
- 1994: Burns
- 1995: McIntosh
- 1996: Francou
- 1997: Thiessen
- 1998: McCormack
- 1999: Harvey
- 2000: Carter
- 2001: Hollands
- 2002: Hollands
- 2003: Backwell
- 2005: Borlace
- 2006: Schell
- 2008: Alleway
- 2009: Sheedy
- 2012: Grocke
- 2013: Ferguson
- 2014: Kirkwood
- 2015: Keough
- 2016: Kirkwood
- 2018: Kirkwood
- 2019: Knoll
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City v Country | |
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The Fos Williams Medal has been awarded since 1981 to the "best" player from South Australia during Inter-State or Inter-Competition matches. |
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AFL |
- 1991–1994: McDermott
- 1995–1996: McGuinness
- 1997–2000: Bickley
- 2001–2007: Ricciuto
- 2008–2010: Goodwin
- 2011–2014: van Berlo
- 2015–2018: Walker
- 2019: Sloane/Walker
- 2020–: Sloane
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AFL Women's |
- 2017–2020: Phillips/Randall
- 2021–: Randall
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Malcolm Blight Medal · Adelaide Football Club best and fairest winners |
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- 1991: Mickan
- 1992: McDermott
- 1993: McGuinness
- 1994: Rehn
- 1995: Connell
- 1996: Liptak
- 1997: McLeod
- 1998: Ricciuto
- 1999: Hart
- 2000: Goodwin
- 2001: McLeod
- 2002: Hart
- 2003: Ricciuto
- 2004: Ricciuto
- 2005: Goodwin
- 2006: Goodwin
- 2007: McLeod
- 2008: Bock
- 2009: Vince
- 2010: Douglas
- 2011: Thompson
- 2012: Thompson
- 2013: Sloane
- 2014: Talia
- 2015: Dangerfield
- 2016: Sloane
- 2017: M. Crouch
- 2018: Laird
- 2019: B. Crouch
- 2020: O'Brien
- 2021: Laird
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Full-back |
- Rodney Maynard
- Nigel Smart
- Scott Lee
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Half-back |
- Robbie Thompson
- Tom Warhurst
- Bruce Lindsay
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Centre | |
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Half-forward | |
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Full-forward |
- Darel Hart
- Darren Smith
- Peter McIntyre
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Ruck | |
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Interchange |
- Rod Jameson
- Eddie Hocking
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Coach | |
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Adelaide defeated Hawthorn 24.11 (155) to 9.15 (69), round 1, 1991, at Football Park |
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- 1921–1923: Hanley
- 1924: Mills
- 1924–1925: Hoft
- 1926–1927: Handby
- 1928: Sallis
- 1929: Brown
- 1930–1932: Handby
- 1933–1934: Owens
- 1935–1937: Percy
- 1938–1939: Goodwin
- 1940: Boyall
- 1940–1941: Keane
- 1945: Corbett
- 1946: Betson
- 1947: Masters
- 1948: Betson
- 1949: Crabb
- 1950–1952: Taylor
- 1953–1954: Hall
- 1955–1956: Crabb
- 1957–1959: Davies
- 1960: Richens
- 1961: Herron
- 1962–1963: Long
- 1964–1965: Kernahan
- 1966: McGowan
- 1967–1969: Kerley
- 1970: Eustice
- 1971–1977: Marker
- 1978: Cornes
- 1979–1982: Weston
- 1983–1988: Carey
- 1989–1990: McDermott
- 1991–1992: Salisbury
- 1993–2000: Chigwidden
- 2001: Hele
- 2002: Byrne
- 2003: Koster
- 2004–2005: Moore
- 2006–2011: Mules
- 2012–2014: Allen
- 2014–: Bradley
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1986 All-Australian team |
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Victoria
- Gerard Healy (Sydney)
- Brian Royal (Footscray)
- Kevin Walsh (Essendon)
- Dale Weightman (Richmond)
- Greg Williams (Sydney)
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Western Australia
- Gary Buckenara (Hawthorn)
- Brad Hardie (Footscray)
- Laurie Keene (Subiaco)
- Andrew Macnish (Subiaco)
- Steve Malaxos (Claremont)
- Michael Mitchell (Claremont)
- Phil Narkle (West Coast)
- Brian Peake (East Fremantle) (Captain)
- Maurice Rioli (Richmond)
- Robert Wiley (Perth)
- Peter Wilson (East Fremantle)
- Ron Alexander (East Fremantle) (Coach)
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South Australia |
- Matthew Campbell (Brisbane Bears)
- Andrew Jarman (North Adelaide)
- Bruce Lindner (Geelong)
- Chris McDermott (Glenelg) (captain)
- Mark Naley (Carlton)
- John Platten (Hawthorn)
- Matt Rendell (Fitzroy)
- Andrew Rogers (Woodville)
- Scott Salisbury (Glenelg)
- Graham Cornes (Glenelg) (coach)
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Victoria |
- Andrew Bews (Geelong)
- Gerard Healy (Sydney)
- Chris Langford (Hawthorn)
- Simon Madden (Essendon)
- Russell Morris (Hawthorn)
- Paul Roos (Fitzroy)
- Paul Salmon (Essendon)
- Bernard Toohey (Sydney)
- Greg Williams (Sydney)
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Western Australia |
- Mark Bairstow (South Fremantle)
- Craig Holden (Sydney)
- Phil Narkle (West Coast)
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1992 All-Australian team |
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Full-back | |
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Half-back |
- Ken Hinkley (Geelong)
- Barry Stoneham (Geelong)
- Mil Hanna (Carlton)
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Centre |
- Dean Kemp (West Coast)
- Darren Jarman (Hawthorn)
- Mick McGuane (Collingwood)
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Half-forward |
- Robert Harvey (St Kilda)
- Stewart Loewe (St Kilda)
- Gary Ablett Sr. (Geelong)
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Full-forward | |
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Ruck | |
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Interchange | |
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Coach |
- Terry Wheeler (Footscray)
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Chris McDermott in South Australian State of Origin teams |
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South Australian team – 1986 State of Origin |
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| Coach: Cornes |
South Australian team – 1988 Bicentennial State Of Origin Carnival |
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Both games | |
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vs. New South Wales |
- Abernethy
- Burgess
- Russell
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vs. Victoria (final) | |
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Coach: Cornes |
South Australian team – 1991 State of Origin |
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| Coach: Cornes |
South Australian team – 1992 State of Origin |
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| Coach: Cornes |
South Australian team – 1993 State of Origin |
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| Both games | |
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Semi-final vs. Western Australia | |
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Final vs. Victoria | |
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Coach: Cornes |
South Australian team – 1994 State of Origin |
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| Coach: Cornes |
South Australian team – 1995 State of Origin |
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| Coach: Cornes |
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1981 VFL interstate draft |
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First round |
- 1. Alan Johnson
- 2. Neil Craig
- 3. Grant Campbell
- 4. Mark Naley
- 5. Craig Holden
- 6. Peter Hofner
- 7. Ken Judge
- 8. Wayne Otway
- 9. Dean Turner
- 10. Tony McGuinness
- 11. Chris Carpenter
- 12. Ross Ditchburn
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Second round |
- 13. Danny Hughes
- 14. Trevor Clisby
- 15. Geoff Linke
- 16. Phil Brooksby
- 17. Tom Warhurst
- 18. David Tiller
- 19. John Platten
- 20. Stephen Copping
- 21. Chris McDermott
- 22. Greg McAdam
- 23. Scott Knight
- 24. Chris Velde
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1987 VFL national draft |
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First round |
- 1. Richard Lounder
- 2. Chris McDermott
- 3. Graham Wright
- 4. Andrew Brockhurst
- 5. Michael Quirk
- 6. Andrew Rogers
- 7. Darren Davies
- 8. Darren Jones
- 9. Michael Murphy
- 10. Michael Parsons
- 11. Tim McNeil
- 12. Grant Williams
- 13. Peter Bubner
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Second round |
- 14. Wayne Peters
- 15. Andrew Jarman
- 16. Chris Grumley
- 17. Chris Waterson
- 18. Patrick Browne
- 19. Jamie Cox
- 20. Stuart Wigney
- 21. Shane Korth
- 22. Scott Christie
- 23. Scott Salisbury
- 24. Mark Ducker
- 25. Damien Trezise
- 26. Steven Oliver
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Third round |
- 27. Brendon Gale
- 28. Andrew Bishop
- 29. Andrew Pascoe
- 30. Ashley Byrne
- 31. Jamie Keane
- 32. John Cook
- 33. Rod Gunn
- 34. Stephen Hewitt
- 35. Craig Patrick
- 36. Tony Virgona
- 37. Andrew Obst
- 38. John Polkinghorne
- 39. David Kernahan
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Fourth round |
- 40. Bevan Cox
- 41. Michael Kennedy
- 42. Tim Wilson
- 43. Darren Wheildon
- 44. Bob Jones
- 45. David Grenvold
- 46. Gary Gunn
- 47. Stephen McQueen
- 48. Liam Pickering
- 49. Jim Silvestro
- 50. Stephen Tingay
- 51. Anthony Dessent
- 52. Stephen Gemmill
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Fifth round |
- 53. Andrew Wisken
- 54. Adam Ladbrook
- 55. Brendan Tranter
- 56. Keith Allan
- 57. Damian Kitschke
- 58. Peter Bennett
- 59. Simon Tregenza
- 60. Pat Gribble
- 61. Darren Read
- 62. David Querzoli
- 63. Jay Viney
- 64. Peter Nunn
- 65. Dean Adams
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