Sttew
Brownlow Medallist
The story of Sean Dundee got me thinking who are the biggest AFL losers.
South African born Dundee became a running joke in soccer circles. In the mid 90's he had such a good goal scoring reputation and was so highly-rated that the Germans put pressure on him to relinquish his South African nationality and become a German citizen so he could play for their national team. Once he did become a German citizen, however, he never played for the Germans.
There are countless rags to riches stories in the VFL / AFL. But has the VFL / AFL had any "losers" like a Sean Dundee?
Leigh Colbert sort of comes to mind. He gave up the Geelong captaincy and left the club for North Melbourne claiming he had a better chance of playing in a premiership team at North than at Geelong. The Kangaroos did not win a premiership with Colbert and Geelong went on to win its first in 44 years in 2007. Admittedly Colbert had retired by then but he was only 30. Its not quite a Sean Dundee story.
Denis Pagan comes to mind too. The dual premiership coach of North Melbourne was lured across to Carlton
in 2003, only to endure five disastrous seasons where he was forced to "do the donkey work" of rebuilding a playing list ravaged by salary-cap sanctions.
South African born Dundee became a running joke in soccer circles. In the mid 90's he had such a good goal scoring reputation and was so highly-rated that the Germans put pressure on him to relinquish his South African nationality and become a German citizen so he could play for their national team. Once he did become a German citizen, however, he never played for the Germans.
There are countless rags to riches stories in the VFL / AFL. But has the VFL / AFL had any "losers" like a Sean Dundee?
Leigh Colbert sort of comes to mind. He gave up the Geelong captaincy and left the club for North Melbourne claiming he had a better chance of playing in a premiership team at North than at Geelong. The Kangaroos did not win a premiership with Colbert and Geelong went on to win its first in 44 years in 2007. Admittedly Colbert had retired by then but he was only 30. Its not quite a Sean Dundee story.
Denis Pagan comes to mind too. The dual premiership coach of North Melbourne was lured across to Carlton
in 2003, only to endure five disastrous seasons where he was forced to "do the donkey work" of rebuilding a playing list ravaged by salary-cap sanctions.