Gordon Coventry
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Gordon Richard James Coventry (25 September 1901 – 7 November 1968) was a former Australian rules footballer who played for Collingwood Football Club in the
Victorian Football League The Victorian Football League (VFL) is an Australian rules football league in Australia serving as one of the second-tier regional semi-professional competitions which sit underneath the fully professional Australian Football League (AFL). It ...
(VFL). Accorded "Legend" status in the Australian Football Hall of Fame, Coventry was the first player to play 300 VFL games, the first to kick 100 goals in a VFL season, the only player ever to head the league's goal-kicking list in five consecutive seasons, and the first player to kick 1000 VFL goals, with his career total of 1299 VFL goals serving as a VFL/AFL competition record for over 60 seasons. ::"He is often considered by fans and journalists to be amongst the greatest forward-line players of all time." — ''AFL Legends.com''.


Education

Gordon and his brothers and sisters attended the Nillumbik State School (No.1003), at
Diamond Creek Diamond Creek is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 23 km north-east of Melbourne's Central Business District, located within the Shire of Nillumbik local government area. Diamond Creek recorded a population of 12,503 at the 20 ...
. While still at school, he began working on his father's fruit orchard.Trembath (2005).


Footballer

Although a very reliable right-foot kick, he was equally able to use his left foot accurately and effectively when needed — see, for example, his left-foot goal, under pressure, for Victoria, at the Sydney Cricket Ground, in the 7 August 1933 match against South Australia at the 1933 ANFC Carnival in Sydney in the recently recovered newsreel footage of the match. The "broad-backed and sticky-fingered" Gordon Coventry did not possess the phenomenal skills of his predecessor at Collingwood,
Dick Lee Richard Lee Peng Boon (born 24 August 1956) is a Singaporean singer-songwriter, playwright and film director. Early life Lee was born to a Peranakan father, Lee Kip Lee, (who wrote for ''The Straits Times'') and his wife , Elizabeth Tan. He was th ...
, or the aerial prowess of his successor, Ron Todd, but relied on tremendous strength and a vice-like grip when marking the ball, a combination that made him almost unstoppable once he had front position. ::"Once ordon "Nuts"Coventry gets in front it seems that no defender can get round him.
His bulky body and his awkward gait seem to brook no interruption, and he never seems to drop a mark."


Diamond Creek (HDFL)

Gordon played his early football for
Diamond Creek Football Club The Diamond Creek Football Club is an Australian rules football club located in Diamond Creek – an outer north-eastern suburb of Melbourne. History Formed in 1904, the club was a founding member of the Whittlesea District Football Associat ...
in the new Heidelberg District Football League (HDFL) (a competition which began after World War I), and had quickly established himself as a champion centre half-forward. In 1920, Gordon was invited to train at Collingwood. The three significant officials involved with that invitation, who were anticipating Collingwood's need to find a suitable replacement for the at-the-time injured
Dick Lee Richard Lee Peng Boon (born 24 August 1956) is a Singaporean singer-songwriter, playwright and film director. Early life Lee was born to a Peranakan father, Lee Kip Lee, (who wrote for ''The Straits Times'') and his wife , Elizabeth Tan. He was th ...
, who was nearing the end of his career, were Ernest William Copeland (1868–1947), John James "Jack" Joyce (1860–1945), and John James "Jack" Peppard (1878–1940). Although Dick Lee had played in Collingwood's first eight matches in the 1920 season, he had only scored 17 goals; and, also, due to an injury sustained in the 26 June 1920 match against South Melbourne, he missed the next seven matches, returning in the season's last home-and-away match on 4 September 1920 — in the interim, Collingwood tried various permutations of forward lines to cover for the loss of Lee, centred on the selection of Ern Utting (five matches), Tom Wraith (one match), and Tom Drummond (one match), at full-forward over that time.


Collingwood (VFL)


Debut

Gordon Coventry played his first senior game for Collingwood at the age of 18 against St Kilda on 14 August 1920. He played on the half-forward flank, kicked one goal, and although "not particularly impressive … eshowed that he can kick well". As one of Collingwood's four inexperienced players given a run that day (the others were Les Lobb, Len Ludbrooke, and Roy Outram), Gordon played his second match, again on the half-forward flank, which was also Dick Lee's return match, in the last home-and-away round of the season, against South Melbourne, on 4 September 1920. Then, just 18, and in his third match, Gordon played at centre half-forward in the Collingwood team (with Dick Lee at full-forward) that beat Fitzroy 4.17 (41) to 3.5 (23), at a muddy, rain-sodden MCG, in the 1920 Semi-Final on 11 September 1920. And then, once more at centre half-forward (with Harry Curtis replacing the injured Lee at full-forward), in the Collingwood team that beat Carlton 12.11 (83) to 8.11 (59) in the 1920 Preliminary Final on 25 September 1920, his nineteenth birthday. Then he played at centre half-forward, in the team (with Curtis at full-forward) that lost to Richmond 7.10 (52) to 5.5 (35) in the 1920 Grand Final on 2 October 1920 (Gordon kicked 3 goals).


Half-forward flanker

In 1921, his second VFL season, he was selected in a representative VFL side to play against a combined Bendigo team on 6 August 1921, but did not play (due to influenza). He was unable to play in the last home-and-away rounds of the 1921 season due to his illness, although he was able to resume training. Unexpectedly, he was selected as a last minute replacement for
Mal Seddon Malcolm 'Doc' Seddon (31 May 1888 – 30 August 1955) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Collingwood in the Victorian Football League (VFL). Seddon was also a veteran of World War I, where he fought in Europe and spent time in ...
, who had declared himself unfit to play on the morning of the match, as a consequence of the injury to his thigh that he had sustained at the preceding Tuesday's training session in a collision with
Percy Rowe Percival Henry Rowe (4 January 1896 – 27 August 1976) was a player and coach in the Victorian Football League (VFL) and Victorian Football Association (VFA). In 1915, Rowe played for Lake Rovers Football Club in the Ovens and Murray Footbal ...
. Gordon played at centre half-forward (kicking 3 goals) in the team that lost to Carlton 9.11 (65) to 7.10 (52) in the 1921 Semi-Final on 1 October 1921. He played the entire 1922 season playing on one half-forward flank, scoring 42 goals, with his brother, Syd, playing on the other.


Full-Forward

In 1923, with Dick Lee having retired at the end of the 1922 season, Gordon (by this stage a 34-game veteran) moved to full-forward, and was the club's leading goal-kicker that season, with 36 goals. He soon became one of the league's most prolific an consistent goal-kickers. He was Collingwood's best and fairest player in 1933. He was Collingwood's leading goal-kicker for 16 consecutive years, and the league's leading goal-kicker on six occasions (five of which were in consecutive years, 1927–1931). He kicked Collingwod's only two goals in the lowest-scores-ever VFL Grand Final in 1927, with Collingwood, in atrocious conditions, defeating Richmond 2.13 (25) to 1.7 (13). He was the first player to kick 100 goals in a VFL season (which he did in 1929, 1930, 1933, and 1934), kicked a total of 1299 goals in VFL football, and 100 goals in VFL representative teams. His tallies included: * 9 goals in a Grand Final: against Richmond, in the Grand Final, on 29 September 1928. **An unbeaten Grand Final record, only equalled on one occasion: by Gary Ablett Sr., against Hawthorn, in the Grand Final, on 30 September 1989. * 10 goals in a match: against North Melbourne on 24 August 1929, and against Melbourne on 2 September 1933. * 11 goals in a match: against Footscray on 19 June 1926, against Fitzroy on 28 May 1927, against St Kilda on 11 June 1927, against South Melbourne on 11 May 1929, and against St Kilda on 5 September 1931. * 14 goals in a match: against Hawthorn on 18 August 1934. * 15 goals in a match: against Essendon on 8 July 1933. * 16 goals in a match: against Hawthorn on 27 July 1929. **This broke the previous league record of 14 goals, set by South Melbourne's Harold Robertson ten years earlier in the match against St Kilda on 26 July 1919. * 17 goals in a match: against Fitzroy on 19 July 1930. **A league record at the time, Gordon Coventry's record score of 17 goals in a single match — 17.4 (106) — has only ever been broken once, by Melbourne's Fred Fanning, who kicked 18.1 (109) in his last-ever VFL match against St Kilda on 30 August 1947; and, also, has only ever been equalled once, by Hawthorn's
Jason Dunstall Jason Hadfield Dunstall (born 14 August 1964) is a former Australian rules footballer who played for the Hawthorn Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL). Dunstall is arguably the greatest Australian rules footballer to come from ...
, who kicked 17.5 (107) against Richmond on 2 May 1992. * 97 goals in a season: 1927. * 105 goals in a season: 1934. * 108 goals in a season: 1933. * 118 goals in a season: 1930. * 124 goals in a season: 1929. **1929 was the first time that any VFL player had scored 100 goals or more in a single season. ImageSize = width:800 height:420 PlotArea = width:600 height:300 left:50 bottom:40 AlignBars = late DateFormat = yyyy Period = from:0 till:124 TimeAxis = orientation:vertical ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:20 start:0 BarData= bar:1 text:"1920" bar:2 text:"1921" bar:3 text:"1922" bar:4 text:"1923" bar:5 text:"1924" bar:6 text:"1925" bar:7 text:"1926" bar:8 text:"1927" bar:9 text:"1928" bar:10 text:"1929" bar:11 text:"1930" bar:12 text:"1931" bar:13 text:"1932" bar:14 text:"1933" bar:15 text:"1934" bar:16 text:"1935" bar:17 text:"1936" bar:18 text:"1937" Colors = id:lightgrey value:gray(0.7) id:darkgrey value:gray(0.1) TextData = pos:(10,380) textcolor:black fontsize:M text:Goals pos:(180,25) textcolor:black fontsize:M text:Year pos:(210,410) textcolor:black fontsize:M text:Performances by season — Gordon Coventry 1920–1937 PlotData= width:18 bar:1 color:lightgrey from:0 till:13 bar:2 color:lightgrey from:0 till:19 bar:3 color:lightgrey from:0 till:42 bar:4 color:lightgrey from:0 till:36 bar:5 color:lightgrey from:0 till:28 bar:6 color:lightgrey from:0 till:68 bar:7 color:lightgrey from:0 till:83 bar:8 color:orange from:0 till:97 bar:9 color:lightgrey from:0 till:89 bar:10 color:green from:0 till:124 bar:11 color:green from:0 till:118 bar:12 color:lightgrey from:0 till:67 bar:13 color:lightgrey from:0 till:82 bar:14 color:green from:0 till:108 bar:15 color:green from:0 till:105 bar:16 color:lightgrey from:0 till:88 bar:17 color:lightgrey from:0 till:60 bar:18 color:lightgrey from:0 till:72


Finals

Gordon played in 31 finals matches in his 18-year career — including the drawn Semi-Final match against Melbourne on 15 September 1928 (the first drawn finals match in VFL history), and 10 Grand Finals, five of which were won by Collingwood (1927-1930, and 1935). In the
1928 VFL Grand Final The 1928 VFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between the Collingwood Football Club and Richmond Football Club, held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Melbourne on 29 September 1928. It was the 30th annual Grand Fina ...
he kicked a league record 9 goals, in a match in which Collingwood beat Richmond 13.18 (96) to 9.9 (63), perhaps due to Collingwood's drawn Semi-Final with Malbourne, and the consequent full replay the following week, which meant that Richmond had a two-week break, rather than the originally scheduled one week.


VFL Tribunal

Gordon missed Collingwood's 1936 VFL Grand Final victory due to disqualification. It was the only time he had been reported in his entire VFL career. He was found guilty of striking Richmond defender
Joe Murdoch Arthur "Joe" Murdoch (30 October 1908 – 26 December 2002) was an Australian rules footballer who played in the VFL in between 1927 and 1936 for the Richmond Football Club. Murdoch was an exceptionally tough defender who was at the foref ...
in the torrid match against Richmond on 1 August 1936. Coventry had a crop of painful boils on his neck; and, when Murdoch repeatedly struck his neck, Coventry retaliated. Gordon was suspended for eight matches, and Murdoch for four; and an appeal, by Coventry, against the severity of the penalty was unsuccessful. At the time, Coventry announced that he was retiring from VFL football. He later relented; and, having served the eighth and last match of his suspension in the first week of the 1937 season, he played in 19 matches, and kicked 72 goals in 1937, his final VFL season.


Life member

Gordon was made a Life Member of the Collingwood Football Club in 1932.


Records

Coventry retired after the 1937 season, the first player to play 300
VFL/AFL The Victorian Football League (VFL) is an Australian rules football league in Australia serving as one of the second-tier regional semi-professional competitions which sit underneath the fully professional Australian Football League (AFL). I ...
games, winning his sixth league leading goal-kicker award, and his 16th consecutive club leading goal-kicker award. Coventry also represented
Victoria Victoria most commonly refers to: * Victoria (Australia), a state of the Commonwealth of Australia * Victoria, British Columbia, provincial capital of British Columbia, Canada * Victoria (mythology), Roman goddess of Victory * Victoria, Seychelle ...
on 25 occasions for a total of 100 goals. He was the first player to kick 100 goals in a VFL season (which he did in 1929, 1930, 1933, and 1934), and he kicked a total of 1299 goals in VFL football: a record that stood for more than six decades until it was broken by Sydney Swans player
Tony Lockett Anthony Howard Lockett (born 9 March 1966) is a former Australian rules footballer who played for the St Kilda Football Club and Sydney Swans in the Australian Football League (AFL). Nicknamed "Plugger", he is considered one of the greatest fu ...
in the match against Coventry's former club, Collingwood, on 6 June 1999.


VAFA coach

After leaving Collingwood, Coventry coached
Collegians Collegians are an Australian rugby league football team based in Wollongong. The club are a part of Country Rugby League and compete in the Illawarra Rugby League premiership. Originally known as CBC Old Boys, the Club was founded in 1933. The ...
in the
VAFA The Victorian Amateur Football Association (VAFA) is the largest senior community Australian rules football competition in Victoria. It consists of seven senior men's and women's divisions ranging from Premier to Division 4. In addition ther ...
for a number of years.


Death

Coventry died on 7 November 1968 (of heart disease) at his property in
Diamond Creek Diamond Creek is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 23 km north-east of Melbourne's Central Business District, located within the Shire of Nillumbik local government area. Diamond Creek recorded a population of 12,503 at the 20 ...
, survived by his wife and four children.


Legacy

In 2009, ''
The Australian ''The Australian'', with its Saturday edition, ''The Weekend Australian'', is a broadsheet newspaper published by News Corp Australia since 14 July 1964.Bruns, Axel. "3.1. The active audience: Transforming journalism from gatekeeping to gatew ...
'' nominated Coventry as one of the 25 greatest footballers never to win a
Brownlow Medal The Charles Brownlow Trophy, better known as the Brownlow Medal (and informally as "Charlie"), is awarded to the "best and fairest" player in the Australian Football League (AFL) during the home-and-away season, as determined by votes cast by t ...
. In 1996, Coventry was an inaugural inductee of the Australian Football Hall of Fame and was elevated to "
Legend A legend is a genre of folklore that consists of a narrative featuring human actions, believed or perceived, both by teller and listeners, to have taken place in human history. Narratives in this genre may demonstrate human values, and possess ...
" status (as the fourteenth "Legend") two years later. In 1998, he was named at full-forward in Collingwood's "Team of the Century". On 24 November 1999, he was inducted into the
Sport Australia Hall of Fame The Sport Australia Hall of Fame was established on 10 December 1985 to recognise the achievements of Australian sportsmen and sportswomen. The inaugural induction included 120 members with Sir Don Bradman as the first inductee and Dawn Fraser th ...
.


Family

The eighth of the ten children of Henry Coventry (1862–1948) and Jane Henrietta Coventry (1863–1940), née Spencer, Gordon Richard James Coventry—known as "Nuts" to his family (said, by some, due to his having a disproportionately large head as a child)Roberts (1991), pp.62–68.—was born on 25 September 1901 at
Diamond Creek, Victoria Diamond Creek is a suburb of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, 23 km north-east of Melbourne's Central Business District, located within the Shire of Nillumbik local government area. Diamond Creek recorded a population of 12,503 at the ...
.


Marriage

He married Christabel Violet Lawrey (1902–1991) on 28 February 1925. They had four children: two sons, George Gordon (b.1925) and Graham (b.1945), and two daughters, Betty Lois (b.1928), later Mrs. Alexander David Denney, and Margaret Shirley (1930–2006), later Mrs. Charles James Banks.


Brothers


Jack, Oak, and Thomas

Three of his brothers served in the
First AIF The First Australian Imperial Force (1st AIF) was the main expeditionary force of the Australian Army during the First World War. It was formed as the Australian Imperial Force (AIF) following Britain's declaration of war on Germany on 15 Aug ...
: John Thomas "Jack" Coventry (1893–1950), Hugh Norman "Oak" Coventry (1895–1916), who was (posthumously) mentioned in dispatches for "gallant devotion to duty as volunteer stretcher bearer, carrying the wounded" on 9 August 1916, and had been killed in action while serving with the First AIF in Pozieres, and Thomas Coventry (1897–1970), who was wounded in the arm and foot in action in France in 1916.


Syd

Another older brother, Sydney Andrew Coventry (1899–1976), also played for Collingwood at the same time as Gordon. While working as a miner at
Queenstown, Tasmania Queenstown is a town in the West Coast region of the island of Tasmania, Australia. It is in a valley on the western slopes of Mount Owen on the West Coast Range. At the , Queenstown had a population of 1,808 people. History Queenstown's hi ...
, and playing football for the Miners' Football Team (as its captain), in
Gormanston, Tasmania Gormanston is a town in Tasmania on the slopes of Mount Owen, above the town of Queenstown in Tasmania's West Coast. At the 2016 Gormanston had a population of 17.Australian Bureau of Statistics, "2016 Census Quickstats: Gormanston", published ...
, in 1920, Syd was approached by St Kilda and invited to play for them in 1921. Syd moved to Victoria, and influenced by Gordon, began training with Collingwood (rather than St Kilda) in the 1921 pre-season; however, in May 1921, "an application by S.A. Coventry for transfer from Miners' (Tasmania) to Collingwood was refused y the Victorian Football League Permit Committee. Having served 12 months out of football, Syd was cleared "from Tasmania to Collingwood" on 26 April 1922. He went on play in 227 VFL games for Collingwood (1922–1934) and 27 representative games for the VFL (1922–1934), captain Collingwood for 144 games (1927–1934), win the
Brownlow Medal The Charles Brownlow Trophy, better known as the Brownlow Medal (and informally as "Charlie"), is awarded to the "best and fairest" player in the Australian Football League (AFL) during the home-and-away season, as determined by votes cast by t ...
in 1927, and serve for three years as the non-playing coach of Footscray (1935–1937) before returning to Collingwood as an administrator, serving as its vice-president for 11 years (1939–1949), its president for 13 years (1950–1962), and its patron from 1963 until his death in 1976.


Remembrance

The Gordon Coventry Trophy is awarded to Collingwood's leading goalkicker each year.AFL End of season report, 2007
/ref> The southern end of the
Docklands Stadium Docklands Stadium, also currently known by naming rights sponsorship as Marvel Stadium, is a multi-purpose sports and entertainment stadium in the Docklands area of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Construction started in October 1997 and was ...
is named the "Coventry end". When the Southern Stand at the MCG was built, a gate/entrance was jointly named after Coventry and brother Syd.


See also

*
List of Australian rules football families This is a List of Australian rules football families, that is families who have had more than one member play or coach in the Australian Football League (previously the VFL) as well as families who have had multiple immediate family members wi ...
*
1927 Melbourne Carnival The 1927 Melbourne Carnival was the sixth Australian National Football Carnival: an Australian rules football interstate competition. New South Wales caused the biggest upset of the carnival when they defeated Tasmania by three points and, also, ...
* Collingwood Team of the Century


Footnotes


References


General

*
* de Lacy, H.A.
"Coventrys Tell of Premiership Battles", ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 24 September 1938), p.5.
* de Lacy, H.A.
"Gordon Coventry and . . . Brother Syd", ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 5 July 1941), p.6.
*
Rohan, J.M., "Greatest Goal-kicker of All Time", ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 9 April 1938), p.8.
* * Ross, J. (ed), ''100 Years of Australian Football 1897–1996: The Complete Story of the AFL, All the Big Stories, All the Great Pictures, All the Champions, Every AFL Season Reported'', Viking, (Ringwood), 1996.
Trembath, Richard, "Coventry, Gordon Richard (1901–1968)", in Cunneen, C. (ed.), ''Australian Dictionary of Biography: Supplement 1580—1980, with a name index to the Australian Dictionary of Biography to 1980'', Melbourne University Press, (Carlton), 2005.


"Gordon Coventry: as told to J.M. Rohan"


Gordon Coventry, Champion Goalkicker, tells when his Knees Knocked with Stage Fright!, ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 16 April 1938), p.8.

Gordon Coventry tells when he Scored Five Goals and Lost Five Teeth, ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 23 April 1938), p.8.

Backs That Bumped, ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 30 April 1938), p.8.

Gordon Coventry Names Jimmy Freake as the Greatest Forward, ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 7 May 1938), p.8.

Gordon Coventry Discloses Secret of Collingwood's Success, ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 14 May 1938), p.8.

Gordon Coventry Declares Gorringe was Best of Those Bust Rovers, ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 21 May 1938), p.8.

Gordon Coventry on Ruck Combinations, ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 28 May 1938), p.8.

Gordon Coventry's Memoirs: Those Dear Old Boots of Mine, ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 4 June 1938), p.5.

Gordon Coventry's Memoirs: A Game of Hard Bumps, ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 11 June 1938), p.5.

Gordon Coventry Discusses Great Centre Line Men, ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 18 June 1938), p.5.

Gordon Coventry Names Champion of His Time: Why Bunton is not Named in First Six Players, ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 25 June 1938), p.5.

Gordon Coventry tells how One Man Won a Premiership, ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 2 July 1938), p.5.

Gordon Coventry Discusses Star Half-Forwards, ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 9 July 1938), p.5.

Gordon Coventry tells of the Greatest Flare-Up Ever Seen, ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 16 July 1938), p.5.
(Wednesday is the clearer copy)
Gordon Coventry tells of Happy Days at Collingwood, ''The Sporting Globe'', (Saturday, 23 July 1938), p.5.


External links

* *
Gordon Coventry, at ''Boyles Football Photos''.

Gordon Coventry, at ''Collingwood Forever''.

"10 things you might not know about Gordon Coventry", at ''Collingwood Forever''.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Coventry, Gordon 1901 births 1968 deaths Australian rules footballers from Melbourne Australian Rules footballers: place kick exponents Collingwood Football Club players Collingwood Football Club Premiership players VFL Leading Goalkicker Medal winners Australian Football Hall of Fame inductees Copeland Trophy winners Five-time VFL/AFL Premiership players Sport Australia Hall of Fame inductees People from Diamond Creek, Victoria