Australian Football

AustralianFootball.com Celebrating the history of the great Australian game

 

Key Facts

Full name
Frederick Fanning

Known as
Fred Fanning

Born
5 November 1921

Died
24 May 1993 (aged 71)

Age at first & last AFL game
First game: 18y 174d
Last game: 25y 298d

Height and weight
Height: 193 cm
Weight: 102 kg

Senior clubs
Melbourne

Jumper numbers
Melbourne: 5

Family links
John Fanning (Nephew)

Fred Fanning

ClubLeagueCareer spanGamesGoalsAvgWin %AKIAHBAMKBV
MelbourneV/AFL1940, 1942-19471044113.9550%17
HamiltonWBFL1948-1952
ColeraineSWDFNL1953
V/AFL1940, 1942-19471044113.9550%17
WDFL1948-1953
Total1940, 1942-19531044113.95

AFL: 4,771st player to appear, 2,317th most games played, 100th most goals kickedMelbourne: 580th player to appear, 158th most games played, 5th most goals kicked

Fred Fanning had a comparatively brief league career but managed one feat that will take some beating. During his final season with Melbourne in 1947 he kicked an all time VFL record tally of 18 goals against St Kilda. He ended the season with a league ladder-topping 97 goals, his best ever return, but the following year he accepted the post of playing-coach at Victorian country team Hamilton, which had offered him nearly three times as much money per match as he was getting in the VFL. Thus, at the age of just twenty-five, his league football career was over¹. 

That career had begun in 1940 when, in a handful of senior appearances, which included that year's winning Grand Final against Richmond, he showed signs of developing into an admirable foil for full forward Norm Smith. At 193cm and 102kg, Fanning was something of a man mountain, and once he had set his sights on the ball there were few opposition players capable of impeding him. He was surprisingly quick over the ground, possessed huge hands which gripped the ball like a vice, and had a gravity-defying leap that enabled him to get sufficiently high in the air as to, in effect, add a good metre to his height.

Unfortunately for Melbourne and Fanning, however, cartilage problems prevented his resuming in 1941, and when he did return the following year he took time to rediscover his touch. Nevertheless, with 37 goals he topped the Redlegs' list for the first of five occasions, and in 1943 he did even better, kicking 62 goals to finish just one adrift of the league's leading goal kicker, Dick Harris of Richmond.

Fanning went on to top the league list himself on three occasions, with 87 goals in 1944, 67 in 1945 and, as noted above, 97 in his final season. He spent much of the 1946 season away from the goal front, but still managed 56 goals for the year.

Fred Fanning's 104 VFL games yielded a total of 411 goals, but his contribution to the club cause went much further than that. In 1945, for example, he won Melbourne's best and fairest award, and far from being 'goal hungry', his fundamental approach to the game was classically team-orientated, with his robust and sturdy frame frequently being brought to bear in the self-sacrificial service of team mates.

He might not have been pretty to watch, but he was demonstrably and consistently effective, and his premature departure left the league football scene the poorer.

Author - John Devaney

Footnotes

  1. It should not be inferred that this was in any way an uncommon occurrence. The VFL of the 1940s was emphatically not the equivalent of today's AFL, which has rightly been compared, in terms of the quality of the players to which it is home, to the apex of a pyramid. In days gone by, however, many elite footballers used the VFL (or SANFL, or WANFL) as a stepping stone to a more financially lucrative football career elsewhere.

Sources

Full Points Footy Publications

Footnotes

* Behinds calculated from the 1965 season on.
+ Score at the end of extra time.