AustralianFootball.com Celebrating the history of the great Australian game
Full name
John Martin
Known as
Ray Martin
Born
18 November 1909
Died
28 July 1988 (aged 78)
Age at first & last AFL game
First game: 20y 173d
Last game: 30y 315d
Height and weight
Height: 173 cm
Weight: 73 kg
Senior clubs
Richmond
Jumper numbers
Richmond: 27, 7
Club | League | Career span | Games | Goals | Avg | Win % | AKI | AHB | AMK | BV |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Richmond | V/AFL | 1930, 1932-1940 | 159 | 135 | 0.85 | 70% | 21.09 | — | 4.47 | 45 |
Total | 1930, 1932-1940 | 159 | 135 | 0.85 | 70% | 21.09 | — | 4.47 | 45 |
Pre 1965 stats are for selected matches only
AFL: 3,669th player to appear, 1,181st most games played, 760th most goals kickedRichmond: 318th player to appear, 63rd most games played, 49th most goals kicked
Along with Jack Dyer and Percy Bentley, rover 'Ray' Martin made up one of the most famous first ruck combinations in VFL history, an ensemble that helped make Richmond one of the most powerful teams of the early 1930s. Combining a rugged fearlessness with immense adroitness and skill Martin, who was fairly big for a rover at 173 cm and 73 kg, was seldom beaten, and hardly ever put in a bad game.
Martin was a member of the Tigers' 1932 and 1934 premiership winning teams, as well as being in the runner-up side of 1933. Richmond did not always proffer best and fairest awards to its players during the course of Martin's playing career, but he nevertheless managed to nab two that were on offer, in 1934-5. A regular 'Big V' representative player, Ray Martin played a total of 159 VFL games for the Tigers in a 10-season league career. His omission from Richmond's official 'Team of the Twentieth Century' remains, perhaps, a trifle surprising.
Author - John Devaney