Australian Football

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Key Facts

Full name
John Fidge

Known as
John Fidge

Born
4 May 1966 (age 57)

Age at first & last AFL game
First game: 17y 353d
Last game: 22y 352d

Height and weight
Height: 182 cm
Weight: 82 kg

Senior clubs
Melbourne; Brisbane; Glenelg

Jumper numbers
Melbourne: 44
Brisbane: 10

Recruited from
Melbourne (1987)

Family links
Ted Fidge (Brother)

John Fidge

ClubLeagueCareer spanGamesGoalsAvgWin %AKIAHBAMKBV
MelbourneV/AFL1984-198632541.6931%7.913.223.410
BrisbaneV/AFL1987-198927381.4130%10.223.334.040
GlenelgSANFL1989-1993693164.58
V/AFL1984-198959921.5631%8.973.273.690
SANFL1989-1993693164.58
Total1984-19931284083.19

AFL: 9,503rd player to appear, 3,876th most games played, 1,184th most goals kickedMelbourne: 1,057th player to appear, 458th most games played, 145th most goals kickedBrisbane: 5th player to appear, 165th most games played, 78th most goals kicked

John Fidge played 59 games for Melbourne and Brisbane between 1984 and 1989. He also played for Glenelg in the South Australian National Football League (SANFL).

Fidge made his VFL debut as a 17 year old centre half forward in 1984, starring with four goals and 23 disposals in a loss to Essendon. He finished his first season with 27 goals from 12 appearances, missing games mid year with a knee injury. Recruited from St Peters East Bentleigh, he played 16 times in 1985 and booted six goals against North Melbourne at the MCG, his best return for Melbourne. It was also the first year where he played games with his brother Ted at Melbourne. He suffered from stress fractures in his foot during 1986 but kicked 12 goals from his four games.

He was one of many VFL players to join the new Brisbane Bears team for their inaugural season in 1987 and played in every one of their first eight games. Late in the season he kicked six goals against Fitzroy to equal his career best and followed it up the following week with five goals and six behinds against his former club. Injuries returned in 1988 and Fidge, who had an icy relationship with coach Peter Knights, was sacked a few games into the 1989 season.

For the rest of 1989, Fidge played with Glenelg in the SANFL. He was selected by the Sydney Swans in the 1989 VFL Draft but chose to remain in South Australia. His decision to stay at Glenelg in 1990 paid off, as he kicked 124 goals for the year, five of them in the Grand Final loss to Port Adelaide. Despite his large goal tally for the season he didn't take home the Ken Farmer Medal, which went to Scott Hodges of Port Adelaide who kicked 153 goals.

Fidge was picked up by Essendon with the 24th pick of the 1990 AFL Draft, but he didn't play a VFL game for them and returned to Glenelg.

He again topped Glenelg's goal-kicking in 1992 with 92 goals and once more finished second in the league. Glenelg made the Grand Final once again, but Fidge's four goals weren't enough to get them over the line. The following year he kicked a more modest 56 goals but it saw him top his club's goal-kicking for the third and final time. He retired after 69 games and 316 goals in the SANFL.

Sources

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Fidge

Footnotes

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