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Charlie Hardy

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Charlie Hardy
Personal information
Full name Charles Hardy
Date of birth 1 April 1887
Place of birth Yea, Victoria
Date of death 19 May 1968(1968-05-19)(aged 81)
Place of death Fitzroy, Victoria
Original team(s) Gippsland
Debut Round 10, 1921,Essendonvs.Melbourne,at theMCG
Height 157 cm (5 ft 2 in)
Weight 54 kg (119 lb)
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1908–1921 North Melbourne(VFA) 224
1921–1925 Essendon(VFL) 36 (21)
Coaching career
Years Club Games (W–L–D)
1928–1930 Essendon 54 (30–23–1)
1931–1932 St Kilda 250(9–16–0)
Total 79 (39–39–1)
1Playing statistics correct to the end of 1925.
Sources:AFL Tables,AustralianFootball.com

Charles Hardy(1 April 1887 – 19 May 1968) was anAustralian rules footballerwho played forNorth Melbournein theVictorian Football Association(VFA) during the 1910s andEssendonin theVictorian Football League(VFL) during the early 1920s.

VFA

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Hardy played withNorth Melbournein theVFAfor over a decade where he formed a strong ruck combination withSyd Barker.At just 157 cm and 54 kg Hardy is one of the smallest players to ever play at a top level.[1]

He captained the club in 1914, and served as a brilliant rover helping North to premiership victories in 1910, 1914, 1915 and 1918.[2]He was also a member of the famous "invincibles" side that went undefeated in a record 58 games. Hardy left the club along with many of his teammates upon thetemporary disbanding of North Melbournein 1921, and joined Essendon in the VFL.

Essendon

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Hardy made his senior VFL debut in Round 10 of the1921 season;he was aged 34 and became the oldest player in the history of the league to make his debut.[2]In 1921, he also representedVictoriaat thePerth Carnival.Hardy continued to be a leading player for Essendon, playing in both the1923and the1924premiership teams. Hardy retired at the end of the1925 VFL season,aged 38, becoming the oldest player to play a League match for Essendon; this record was overtaken byDustin Fletcher,who played his final game in 2015 at 40 years and 21 days.[3]

Coaching

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Hardy started his coaching career at VFA clubCoburgand coached them to premierships in 1926 and 1927,[2]the club's first two. This effort saw him rejoin Essendon in1928as their non-playing coach and he spent three years in this role with the Bombers, narrowly missing the finals on each occasion. In1931he crossed to St Kilda and was coach for two seasons, with little success. During the First World War recess in the VFA, he went to Williamstown Juniors in the VJFA as captain-coach during 1916 when the incumbent coach, former Williamstown player Reg Wallis, was badly injured early in the season and ruled out for the remainder of the year. Williamstown Juniors won the premiership in that season and followed it up with another in 1917 before Hardy returned to North Melbourne.

References

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  1. ^'Lynx', "Footballers' Pastime: History of Handball",The Herald,(Saturday, 20 March 1920), p.2.
  2. ^abc"Hardy proves you are never too old",Football Record,Australian Football League, 31 May 2013, p. 28
  3. ^"AFL Tables - Miscellaneous Player Records".
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