Jump to content

Mick Nunan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mick Nunan
Personal information
Full name Michael Allen Nunan
Date of birth (1949-04-12)12 April 1949(age 75)
Original team(s) Port Pirie
Height 165 cm (5 ft 5 in)
Weight 63 kg (139 lb)
Playing career
Years Club Games (Goals)
1966–1977 Sturt 188 (259)
1971 Richmond 00100(3)
1978–1979 Norwood 0360(34)
1980–1982 North Adelaide 0340(18)
Total 259 (313)
Representative team honours
Years Team Games (Goals)
South Australia 3 (?)
Coaching career
Years Club Games (W–L–D)
1981–1992 North Adelaide 279 (157–120–2)
1996 Fitzroy 01400(1–13–0)
Total 293 (158–133–2)
Career highlights
Sources:AFL Tables,AustralianFootball.com

Michael Allen Nunan(born 12 April 1949) is a formerAustralian rules footballerwho played for theSturt Football Club,Norwood Football Cluband theNorth Adelaide Football Clubin theSouth Australian National Football League(SANFL), as well as for theRichmond Football Clubin theVictorian Football League(VFL).

Nunan had a highly decorated playing career, winning premierships with Sturt and Norwood before becoming coach of North Adelaide and leading the club to two premierships. He was alsoFitzroy Football Club's last official AFL senior coach in 1996, resigning halfway through the season as news came out that Fitzroy's AFL operations would be taken over byBrisbane Bearsand that the Bears would become theBrisbane Lions.[1]

Nunan was recognized for his achievements in South Australian football when he was among the inaugural inductees at the establishment of theSouth Australian Football Hall of Famein 2002.

SANFL career

[edit]

Nunan played his football as a rover.[2]He joinedSturtfromPort Piriein 1966 and during his 188 games with the Double Blues, he played in their 1969, 1970, 1974 and 1976 premiership sides. Having spent his whole playing career at Sturt under the tutelage of the legendaryJack Oatey,it was no surprise that Nunan was heavily influenced by him when he later became a coach.[2]He played in the 1978 premiership side during the first of his two seasons atNorwood.He then coachedNorth Adelaideto premierships in 1987 and 1991 during his twelve seasons as senior coach.

His solitaryVFLsenior game came while he was onNational Servicetraining inMelbourne.The previous week he had played in theRichmondreserves side while fellow Sturt footballer andconscript,Malcolm Greenslade,played in the senior side. The next week they both played in the seniors. Both then returned to the SANFL.

Coaching career

[edit]

Fitzroy Football Club senior coach

[edit]

Nunan was appointed senior coach ofFitzroy Football Clubfor the1996 season,when he replaced caretaker senior coachAlan McConnell,who replacedBernie Quinlan,after Quinlan was sacked in the middle of the 1995 season.[3]

Nunan was at the helm for Fitzroy's last ever AFL win, in Round 8 againstFremantleatWhitten Ovalon 16 May 1996. It was an emotional day for many Fitzroy fans, and he described it as "a relief and reward for those players who had worked very hard to improve their skill levels".[4] After Fitzroy lost to Essendon in Round 14, 1996 and just 48 hours after the Fitzroy administrator at the time negotiated a deal with Brisbane Bears whereby Brisbane would take over Fitzroy's AFL operations, Nunan announced his resignation as senior coach of Fitzroy Football Club to the staff and players, which he had planned to do if the deal with Brisbane went ahead. As he left the room, he remembered that the club doorman, Tommy Couch, had taken a liking to Nunan's jacket and had asked him if he could have it if he couldn't fulfill his commitments. So he returned and handed Couch the jacket.[5][6][7][8]Nunan was then replaced byAlan McConnell,who returned to the role in his second stint as caretaker senior coach of Fitzroy Football Club in the 1996 season for Fitzroy's last eight games within the AFL.[3]At the end of the 1996 season, the Fitzroy Football Club's AFL operations were taken over byBrisbane Bears,and Brisbane Bears then becameBrisbane Lions.[1][9][10]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"Fitzroy Football Club - Lions".fitzroyfc.com.au.Retrieved10 May2023.
  2. ^abConnolly, Rohan (28 October 1995)."New coach Michael Nunan rolls up his sleeves and - The rebuilding begins".The Sunday Age.
  3. ^ab"Alan McConnell gives reflections on Fitzroy's demise 24 years ago".Retrieved25 March2022.
  4. ^"The Last of the True Mighty Roars".Archived fromthe originalon 27 February 2016.Retrieved4 January2016.
  5. ^Howell, Stephen (24 August 1996)."Lion Will".The Sunday Age.
  6. ^"Roys and fall: tears of a footy club".3 September 2021.Retrieved25 March2022.
  7. ^"Where are they now: Michael Nunan Coach who closed book with 'Roys".21 May 2016.Retrieved25 March2022.
  8. ^"Book extract: the last roar of the mighty Roys".4 June 2021.Retrieved25 March2022.
  9. ^"The Merger: Where Are They Now?".5 July 2021.Retrieved25 March2022.
  10. ^"The Day That Changed Everything".1 September 2021.Retrieved25 March2022.

Bibliography

[edit]
  • Hogan P:The Tigers Of Old,Richmond FC, Melbourne 1996
[edit]