Shane Crawford

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Shane Crawford
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Personal information
Full name Shane Crawford
Date of Birth 9 September 1974 (1974-09-09) (age 34)
Place of Birth Mount Barker, South Australia
Recruited from Assumption College
Draft 13th overall, 1991
Hawthorn Hawks
Height/Weight 174cm / 80kg
Club information
Current club Hawthorn
Number 9
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1993-2008 Hawthorn 305 (224)
¹ Playing statistics to end of 2008 season.
Career highlights

Shane Crawford (born 9 September 1974 in Mount Barker, South Australia) is a former Australian rules football player for the Hawthorn Football Club in the Australian Football League. He announced his retirement on 8th November 2008.

Shane spent much of his childhood in Finley, New South Wales and Myrtleford, Victoria.

Contents

Australian rules football career

Crawford was recruited from Assumption College, Kilmore in Victoria, and selected by the Hawks with the 13th pick in the 1991 AFL National Draft. He made his debut in 1993 and "has since become an all-time club great and remains the only link from Hawthorn's golden era through to today."[1]

Proven by a special tracking system, it is said that he runs about 20 km when playing a full match[citation needed]. His amazing fitness levels make him almost impossible to tag for long periods by a single player. "Crawf" is still one of the AFL's elite midfielders and his hard running and polished skills make him a highly dangerous opponent. It is said that Crawford could have made it as a national 800 m runner if he chose athletics over football in his earlier years. These days a player who is only 174 cm would usually be overlooked but Crawford proves that theory wrong and performs week in week out with his work ethic. Although he has also been highly criticised for never going in for the 'hard ball gets', preferring to let his team mates take the hits and then pick up the crumbs.

Crawford has played over 300 career AFL games. He is also a four-time All-Australian player and has played in three International Rules series for Australia. He became captain of Hawthorn in 1999 and that season he also won the AFL's top individual honours, the Brownlow Medal and the Players' Association MVP award. He has won four Hawthorn best and fairest awards ( 1998, 1999, 2002, 2003) and came second in the Brownlow in 2003, losing to the winner by one vote. He is also a member of the 2008 premiership side.

Shane Crawford stepped down from the Hawthorn Football Club captaincy after the 2004 season, in which he broke his arm and the Hawks finished second last on the AFL premiership season ladder. He regained some form in the 2005 season and was again one of the league's leading possession winners. In 2006 Crawford showed he still has plenty to offer and could be a handy utility player for the Hawks for at least 2-3 years yet. He has the ability to get the ball quickly out of defence when needed and can also kick much needed goals on the run.

He played his 300th game for Hawthorn against the Brisbane Lions in round 19, 2008 in Launceston and, after a slow start, they eventually thrashed the Lions by 69 points.

On September 27 2008, Shane Crawford won his first premiership in his 305th AFL match, at age 34. He played more AFL games before receiving his first premiership medal than any other player. After receiving his medal he went to the microphone and yelled in a loud voice, "That's What I'm Talking About", a phrase he has uttered on The AFL Footy Show on several occasions.

Crawford was offered another year with the Hawks,[2] but he announced his retirement, closing out a 305 game career.[3]

References

  1. ^ "How the list was built: Hawthorn". AFL.com.au (2008-09-26). Retrieved on 2008-09-26.
  2. ^ http://www.realfooty.com.au/articles/2008/11/08/1225561205571.html
  3. ^ http://www.foxsports.com.au/story/0,8659,24619409-23211,00.html

Personal life

Crawford has a long-term girlfriend, Olivia Anderson. They have two sons, Charlie John (born 6 July 2006) and Benjamin Wayne (born 27 October 2008).

External links

Preceded by
Nathan Buckley
Alex Jesaulenko Medal winner
1998
Succeeded by
No award given
Preceded by
Paul Salmon
Hawthorn Best and Fairest winner
1998-1999
Succeeded by
Nick Holland, Daniel Chick
Preceded by
Robert Harvey
Brownlow Medallist
1999
Succeeded by
Shane Woewodin
Preceded by
Wayne Carey
Leigh Matthews Trophy
1999
Succeeded by
Anthony Koutoufides
Preceded by
Joel Smith
Hawthorn Best and Fairest winner
2002-2003
Succeeded by
Peter Everitt