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Adelaide
coach and Norwood
premiership player
Neil Craig still
talks footy with
Wally Miller every
week. Neil says
Wallys influence
on himself, Norwood,
and football is
huge. Premiership
captain John Wynne
has said Wallys
compassion set the
scene at Norwood,
and made it different
from other football
clubs. Current chairman
Ian Stasinowsky
says Wally always
assessed the player
as a human being
before he assessed
the player.
He shaped Norwood
that way. His playing
career cut short
by polio at only
24, Wally devoted
himself to developing
Australian football
at all levels. He
was at the forefront
of the nationwide
modified rules for
kids, wrote a book
on kicking, and
in 1970 took over
the day-to-day running
of Norwood, his
greatest sporting
passion.
For the next 22
years Wally was
the heart of the
club, no surname
required. When Norwood
won premierships,
the players rushed
to embrace their
mentor. When VFL
clubs appointed
their new CEOs,
they sent them to
see Wally. While
Norwood grew during
Wallys time,
so did the game
in SA. Wally has
an OAM for services
to football. He
also has a wide
network of friends
for life through
football, which
is what it is all
about.
Games: 64
Goals: 13
Norwood service:
Promotions officer
1968-69, secretary/manager/football
director 1970-92,
match committee/selector
1974-96
Other service:
SANFL sub-committees
1970-99, as League
and proxy delegate,
rules, national
football league
investigation and
future direction
committees, SA Football
Foundation, Adelaide
Football Club director
1997-2002
Honours:
Norwood Life Member,
Medal of the Order
of Australia, SANFL
Life Member, SANFL
Hall of Fame
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