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Following
in the footsteps
of a famous father
is never easy, even
at the best of times,
but Haydn Bunton
junior, son of the
player whom some
regard as the most
audaciously gifted
of all time, had
more obstacles to
overcome than most.
As a boy he had
suffered from Perthe's
disease, and had
spent six years
trapped within leg-irons
or a frame before
making use of crutches
in order gradually
to re-acquire the
ability to walk.
By the time he was
fifteen he was not
only playing high
school football
with and against
boys who were, on
average, two or
three years older
than he was, he
had also made some
telling adaptations
to his style of
play in order to
compensate for his
perhaps understandable
lack of leg speed.
Chief among these
adaptations was
his uncanny proficiency
at handball, which
in terms of its
accuracy and the
speed with which
it could be implemented
was ahead of its
time. Quick to note
its effectiveness,
Bunton would later,
when coaching, accord
intelligent use
of handball pride
of place among his
arsenal of attacking
weaponry.
Bunton commenced
his league career
as a 17 year old
with North Adelaide
in 1954 and two
years later was
one of South Australia's
best players at
the interstate carnival
in Perth, earning
All Australian selection
and the plaudits
of team mates and
opponents alike.
At the end of the
season he finished
first in North's
best and fairest
voting, but was
controversially
stripped of the
honour when he asked
for a clearance
to Norwood - a club
which, ironically,
he had loathed as
a Port Adelaide-loving
youngster. Although
still aged only
nineteen, Bunton
already had coaching
aspirations, and
aware of this the
Redlegs had offered
him the job of senior
coach for 1957.
Bunton coached Norwood
for two years, the
first in a strictly
non-playing capacity
after North refused
to clear him, and
in 1958 he steered
the side to a losing
grand final against
Port Adelaide. In
1959 he moved to
Tasmania as coach
of Launceston, but
after suffering
horrendous injuries
in a car accident
prior to the start
of the season it
was feared he might
never walk again.
However, the same
determination that
had helped him shrug
off the effects
of Perthe's disease
returned to the
fore again, and
Bunton not only
walked once more,
he returned to the
football field.
In that season's
final series he
picked himself at
centre against City-South
and managed over
30 disposals, all
but 4 of them handpasses.
After spending the
1960 season back
with Norwood, Bunton
embraced the greatest
challenge of his
career to date by
accepting an offer
to coach WANFL club
Swan Districts,
which at that point
in time had yet
to win a senior
flag. Bunton's achievement
in lifting Swans
from last place
in 1960 to an odds-defying
grand final defeat
of East Perth in
1961 seems, if anything,
even more miraculous
in hindsight than
it probably did
at the time. Further
premierships followed
in 1962 and 1963,
and Haydn Bunton's
reputation as a
master coach was
born. Perhaps even
more miraculously,
the man who just
three and a half
years earlier had
been groaning semi-conscious
in a crushed vehicle,
with shattered ribs,
mangled kneecap,
and profuse internal
bleeding, was in
1962 awarded the
Sandover Medal as
Western Australia's
pre-eminent footballer.
The 1965 season
saw Bunton back
at Norwood where,
although he failed
to achieve success
in premiership terms,
he played a major
part in establishing
the youth policy
that would prove
to be the foundation
of the club's eventual
return to greatness
in the 1970s. It
was a similar story
at Bunton's next
port of call, Subiaco,
where he remained
from 1968 to 1972,
the last two years
of which saw him
coaching from the
sidelines. In 1973,
with Bunton's replacement
Ross Smith at the
helm, the Lions
broke through for
their first flag
in almost half a
century, but few
people were in any
doubt that it was
the man affectionately
dubbed 'the little
master' who was
in actual fact the
prime architect
of the victory.
Haydn Bunton's coaching
reputation was further
enhanced by stints
at South Adelaide
(from 1975 to 1982)
and back again at
Subiaco, where he
masterminded premierships
in 1986 and 1988.
Only at Sturt, where
he failed to lift
the club off the
bottom in 1993 and
'94, could he be
said to have under-achieved.
In many ways the
antithesis of his
flamboyant, some
would even say egotistical
father, the importance
of Haydn Bunton
junior's overall
contribution to
the game he loved
loses little if
anything by comparison.
*Courtesy
of John Devaney
at www.fullpointsfooty.net
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