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Although
he was born in Adelaide,
Jack Oatey grew
up in Maitland on
the Yorke Peninsula,
where his father
Ted moved with his
family during the
Depression in order
to find work. Ted
Oatey was a fine
footballer, who
had played as a
rover in the SAFL
with Port Adelaide
and West Torrens,
and the young Jack
was keen to follow
in his footsteps.
For a youngster
growing up in a
South Australian
country town during
the 1930s there
was very little
to do in the way
of recreation other
than play sport,
and this suited
Jack Oatey just
fine. At the age
of fourteen he followed
his father into
the Maitland senior
team, and for the
next five seasons
he garnered a reputation
as a wily and tenacious
goal kicking rover.
Oatey moved back
to the city in 1940
when he joined Norwood.
In a war-interrupted
league career he
played 181 games
for the Redlegs
(plus 7 for the
state), winning
four club best and
fairest awards,
and captain-coaching
the team from 1945
to 1952. During
his time at the
helm he oversaw
premiership wins
in 1946, 1948 and
1950, and despite
his noteworthy accomplishments
as a player, it
would be chiefly
as a coach that
he would make his
name.
During his active
service in World
War Two, Jack Oatey
was briefly stationed
in Victoria, where
he played a handful
of games for South
Melbourne, an experience
which played a significant
part in shaping
his coaching style.
For one thing, Oatey
was struck by how
much more team-orientated
the Victorian players
were when compared
to their counterparts
in South Australia;
shepherding, tackling,
smothering and all
the supposedly unglamorous
aspects of football
were essential components
in every VFL footballer's
armoury, and the
ultimate effect
of this was to make
life for the player
actually in possession
of the ball considerably
easier. Although
Oatey's great rival
Fos Williams is
normally credited
with introducing
a Victorian mentality
into South Australian
football, there
were elements of
the typical VFL
game, notably the
'all for one, one
for all' team ethic,
which Oatey implemented
first. During his
time at Sturt in
particular, success
was repeatedly achieved
by teams ostensibly
devoid of stars,
which is not to
imply that the players
lacked talent -
far from it, footballers
like Bagshaw, Schoff,
Adcock, Shearman
and Graham were
all among the finest
in the competition
- merely that that
talent was ineluctably
channeled towards
team goals. Had
Paul Bagshaw, for
instance, played
for virtually any
other SANFL club,
he would probably
have won at least
one Magarey Medal.
As it was, the best
he could manage
was coming a distant
third, twelve votes
behind winner Barrie
Robran, in 1973.
But then Bagshaw
played in seven
premiership teams,
compared to Robran's
two.
After finishing
his career as a
player, Jack Oatey
remained at Norwood
as non-playing coach
for another four
seasons before obeying
the interior whisper
that told him it
was time for a change
by accepting the
position of senior
coach at West Adelaide.
His time with the
Bloods was almost
unendurably frustrating,
yielding one hundred
per cent finals
participation coupled
with one hundred
per cent ultimate
failure, much of
it at the hands
of Port Adelaide,
in four seasons
in charge.
The frustration
must, if anything,
have been intensified
in 1961 when, in
a year away from
the game, Oatey
watched his protégé
Neil Kerley guide
the players that
Oatey had nurtured
and schooled for
the previous four
years to an elusive
flag. Perhaps it
was this that re-kindled
his passion for
the game, but whatever
the reason, in 1962
Oatey took over
the senior coaching
job at Sturt, a
club which had not
secured a premiership
since 1940. Under
Oatey the Blues
would secure no
fewer than seven
in a glorious eleven
season period from
1966 to 1976, including
five in succession
between 1966 and
1970. In the process,
although the word
tends to be over-used,
the team would revolutionise
South Australian
football, raising
standards both of
skill and professionalism
to unprecedented
heights. Oatey himself
was central to this
process, exhorting,
instructing, encouraging
- but above all,
always ensuring
that football, for
players and spectators
alike, was something
to be enjoyed, a
game and not a chore.
Statistically, Oatey's
record as a coach
was remarkable:
in thirty-seven
years at the helm
he masterminded
ten premierships,
an achievement only
Port Adelaide's
John Cahill, among
South Australian
coaches, can match.
Only four times
during those thirty-seven
years did the team
he was coaching
fail to qualify
for the finals.
However, Oatey's
legacy to Australian
football goes way
beyond the merely
statistical, impinging
in a sense on the
very soul of the
game. Although he
was in no way connected
to South Australia's
inaugural AFL club,
the Adelaide Crows,
there was a sense
in which their premierships
in 1997-98, and
in particular the
style in which they
were achieved, bore
direct and eloquent
testimony to Oatey's
impact on South
Australian football,
and if there truly
is a heaven above
he would doubtless
have been looking
down with no small
measure of pride,
and smiling.
*Courtesy
of John Devaney
at www.fullpointsfooty.net
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