|
Diminutive rover
Mick Nunan made
his senior Sturt
debut in 1966, but
did not become a
league regular until
three years later.
Indeed, he failed
to play a single
senior game in 1968
after being overtaken
in the 'pecking
order' by Peter
Endersbee. Once
he established himself,
however, Nunan became
a key figure in
a Double Blues combination
that was nearing
the end of its five
year reign over
South Australian
football. He played
in the club's last
two grand final-winning
teams of that era,
and when the rebuilding
phase was over and
the Blues returned
as a power in 1974
he was still very
much a pivotal performer.
In that year's grand
final defeat of
Glenelg he was close
to best afield,
while two years
later, when Sturt
scored a sensational
upset victory over
Port Adelaide in
the season's ultimate
game, he was once
again among the
finest players on
view.
In 1978, the Double
Blues once again
reached the grand
final, but Nunan
by this time was
playing for their
rivals for the premiership,
Norwood, and had
the satisfaction
of making a telling
contribution to
the Redlegs' stunning
come-from-behind
win by the narrowest
of margins.
Next port of call
for Nunan was North
Adelaide, where
he added another
34 SANFL games to
the 36 he had played
with Norwood and
the 189 appearances
for Sturt. He also
represented South
Australia 3 times,
and in 1971, whilst
on National Service
duty in Melbourne,
he played a single
game for Richmond.
Nunan's major impact
at North Adelaide
was not as a player
but as a coach,
however. When he
assumed the coaching
role in 1981 the
Roosters had endured
almost a decade
of mediocrity, but
under Nunan all
that was to change
as, between 1985
and 1991, the club
contested five grand
finals, for wins
in 1987 and 1991.
Arguably of even
greater significance
than the statistical
success, however,
was the style in
which it was achieved,
as Nunan's teams
played an exciting,
aesthetically appealing
brand of football
which in some ways
could be regarded
as the logical consummation
of the ideas and
teachings of Nunan's
former mentor, Jack
Oatey.
After leaving North
Adelaide at the
end of the 1992
season, Nunan had
a brief, thankless
stint as coach of
Fitzroy in 1996,
before coaching
South Australia's
state league side
on four occasions
for four wins. Even
if his overall impact
on the game was
undermined to some
extent by circumstances
and developments
outside his control,
not least the wholesale
re-shaping of the
game to suit the
financial needs
of Victoria's VFL
clubs, it was nevertheless
a good deal more
significant than
might have seemed
likely when he was
vying with Peter
Endersbee to assume
Roger Dunn's mantle
as second rover
in the all-powerful
Sturt side of the
1960s.
*Courtesy
of John Devaney
at www.fullpointsfooty.net
<<
Back
|