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Rohan Smith

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Revision as of 12:59, 27 June 2016 by Flickerd (talk | contribs) (External links: fixed link per move)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff) For Port Adelaide and St Kilda player, see Rohan J. Smith. For Australian rugby league coach, see Rohan Smith (rugby league).

Australian rules footballer
Rohan Smith
Smith before a game against Collingwood in April 2004
Personal information
Date of birth (1973-05-31) 31 May 1973 (age 51)
Place of birth Yarraville, Victoria
Original team(s) Kingsville
Debut Round 1, 1992, Footscray vs. Adelaide, at Football Park
Height / weight 184 cm / 80 kg
Career highlights
Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com

Rohan H. Smith (born 31 May 1973 in Yarraville, Victoria) is a former Australian rules footballer in the Australian Football League.

Debuting in 1992 after being recruited around 1990, Smith has long been one of the Bulldogs' favourite sons, with his reputation rising during the mid-1990s when he became one of the best half-backs in the league. In 1997 he cemented this reputation by earning All-Australian selection.

Smith is currently serving as the backline coach of the Western Bulldogs.

Early life

Smith attended St. Paul's College in Altona North, Victoria.

1997

The 1997 season was the most eventful for Smith and his team, which made a preliminary final. Despite a four-point lead in the last quarter, the Bulldogs had victory stolen from them by Adelaide. The battling club, which was the subject of the Year of the Dogs documentary in 1996, drastically improved in 1997 with the club being renamed from Footscray to the Western Bulldogs and seemingly a new dawn arising with a Grand Final berth likely. He also had a little girl named Keely Shea Smith and in 1999 had a son named Jacob Harrington Smith.

With the Bulldog's surrender of a big lead, Smith is best remembered for encapsulating the feelings of the team after the loss, on his knees in the middle of the Melbourne Cricket Ground, punching the turf.

Later career

Smith again won All-Australian selection in 2003 and in recent seasons had been noted for his longevity in the game, at 33 years of age still being a valuable member of a young Bulldogs side. However, he had noticeably lost some of his pace during the 2006 season, and announced his retirement before the start of the finals series in 2006. There was talk of him continuing a further year if he was stuck on 299 games, but he insisted that he would retire at the end of the season, regardless of his games tally. The Bulldogs won their first final, against Collingwood, to set up a 300th game for Smith which he would share with Scott West, another long serving veteran and one of Smith's best friends at the club. Smith and West were the only team mates in AFL history to share their 300th game in the same match.

Unfortunately that game would be his last, with the Bulldogs going down by 74 points, away to West Coast. An emotional Smith was chaired off the Subiaco Oval where he received a standing ovation, a testament to his illustrious career.

Rohan Smith now resides in Williamstown with his wife Alison and his two children.

References

  1. "Assistant Coaches". westernbulldogs.com.au. Western Bulldogs. Retrieved 23 August 2015.

External links

E. J. Whitten Medal winners
Western Bulldogs · leading goalkickers
VFL/AFL
AFL Women's
1997 All-Australian team
Full-back
Half-back
Centre
Half-forward
Full-forward
Ruck
Interchange
Coach
1996 1998
2003 All-Australian team
Full-back
Half-back
Centre
Half-forward
Full-forward
Ruck
Interchange
Coach
2002 The position of coach in the All-Australian team has been awarded to the coach of the premiership-winning team since 1999. 2004
Australian squad1998 International Rules Series
Coach: Matthews
Australian squad1999 International Rules Series
Coach: Brereton
Australian squad2000 International Rules Series
Coach: Brereton
Australian squad2003 International Rules Series
Coach: Lyon
Rohan Smith in Victorian State of Origin teams
Victorian team1997 State of Origin
Coach: Matthews
Victorian team1998 State of Origin
Coach: Matthews
Victorian team1999 State of Origin
Coach: Walls
1989 VFL national draft
First round
Second round
Third round
Fourth round
  • 47. Richard Gerke
  • 48. Dennis Rapacholi
  • 49. Greg Jones
  • 50. Dean Irving
  • 51. Joe Wilson
  • 52. Rod Jameson
  • 53. Derek Coghlan
  • 54. Steven Bozicevic
  • 55. Grant Coffee
  • 56. Shayne Bennett
  • 57. Tim Moreland
  • 58. Jason Dullard
  • 59. Daniel Frawley
  • 60. Chris Sharp
Fifth round
Sixth round
Seventh round
Eighth round
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