Craig Bradley

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Craig Bradley
Personal information
Full name Craig Edwin Bradley
Date of birth (1963-10-23) 23 October 1963 (age 58)
Place of birth Ashford, South Australia
Height 180 cm (5 ft 11 in)
Weight 81 kg (179 lb)
Position(s) Midfielder
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1981–1985 Port Adelaide (SANFL) 98 (97)[1][2]
1986–2002 Carlton (VFL/AFL) 375 (247)
Total 473 (344)[2]
Representative team honours
Years Team Games (Goals)
1983–1999 South Australia 19 (?)
International team honours
1984–2002 Australia 9 (?)
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 2002.
Career highlights

VFL/AFL

SANFL

Representative

  • National Football Carnival Championship player: 1988, 1993
  • All-Australian team: 1983, 1985, 1986
  • Fos Williams Medal: 1985, 1986, 1991, 1993
  • Simpson Medal: 1985
  • South Australia captain

Overall

  • Australian Football Hall of Fame
  • Elite Australian Rules football games record holder (473)[2]
Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com

Craig Edwin Bradley (born 23 October 1963)[1] is a former Australian rules footballer and first-class cricketer. He is the games record holder at Carlton in the AFL/VFL, and in elite Australian rules football (the AFL/VFL, SANFL and WAFL).

Early life[]

Bradley was born in Ashford in suburban Adelaide.

Football[]

Port Adelaide (1981–1985)[]

Bradley made his senior football debut in 1981 as a seventeen-year-old for Port Adelaide in the South Australian National Football League (SANFL), Port's third premiership in a row. At the end of 1981 Victorian Football League club Essendon approached Bradley to join them but he turned down the offer, wishing to remain in South Australia with Port Adelaide and to build on his promising cricket career.

In 1982, his second season, Bradley won Port Adelaide's Best and Fairest.

In 1984 Bradley would be selected in the Australian team to take on Ireland in the revival of the International Rules series.

In 1985 Bradley had won his third consecutive Port Adelaide best and fairest and was runner-up for the Magarey Medal.[3]

Carlton (1986–2002)[]

After 89 games with Port Adelaide, Bradley was recruited by VFL club Carlton in 1986 as part of a recruiting drive that also netted future captain Stephen Kernahan and Peter Motley.

Bradley won three Robert Reynolds Trophies as Carlton's Best & Fairest, in 1986, 1988 and 1993, as well as being a member of the 1987 and 1995 premiership sides. Bradley played with Carlton for seventeen seasons, acting as Kernahan's vice captain from 1990 until 1997, then captaining Carlton from 1998 to 2001.

In this time, Bradley also represented Australia three times in the International Rules series, including as vice-captain in 2000 and captain in 2001. He broke Bruce Doull's Carlton games record in Round 1, 2002.

In a senior career spanning 22 seasons, Bradley was renowned as one of the games tireless champions, and in particular his amazing fitness that meant he could play the physically demanding game of Australian rules football until the age of 38. For much of his career, Bradley played as an outside midfielder, rotating into the forward line during games, where his nous allowed him both to score and assist many goals through his career. In his final few seasons, Bradley spent more time acting as a loose, sweeping half-back flanker, and much of Carlton's drive forward came from his play through the wings.

Bradley's final AFL game, against Port Adelaide, was in Round 19, 2002, polling 3 Brownlow Votes at the age of 38 years and 289 days, making him the sixth-oldest player in the history of the league. His final appearance overall was in the 2002 International Rules series.

In November 2002, following Carlton's salary cap breach which lost the club valuable draft picks, Bradley had contemplated reversing his decision to retire[4] and attempt to rebuild a club in crisis, but he eventually stood by his initial decision to retire from the game, which was made three weeks before the salary cap drama occurred.

Cricket[]

Bradley played first-class cricket for South Australia and various Australian junior sides. After moving to Victoria to play for Carlton, he initially continued to play cricket for Victoria, although the increasing demands of football led him to retire from cricket after four first-class games.

He played grade cricket for Port Adelaide until 1987/88 (originally returning to South Australia each summer after the football season to do so), and from 1988/89 until his retirement from cricket after the 1991/92 season, he played district cricket in Victoria for the Melbourne Cricket Club.[5] Bradley holds the distinction as the last active VFL/AFL player to win a Victorian district cricket premiership, achieving the feat in 1988/89,[6] and had an agreement with the Carlton Football Club that district cricket finals took precedence over early season home-and-away football games if there was a clash.[7]

Post football[]

In 2007, Bradley returned to Carlton as a part-time assistant coach.

Honours[]

Bradley's services to the game have been officially recognised several times at the highest levels. He was immediately inducted into the Australian Football Hall of Fame in 2006, after the minimum three years of retirement. At Carlton, Bradley is an Official Legend of the club's Hall of Fame, and was selected on the wing in the club's Team of the Century. He was also selected on the wing in Port Adelaide's Team of the Century.

Games record[]

Craig Bradley is the all-time games record holder in elite Australian rules football. In total, he played 464 elite football premiership (home-and-away and finals) games: 89 for Port Adelaide in the SANFL from 1981 to 1985 (despite missing the last eight matches of the 1983 season touring England with the Young Australia cricket team),[8] and 375 at Carlton in the VFL/AFL from 1986 to 2002, including 31 finals (7 for Port Adelaide and 24 for Carlton).

He holds the Carlton club games record, which was also, at the time of his retirement, the fourth-highest number of games played in the VFL/AFL behind Simon Madden (378), Kevin Bartlett (403) and Michael Tuck (426). As of 2020, he is now eighth.[9]

Other matches[]

Bradley represented South Australia nineteen times from 1983 up until 1999, the final season of State of Origin football.

He also played in nine international rules games for Australia, which are also considered to be senior games by the AFL.

He also played nine night series matches for Port Adelaide, which are counted as senior matches by the SANFL and the WAFL, but not in the AFL. As such, he played 501 senior Australian football games overall, which is an all-time record.

Bradley also played 27 matches in Night Series competition with Carlton, but these are not counted as senior games by the AFL. Taking the AFL's view, Bradley's 500th game was the first International Rules test against Ireland at Croke Park in 2002.

If the Carlton night series matches are considered, then Bradley played 528 overall games in his career, with his 500th game being against St Kilda in Round 20, 2001, at the Docklands Stadium.

Statistics[]

[10]
Legend
 G  Goals  K  Kicks  D  Disposals  T  Tackles
 B  Behinds  H  Handballs  M  Marks
AFL playing statistics
Season Team No. Games Totals Averages (per game) Votes
G B K H D M T G B K H D M T
1986 Carlton 21 25 30 12 386 215 601 145 N/A 1.2 0.5 15.4 8.6 24.0 5.8 N/A 9
1987 Carlton 21 22 17 16 378 124 502 92 29 0.8 0.7 17.2 5.6 22.8 4.2 1.3 14
1988 Carlton 21 25 14 15 475 127 602 91 30 0.6 0.6 19.0 5.1 24.1 3.6 1.2 2
1989 Carlton 21 21 16 12 320 128 448 68 32 0.8 0.6 15.2 6.1 21.3 3.2 1.5 8
1990 Carlton 21 22 10 12 373 184 557 58 44 0.5 0.5 17.0 8.4 25.3 2.6 2.0 6
1991 Carlton 21 21 9 7 359 162 521 52 41 0.4 0.3 17.1 7.7 24.8 2.5 1.6 6
1992 Carlton 21 22 17 15 287 198 485 64 35 0.8 0.7 13.0 9.0 22.0 2.9 1.6 4
1993 Carlton 21 22 26 20 332 228 560 85 45 1.2 0.9 15.1 10.4 25.5 3.9 2.0 6
1994 Carlton 21 21 15 13 285 188 473 59 35 0.7 0.6 13.6 9.0 22.5 2.8 1.7 4
1995 Carlton 21 25 12 12 373 211 584 100 30 0.5 0.5 14.9 8.4 23.4 4.0 1.2 10
1996 Carlton 21 19 17 10 314 137 451 66 36 0.9 0.5 16.5 7.2 23.7 3.5 1.9 6
1997 Carlton 21 22 12 11 436 151 587 76 32 0.5 0.5 19.8 6.9 26.7 3.5 1.5 15
1998 Carlton 21 19 7 9 267 160 427 62 28 0.4 0.5 14.1 8.4 22.5 3.3 1.5 10
1999 Carlton 21 26 9 11 430 196 626 96 35 0.3 0.4 16.5 7.5 24.1 3.7 1.3 18
2000 Carlton 21 21 15 2 281 168 449 51 34 0.7 0.1 13.4 8.0 21.4 2.4 1.6 12
2001 Carlton 21 23 14 7 344 177 521 94 24 0.6 0.3 15.0 7.7 22.6 4.1 1.0 10
2002 Carlton 21 19 7 8 236 146 382 58 36 0.4 0.4 12.4 7.7 20.1 3.1 1.9 4
Career 375 247 192 5876 2900 8776 1317 546 0.7 0.5 15.7 7.7 23.4 3.5 1.6 144

See also[]

  • List of Victoria first-class cricketers
  • List of South Australian representative cricketers
  • List of Australian rules football and cricket players

References[]

  1. ^ http://australianfootball.com/players/player/craig%2Bbradley/12110
  2. ^ a b c These totals refer to premiership matches (home-and-away and finals matches) only.
  3. ^ Rohan Connolly (4 July 1993). "Craig Bradley: shaking the tag". The Sunday Age (Sport Liftout). Melbourne. pp. 12–13.
  4. ^ "Silvagni decides not to play - realfooty.com.au". The Age.
  5. ^ "VCA 1st XI Career records 1889-90 to 2014-15, A-C" (PDF). Cricket Victoria. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 December 2015. Retrieved 28 November 2015.
  6. ^ Ben Huf. "Home Ground". Victorian Premier Cricket. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 7 April 2014.
  7. ^ Damian Barrett (1 April 1991). "Braddles' day of pain and joy". Herald-Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 77.
  8. ^ "YOUNG AUSTRALIA IN ENGLAND : JUL/SEP 1983". static.espncricinfo.com.
  9. ^ "Most career games". AFL Tables. Retrieved 20 September 2014.
  10. ^ Craig Bradley's player profile at AFL Tables

External links[]

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