Ebony Marinoff

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Ebony Marinoff
Ebony Marinoff 2018.jpg
Marinoff during a pre-season practice match for Adelaide in 2018
Personal information
Full name Ebony Marinoff
Date of birth (1997-11-15) 15 November 1997 (age 24)
Original team(s) Morphetville Park (SAWFL)
Draft No. 7, 2016 national draft
Debut Round 1, 2017, Adelaide
vs. Greater Western Sydney, at Thebarton Oval
Height 169 cm (5 ft 7 in)
Position(s) Midfielder
Club information
Current club Adelaide
Number 10
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
2017– Adelaide 41 (4)
Representative team honours
Years Team Games (Goals)
2017 The Allies 1 (0)
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of the 2021 season.
2 State and international statistics correct as of 2017.
Career highlights
Source: AustralianFootball.com

Ebony Marinoff (born 15 November 1997) is an Australian rules footballer playing for the Adelaide Football Club in the AFL Women's (AFLW). Marinoff was named the inaugural AFL Women's Rising Star winner in 2017, and is a dual AFL Women's premiership player and three-time AFL Women's All-Australian. She also won a premiership with Darebin in the VFL Women's (VFLW) in 2017, represented The Allies in the inaugural AFL Women's State of Origin match later that year and won the Adelaide Club Champion award in 2021.

Early life[]

Marinoff first played competitive football at the age of five in the boys team at Lockleys Football Club in the Adelaide suburb of Lockleys.[1] She remained at the club through to the age of twelve.[1] She later moved on to play with an all-girls team at Morphetville Park. In 2014, at sixteen years of age, she played in her first premiership with the senior side at Morphettville Park, and played in two more premierships in 2015 and 2016.[2][1] Marinoff represented South Australia in under-16, under-18 and open age teams. In 2015, she was named in the youth girls All-Australian team.[1]

Marinoff played for South Australia in the 2016 women's exhibition series. She was named best-on-ground for a 37-disposal performance in a South Australia intra-club match at Adelaide Oval in April[3][4] and kicked the match-winning goal in the late stages of the final quarter against NSW/ACT at Adelaide Oval in June.[5][6] In September, she played for Melbourne in the women's all-star exhibition match at VU Whitten Oval.[1][7]

AFL Women's career[]

Marinoff playing for Adelaide in 2017

2017[]

Marinoff was drafted by Adelaide with the club's first selection and seventh overall in the 2016 AFL Women's draft.[8] Marinoff made her debut in the club's inaugural match in round 1, 2017 against Greater Western Sydney at Thebarton Oval, where she gathered a game-high twenty disposals and six tackles in the 36-point win.[9] Her performance earned her a nomination for the 2017 AFL Women's Rising Star award.[10]

Marinoff was a member of the Adelaide team that won the inaugural AFL Women's premiership in 2017, defeating Brisbane by six points at Metricon Stadium. A few days later, Marinoff was named in the 2017 AFL Women's All-Australian team and announced as the 2017 AFL Women's Rising Star.[11] She also led the competition in tackles (76) and average tackles per game (9.5) in its inaugural season.

Adelaide signed Marinoff for the 2018 season during the trade period in May 2017.[12] Following the AFL Women's season, Marinoff played for Darebin in the VFL Women's (VFLW), also winning a premiership.[13] She later played for The Allies in the inaugural AFL Women's State of Origin match on 2 September, where she was named among the Allies' best players with 13 disposals and five tackles.[14]

2018[]

Marinoff (centre) playing for Adelaide in 2018

After an impressive start to the 2018 season, in round 4, Marinoff set a new record for tackles with 21 in her side's draw against Greater Western Sydney in heavy rain at Blacktown ISP Oval,[15] breaking the record of 16 set by Carlton midfielder Sarah Hosking two weeks earlier.[16] The effort also bested the existing men's league record of 19, thus setting the national senior-level record across men's and women's competitions for tackles.[17] Marinoff later said regarding her physicality and tackling pressure:

My mindset in a game is to get the ball, and tackling is part of my game... I don’t really think about it at all. I don’t know if it’s 21 tackles, or 21 times beaten to the ball.[18]

Marinoff was selected in afl.com.au's Team of the Week in rounds 3,[19] 4,[20] 5[21] and 7,[22] and finished equal-fifth in the 2018 AFL Women's best and fairest count with six votes. She was also named in the initial 2018 AFL Women's All-Australian 40-woman squad.[23] Marinoff again finished the season leading the competition in tackles (82) and average tackles per game (11.7); both statistics were better than her previous season and in less games (Marinoff played eight of eight possible games in 2017 and seven of seven possible games in 2018).

Adelaide signed Marinoff for the 2019 season prior to the trading and signing period in May 2018 after she chose not to accept an offer from one of Geelong or North Melbourne.[24]

2019[]

In round 3 of the 2019 season, Marinoff broke the league disposal record of 30 set by Emma Kearney in round 6 of the 2017 season, recording 33 disposals in Adelaide's win against Geelong at Norwood Oval[25] (a record which was later broken by teammate Anne Hatchard in 2020[26]), and was selected in womens.afl's Team of the Week in rounds 1,[27] 3[28] and 6.[29] Marinoff credited her teammates with helping her find form in an expanded midfield role and add greater versatility to her game:

Bringing in Renee [Forth] and with 'Hatchy' (Hatchard) having a really good [pre-season, that] has given me the flexibility to not always be the inside player... to have that balance is really good for my footy and gives other girls opportunities.[30]

Marinoff went on to play in Adelaide's second premiership, when they defeated Carlton by 45 points in front of a record AFL Women's crowd at Adelaide Oval, and was named among their best players.[31] She was also named in the 2019 AFL Women's All-Australian team, her second All-Australian selection,[32] and finished equal-fourth in the 2019 AFL Women's best and fairest count with seven votes. Marinoff finished the season leading the competition in kicks (130), disposals (205) and average disposals per game (22.8), along with finishing second in handballs (75), average handballs per game (8.3), tackles (74) and average tackles per game (8.2), in a career-best season. She also kicked her first AFL Women's goal in round 7[33] and followed up with two in the preliminary final,[34] and finished the season as one of only three players (along with teammates Deni Varnhagen and Stevie-Lee Thompson) to have played the most AFL Women's matches to that point with 24.

Adelaide signed Marinoff for the 2020 season during the trade and signing period in April 2019.[35]

2020[]

Leading into the 2020 season, womens.afl journalist Sarah Black named Marinoff at no. 15 on her list of the top 30 players in the AFLW.[36] She was selected in womens.afl's Team of the Week in rounds 2[37] and 3.[38] Marinoff finished the home-and-away season equal with North Melbourne's Ashleigh Riddell in first for kicks (94) and average kicks per game (15.7), also improving her career-best average in disposals per game (23.2), and was one of fourteen players to have played the most AFL Women's matches to that point with 30.[39] She was selected in the initial 40-woman squad for the 2020 AFL Women's All-Australian team,[40][41][42] and was also selected in the AFL Players Association's inaugural AFL Women's 22under22 team,[43][44][45] having earlier been selected in the retrospective 2017–2019 team.[46]

2021[]

During a practice match in the 2021 pre-season, Marinoff made front-on contact with Greater Western Sydney player Bríd Stack in an incident that saw Stack suffer a fractured vertebra and was given a three-match suspension, the longest suspension in the competition's history to that point.[47] Commentators such as Kane Cornes and his father, inaugural Crows AFL coach Graham Cornes, suggested that the incident was unavoidable and the club should appeal the decision.[48] Adelaide eventually announced that it would appeal the decision, with the club calling it "grossly disproportionate" and coach Matthew Clarke calling the incident an "unavoidable footy collision".[49][50][51] After the appeal was initially delayed due to new video evidence found by Marinoff herself,[52] her suspension was successfully overturned by the appeals board after a hearing that lasted more than three hours, allowing Marinoff to play in the opening round of the season.[53][54][55][56][57] Melbourne captain Daisy Pearce voluntarily provided a character reference.[53][54][55] After collecting and averaging the most kicks out of any player in the league in the 2021 season, Marinoff claimed her inaugural Adelaide Club Champion award with a total of 265 votes, beating out second-placed Anne Hatchard by 14 votes.[58][59] Marinoff was awarded with her third All-Australian blazer, named on the interchange bench.[60][61] After strong interest from St Kilda in the 2021 trade period, she declined a large offer from the Saints to instead to re-sign with the Crows on 9 June 2021.[62][63] Marinoff achieved selection in Champion Data's 2021 AFLW All-Star stats team, after placing in the top ten for every midfield statistical category.[64]

Statistics[]

Statistics are correct to the end of the 2021 season.[65]
Legend
 G  Goals  K  Kicks  D  Disposals  T  Tackles
 B  Behinds  H  Handballs  M  Marks
 #  Played in that year's
premiership team
 †  Led the league
for the season
AFLW 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
2017# Adelaide 10 8 0 2 96 31 127 19 76 0.0 0.3 12.0 3.9 15.9 2.4 9.5 2
2018 Adelaide 10 7 0 2 81 28 109 14 82 0.0 0.3 11.6 4.0 15.6 2.0 11.7 6
2019# Adelaide 10 9 3 2 130 75 205 15 74 0.3 0.2 14.4 8.3 22.8 1.7 8.2 7
2020 Adelaide 10 6 0 0 94 45 139 31 47 0.0 0.0 15.7 7.5 23.2 5.2 7.8 2
2021 Adelaide 10 11 1 2 189 69 258 20 74 0.1 0.2 17.2 6.3 23.5 1.8 6.7 11
Career 41 4 8 591 248 839 99 354 0.1 0.2 14.4 6.0 20.5 2.4 8.6 28

Honours and achievements[]

Team

Individual

References[]

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External links[]

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