Gary O'Donnell |
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Personal information |
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Full name |
Gary O'Donnell |
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Date of birth |
(1965-05-12) 12 May 1965 |
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Original team(s) |
North Ringwood (EFL) |
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Height/Weight |
181 cm / 85 kg |
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Position(s) |
Midfielder |
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Playing career1 |
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Years |
Club |
Games (Goals) |
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1987–1998 |
Essendon |
243 (88) |
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Representative team honours |
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Years |
Team |
Games (Goals) |
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Victoria |
9 |
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Coaching career3 |
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Years |
Club |
Games (W–L–D) |
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2006 |
Essendon |
1 (0–0–1) |
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1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1998 season. 3 Coaching statistics correct as of 2006. |
Career highlights |
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Gary O'Donnell (born 12 May 1965) is a former Australian rules footballer who played 243 games for the Essendon Football Club between 1987 and 1998.[1] He is currently serving as the Offensive Strategy Coach at the Brisbane Lions.[2]
O'Donnell's start at football didn't come easy: he played nearly 50 reserve grade matches before being selected to make his debut in the last game of the 1987 season. From there he held down a steady place in the side, first as a defender, then later developing into a tagging midfielder who was capable of getting the football as well as keeping an opposition player quiet. At his peak, O'Donnell was regarded as one of the most consistent players in the competition, with commentators often stating that he "never plays a bad game".
Underlining this consistency is his record in the club best-and-fairest: O'Donnell finished in the top three six years in a row, winning it in 1993, a premiership year for the Bombers. He also won the Michael Tuck Medal in 1994 as the best player in the pre-season grand final. Additionally, O'Donnell represented Victoria nine times in state of origin football.
O'Donnell was always regarded as one of the most astute thinkers in the game, and was rewarded with the captaincy for the 1996 and 1997 seasons. He reputation was further enhanced when after retirement he took up an assistant coaching role with the Brisbane Lions. His tactical insight was a key part of the Lions' rise up the ladder, culminating in three premierships from 2001 to 2003.
After Brisbane's grand final loss in 2004, Gary O'Donnell announced that he would be returning to Essendon in 2005 as an assistant coach to Kevin Sheedy. On 22 July 2006, O'Donnell coached Essendon for one match due to the absence of head coach Kevin Sheedy, who injured his shoulder in a collision with defender Dean Solomon. Essendon drew with long-time rivals Carlton to break its long-losing streak of 14. Effectively, O'Donnell has coached Essendon for 0 wins, 0 losses and a draw.
Some people had speculated that O'Donnell's return to Essendon indicated that he was the preferred replacement for Sheedy upon the latter's retirement, but O'Donnell denied this, and on 27 September 2007 it was announced that Matthew Knights would be Sheedy's successor.
In October 2010, it was announced that O'Donnell was returning to the Brisbane Lions as an assistant coach to Michael Voss.[3]
O'Donnell is a descendant of the Rankins, who were champion footballers of the Geelong Football Club.
References
External links
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| | | *Essendon did not participate in the VFL from 1916–1917 due to World War I Italics denote caretaker coach |
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Gary O'Donnell in Victorian State of Origin teams |
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| New South Wales 13.8 (86) defeated Victoria 10.16 (76), at the SCG, 22 May 1990
Victoria 14.13 (97) defeated Western Australia 8.12 (60), at the WACA Ground, 26 June 1990 | | Both games | |
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| vs. New South Wales | |
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| vs. Western Australia | |
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| Victoria 12.14 (86) defeated South Australia 11.4 (70), at Football Park, 28 May 1991
Western Australia 19.13 (127) defeated Victoria 7.9 (51), at the WACA Ground, 16 July 1991 | | Both games | |
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| vs. South Australia | |
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| vs. Western Australia | |
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| Victoria 23.19 (157) defeated Western Australia 13.12 (90), at the MCG, 26 May 1992
South Australia 19.19 (133) defeated Victoria 18.12 (120), at Football Park, 7 July 1992 | | Both games | |
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| vs. Western Australia | |
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| vs. South Australia | |
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| Victoria 19.16 (130) defeated New South Wales-ACT 8.17 (65), at the MCG, 1 June 1993, crowd: 22,409
South Australia 16.13 (109) defeated Victoria 14.13 (97), at the MCG, 5 June 1993, crowd: 31,792 | | Both games | |
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| Semi-Final vs. NSW/ACT | |
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| Final vs. South Australia | |
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