Merv McIntosh
Merv McIntosh |
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Personal information |
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Full name |
Mervyn Frederick McIntosh |
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Date of birth |
(1922-11-25)25 November 1922 |
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Place of birth |
Subiaco, Western Australia |
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Date of death |
3 May 2010(2010-05-03) (aged 87) |
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Place of death |
Salter Point, Western Australia |
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Playing career1 |
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Years |
Club |
Games (Goals) |
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1939-41,1946-55 |
Perth |
217 (79) |
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Representative team honours |
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Years |
Team |
Games (Goals) |
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Western Australia |
24 (8) |
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1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1955 season. |
Career highlights |
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Mervyn Frederick "Merv" McIntosh (25 November 1922 – 3 May 2010) was an Australian rules footballer in the (then) West Australian National Football League (WANFL). A brilliant ruckman, he was awarded the Sandover Medal as the fairest and best player in the league three times while playing with the Perth Football Club.
Playing career
Merv McIntosh played 217 games for Perth (severely curtailed by the World War II years), plus 20 state games for Western Australia in the period 1939 to 1955. In a richly rewarded career he won three Sandover Medals, three Simpson Medals and a Tassie Medal (as the best player at the 1953 Adelaide National Football Carnival). He was named in the 1953 All-Australian Team.
His Simpson Medal winning performance in his last game, propelling Perth to a two-point victory in the 1955 grand final (Perth's first for 48 years), is legendary. At half-time, East Fremantle had a 34-point lead, but in the third quarter McIntosh led his side to get within two points at the last change. In the final quarter, kicking into the wind, Perth managed to get in front and hold East Fremantle at bay to win 11.11 (77) to 11.9 (75). McIntosh's strategy was to stay in the dead pocket and repeatedly knock the ball out-of-bounds.[1]
He won seven best and fairest awards for his club. He is depicted in a Western Australian state guernsey in Jamie Cooper's painting The Game That Made Australia, commissioned by the AFL in 2008 to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the sport.[2]
Honours
The Merv McIntosh Entrance to the Subiaco Oval is named in his honour.[3]
In 1996, Merv McIntosh was inducted into the Australian Football Hall of Fame.
In 2004, he was inducted into Legend Status in the West Australian Football Hall of Fame.[4]
War service
McIntosh enlisted with the Australian Army in 1941 and was discharged in 1946.[5]
References
Footnotes
1947 Sporting Life Team of the Year |
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1948 Sporting Life Team of the Year |
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1949 Sporting Life Team of the Year |
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1950 Sporting Life Team of the Year |
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1953 Sporting Life Team of the Year |
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