Brett Kirk
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Personal information | |
---|---|
Birth | October 25, 1976 , |
Recruited from | North Albury Football Club (NSW) |
Height and weight | 184cm, 80kg |
Playing career¹ | |
Debut | Round 19 1999, Sydney Swans vs. Kangaroos, at SCG |
Team(s) | Sydney Swans
171 games, 67 goals |
¹ Statistics to end of 2007 season | |
Career highlights | |
|
Brett Kirk (born 25 October 1976) is an Australian rules football player with the Sydney Swans of the AFL, and is known colloquially as "Kirky", "Captain Kirk", during the 2005 AFL Finals Series, "Captain Blood" and by teammates as "Hippy". Kirk is a hard working and onfield leader who has played in a premiership with the Sydney Swans.
Contents |
[edit] Early career
Kirk grew up in Albury, New South Wales. He was a standout for the North Albury Football Club in the highly competitive Ovens & Murray Football League before being drafted to the Sydney Swans as a rookie.
[edit] AFL career
Kirk was elevated from the Swans rookie list and made his senior debut in 1999, despite having previously been cut from the supplementary list.
For a while, he struggled to cement his place in the team, but since Paul Roos replaced Rodney Eade as coach, his career has blossomed. He has gained a reputation as a tough player, willing to put his body on the line and full of determination. He is usually ranked highly by number of handballs and hard-ball gets, and led the competition in tackles for 2004 and 2005.
He was runner-up for the clubs best and fairest award in both 2003 and 2004, making the All Australian Team in 2004. After the resignation of Stuart Maxfield from the Sydney captaincy in the early rounds of the 2005 premiership season, Kirk was one of the six players in the captaincy rotation. He captained the club for 4 games and was later named the best and fairest in the 2005 premiership winning team.
During a Round 18, 2006 game against Essendon, Kirk was booked for rough conduct against Ricky Dyson in the opening moments of the game. He was cleared the following Monday.
In 2007, Brett Kirk has won his second best and fairest award. Kirk polled in all the 23 matches he played in 2007, amassing a total of 461 votes.
During the first half of the 2008 season, former Collingwood legend, now channel seven commentator Tony Shaw, praised Brett Kirk for his consistency as a leader and a player over the past few years, and rated him as the best captain in the league. He noted that with the departure of great team leaders and club legends like Nathan Buckley for Collingwood, Michael Voss for the Brisbane Lions and James Hird for Essendon, the AFL had lost much of its leadership, and did not hesitate to name Brett Kirk as one of the few who has taken the mantle of the league's most influential and consistent leaders, alongside players such as that of Brisbane's Jonathan Brown. Shaw said that though Kirk may not have the speed or skills to rival players like Chris Judd, Gary Ablett, Sam Mitchell and Sydney Swans teammate Adam Goodes, he certainly had the toughness, strength, fitness, consistency and leadership skills to be considered as one of the AFL's best leaders since his debut.
[edit] Personal life
In 2007, Kirk was given the honour of meeting with the Dalai Lama during his Australian tour in which he presented the Dalai Lama with a signed Swans guernsey.[1] Kirk is known as a practicing Buddhist and wears a tattoo of a Buddhist symbol on his back.[2]
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Brett Kirk profile on the Official AFL Website of the Sydney Swans Football Club
Awards | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Barry Hall |
Sydney Swans Best and Fairest 2005 |
Succeeded by Adam Goodes |
Preceded by Adam Goodes |
Sydney Swans Best and Fairest 2007 |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
|
|
|