Alastair Clarkson | |||
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Alastair Clarkson (left) |
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Personal information | |||
Full name | Alastair Clarkson | ||
Date of birth | 27 April 1968 | ||
Original team | Kaniva (TFL) | ||
Height/Weight | 171cm / 79kg | ||
Position(s) | Forward | ||
Club information | |||
Current club | Hawthorn | ||
Playing career1 | |||
Years | Club | Games (Goals) | |
1987–1995 1996–1997 Total |
North Melbourne Melbourne |
93 (61) 41 (24) 134 (85) |
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Coaching career3 | |||
Years | Club | Games (W–L–D) | |
2005– | Hawthorn | 162 (88–73–1) | |
1 Playing statistics to end of 1997 season .
3 Coaching statistics correct as of 2011.
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Career highlights | |||
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Alastair Clarkson (born 27 April 1968)[1] is a former Australian rules footballer and current coach of the Hawthorn Football Club.
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Clarkson was recruited from Kaniva, Victoria to the North Melbourne Football Club, where he made his VFL debut in 1987, kicking the winning goal after the siren in his first senior game for the Kangaroos. He played mainly as a half-forward and stood at 171 cm, before moving into the midfield. In 1995, he was made Captain of the reserves side, with chances of senior selection unlikely due to the presence of midfielders such as Wayne Schwass, Anthony Stevens and Anthony Rock. He played just 91 games with the Roos for 61 goals in his nine seasons there until '95. Clarkson is also remembered for a king-hit to Carlton player Ian Aitken in a AFL exhibition match in London, UK, that subsequently broke Aitken's jaw.
With limited opportunity at the Roos, Clarkson was drafted by the Melbourne Football Club where he debuted in 1996. He was a solid player and averaged 23.5 disposals in his 22 games that year. He played a further 19 games in 1997, taking his tally with the Demons to 41 games, before retiring at the end of the season.
Clarkson moved into coaching, first with Werribee in the VFL, followed by roles at St Kilda and Central District where he was a Premiership coach in 2001. In 2003 he became the midfield coach at Port Adelaide and forward coach in 2004.
He was appointed his first senior AFL coaching role at the Hawthorn Football Club for the 2005 season, when the Hawks appointed Clarkson to lead their rebuilding phase. While his side could only manage five wins in his debut season, finishing 14th, 2006 saw the side improve, winning their last four games in a row and taking them to 11th spot on the ladder. The Hawks continued to improve in 2007, winning 13 games and finishing fifth on the Premiership table. This took them into the finals, where they eliminated Adelaide in the Elimination Final, before being eliminated themselves in the Semi Final against North Melbourne.
On 13 May 2008, the Hawthorn Football Club announced that Clarkson had signed a contract until the end of 2011. In 2008 Clarkson took the Hawks to second place on the ladder in the home and away season, behind Geelong, a team who lost only a single game during that period. After defeating the Western Bulldogs and then St Kilda to qualify for the Grand Final, he then coached the Hawks to what many believed was impossible: a Grand Final win over the dominant 2008 Geelong Cats. The 2008 Premiership is the pinnacle of his career, completing a meteoric rise in his tenure as coach at Hawthorn, and in doing so, Clarkson became the only coach to ever lead his sides to a Premiership in both the AFL/VFL and the SANFL, in the well over 100 years existence of both leagues.
In the September 2009 round 22 game against Essendon, Clarkson was fined $15,000 for confronting and threatening Matthew Lloyd after Lloyd had flattened Hawthorn's Brad Sewell and started a bench-clearing brawl 11 seconds into the third quarter, and abusing an interchange steward who attempted to intervene in the incident.[2]
Clarkson holds a Master of Business Administration from Monash University.[3]
Sporting positions | ||
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Preceded by Donald McDonald |
Hawthorn Football Club coach 2005– |
Succeeded by Incumbent |
Awards and achievements | ||
Preceded by Mark Thompson |
Premiership Coach Jock McHale Medallist 2008 |
Succeeded by Mark Thompson |
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