Steven Koops

Steven Koops
Personal information
Full name Steven Koops
Date of birth 24 July 1978 (1978-07-24) (age 33)
Original team Southern Districts, NTFL
West Perth, WAFL
Draft Fremantle: Zone Selection, 1995
Western Bulldogs: Traded for Selection 19, 2003
Height/Weight 187cm / 83kg
Position(s) Half-forward flank/Half-back flank
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1996-2003

2004-2005

2006
Fremantle

Western Bulldogs

North Adelaide
78 (49)

11 (0)

15 (3)
1 Playing statistics to end of 2008 season .
Career highlights

Premiership player: *West Perth premiership side 1999, 2003

Steven John Koops (born 24 July 1978) is a former professional Australian rules footballer who played for the Fremantle Football Club and Western Bulldogs in the Australian Football League (AFL).

Contents

Early life

Originally from the Darwin based Southern Districts Football Club in the NTFL, Koops was drafted from the West Perth Football Club in the WAFL. He represented the Northern Territory at the 1994 and 1996 Under 18 Championships and won the Hunter Harrison Medal in 1995 as the best player in Division 2.[1]

AFL career

In his first four seasons at Fremantle he only played 16 games and in total only played 78 games in eight seasons before being traded to the Western Bulldogs for pick 19 in the 2003 draft. He made his debut in Round 5 of the 1996 AFL season at the age of 17 years and 277 days, the youngest ever to debut for Fremantle.[2]

In 1999 he suffered a knee injury and was drug tested the day after surgery, returning a positive test for pethidine, a banned substance. Upon advice from the club, he pled guilty to the charge, but no penalty was imposed. However, due to the guilty finding, his name was entered onto the Australian Sports Drug Agency register, even after the AFL overturned the guilty finding and cleared Koops' name. Fremantle Football Club was fined $5000 for not notifying the AFL of the operation.[3]

His first year at the Bulldogs continued his injury woes, with a thigh strain, broken jaw and punctured lung restricting him to just 11 games in 2004.[4] Shoulder injuries and family reasons forced him to retire in 2005 at only 26 years of age, managing a total of only 89 AFL games over 10 seasons.

External links

References

  1. ^ Lovett, Michael, ed. AFL 2005. AFL Publishing. p. 764. ISBN 0-9580300-6-5. 
  2. ^ Lovett, Michael, ed. AFL 2002. AFL Publishing. p. 522. ISBN 0-9580300-0-6. 
  3. ^ Tribunal: Koops pleads guilty of taking pethidine, Verdict: no penalty on player; Footystats 1999 Review
  4. ^ Lovett, Michael, ed. AFL 2005. AFL Publishing. p. 313. ISBN 0-9580300-6-5.