by baggy8 » Sun Mar 21, 2010 11:46 am
Great work CK, providing umpteen talking points. Appreciate the point you're making about the twins but I'm afraid I have to agree with the general consensus here that the Gowanses don't belong in this elite group even if you give them double value. Obviously Bob Shearman, Darren Jarman, Tony McGuinness, Bob Hammond and Peter Marker ranked 51-55 in your listing.
Of those in the 50 that I saw play and that generally CK wouldn't have, I would have a lower rating for Ebert, Head (Lindsay), Fitzgerald, Evans, Abley, Adcock, Phillis and Gary Window (lovely fellow, but not worthy of a ranking in this company)
Those I'd rank higher would be Bagshaw, Blight, Hank, Kernahan, Cahill, Kerley, Darley, Lindner and Aish.
I know I judge Ebert more harshly than most, but apart from his brilliant game at full-forward as a 17 year-old he rarely played great games against Sturt, invariably being negated by Robbert Klomp, or thrashed by Colin Casey (when Case had a rare game at CHF). He was obviously still a champion (you don't get ranked in the best two on ground 16 times in the one season without being one), but I've always considered John Cahill to be the best Port player I've seen.
If Ebert and Peter Carey had played full forward throughout their careers(they were too good to do that), then Evans and Phillis would not be part of this discussion. Any FF who kicks 0.6 in a GF probably doesn't deserve to be in the list at all. Brenton Adcock was the best back pocket I've seen and if his flying shot for goal in the last quarter of the '65 GF had gone through the middle instead of out on the full, he'd probably deserve to be ranked 24, but it didn't and he doesn't.