by SABRE » Thu Jan 01, 2009 11:38 pm
From 'The Advertiser', 12/9/70
'LEAPING LINDY' FOLDS WINGS
by Merv Agars
Don Lindner, the 'astronaut' of SA football for 17 years, yesterday announced his retirement from league football.
Lindner, 35, veteran of 284 league games with North......said it had been a problem to decide when to quite league football. "I didn't think I was playing well enough to go on. People come to expect a certain standard from you after a long time in the game and I wasn't playing up to that standard. I guess I could have gone on to reach 300 games if it had been as important to me as it was to some other North supporters," said Lindner.
An easy going, good natured country boy, Lindner has never fitted the dedicated, ruthless image of the present day league footballer. "It has always been a game to me - even when I was coaching," he said yesterday. "That's another reason for giving up. They expect you to be a bit business-like about it these days."
Lindner - often known as 'Leaping Lindy' or 'Daredevil Don', but more commonly as 'Butch' - is easily the most sensational high mark in league football since World War Two. I was......lucky enough to see him in action at the peak of his career in the 1961 Brisbane carnival when he turned a game for SA with his breathtaking marking. SA lost to Victoria and then, playing WA, trailed by 20 points at three quarter time and looked a beaten side after having been outscored 9.14 to 4.2 in the preceding two quarters. Then Lindner, opposed to 6ft 4in (193cm) 17 stone (108kg) WA giant Ray Gabelich, cut loose with the most electrifying burst of marking I have seen. His inspiring play (plus 2 fine goals) and the ruckwork of Bill Wedding lifted SA to a thrilling 2 point win.
Lindner took one mark at full stretch with his foot wedged against the upright Gabelich's neck. His hands must have been close to 14ft (4.3 metres) from the ground when he grabbed the ball. Victoria's coach, the late Len Smith......described Lindner's effort that day as "out of this world".
Lindner said he thought his peak years had been the late 1950s and early 1960s. His most rewarding year was in 1963 when he took North from 6th in 1962 to the grand final (it lost to Port) in his first year as playing coach. "I was also in the SA side which beat the Vics in Melbourne that year."
When it was pointed out his best year for votes was 1967 when he won 'The Advertiser' Trophy and lost the Magarey Medal To Trevor Obst on a countback (see footnote 1), Lindner said: "Aha - that was the year I was switched to the ruck, resting in defence. It just shows what might have happened if I had got away from the clutches of those centre half backs a little earlier in my career."
Lindner will rank with the unforgettable. He is already a legend among North supporters (see footnote 2).
Footnotes
1. In 1998, the SANFL decided to award retrospective Medals to all players who had initially lost either on countback - such as Lindner - or the casting vote of the league chairman. Return to Main Text
2. Besides his retrospective Magarey Medal, Don Lindner won North Adelaide's premier award in 1958, 1962 and 1967, topped the club's goal kicking list in 1955 with 36 goals, was a member of the 1960 premiership-winning side, was named an All Australian in 1961, and made a total of 16 appearances for South Australia.
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Goodbye to a great 'Croweater' - Don Lindner - R.I.P.
NFC 2021