Bob Merrick | |||
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Personal information | |||
Date of birth | 23 July 1893 | ||
Place of birth | Darlinghurst, New South Wales | ||
Date of death | 24 October 1981 | (aged 88)||
Place of death | Kew, Victoria | ||
Original team(s) | Port Melbourne (VFA) | ||
Height | 175 cm (5 ft 9 in) | ||
Weight | 73 kg (161 lb) | ||
Playing career1 | |||
Years | Club | Games (Goals) | |
1919–1922, 1926 | Fitzroy | 59 (181) | |
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1926.
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Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com |
Robert 'Bob' Merrick (23 July 1893 - 24 October 1981) was an Australian rules footballer who played for Fitzroy in the VFL.
Merrick was originally from Sydney and prior to joining Fitzroy played his football with Port Melbourne, finishing the 1915 VFA season as the league's leading goalkicker. He debuted for Fitzroy in 1919 and playing as a full-forward, topped Fitzroy's goalkicking every year until he left in 1922, with 42, 53, 32 and 47 goals respectively. Unlucky not to play in a premiership, he missed out on the Maroon's 1922 premiership side due to a knee injury.
He shares with Jack Moriarty the record for most goals in a match by a Fitzroy player, kicking a bag of 12 goals in his club's Round 16 encounter with Melbourne at Brunswick Street Oval in 1919.
Merrick made a brief comeback with Fitzroy in 1926 but could only manage five games before an injured shoulder saw him omitted from the side. He completed his senior football career back at Port Melbourne for the remainder of 1926 and entire 1927-28 seasons.
From 1930-34 Merrick played in the Wednesday league for Yellow Cabs booting four goals in winning 1930 and 1934 Grand Final teams and two in the 1931 premiership loss. It was during this stint that, according to a story told by Jack Dyer, Merrick abused the ball and an all in fight resulted when an opponent assumed the abuse was directed at him.
After missing out on the 1922 VFL Grand Final Merrick took a break from playing and began what was to become an intermittent umpiring career.
He was appointed by the North West Football Union (NWFU) in 1923 but his knee proved restrictive even for umpiring and he resigned his appointment without making the trip to Tasmania.
Merrick's activities in 1924 are undocumented but by April 1925 he had been appointed captain-coach of Benalla and had the team in rigorous pre-season training. He starred in the opening round kicking seven goals against Rutherglen where "his marking and snapshots were just as good as when he was the idol of Fitzroy". Three more goals against Albury and two against Hume Weir and it appeared he was back in form. In early June Merrick resigned from Benalla and by the middle of the month had once again taken up the whistle, this time in the Barrier Ranges Football Association (BRFA). It was an interesting selection given Merrick's relative inexperience against a list of applicants that included Les Netherton, a VFL umpire with 16 senior matches to his credit and a further 72 VCFL appointments over four seasons. Merrick's readiness to travel at once, and paying the fares of his family himself, seems to have been the difference.