Jack Danckert | |||
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Personal information | |||
Full name | Jack Danckert | ||
Date of birth | 10 July 1922 | ||
Date of death | 26 January 2000 | (aged 77)||
Original team(s) | Middle Park (CBL) | ||
Height / weight | 178 cm / 80 kg | ||
Playing career1 | |||
Years | Club | Games (Goals) | |
1944–1947 | South Melbourne | 13 (0) | |
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1947.
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Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com |
Jack Danckert (10 July 1922 – 26 January 2000) was an Australian rules footballer who played with South Melbourne in the Victorian Football League (VFL) during the 1940s.
Danckert was a defender who was unable put together regular appearances while at South Melbourne, never playing more than five games in a single season. He played as a half back flanker in the 1945 VFL Grand Final against Carlton, in what was just his ninth league appearance. The grand final, which South Melbourne lost, is referred to as being a "Bloodbath" and Danckert was one of the victims when he was felled by Carlton ruckman Rod McLean.
He didn't feature at all in the 1946 VFL season and played just four games in 1947. The following year he signed with Victorian Football Association (VFA) club Williamstown and made 64 appearances for them in three seasons. Danckert was a back pocket defender in Williamstown's 1949 premiership team and won their "Best and Fairest" award in 1950. He was a VFA representative at the 1950 Brisbane Carnival.
Danckert later joined the administration of the Mordialloc Football Club, and became one of its two delegates to the VFA Board of Management. Famously as delegate, Danckert was unable to attend the VFA meeting on 2 December 1960 to lodge Mordialloc's second vote against partitioning of the Association into two divisions, because his wife was expecting their child that night; the change was ultimately passed by exactly the three-quarters majority it required, and Danckert's vote (or that of a proxy, which the club failed to arrange) could have defeated the motion.