Matt Rendell | |||
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Personal information | |||
Full name | Matthew Rendell | ||
Date of birth | 18 April 1959 | ||
Original team(s) | West Torrens | ||
Draft | 76th overall, 1991 National Draft | ||
Height / weight | 200 cm / 103 kg | ||
Position(s) | Ruckman | ||
Playing career1 | |||
Years | Club | Games (Goals) | |
1981–1991 | Fitzroy | 164 (101) | |
1992 | Brisbane Bears | 13 (7) | |
Total | 177 (108) | ||
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1992.
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Career highlights | |||
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Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com |
Matthew Rendell (born 18 April 1959 in South Australia) is a South Australian born Australian rules footballer who played in the Australian Football League and South Australian National Football League (SANFL).
Rendell, standing at 200 cm, was a ruckman who made his debut with the West Torrens Football Club in the SANFL in 1977 where he played 79 games. He left South Australia in 1981 to play with the Fitzroy Football Club in the VFL, wearing the No. 9 guernsey. In his first year, he played mainly at full forward and kicked forty-five goals, but he admitted in later years he did not enjoy it. With the return of Ron Alexander to Western Australia, however, Rendell was to make the ruck position his own, barring injuries, until 1987. Rendell did have quite a number of injuries, however, after 1983, with the result that he played only 26 of 43 games in 1984 and 1985.
Rendell won Fitzroy's 1982 and 1983 best and fairest awards, and was appointed captain from 1985 to 1987. In one of the most amazing games in V/AFL history, Rendell, who had not kicked a goal in his previous seventeen games for Fitzroy, was used as a seventh forward to counter North Melbourne's Gary Dempsey's habit of marking in the last line. The result was sensational: Rendell kicked eight goals and the Lions won a top-of-the-table clash by 150 points, which at the time more than doubled the previous biggest loss by a minor premier.
Rendell played just one game with the Lions in 1988, the rest of the year spent in the reserves, which Rendell put down to a misunderstanding with coach David Parkin. He recovered so well in 1989, though, that he was again among the club's most valuable players in a drive to the finals that was deflated by an injury to top forward Richard Osborne.