Gary Pert

Gary Pert
Personal information
Full name Gary Pert
Date of birth (1965-05-28) 28 May 1965
Original team(s) Bulleen
Height / weight 189 cm / 97 kg
Position(s) Full back
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1982–1990
1991–1995
Total
Fitzroy
Collingwood
163 (42)
070 0(4)
233 (46)
Representative team honours
Years Team Games (Goals)
Victoria 6
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1995.
Career highlights

Gary Pert (born 28 May 1965) is a former Australian rules footballer who represented Fitzroy and Collingwood in the Australian Football League (AFL). Tall, well-built and strong in the air, Pert played over 200 league games, despite suffering two serious knee injuries in the prime years of his career.

Fitzroy career

The son of Brian Pert, a former Fitzroy utility player, Pert was educated at Templestowe High School.[1]

Besides representing Bulleen in junior football, Pert also played for the Victorian Football League (VFL) schoolboys team in Ireland in 1981.[1] He was recruited to Fitzroy, as Bulleen was in Fitzroy's recruiting zone, and made his senior debut in Round 4 of the 1982 season at only 16 years of age. Also making his debut was Paul Roos, with whom Pert formed a great partnership for Fitzroy through the 1980s.

He played State of Origin for Victoria in 1984 at the age of just 18, and was a champion full-back for the Lions (who could be switched to the forward line). In 1985 he won All-Australian selection.[2]

Pert missed much of the first half of the 1987 VFL season due to a knee injury, but was playing again by the end of the season. Prior to the start of the 1988 VFL season, Paul Roos was named captain of Fitzroy, and Pert was chosen as his deputy.[3] On the strong bond between Roos and Pert, David Parkin, who was coach of Fitzroy at the time, said:

They're inseparable in everything they do... On the field, from the time the ball leaves Pert and goes to Roos, there is an understanding there. I don't think I've seen such an understanding relationship between two players... It is remarkable[3]

Early in the season, Pert suffered a bizarre injury when he went to his girlfriend's house for dinner and got a biscuit stuck in his oesophagus. The blockage remained overnight and so the following day he underwent an oesophagoscopy under general anaesthetic.[4] He recovered in time for the Round 5 game against Richmond. He returned in 1989, winning Fitzroy's best and fairest.[5]

At the end of the 1990 AFL season, Pert suffered another knee injury that would rule him out of play for the whole year. The Lions let Pert go, having played 163 games with 42 goals between 1982 and 1990. The Collingwood Football Club subsequently picked him up in the 1990 AFL Draft.

Collingwood career

Gary's Collingwood career started well, until unfortunately he had another player (Gary Ablett sr) set up his own camp ground on Perts shoulders as he was waiting to take mark of the century, abruptly bring his career to a hault with crippling shoulders injuries

Post-AFL career

After retiring, Pert worked as a chief executive officer (CEO) for various high-profile organizations in Melbourne. He was head of Austereo[6] before taking up a position at the Nine Network TV station in December 2006.[7] But that job did not last long. In May 2007, he replaced Greg Swann as CEO of Collingwood.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 Carter, Ron (16 April 1982). "Kink, Barker back: Seven in for first League games". The Age.
  2. "Sheedy tables his top 20 in 20 years". The Age. 18 July 1985. p. 30.
  3. 1 2 Linnell, Garry (5 February 1988). "Fitzroy puts its faith in the Young Lions". The Age.
  4. Smithers, Patrick (28 April 1988). "Surgery, but Pert may play". The Age.
  5. Lovett, Michael (ed.). AFL Record Season Guide 2010. p. 333. ISBN 978-0-9806274-5-9.
  6. Wilson, Caroline (28 April 2006). "New era ahead as Pies look to life after Eddie". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 3 August 2009.
  7. "Pert perks up at Nine". Herald Sun. 8 December 2006.
  8. Barrett, Damien (11 May 2007). "Pert is Eddie's lifeline". Herald Sun.

External links

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