John Nicholls (footballer)

For other people named John Nicholls, see John Nicholls (disambiguation).
John Nicholls
Personal information
Full name John Nicholls
Date of birth (1939-08-13) 13 August 1939
Original team(s) Maryborough (BFL)
Height / weight 189 cm / 105 kg
Position(s) Ruckman
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1957–1974 Carlton 328 (307)
Representative team honours
Years Team Games (Goals)
Victoria 31 (?)
International team honours
1968 Australia
Coaching career3
Years Club Games (W–L–D)
1972–1975
1977–1978
1981
Carlton (VFL)
Glenelg (SANFL)
Coburg (VFA)
97 (63–31–3)[1]
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1974.
3 Coaching statistics correct as of 1975.
Career highlights

John Nicholls (born 13 August 1939) is a former Australian rules footballer who represented Carlton in the Victorian Football League (VFL).

Nicholls is widely regarded as one of Australian football's greatest players. He was the first Carlton footballer to play 300 games for the Blues, and was declared the club's greatest player.[2] He represented Victoria a record 31 times in interstate football, and was named as one of the inaugural Legends when the Australian Football Hall of Fame was established in 1996.[1] Nicholls played most of his football as a ruckman, and although at 189 centimetres he was not especially tall, he compensated his lack of height with his intelligence and imposing physical presence, which earned him the nickname 'Big Nick'.[2] His rivalry with fellow Australian football legend Graham Farmer raised the standard of ruck play during the 1960s.[2]

Carlton career

The Carlton Football Club recruited Nicholls from the Maryborough Football Club in 1957 after recruiting his elder brother, Don, the previous year their father ensured that both brothers would play together at one club.[3] Don played 77 senior games as a centreman for Carlton from 1956, when he was Carlton's best first-year player, to 1961.[4] Nicholls enjoyed an outstanding season in 1966, winning his second consecutive Robert Reynolds Trophy, and finishing second in the Brownlow Medal count, four votes behind St Kilda champion Ian Stewart.[5]

Success as captain-coach

In his first year as captain-coach, Nicholls led the Blues to the minor premiership with 18 wins and a draw, followed by Richmond with 18 wins. 1972 was the first season in which the McIntyre "Final Five" system was used, and so because Carlton finished on top of the ladder, this meant that they had to wait until the semi-final, in which they faced Richmond. The match was drawn, which in those days meant that a replay was required the following week, thus shifting every other match back another week. Richmond won the replay by 41 points, but in the post-match interviews Nicholls refused to panic:

Carlton has not hit a form slump. We just had a dismal day - our worst for the season. [...] There'll be no panic just because we went down by 41 points. There won't be more than one or two changes. [...] We will be sticking to the same players because it was they who put us where we finished at the end of the home-and-away games. [...] I know the players will redeem themselves next week. We just won't beat St. Kilda - we will win well. And if we team together as I know we can I know we are good enough to take the premiership.[6]

Robert Walls, who was serving as vice-captain, recalled that the day after the semi-final defeat, the players arrived at training feeling flat, but Nicholls revealed to them the outline of his plan to win the premiership with all-out attacking football.[7] But first, Carlton had to defeat St Kilda in the Preliminary Final. The Saints had played in the previous year's Grand Final and still boasted a strong team. Nicholls chose not to implement his plan, trusting that his players would get the job done.[8] The Blues prevailed by 16 points and earned the right to redeem themselves against their arch-rival.
Richmond went into the Grand Final as clear favourites, but this would be the day when Nicholls established once and for all his reputation as one of the greats of the game. The element of surprise in Nicholls' plan lay in his team selection; he handed the rucking responsibilities to "Percy" Jones, whilst stationing himself in the forward pocket with the intent of kicking goals.[9] He also deployed Barry Armstrong in the centre while Vin Waite was given the task of minding Barry Richardson.[9] Finally, in the lead-up to the match, Nicholls had given his players three simple instructions: get to the ball first, kick long into attack and contest for 100 minutes.[9]
The plan succeeded in the most spectacular fashion possible. In an enthralling spectacle of attacking football from both teams, Carlton piled on the goals to lead at half time with an incredible score of 18.6 (114) to 10.9 (69). The shell-shocked Tigers tried to claw their way back into the game, but every goal they scored was met with a Carlton reply. When the final siren sounded, Carlton had registered a record score of 28.9 (177) while Richmond's score of 23.12 (150), enough to win most games, remains the highest losing score in a Grand Final. While every Carlton player contributed, Nicholls himself had a field day, kicking six goals on Ray Boyanich. He said afterwards that had he not kicked six, he felt he would have failed in the position.[9] Walls, who also kicked six goals, was nominated best on ground.
Stung by their defeat, Richmond didn't have to wait long to avenge their humiliation as the two rivals squared off again in the following season's Grand Final. On a hot and blustery day, Richmond prevailed in a match that would be remembered for two major incidents. The first occurred at the three-minute mark of the first quarter, when Nicholls was sensationally felled by Richmond back pocket Laurie Fowler while juggling a mark. Both players had their eyes on the ball and didn't see each other until it was too late. Fowler, who was airborne, hit Nicholls with his shoulder[10] and emerged from the collision unscathed, but Nicholls went to ground and had to be helped to his feet by the club trainers. The sight of their fallen leader stunned the Carlton players; Robert Walls recalled that "[t]here was a bit of disbelief when Nicholls went down because we'd never seen the big bloke hurt like that before."[11] Nicholls was awarded a 15-metre penalty, and goaled from the free kick, but suffered double vision from the collision, and had little further impact on the game.
The second incident came in the second quarter, when Ian Stewart kicked the ball deep into Richmond's attacking zone to a contest involving Carlton full-back Geoff Southby and Richmond forward Neil Balme. What happened next would sour Carlton's already bitter relations with Richmond for many years.[12] Going for the ball after it spilled off a pack contest, Southby was floored by a round-arm punch from Balme. The hit broke Southby's jaw, and he would not return to the field after half time. Just moments later, Balme would lash out again, this time at Vin Waite. Reflecting on the incident many years later, Nicholls angrily labelled Balme a "cheat":

I didn't respect him as a player because I reckon he was a cheat. He used to dwell on players and with his big, strong frame, he should have been doing more courageous things. People over the years say Balmey knocked a couple out, but he basically king-hit people.[12]

This was often seen as hypocritical by Richmond and the football world in general following Nicholls' own cheating. In a famous incident in 1967 Nicholls feigned being hit by Neville Crowe in the semi-final and then failed to come clean at the tribunal. This was not only against the spirit of the game and Australian culture in general but also outright cheating as Nicholls didn't want to have to face Crowe in the Grand Final if the two teams played off. Crowe subsequently missed the Grand Final and retired without ever winning a premiership (although two weeks later Richmond beat Geelong for the 1967 Premiership meaning Crowe would have had a premiership to his name had Nicholls not cheated). This cheating and complete lack of sportsmanship on Nicholls' behalf remains a huge stain on his reputation to this day.


Retirement and Further coaching

Nicholls finished his VFL career with a then-record 331 games (three state games played during Carlton games were added to his 328 Carlton games). Following his retirement, he served as non-playing coach at Carlton in 1975, but then resigned three days before the start of the 1976 VFL season, citing mental and physical exhaustion.[13] Nicholls then went to South Australia, where he coached Glenelg Football Club, from 1977–1978, and then returned to Melbourne to coach Coburg Football Club in 1981.

Life after Football

Nicholls has remained loyal to Carlton, even through the recent lean years.

In August 2010, at a function to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Carlton's memorable 1970 premiership, Nicholls took the opportunity to voice his displeasure at the way Carlton had been run by previous administrators since the 1995 premiership, which eventually led, among other things, to the club's first wooden spoon in 2002:

The thing that annoys me more at the moment about Carlton is our lack of respect, generally, in the footballing public. I know that, without going right through all the 50-odd years, I have seen a lot of good committees come and go. I have seen a lot of good players come and go, but there is a lack of respect and, to me, a trashing of the Carlton brand in the past 10 or 15 years.[14]

During Carlton's 150th anniversary celebration in June 2014, at which he was named the club's greatest player, Nicholls went further, saying that the club needed to lose its arrogant image:

But I must say, if I have one regret about the image of Carlton, who I love, it is the fact that we have probably taken over from Collingwood as being the most hated side in the league. I say that because people think we were arrogant, which we were - thanks to a couple of presidents. Without mentioning any names, they were arrogant. When we won, they didn’t know how to win properly. I believe that’s the thing about sport - you have got to know how to win and how to lose and do both properly. We were arrogant. I think that helped create an image of the club, being an arrogant club, which I don’t think we are.[15]

Honours and Tributes

Nicholls won the Robert Reynolds Trophy for Carlton's best and fairest player on five occasions: 1959, only his third season, and then in 1963, 1965, 1966 and 1967. In the eleven seasons from 1959 to 1969, Nicholls never placed outside the top three for the award. The trophy was renamed in Nicholls' honour[16] in 2004. He was also named in Carlton's Team of the Century in the first ruck.[17]

Besides being named as one of the twelve inaugural "Legends of the Australian Football Hall of Fame in 1996, Nicholls was also named in the AFL Team of the Century, as the resting ruckman in the back pocket, with Graham Farmer taking the first ruck position.[18] He is depicted contesting a boundary throw-in against Farmer in Jamie Cooper's painting the Game That Made Australia, commissioned by the AFL in 2008 to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the sport.[19]

Teammate and fellow Legend Alex Jesaulenko rated Nicholls the best he had seen or played with, "because he could have two marks and four kicks and still win a game."[20]

Former Collingwood captain Des Tuddenham said that Nicholls had the best football brain of anyone he had met.[20]

Carlton rover Rod Ashman recounted the impact Nicholls had during his early years at the club:

Playing alongside "Big Nick" was an absolute godsend. I got him at the end of his career, but I'll never forget one day at Carlton at a boundary throw-in, right in front of the social club in the forward pocket. He looked at me and motioned towards a spot; it was clear he wanted me to get there. Sure enough, he palms it straight to me and I kick a goal. He was that good. Opposition ruckmen just couldn't get around him. I couldn't believe the size of his legs; they were enormous. He could manoeuvre around blokes like Polly Farmer, even though he stood only six feet two. that's shorter than Chris Judd. He was just a sensational player.[21]

References

  1. 1 2 "Legends". AFL.com.au. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 Bowen, Nick (14 June 2014). "John Nicholls voted greatest Blue of all time". AFL.com.au.
  3. "Big Nick and Ragsy". The Age. 30 August 2007.
  4. Don Nicholls Profile
  5. Phillips, Stephen (18 July 1977). "Five votes off a grand slam". The Age.
  6. "No panic changes, says Nicholls". The Age. Melbourne, Vic. 26 September 1972. p. 22. Retrieved 24 June 2012.
  7. Connolly, Rohan (25 September 2001). "Blues by a cricket score". The Age.
  8. "Preliminary Final, 1972". Blueseum. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  9. 1 2 3 4 Beames, Percy (10 October 1972). "Carlon's flag... and how!". The Age.
  10. "Carlton ruckman John Nicholls goes down". Herald Sun. 20 June 2008.
  11. "Ferocious rivalry the making of a big hit". The Australian. 7 September 2013.
  12. 1 2 Connolly, Rohan (7 May 2005). "The bad blood that won't wash away". The Age. Melbourne, Vic.
  13. Cartledge, 2013, p. 59
  14. Hawthorne, Mark (13 August 2010). "Great says Blues not in great Nick".
  15. Pierik, Jon (15 June 2014). "John Nicholls says Carlton needs to shed arrogant image". The Age.
  16. "Teague wins Carlton best and fairest". The Sydney Morning Herald. 9 September 2004. Retrieved 13 October 2009.
  17. Team of the Century
  18. AFL Record Guide to Season 2005; Lovett, Michael (editor); p493
  19. "The Game That Made Australia". Australian Football League. Retrieved 19 September 2010.
  20. 1 2 Flanagan, Martin (28 August 1999). "The Grand Final of the Century 1970 (Part One)". The Age.
  21. Cartledge, 2013, pp.57-58

Bibliography

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