William "Nipper" Truscott
William "Nipper" Truscott | |||
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Personal information | |||
Date of birth | 9 October 1886 | ||
Place of birth | Lithgow, New South Wales, Australia | ||
Date of death | 20 June 1966 | (aged 79)||
Place of death | East Fremantle, Western Australia | ||
Original team(s) | Trafalgar juniors | ||
Height | 175 cm (5 ft 9 in) | ||
Weight | 66 kg (146 lb) | ||
Position(s) | Rover, forward pocket | ||
Playing career1 | |||
Years | Club | Games (Goals) | |
1907–12 | Mines Rovers | unknown | |
1913–24 | East Fremantle | 202 (90) | |
Representative team honours | |||
Years | Team | Games (Goals) | |
1908–24 | Western Australia | 16 (2) | |
Coaching career3 | |||
Years | Club | Games (W–L–D) | |
1925–26 | East Fremantle | 37 (24–13–0) | |
1934–35 | Perth | 41 (18–23–0) | |
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1924. 2 State and international statistics correct as of 1924. 3 Coaching statistics correct as of 1935. | |||
Career highlights | |||
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Source: AustralianFootball.com |
William John "Nipper" Truscott Jr. (9 October 1886 in Lithgow, New South Wales – 20 June 1966 in East Fremantle, Western Australia[1]) was an Australian sportsman. He played over 300 games of Australian rules football for Mines Rovers in the Goldfields Football League (GFL) and East Fremantle in the West Australian Football League, and represented Western Australia at football, cricket and lawn bowls. He was inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame in 1985 and the Australian Football Hall of Fame in 1996.
Early life
[edit]Born to Susannah (née Strickland) and William John Truscott in Lithgow, Truscott grew up in Sydney where he played rugby football. He moved with his family to Kalgoorlie on the Western Australian Goldfields at the age of 14, and began playing for the Trafalgar Football Club's junior side.
Football career
[edit]Truscott was a durable rover (175 cm, 66 kg), who played to age 41. Lithgow born Truscott was a doyen of West Australian football, and an all round sportsman, once representing Western Australia in a first-class cricket match as a wicket-keeper and also playing bowls. Partnered by Harry Snook, he won an Australian pairs bowls title in 1955.[2]
Nicknamed 'Nipper' as a boy for his quickness in Rugby Union, he grew up in Sydney, only taking up Australian rules football when his family moved to the goldfields in Kalgoorlie, Western Australia in 1899. He was an exceptional player for Mines Rovers club at a time when the Goldfields League was considered to be almost the equal of any other league in the country. Truscott was chosen to represent Western Australia in the 1908 national carnival side – the first of his record five carnival appearances over 18 years.
Having married in 1912 he then moved to Perth where he became a postmaster. He commenced in the 1913 season with the East Fremantle Football Club, and quickly established himself as the WAFL's leading centreman. His ability to pass the ball (always with a drop kick) accurately to teammates was a feature of his play. He played in three premiership teams and in seven that were runners-up. He later acted as coach, club and State selector, club secretary and delegate.
Truscott died at the age of 79, on 20 June 1966 in Western Australia. He was an inaugural member of the Western Australian Institute's Hall of Fame in August 1985, and in the same year he was listed in the Sport Australia Hall of Fame.
Truscott was made a member of the Fremantle Football Club created Fremantle Football Hall of Legends in 1996. In 2004 he was awarded Legend Status in the West Australian Football Hall of Fame. The Nipper Truscott Pavilion at East Fremantle Oval is named in his honour.
In 1996 Truscott was inducted into the Australian Football Hall of Fame.
See also
[edit]Footnotes
[edit]- ^ Cemetery record
- ^ "Fresh Laurels Come At Sixty-Nine". The Daily News. Vol. LXXIII, no. 24, 462. Western Australia. 20 April 1955. p. 24. Retrieved 14 September 2023 – via National Library of Australia.
References
[edit]- Ross, John (1999). The Australian Football Hall of Fame. Australia: HarperCollinsPublishers. p. 129. ISBN 0-7322-6426-X.
- Australian Dictionary of Biography
- AFL: Hall of Fame Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine
- Cricinfo profile