Tony McGuinness

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 Career Highlights Player
  • Glenelg 1981 – 1985
    • 113 games
    • 200 goals
  • Magarey Medallist 1982
  • Glenelg Best and Fairest 1982
  • Glenelg premiership player 1985
  • Glenelg Hall of Fame inducted 2002
  • SANFL Hall of Fame inducted 2002
  • Played 12 Rep games for South Australia
  • All-Australian 1988, 1992, 1993
 Career Highlights Coach
  • Glenelg 1998 - 2000
  • Finalist 1999
 Career Highlights Footscray
  • Footscray 1986 - 1990
    • 109 games
    • 108 goals
  • Footscray Best and Fairest 1987
 Career Highlights Adelaide
  • Adelaide 1991 - 1996
    • 113 games
    • 79 goals
  • Adelaide Best and Fairest 1993
  • Adelaide Club Captain: 1995-96

Dynamic, tireless, direct and pacy, Tony McGuinness was without doubt one of the finest rovers of the past twenty-five years. If he had a weakness it was that he tended to be one-footed - the left - but what a foot it was, whether sending a daisy-cutter down a team mate's throat from a distance of twenty or thirty metres, or bisecting the uprights from a tight angle near the boundary on fifty.

McGuinness wasted no time in making his mark in top level football, winning a Magarey Medal with Glenelg in 1982 while still aged just eighteen. He won the Bays' best and fairest award the same year, and would later also reap the premier individual rewards at Footscray (1987) and Adelaide (1993).

The last of Tony McGuinness' 113 SANFL games with Glenelg was the 1985 grand final in which North Adelaide was despatched to the tune of 57 points. McGuinness' 2 goals in that match brought his career tally with the Tigers to precisely 200.

Between 1986 and 1990 he played a total of 109 V/AFL games for Footscray, amassing 108 goals. With the Crows from 1991 to 1996 he added a further 113 AFL games and 61 goals.

Tony McGuinness returned to Glenelg as non-playing coach from 1998 to 2000 but proved unable to resurrect the fortunes of the once proud club.

Subsequently he commenced as an Assistant Coach at Port Adelaide Power AFL side in 2005. He resigned from this position at the end of the 2006 season, citing outside business interests and wanting to spend more time with his family.

Life after playing has seen McGuinness set-up the McGuinness-McDermott Foundation with fellow former Tiger Chris McDermott. He also ran a sports retails business, Rowe and Jarman, which he sold to Amart All Sports in 2006.

Reference

Wiki Article

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