Mark Stone

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 Career Highlights
 Other Career Highlights

PLAYING

COACHING

  • Woodville-West Torrens SANFL (1998-1999)


* Stats current to end of 2019

File:Mark Stone.JPG

Contents

Biographical

  • Born: 1967
  • Height: cm
  • Weight: kg


Mark Stone

Early Years

Like the other males in his family, Mark played his first football with the local Tarrawingee (Vic) Magpies. Mark’s first job, with Westpac, took him to Wodonga. He had lined up in several games for the Bulldogs’ Thirds and had just made his senior debut, when he was belatedly suspended by the O & M for being an unregistered player.

“Some-one had overlooked the paperwork,” his father Jim recalls. “So he headed out to Howlong (NSW) for a season.”

By this time, he had scored employment with an Automotive Finance company in Melbourne, and joined Amateur team, Powerhouse (he won his Division’s Pepper Medal), followed by a couple of seasons with Ormond Amateurs.

He travelled back to play with Wangaratta for three years, had a stint with Moe, then joined Eastern District League club Ringwood, under former Benalla boy John Lamont.

Mark’s next move in employment took him to the Riverina, where Terry Daniher had turned Wagga Tigers into a classy unit. Friend and foe alike, admired the inimitable ‘T.D’, and Mark, who hit it off with him a treat , shared in a flag triumph and took out the Riverina F.L’s Quinn Medal.

In his first term as Daniher’s successor, he led the Tigers to another premiership. He was looking for a sea-change at the end of the following season, and responded to an advertisement from WAFL club South Fremantle , who appointed him Assistant-Coach.

AFL

Mark then spent 15 years as a coaching assistant in the AFL. He was West Coast’s Stoppage and Opposition Analyst from 2003-‘07, under John Worsfold, and took over as a Sydney Assistant and Stoppage Coach under Paul Roos, from 2008-11.

He headed back to the West in 2012, when Fremantle snapped him up as an Assistant.

He held a variety of positions in his six years with the Dockers, including midfield, forward-line and stoppage coach, and was one of Ross Lyon’s longest-serving off-siders. But he felt it was time to explore other options, and he informed Freo that he’d be leaving when his contract expired in October 2017.

Glenelg

In December 2017 Mark was appointed Glenelg Senior Coach, following the abrupt departure of Matthew Lokan in November that year.


References

1. Glenelg Football Club

2. KB Hill "On Reflection" Blog

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