Brian Faehse
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Brian Faehse | |||
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Personal information | |||
Full name | Brian Keith Faehse | ||
Nickname(s) | Iron Man | ||
Date of birth | 8 October 1924 | ||
Place of birth | Cummins, South Australia | ||
Date of death | 21 March 2021[1] | (aged 96)||
Height | 182 cm (6 ft 0 in) | ||
Weight | 76 kg (168 lb) | ||
Position(s) |
Ruckman | ||
Playing career1 | |||
Years | Club | Games (Goals) | |
1944–56 | West Adelaide | 222 (60) | |
Coaching career | |||
Years | Club | Games (W–L–D) | |
1951–52 | West Adelaide | 35 (14–21–0) | |
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1956. | |||
Career highlights | |||
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Source: AustralianFootball.com |
Brian Keith Faehse (8 October 1924 – 21 March 2021) was an Australian rules football player who played his league career with West Adelaide in the South Australian National Football League (SANFL) between 1944 and 1956. He was born in Cummins, South Australia. Fos Williams, who played alongside Faehse at West Adelaide, and against him with Port Adelaide, stated that "I've never met a better team mate or a more ferocious and determined opponent".
Playing career
Faehse made his league debut with the wartime West Adelaide-
After attending
Faehse was a member of West Adelaide's 1947 premiership side which defeated
Faehse was appointed Captain-Coach of West again in 1951 and held the position for two seasons, compiling a 14-21 record. In 1951 he repeated as club Best & Fairest. After taking the club to sixth and missing the finals in both seasons he was replaced as coach of the side in 1953 by Laurie Cahill (uncle of future multiple Port Adelaide premiership player and coach and 1985-87 Wests coach John Cahill), but remained captain of the side until his retirement in 1956.
Faehse was involved in an incident with Port Adelaide player Dave Boyd just before half-time of the 1954 SANFL Grand Final. He had flattened Boyd with what umpire Ken Aplin considered to be a fair bump. However, Port fans in the Sir Edwin Smith Stand at the Adelaide Oval didn't like what happened to their player and set upon the West Adelaide players as they made their way through the crowd to the dressing room with punches and kicks, with some players and officials reportedly not making it to the rooms until it was time to return to the ground for the second half. West, who had been leading at half time, were overrun by Port Adelaide in the second half of the match.
The incident prompted the construction of new changerooms underneath the George Giffen Stand over the summer of 1954-55. With the entrance to the rooms now located in the south-western corner of the oval forming part of the boundary fence, players no longer had to go through the crowd to get to the rooms (until the building of the new rooms, football players used the same dressing rooms as the cricket players. The only way to get to the original rooms from the ground was through the members pavilion in the Sir Edwin Smith Stand). Faehse was given the honor of being the first player to use the tunnel when as captain he led West onto the field for a game against Norwood in 1955. Faehse retired from league football after the 1956 Grand Final loss to Port Adelaide having played 222 games, including 128 consecutive games earning him the nickname Iron Man, and kicking 60 goals for the club over 13 seasons. His total games was then a club record for West Adelaide.
Representative football
Faehse represented
Off field
Faehse was a players' representative on the club's management committee from 1948 to 1955 and after retiring in 1956 was elected to the club's board by its members in 1958. He was also one of the prime movers to get West Adelaide their own home ground and was a member of the sub-committee which negotiated the lease of the land that is now the club's home ground (Richmond Oval) from the West Torrens Council. He organised the plan of the oval and arranged the original earthmoving, clearing and levelling of the site.
The 1,500 seat grandstand at Richmond Oval, of which Faehse was one of the organisers and planners, was named the B.K. Faehse Stand in the 2000s in honor of his services to the West Adelaide Football Club. Faehse was appointed to the position of SANFL Tribunal Commissioner in 1964 and held the position for 15 years and was an inaugural inductee into the South Australian Football Hall of Fame in 2002. He was also an inaugural inductee into the West Adelaide Hall of Fame in 2005 and was elevated to Legend status in 2011 alongside the club's only other official legend, former team mate Neil Kerley.
References
- ^ "Brian Keith FAEHSE". The Advertiser.