Lance Mann

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Lance Mann
Personal information
Full name Lance Gibson Mann
Date of birth 12 July 1930
Place of birth Walwa, Victoria
Date of death 13 March 2015(2015-03-13) (aged 84)
Place of death Albury, New South Wales
Original team(s) Albury
Debut 2 June 1951, Essendon vs. Fitzroy, at Brunswick Street Oval
Height 175 cm (5 ft 9 in)
Weight 73 kg (161 lb)
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1951–1954 Essendon 55 (21)
1955–1957 Albury
1958–1959 Essendon 25 0(1)
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1959.
Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com

Lance Gibson Mann (12 July 1930 – 13 March 2015[1]) was a professional footrunner and a former Australian rules footballer in the Victorian Football League (VFL).

Footballer

A talented wingman, Mann started his football career in Walwa, before playing with

Ovens & Murray Football League.[2]

He played his first senior match for the

Lance won the

Ovens and Murray Football League Best and Fairest award, the Morris Medal in 1956 and was a member of Albury's 1956 premiership team.[4]

He was the coach of the Essendon Reserve Grade team in 1960 and 1961.

Sprinter

1952

Trained by Pat Kennedy,[5] aged 21, Mann won the Wangaratta Gift on Monday 28 January 1952, running off 8½ yards 8+12 yards (7.8 m) in 12.1 seconds. He started the final as 5-to-4-on favourite, having been a 20/1 outsider before the first heat.[6]

On Monday, 14 April 1952, he won the 75th [130-yard (120 m)] Stawell Gift in 11 14/16 seconds, running off a handicap of 7+14 yards (6.6 m).[7]

On Wednesday, 16 April 1952, he also won the Bendigo Easter Gift by 2 yards (1.8 m) in 11.8 seconds, running off a handicap of 7+14 yards (6.6 m).[8]

Mann was the first athlete to win the Wangaratta Gift, the Stawell Gift, and the Bendigo Gift treble in the same year.[9] It is also significant that his Essendon team-mate, Norm McDonald, running off 5 yards (4.6 m), ran second to Mann in the finals of both the Stawell Gift and the Bendigo Gift.[10]

1958

On Monday, 10 March 1958, and running off 4½ yards, he ran second in the Bendigo Thousand (130 yds);[11] the feat was all the more remarkable as Mann had broken down during his heat the year before (1957) with a thigh injury so severe that he had to be stretchered from the ground.[12]

Footnotes

  1. ^ "Vale Lance Mann".
  2. ^ Johnstone, D., "Lance Mann — an Albury sporting legend", The Border Mail, 17 March 2015.
  3. ^ Buggy, H., "'Back to the Wall' Succeeds", The Argus, (Monday, 1 October 1951), p.11.
  4. ^ "1956 - O&MFL - Morris Medal votes". O&MFNL. O&MFNL.
  5. ^ Heavily Backed for Stawell Gift, The Sunday Herald, (Sunday, 13 April 1952), p.10.
  6. ^ Balfe, H., "Mann Takes Gift", The Argus, (Tuesday, 29 January 1952), p.10.
  7. ^ Welch, B., "Stawell Gift: Fancied Runners Clash In Heat: Draw Upsets Betting", The Age, (Saturday, 12 April 1952), p.14; Mann for Stawell Gift Today, The Age, (Monday, 14 April 1952), p.12; Welch, "Mann Beats Team Mate in Stawell Gift Final", The Age, Tuesday, 15 April 1952), p.14.
  8. ^ The Bendigo Easter Gift is an entirely different event from the Bendigo Thousand. The 1952 Bendigo Thousand was conducted 8–10 March 1952. Mann, running off a handicap of 7+14 yards (6.6 m) came second in the second semi-final to the eventual final winner Dave Hobbs, who ran off 9+12 yards (8.7 m). Hobbs won the semi-final in 11.7 seconds, equalling the record set by Australian sprint champion, John Stoney, in 1948. Hobbs set a new race record (11.6 seconds) in winning the final (see: Bendigo Thousand to Burnie Gift Winner, The (Launceston) Examiner, (Tuesday, 11 march 1952), p.15.
  9. ^ Superb Bendigo Win by Mann, The Age, (Thursday, 17 April 1952), p.16.
  10. ^ Kerville, B., "Essendon Pair Dons of Track: Great Fight in Stawell Gift", The Sporting Globe, (Wednesday, 16 April 1952), p11.
  11. ^ Bendigo Thousand Finish, The Age, (Tuesday, 11 March 1958), p.18.
  12. ^ Mann Injured at Bendigo, The Age, (Monday, 11 March 1957), p.16.

References

External links