Byron Pickett
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| Byron Pickett | ||||||||
Byron Pickett
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| Personal information | ||||||||
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| Full name | Byron Pickett | |||||||
| Date of Birth | August 11, 1977 | |||||||
| Place of Birth | Kellerberrin, Western Australia | |||||||
| Recruited from | Port Adelaide (SANFL) | |||||||
| Height/Weight | 178cm / 84kg | |||||||
| Playing Career1 | ||||||||
| Years | Club | Games (Goals) | ||||||
| 1997 – 2002 2003 – 2005 2006 – 2007 |
North Melbourne Port Adelaide Melbourne |
120 (81) 55 (80) 29 (16) |
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| ¹ Club statistics to end of 2007 season | ||||||||
² Representative statistics to end of {{{repstatsend}}}
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Byron Pickett (born August 11, 1977) is a indigenous Australian rules footballer known for his strength, hard bumps and tough approach to the game. He retired from the AFL in 2007, but continues his career in the SANFL with the Port Adelaide Magpies.
At only 178 cm and 86 kg, Pickett is not a large Australian Rules player, however he is solidly built and unquestionably tough. Despite developing a reputation as an unfair or 'dirty' player for his aggressive attack on the ball and the man, he has only been suspended three times since 2001.[1] In 2005 Pickett was acknowledged as one of the finest Aboriginal players in the history of the game, with his selection to the Indigenous Team of the Century.[2]
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[edit] Early Career
Born in Kellerberrin in country Western Australia, he grew up in Taman and then Geraldton, Western Australia before moving to South Australia and Port Lincoln where he played the majority of his junior football for the Mallee Park Football Club. He made the long trip each weekend to Adelaide, where he was later to play for the Port Adelaide Magpies in the SANFL from which he was recruited by AFL club North Melbourne.
[edit] AFL Career
[edit] North Melbourne Football Club
Nicknamed "Choppy", Pickett burst onto the scene in 1997 with the North Melbourne Football Club , playing only one game. However, in 1998 he had a fine year and was rewarded with the Norwich Rising Star award.
In 1999 he played in a premiership team with the Kangaroos, before switching to the club he originally played for in the SANFL, Port Adelaide Football Club, in 2002.
[edit] Port Adelaide Power
He was part of Port Adelaide's first ever AFL premiership in 2004, his eye-catching 3-goal, 20 possession performance[3] earning him the Norm Smith Medal for best afield.[4]
[edit] Melbourne
At the end of 2005, Pickett was involved in a trade that saw him play at the Melbourne Football Club from 2006 onwards, and he has vowed not to alter his style of play. He wears No 33, previously worn by former aboriginal player Jeff Farmer who currently plays for Fremantle (Still No 33).
In a round 7, 2006 clash with Fremantle at the MCG, Pickett sent Ryan Crowley to hospital with a broken cheekbone [5] in a shepherd.
Pickett suffered successive hamstring injuries in 2006 which sidelined him for several games.
2007 began slowly for Pickett, not selected in the initial rounds due to poor pre-season match fitness. However he returned in Round 4 and on May 5, 2007, laid a strong tackle on Port Adelaide's Kane Cornes left Cornes concussed and taken from the ground on a stretcher.
After round 6 in 2007, the Demons suspending Pickett to a minumum of four weeks at the Sandringham Football Club for the official reason of failing to attend a game. Unofficially, there were clubs concerns surrounding Pickett's weight and pre-season work ethic and him turning up to training under the influence of alcohol. [6]
Byron Pickett said that he will play his last game of football on Sunday 2nd of September, in the match against Carlton, retiring along with Demons teammates Clint Bizzell and Nathan D. Brown. He kicked a goal in his final game against the Blues.
[edit] Controversy
In 1999, Pickett crashed into Hawthorn's Brendan Krummel while his head was down to get the ball. In the bump, Pickett broke Krummel's nose, he was concussed and had short-term amnesia. A free kick was awarded but no official charge from the AFL. Despite his injuries, Krummel publicly defended Pickett's actions.
In 2000, Byron was admitted to a mental health clinic with fears of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder and other mental illnesses. Pickett was released from the clinic with reports that his mental health was fine. However, a certain amount of controversy still circles around the issue.
In 2005 he received 6 weeks for a clash which accidentally knocked out James Begley in a pre-season match with both players chasing for the ball. The incident sparked controversy and in response many football commentators, including premiership player Robert Walls called to ban the bump. Many cynics felt that Pickett had been singled out over the incident and his style of play unfairly made an example of, with the rules changing in response to the incident.
He received 2 weeks for a hip-and-shoulder on Carlton's Simon Wiggins as he completed a mark, after slowing down and pulling up to reduce the collision. Later in the season, a bump on Adelaide Football Club's Rhett Biglands knocked the 104 kg ruckman out cold, seeing Biglands stretchered from the field [7]. Biglands recovered, returned and played later in that match.
Pickett has also made numerous appearances in court related to drink-driving offences.[8]
In 2007 Pickett was suspended by Melbourne for failing to turn up to a game against the Western Bulldogs in which he was a listed emergency. It was later revealed he sent a phone text message to his coach Neale Daniher to inform him that he was too hungover to play. [9]
[edit] Post AFL Career
Following his AFL retirement, he was rumoured to be approached by several Victorian country football clubs including Port Fairy in the Warrnambool league. However he signed with the Port Adelaide Magpies in the SANFL for 2008 and 2009[10], enabling him to once again play for his former club.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
[edit] Notes
- ^ 'Byron Pickett Profile'
- ^ 'AFL names Indigenous Team of the Century'
- ^ '2004 Grand Final statistics'
- ^ 'Pickett claims Norm Smith medal'
- ^ 'Head Rule Strikes At Injuries'
- ^ 'Pickett wants back in'
- ^ 'Pickett off the hook for Biglands bump'
- ^ 'Pickett charged over car accident'
- ^ 'Pickett Too Hungover To Play'
- ^ http://www.portmagpies.com.au/news.php?news_id=223
| Awards | ||
|---|---|---|
| Preceded by Michael Wilson |
AFL Rising Star 1998 |
Succeeded by Adam Goodes |
| Preceded by Simon Black |
Norm Smith Medal 2004 |
Succeeded by Chris Judd |
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