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Joel Corey

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Joel Corey
Personal information
Full name Joel Corey
Nickname(s) Smithy[1]
Date of birth (1982-02-17) 17 February 1982 (age 42)
Place of birth Perth, Western Australia
Original team(s) East Perth (WAFL)
Draft 8th overall, 1999
Geelong
Height / weight 191 cm / 89 kg
Position(s) Midfielder
Club information
Current club Geelong
Number 11
Career highlights
Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com

Joel Corey (born 17 February 1982) was an Australian rules footballer who played for the Geelong Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL). A midfielder, 1.90 metres (6 ft 3 in) tall and weighing 87 kilograms (192 lb), Corey is able to contribute inside or outside while on the ball.

Corey is a dual Carji Greeves Medallist, two-time All-Australian, and was part of Geelong's AFL premiership-winning teams in 2007, 2009 and 2011. He was also selected in the Dream Team, a representative Australian rules football team that contested in the AFL Hall of Fame Tribute Match, as well as being selected to represent Australia in International rules football.

Career

Corey being tackled by Hawthorn's Sam Mitchell in round 17, 2008.

Corey was drafted with Geelong's 8th pick in the 1999 draft as a 17 year old. He has since built a reputation as a tall, consistent, hard-running midfielder with an uncanny ability at clearing the ball from tight, pack situations. Corey is an important cog in the Geelong midfield, and if needed can play a defensive role within the team. Though he often goes unnoticed, Corey consistently gets the job done and because he has such a star-studded midfield around him he does not have the burden of getting the number one tag each week.

Highlights of his career to date include a 2005 Carji Greeves Medal victory, selection in the Australian International Rules team of 2004, and selection as an All-Australian in 2007 and 2008. Corey played an integral part in Geelong's record breaking 2007 Grand Final win. He is a part of the 6-man leadership group at Geelong.

Statistics

Statistics are correct as of 1 October 2011 (Grand Final)[2]
Season Team No. Games Goals Behinds Kicks Marks Handballs Disposals
2000 Geelong 11 5 2 2 39 11 23 62
2001 Geelong 11 14 3 4 102 39 36 138
2002 Geelong 11 20 5 4 198 57 165 363
2003 Geelong 11 22 9 6 250 78 157 407
2004 Geelong 11 22 9 13 242 92 173 415
2005 Geelong 11 21 5 11 292 120 205 497
2006 Geelong 11 22 8 4 298 107 231 529
2007 Geelong 11 25 7 9 338 119 312 650
2008 Geelong 11 25 6 7 339 116 391 730
2009 Geelong 11 23 7 4 306 106 356 662
2010 Geelong 11 14 2 3 153 51 185 338
2011 Geelong 11 21 8 5 257 77 262 519
2012 Geelong 11 20 3 5 189 54 239 428
2013 Geelong 11 22 5 3 170 72 288 458
Totals 276 79 80 3173 1099 3023 6196

Honours and achievements

Corey at Geelong's 2011 premiership victory parade.

AFL

Geelong Football Club

U18 Juniors

Milestones:

Tribunal history

Season Round Charge category (level) Victim Result Verdict Ref(s)
2004 20 Melee involvement N/A Guilty (accepted fine) $2000 fine [3][4]

Personal life

Corey graduated from John Septimus Roe Anglican Community School in 1999. He was a junior Australian representative in baseball when he was younger, but Corey gave baseball up to pursue a football career.[5] Outside of football, Corey is a quiet, humble person who does not particularly enjoy doing interviews saying even in Primary school speaking in front of the class wasn't his forte.[1]

Corey enjoys surfing, in Torquay with teammate Cameron Ling, as he finds it "pretty peaceful, it clears your head". His nickname, Smithy, comes from the fact that his surname is also a popular boys given name. Though Corey still calls Western Australia home, he has no intentions of returning there anytime soon.[6] Corey has two dogs, a Kelpie and a Staffordshire terrier.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c Hanlon, Peter (6 June 2008). "The power and the Corey". realfooty.com.au. Archived from the original on 6 June 2008.
  2. ^ FootyWire.com "Joel Corey Statistics", footywire.com, accessed 30 December 2011
  3. ^ "Tribunal History in Season 2004". AFL Historical Statistics. Retrieved 10 August 2009.
  4. ^ "Joel Corey, Geelong Cats @ FanFooty". FanFooty. Retrieved 10 August 2009.
  5. ^ Bernard, G, "Corey slips under the radar", heraldsun.com.au, 8 April 2006
  6. ^ Sheahan, M, "Corey seeks safety in numbers", heraldsun.com.au, 6 September 2008
Awards
Preceded by Ron Barassi Medal
1999
Succeeded by
Preceded by Carji Greeves Medal
2005
2008
Succeeded by
Preceded by Geelong Football Club Coach's Award
2005
Succeeded by

Template:2007/09/11 Geelong Cats triple premiership players

Template:Persondata