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Martin Mattner

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Martin Mattner
Personal information
Full name Martin Mattner
Date of birth (1982-08-06) 6 August 1982 (age 42)
Place of birth Ki Ki, South Australia
Original team(s) Sturt (SANFL)
Height / weight 189cm / 86kg
Position(s) Defender
Career highlights
  • Adelaide Pre Season Premiership Player 2003
  • Sydney Premiership Player 2012
Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com

Martin Mattner (born 6 August 1982) is a former Australian rules football who played for the Sydney Swans in the Australian Football League. He was traded to Sydney from the Adelaide Crows in October 2007 in exchange for Draft pick number 28.

Mattner grew up in a small town called Ki Ki, which is 150 kilometres south-east of Adelaide. In the year he was elevated off Adelaide's rookie list (2002), Mattner was busily studying as he was in Year 12, as well as having to travel up to Adelaide twice a week to train and play football for Sturt.[1]

Prior to joining the Sydney Swans, he was the Adelaide Football Club's leading tackler for the 2005 and 2006 seasons. In the 2006 season, Mattner missed out on just two games due to a calf injury.

He retired midway through the 2013 AFL season, succumbing to his ongoing hip injury. He took up a coaching role with the Sydney Swans as a development coach until the end of the 2015 season.[2] In October 2015, Mattner was announced as the head coach of Sturt.[3]

AFL career

Mattner grew up in a small town called Ki Ki, which is in the south-east region of South Australia, a town with a population of just 12.[4] He attended Coomandook Area School and played some junior footy with Peake and Districts Football Club. He then sought to further develop his game and progressed to play with the Imperial Football Club in 1997, and later Sturt until he was recruited to the Adelaide Football Club for the 2002 season, off of the rookie list.

2002-2003

Mattner with the football.

Debuting with the Adelaide Crows as a 19-year-old, Mattner slowly began his career. After being elevated from Adelaide's rookie list at the start of the 2002 season, he played just seven games for the year. One of his best performances was a game against Geelong where he laid 13 tackles, a feature of his game that he has become noted for. He picked up 11 disposals in his first game, and then 13 disposals in a win over St Kilda. He averaged eight disposals a match over his seven games, and had an impressive average of just over three tackles a game.

Much was the same the next year, with coach Gary Ayres displaying a tendency to not play his younger players unless a senior player was injured. He was able to play ten games in the 2003 season, averaging nine disposals a match, including 21 in a game against the Kangaroos, in the same game as he kicked his first goal.

Mattner during these two years was still young, and was playing well for his local SANFL club Sturt, regularly gathering 20 or more disposals a match as well as laying many bone-crunching tackles. In the 2002 SANFL season, the Double Blues won the premiership over Central District and Mattner was listed among the best players in the Grand Final. Sturt's end of season trip was to Bali. Team members were caught up in the 2002 Bali bombings and fellow player Josh Deegan and club official Bob Marshall were killed.[5]

2004-2005

During the 2004 season, Mattner was seen to improve in a number of areas - averaging eleven disposals and playing 16 matches for the year. Midway through a disappointing season for the team (where the Crows missed the finals), new coach Neil Craig gave Mattner more opportunity than previous coach Ayres, which helped Mattner grow as a player, another feature becoming noticeable was his run through the midfield. His new coach also played him more through the wing than Gary Ayres did, giving him more opportunity as a player. At that time, he had a career equaling 21 disposals in a game against Melbourne, and failed to miss a match after his inclusion in Round 7 which shows how well he was performing.

In 2005, Mattner came of age and so did a younger Crows outfit. He played all but one match for the season and failed only once to gather more than ten disposals in a disappointing effort against Melbourne. His average of 16 disposals per game seeing him as an important cog in Adelaide's midfield. He also had 98 tackles, which was the highest of any Crows player in the season. His long left-foot kicking, often described as "raking" and "accurate" by television commentators, was vital in setting up many of Adelaide's forward thrusts. He missed just one game in the season, which was in Round 22, but failed to have a 15 disposal plus game in any of the Crows' three finals. Adelaide was knocked out of the finals race by West Coast in the preliminary final.

2006

Mattner (#39) handballs off to Goodwin (#36) in the Round 16, 2006 game against the Kangaroos which Adelaide won by 72 points.

In 2006, Mattner started to play on a half-back flank, keeping a smaller player relatively quiet and gaining many possessions of his own. This was suggested by former Crows coach Malcolm Blight, as he did with Andrew McLeod and Simon Goodwin in 1997 and 1998.[6] At the end of the season, he had only missed out on two games due to a calf injury. He had a career high 27 disposals against St Kilda, and followed that performance with 25 disposals against Geelong playing on the likes of Gary Ablett and Jimmy Bartel. Also in the game against St Kilda, Mattner had a career high number of kicks and marks playing further in the midfield. He continued to play well during the season, picking up 21 dispoals against Fremantle in Round 19 and again against Melbourne three weeks later in Round 22. He picked up 12 Brownlow Medal votes, beating the likes of veterans Simon Goodwin, Andrew McLeod and Mark Ricciuto. In the season, he only failed to pick up 10 disposals or more in a game three times (twice against eventual premiers West Coast), and failed to lay a tackle twice. He kicked five goals for the season, including a career high two goals in a game against the Bulldogs in Round 5.

He has been praised by coach Neil Craig after he wanted him to take some parts of his game to a higher level.[7] He is now considered an "automatic selection" player - that is, he will always get into the starting squad unless he is injured.[8]

2007

Mattner managed 19 of 23 games for Adelaide in 2007, though his statistics were well down on previous years. Despite being a naturally attacking player, Mattner was consistently played in defence, rather than on a wing which would be his preferred position. This is often offered as an explanation to his drop in form, and subsequent trading away from the Crows.

2008-2012

Mattner was traded to the Sydney Swans at the end of the 2007 season and quickly found his feet in the Swans' backline. He had a terrific first year at his new club and consequently placed 3rd in the Bob Skilton Medal (Sydney's Best and Fairest Award) behind Jarrad McVeigh and Brett Kirk. His second game for the Swans was his 100th AFL game overall, played against Port Adelaide.

Since then, Mattner has played some very consistent football in defence and has established himself as a clear best 22 player in Sydney. 2009 and 2010 saw solid form from Mattner while he has started the 2011 season in as strong form as has been seen from him at the club.

Mattner has only missed one game in his time at the Sydney Swans, that being Round 15, 2010 against North Melbourne.

2011 was one of Mattner's most consistent years in the AFL. He didn't see as much ball rebounding from the back half but, as a pure defender, he produced some of his best football.

Mattner played his 200th AFL game in Round 9, 2012, against St Kilda. He went on to play in the Swans' side that won the club's fifth premiership with a victory over Hawthorn. He played an important role in the team, including a ferocious run down tackle on Hawthorn's Grant Birchall in the dying minutes.


2013 & End of Career

Mattner played the first seven rounds of the season in reasonable form however was sidelined for 3 rounds midway through the season. Just prior to round 11, Mattner announced his retirement effective immediately, due to a degenerative hip condition that had caused him constant pain for several years. Mattner stated that to continue playing football would aggravate the injury and could lead to a life of crippling pain. [9]

Statistics

[10]
Legend
  G  
Goals
  K  
Kicks
  D  
Disposals 
  T  
Tackles
  B  
Behinds 
  H  
Handballs 
  M  
Marks
Season Team No. Games Totals Averages (per game)
G B K H D M T G B K H D M T
2002 Adelaide 39 7 0 1 32 22 54 10 22 0.0 0.1 4.6 3.1 7.7 1.4 3.1
2003 Adelaide 39 10 1 2 51 38 89 17 26 0.1 0.2 5.1 3.8 8.9 1.7 2.6
2004 Adelaide 39 16 3 4 93 86 179 44 49 0.2 0.3 5.8 5.4 11.2 2.8 3.1
2005 Adelaide 39 24 4 9 194 188 382 80 98 0.2 0.4 8.1 7.8 15.9 3.3 4.1
2006 Adelaide 39 22 5 5 180 164 344 96 66 0.2 0.2 8.2 7.5 15.6 4.4 3.0
2007 Adelaide 39 19 1 2 143 148 291 83 44 0.1 0.1 7.5 7.8 15.3 4.4 2.3
2008 Sydney 29 24 4 6 257 190 447 108 116 0.2 0.3 10.7 7.9 18.6 4.5 4.8
2009 Sydney 29 22 12 3 209 154 363 90 95 0.5 0.1 9.5 7.0 16.5 4.1 4.3
2010 Sydney 29 23 6 2 232 153 385 93 64 0.3 0.1 10.1 6.7 16.7 4.0 2.8
2011 Sydney 29 24 3 1 206 120 326 77 106 0.1 0.0 8.6 5.0 13.6 3.2 4.4
2012 Sydney 29 24 1 3 205 122 327 81 74 0.0 0.1 8.5 5.1 13.6 3.4 3.1
2013 Sydney 29 7 0 0 49 27 76 23 19 0.0 0.0 7.0 3.9 10.9 3.3 2.7
Career 222 40 38 1851 1412 3263 802 779 0.2 0.2 8.3 6.4 14.7 3.6 3.5

References

Publications
  • Gleeson, Michael. AFL 2002 - The Official Yearbook. Sydney:Harper Collins Publishers, 2002. ISBN 0-7322-7620-9
Notes & Web references
  1. ^ Real Footy Story
  2. ^ "Sydney Swans Coaching Staff". sydneyswans.com.au. Sydney Swans. Retrieved 23 August 2015.
  3. ^ Morgan, Kym (8 October 2015). "SANFL: Martin Mattner announced as new Sturt coach". News Corporation. The Advertiser (Adelaide). Retrieved 23 October 2015.
  4. ^ ABC story
  5. ^ http://www.foxsports.com.au/story/0,8659,23167496-23211,00.html
  6. ^ The Advertiser story
  7. ^ AFC story
  8. ^ ABC story
  9. ^ [1]
  10. ^ Martin Mattner's player profile at AFL Tables