Ben Allan
Ben Allan | |||
---|---|---|---|
File:Noimage | |||
Personal information | |||
Original team(s) | Claremont Football Club | ||
Debut | Round ?, ?, 1990, Hawthorn vs. ?, at ? | ||
Playing career1 | |||
Coaching career | |||
Fremantle (2001) 13 Games - 2 wins, 11 losses | |||
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 2005. | |||
Career highlights | |||
| |||
Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com |
Ben Allan (born October 10, 1968) is an Australian rules footballer.
Hawthorn career
He played as a rover (or follower). He was a premiership player withClaremont in the WAFL before be drafted to the Hawthorn Football Club in the Australian Football League where he played 98 games and won their Best and Fairest in 1991 as well as a premiership. He was an All Australian player in 1993 and 1994.
Fremantle career
Having previously coached Allan at Claremont, Gerard Neesham the inaugural Fremantle coach, targeted Allan to return to Western Australia. As the most experienced and highly decorated player in the initial 45 man squad, he was named Fremantle's first captain.
He played all 22 games in 1995 and finished 3rd in the best and fairest award. However injuries took their toll in 1996, restricting him to only 8 games for the year. In 1997 he relinquished the captaincy to Peter Mann and managed to play 17 games. However recurring injuries led Allan to retire from football at the end of the 1997 season. He had played 145 AFL games in total, along with 66 for Claremont and 6 state games, earning him a position in the WA Football Two Hundred Club.
Coaching stint
Allan stayed at the club as an assistant coach in 1998. When it became clear Gerard Neesham would not coach Fremantle in 1999, Allan tendered his resignation pending the appointment of a replacement. Allan was interviewed by the newly appointed head coach Damian Drum but no satisfactory position was agreed on. Drum would eventually bring Terry Bright, an ex-teammate from Geelong, to Fremantle as his assistant. Stan Magro was also to be released leaving only Mark Riley of the panel of coaches from Neesham.
Ironically, it was Allan who would be called on as care-taker to replace the sacked Drum after a diabolical performance and 10th consecutive loss at the SCG in 2001. Despite his role three years previously as assistant coach, Allan did not view the appointment as leading to a permanent position. On being made coach, he told the media: 'I'm not in a caretaker role to try to further my career for next year. If you look at the history of caretaker coaches, they all wanted to have a crack at it for the next year. I'm there to help out. It gives the club time to look for someone who's been there and done that and then I can go off on my merry way. If we win every game for the rest of the year I still won't be the senior coach next year'.
Fremantle won 2 of the remaining 13 matches with Allan as coach and finished 16th and last on the AFL ladder. Taciturn rather than inspiring, Allan kept a dispirited playing group competitive in many of the remaining games of the season. Allan's two victories were both notable. The first coming at Telstra Dome in Round 18 against Hawthorn, breaking an 18 game losing series of matches. The second and more significant was in the last match of the season against finalists Adelaide. The joyous spirit of this game, played in front of a smallish but passionate crowd in night rain at Subiaco Oval, was rejuvenating for the club and its supporters after the gloom of the Damien Drum years. The new optimism was built on with the appointment of the new coach for 2002, Chris Connolly, and the exciting victories and growing crowds that year brought.
Current
In 2005 he was elected to the Members position on the board of the Fremantle Football Club. He will hold that position for 2 years before all Fremantle Season Ticket holding members over 18 years vote again.
Allan has also spent time in the media as a football commentator with the ABC, 6PR and Fox Footy Channel. Outside of football he has become a successful businessman in the Margaret River wine industry.
This Australian rules football biography is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |