Author Topic: Dustin Martin [merged]  (Read 1153872 times)

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #5010 on: October 09, 2020, 04:19:27 PM »
Dustin Martin skewered by Mark Williams drive-by on The Front Bar

Footy superstar Dustin Martin has been skewered by one of his former coaches over the fact he’s been embarrassed by a 13-year-old girl.


Tyson Otto
news.com.au
OCTOBER 9, 2020


For every story of modern day footballers reaching the top only because of their exceptional work ethic, there are the stories of naturally gifted athletes who have been freakishly good at everything they have ever tried.

The footballers that can pick up a cricket bat or a golf club in summer and appear instantly like they have been doing it all their lives.

Well, we can now scratch Dustin Martin from that list.

Thanks to Port Adelaide premiership coach and former Richmond senior assistant coach Mark Williams, Martin’s secret of being extremely human away from the football field has been exposed.

Williams said he was serious in a hilarious segment on Channel 7’s The Front Bar when he gave the Tigers star a fair drive-by about being useless at every sport he attempts other than footy.

Williams, who was one of Martin’s closest mentors during the early stages of his career, said Martin is “lucky” he has a football career.

Front Bar host Mick Molloy asked Williams to explain the serve Williams gave his former pupil.

“You were saying some very controversial things about Dustin Martin,” Molloy said.

“You said, and I’m quoting you, ‘It’s lucky he can play football because he can’t do anything else’.”

Williams replied with a smile: “No that’s true.

“Dusty comes over and we might play darts — he can’t play. Table tennis? He throws the racquet at you. A little putting contest. I can say I could bring my little 13-year-old daughter over and say, ‘Izzy, come over here, lets play, quoits against him and see if he can beat you’. He can’t even beat her. He’s lucky, lucky, lucky that he can play football.

“You think I’m kidding don’t you? You should see him try and surf. He’s no good at that either.”

https://www.news.com.au/sport/afl/dustin-martin-skewered-by-mark-williams-driveby-on-the-front-bar/news-story/75c834d0d2a07bc50a5ab6af22db6b16


Offline one-eyed

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #5011 on: October 10, 2020, 05:14:49 AM »
Dustin Martin

The Richmond superstar put on a clinic having nearly double the amount of inside 50s of any other player on the ground. A late goal put the icing on the cake, with Jonathan Brown outlining on Fox Footy how he thought Damien Hardwick wanted to use his star in the first half ““it looked like they wanted to play him forward very early on in the game and then I reckon they‘ve just gone ’oh bugger it, ’let’s put him in the midfield and let him dominate’.”

Rating: 9

Source: Foxsports

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #5012 on: October 11, 2020, 02:23:17 PM »
Highest-rated players

Dustin Martin (Richmond):
Two things make a great finals player. One is the ability to always deliver – we checked, and we don’t think Dusty has ever played a bad final. Tick. The other is to absolutely explode in crucial moments and games, showing the rest of the competition how far behind they are. Tick, tick. 25 touches, almost 600 metres gained, 10 inside 50s, nine score involvements … bloody hell, he’s good.

Source: Foxsports

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #5013 on: October 12, 2020, 10:36:19 PM »
Dusty's last 8 finals:

Disposals  20.2
Contested poss. 11
Clearances 3.6
Goals 2.6

source: Footy Classified. 

Offline one-eyed

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Port won’t tag Tiger ace Dustin Martin (AAP)
« Reply #5014 on: October 16, 2020, 03:58:38 AM »
Port won’t tag Tiger ace Dustin Martin

By AAP+
16/10/2020


Port Adelaide coach Ken Hinkley reckons it will take his entire team to put the clamps on Richmond megastar Dustin Martin in Friday night’s AFL preliminary final.

The Brownlow medallist looms as the game-breaker in the Adelaide Oval encounter to decide which club secures a grand final spot.

But Hinkley says he won’t deploy a hard tag on Martin, instead asking all his players to be mindful of not only the Tigers great, but his teammates.

“Collectively the job on any of their players will be done by the team, that is what will happen,” Hinkley said.

“Dusty is a great player.

“But it’s a prelim final. There’s great players out there everywhere and that is why it’s exciting.

“It’s Richmond’s great players and Port Adelaide’s great players – there’s some concern for both teams.

“That is why you go into a prelim final and you’re on edge.”

Martin has played starring roles in Richmond’s preliminary finals in their premiership years of 2017 and 2019.

In a 2017 win against Greater Western Sydney he collected 20 disposals and booted three goals; in a 2019 triumph over Geelong he gathered 22 possessions and kicked two majors.

But in 2018, when the Tigers lost a preliminary final, Martin was relatively subdued by his lofty standards – 19 touches and scoreless.

The star Tiger will again by given licence to roam against Port through the midfield and in attack.

“He can make his impact in both areas of the ground,” Richmond assistant coach Adam Kingsley said.

“And pretty much where he’s having his impact, we tend to leave him.

“He’s very, very good around stoppages, very good through the midfield. But he’s also a goalscorer and a difficult match-up (in attack).

“We will just see how the game pans out to see where he’s playing.”

DUSTIN MARTIN’S PRELIMINARY FINALS

* 2017 (Richmond beat Greater Western Sydney by 36 points): 20 disposals, 3 goals 3 behinds, 4 clearances, 2 goal assists, 1 inside 50

*2018 (Richmond lose to Collingwood by 39 points): 19 disposals, no score, 0 clearances, 1 goal assist, 4 inside 50s

* 2019 (Richmond beat Geelong by 19 points): 22 disposals, 2 goals 2 behinds, 2 clearances, 0 goal assists, 4 inside 50s

https://www.sportsnews.com.au/afl/port-wont-tag-tiger-ace-martin-in-afl/547489

Offline mightytiges

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #5015 on: October 16, 2020, 10:59:59 PM »
Didn't dominate but Dusty is a class above out there. Clean + footy smarts. Wouldn't have won without him. 
All you touch and all you see is all your life will ever be - Pink Floyd

Offline lamington

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #5016 on: October 16, 2020, 11:00:13 PM »
Champagne football from the champ. Every time he took possession we either gained territory or it opened up the play. Not to mention his goals were amazing

Offline WilliamPowell

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #5017 on: October 16, 2020, 11:01:36 PM »
 :bow

Great game
"Oh yes I am a dreamer, I still see us flying high!"

from the song "Don't Walk Away" by Pat Benatar 1988 (Wide Awake In Dreamland)

Offline Tiger Khosh

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #5018 on: October 16, 2020, 11:10:52 PM »
Set shot goal was a thing of beauty.
Another great game from mr. September ahhhh or is it mr. October

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #5019 on: October 17, 2020, 06:17:43 AM »
Dustin Martin

What else can you say about Dusty in finals? He did what he does on the big stage. A couple of goals, the leading posesssion winner for the Tigers and looked dangerous whenever he got near it. He lifts when it counts.

Rating: 9

Source: Foxsports

Offline The Machine

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #5020 on: October 17, 2020, 11:04:28 AM »
Well he is easily the best player in the game currently, and one of the best to have ever played this great game in my mind. So grateful to be watching him week in week out as he is extraordinary.   

Offline one-eyed

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'Boy, could he play': Dusty's journey to Richmond greatness (Age)
« Reply #5021 on: October 22, 2020, 02:24:47 PM »
'Boy, could he play': Dusty's journey to Richmond greatness

By Wayne Campbell
The Age
October 22, 2020


The memory is still vivid. I was sitting in the Graham Richmond room at the Richmond Football Club as Francis Jackson, the club's national recruiting manager, took the coaches through the draftees his team had selected in the previous week's 2009 national draft.

He had selected Dustin Martin, from Castlemaine, with pick three. It's always an optimistic time for recruiters, but Francis seemed particularly pleased with himself this year.

He made three points:

- He thought Dustin was the best player in the draft (they always do!);
- He was unique player, in that he was an inside mid, who unlike a few going around the league who played inside the contest, was also a beautiful kick, and;
- He probably wouldn't captain the club.

The first two have proved to be absolutely true but it was the third descriptor that I remember generating the most discussion at the time. Leadership is always high on the list of attributes when ranking players, so for Frank to be so candid was interesting.

"Why is that?" someone asked.

"He's different. He's quiet. He's from a unique background. But don't worry, in 10 years' time we wont be talking about his lack of leadership," was the way I remember Francis answering the query.

To have watched Dustin's journey is to see the way football can help and nurture a young person to grow into a man, while fulfilling their sporting ambitions.

Dustin was instantly likable. He was shy and awkward but still, people naturally gravitated to him. And boy, could he play.

His first training session was a sign of things to come. There was a stoppage drill; the ball got hit to him, he pivoted, planted his hand on the chest of a would-be tackler (his arm was much skinnier back then) and dispensed with them before kicking a quaint, perfectly weighted 20-metre left-footer that seemed to nestle into the hands of a leading forward.

You could hear the coaches' brains ticking over.

He was funny and self-deprecating.

The choice of location of his first tattoo was interesting to say the least – his neck.

Exactly seven days after acquiring his new artwork, he walked into my office, sat down pointing to his neck and remarked, "not sure about this".

In his first three seasons he got better every year. He never missed games and finished top four of the best and fairest. All you want from a top three pick.

The next three years, while the Tigers wobbled a bit, Dustin's football was still at a very high standard, but maybe plateaued a little.

There was a dalliance with leaving the Tigers, including a much-publicised tour of the GWS Giants' facility. The meeting with coach Leon Cameron proved the turning point. The more Leon asked Dustin about Richmond, the more he relaxed. When asked about the people at Richmond, his eyes lit up and he was effusive in his praise. Everyone in the meeting knew where he should be playing his football. By 5pm that night, Dusty was a Tiger again.

There were a couple of issues off the field. I will make comment on only one.

It has been well documented that he had an incident at a Japanese restaurant with some chopsticks allegedly being used threateningly. Once told of the alleged account I tossed it around in my head for a few minutes before it hit me. "He didn't do it," I said to myself.

It's common for anyone who looks like Dustin to be stereotyped. But ask anyone who knows him, he is a teddy bear, and I, like many, just want to hug the man he has become.

Multiple investigations cleared him of the allegation.

A lot of people have helped Dustin become the player and person he is today. Trent Cotchin is one of the more influential. His desire and willingness to help his friend and teammate has indeed aided Dustin to flourish.

What hasn't been considered as much as it might, is the role this has played in Richmond's turnaround and resurgence to be the premier club of the past four years and on the cusp of true greatness.

Dustin and Trent are very different people. A fairly obvious statement. Trent is at home with the white picket fence and family, while Dustin is at music festivals with Dane Swan.

The fact that Trent went to the lengths he did to help the person the most diametrically opposed to his personality showed the whole of the Richmond playing list and the club that they would look out for each other and differences would be embraced.

Like everyone, I constantly marvel at what Dustin does on the field. But it is off the field, and the person he has become, that makes me a little misty-eyed.

He likes to come to Sydney to get away so he, Brett Deledio and I have often find ourselves over a cool beer on a warm afternoon.

The nervous, shy youngster who walked into the Richmond Football Club 10 years ago has been replaced by a quietly assured and confident, extremely respectful young man. He is curious about the world and optimistic about the impact he can have on it.

There is a still a twinkle in his eye, but given all that he has had encountered in life, his mum and dad have every right to be very proud of their son.

He's had to overcome challenges, like a lot of people in life. Most though, don't have to grow up under the spotlight that has shone so brightly on him.

Meditation has taught him to calm his mind so that he feels as calm off the field as what he looks on it.

Tony Greenberg, the lifelong Tiger supporter and media department doyen, this year ranked Dustin ahead of the great Francis Bourke for the first time in a list of the greatest Richmond players. Heady praise indeed, that potentially places only Jack Dyer and Royce Hart ahead of him.

This Saturday, Dusty has a chance at immortality. That may just slide him up two more places. And if he doesn't, it won't matter at all. He's already achieved more than Francis Jackson could have ever dreamed of. With still plenty more to come…

PS - Dustin Martin captained Richmond against Adelaide in round 13 of the 2019 season. How cool is that?

Wayne Campbell is a former Richmond captain and assistant coach.

https://www.theage.com.au/sport/afl/boy-could-he-play-dusty-s-journey-to-richmond-greatness-20201022-p567gl.html?js-chunk-not-found-refresh=true

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #5022 on: October 23, 2020, 06:55:00 PM »
Melbourne tanked (against Richmond) to get picks 1+2. When the Tigers found out the Dees wanted Scully and Trengove they hit the road. The story of how (and where) Dustin Martin became a Tiger 🏌️‍♂️🍴

When Dustin Martin was five he would go to sleep wearing a St Kilda cap. And when he was 17 he was doing this on the Golden Square netball courts ... #aflfinals #gotiges

Paywall: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/teams/richmond%2Fafl-grand-final-2020-how-dustin-martin-went-from-castlemaine-kid-to-modernday-great-at-richmond/news-story/8a5cf3d554b20fd29a1e0376f2945a03

Offline amc11

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #5023 on: October 24, 2020, 12:34:19 AM »
From behind the paywall:  Paywall: https://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/teams/richmond%2Fafl-grand-final-2020-how-dustin-martin-went-from-castlemaine-kid-to-modernday-great-at-richmond/news-story/8a5cf3d554b20fd29a1e0376f2945a03


RICHMOND
AFL Grand Final 2020: How Dustin Martin went from Castlemaine kid to modern-day great at Richmond
Only four men in VFL/AFL history have won dual Norm Smith Medals, but none have won three. Richmond superstar Dustin Martin has the chance to do exactly that when he faces off against Geelong in Saturday’s decider.

Sam Landsberger, Gold Coast, News Corp Australia Sports Newsroom
Subscriber only
|
October 23, 2020 4:54pm




Dustin Martin the 17-year-old walked on to the Golden Square netball courts.

The cleanskin kid from Castlemaine had arrived at footy training early and decided to warm up with some party tricks.

He had no idea Richmond was watching.

“For 15 minutes I watched Dustin just in front of me – he didn’t know I was there – kicking boomerang goals from the netball court, which was lateral to the footy field,” Tigers recruiter Francis Jackson told the Herald Sun.

“I’d driven up to watch Dustin train – sometimes you can learn a bit watching them train – and I’ll never forget sitting there in the cold at Golden Square.”

In 2009 an early draft choice beckoned for the Tigers after they sacked coach Terry Wallace at two wins and nine losses.

But Jordan McMahon’s goal after the final siren against Melbourne in Round 18 helped gift the Demons a priority pick in a game everyone bar the AFL accepts that the Dees threw.

Melbourne ended up with the first two golden selections in a draft flush for midfielders, and Martin had rattled to the finish line.

In Martin’s final three TAC Cup matches he averaged 153 SuperCoach points and collected 32 disposals each time.

But the Tigers – armed with pick No. 3 – had fallen in love with the future megastar a long time before then and ranked him a clear No.1.

“I remember I saw him play as a bottom-age player and thought, ‘my goodness’,” Jackson said.
“His power and speed was just phenomenal. We were all over him.”
In August that year, the Tigers appointed Hawthorn assistant Damien Hardwick as coach over Geelong’s Ken Hinkley and, about four days before the national draft, their prayers were answered.

“We found out Melbourne were picking (Tom) Scully and (Jack) Trengove, and our recruiting department jumped straight in a car, drove up to Bendigo and organised to meet Dustin,” Jackson said.

“We went and played golf at Eaglehawk.

“Dustin had never played golf before and it was a bit like Happy Gilmore, he basically had a run up.

“We had lots of laughs and then we drove back to the Shamrock Hotel in Bendigo and had lunch with his mum (Kathy) and his grandma (Lois) and told him we were picking him, that we had strong advice Melbourne were taking Trengove and Scully and that Dustin was going to become a Tiger.

“They were delighted at that, and we were delighted with Dustin, because we knew he had attributes that were unique.”

Martin’s boomerangs from the Golden Square netball courts can be traced back to a childhood spent attached to a Sherrin.

His parents converted one of the paddocks at the family farm into football field complete with goalposts.

“Before school in the morning he would go out and have a kick. Then he’d come home from school, drop his bag at the door and he’d be out kicking the football again,” Lois said.

“When he was five he had a football in his hand all the time.

“He’d sleep with it and even go to bed with a St Kilda cap on.”

Martin’s Nan delivered that anecdote to the Herald Sun shortly after he had won his first Norm Smith Medal in 2017, in a week in which Martin also became a premiership player and Brownlow Medallist.

Perhaps he was a touch fortunate in the ’17 Grand Final.

Both Hardwick and Adelaide coach Don Pyke thought Bachar Houli was best-on-ground, as did Wallace, who voted on the medal.

But the AFL world was giddy with “Dusty” fever at the time and it was fitting that he capped one of the best individual seasons ever seen with a trio of medals, having just polled a record 36 Brownlow votes and inked an $8.75 million contract extension.

Last year, it was a different story.

Martin (four goals) was the unanimous choice for a second Norm Smith Medal and, against Geelong on Saturday night, he has the chance to become the game’s first three-time winner of the prestigious award in history.

“Geez, imagine becoming a three-time Norm Smith winner,” said Gary Ayres, the first person to win two.

“Uniqueness and greatness, they’re two words that come to mind.”

Ayres won the medal in 1986 and 1988 and was joined by Andrew McLeod (1997-98), Luke Hodge (2008 and 2014) and then Martin (2017 and 2019) as the only multiple recipients.

Hawthorn heroes Ayres and Hodge both marvelled at Martin’s “elite” consistency.

Ayres, now a VFL coaching legend at Port Melbourne and former Cats and Adelaide coach, said Geelong needed to find someone with size and strength after Martin treated lightweight preliminary final match-up Darcy Byrne-Jones like one of his TAC Cup opponents.

“As an old defender you really want that pressure to be high-octane when the ball is coming in,” Ayres said.

“He’s such a powerful mark and powerful athlete but someone who’s got a little bit more size on Dusty and is just as strong, if not stronger, would be a suggestion from an old ex-coach.”

Jake Kolodashnij looms as the man, although Hodge warned that Martin could burn you twice.

How often does Kane Lambert start forward and spit into the midfield, giving Martin a deadly amount of freedom?

“He’s got some teammates around him that are playing really selfless roles around half-forward who work up for him,” Hodge said.

“He gets to either exploit a midfielder who’s not as strong as him when he sneaks forward, or if he plays forward he can work up the ground and exploit a defender who isn’t as smart around a stoppage.

“Having a bloke who can play mid and forward and do both equally well … it’s a dangerous match-up.”

Hodge won his Norm Smiths two years apart and pocketed his second after his 30th birthday.

It has him thinking Martin won’t be done devouring finals by 10pm at the Gabba.

“For a bloke who’s 29, and if you assess Richmond’s list and where they’re going, I’m tipping he’s going to be playing finals for the next few years,” Hodge said.

“What he could be …. who knows?”

Offline one-eyed

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Re: Dustin Martin [merged]
« Reply #5024 on: October 24, 2020, 12:51:45 AM »
Cheers for posting that article, amc11  :cheers.

-----------------------------------------------



Will Dustin Martin get a bit of extra attention from the Cats tomorrow night?

Chris Scott answers that very question.

https://twitter.com/FootyonNine/status/1319584400045182976