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Patrick Yost Walsh (21 August 1906 – 3 August 1988) was an Australian rules footballer who played with the Essendon Football Club in the VFL/AFL.

Family

The son of Michael Walsh (1867–1942),[2] and Matilda Walsh (1864–1947), née Yost.[3]

Football

Having attracted the Essendon club's attention, as one of the best players on the ground during Essendon's Tasmanian tour match against a combined North-Eastern Football team, at Scottsdale on 28 July 1926 (Essendon coach Syd Barker officiated as field umpire),[4][5] he was recruited in 1927.[6]

Walsh was a left-footed ruckman who won the Essendon Best and Fairest award in 1933. He played 115 games for the club over 10 seasons,[7] and represented Victoria at interstate football 12 times in his career. He badly injured his knee in Essendon's 4 June 1934 (round 5) match against Richmond (his 105th senior game), and did not play again that season.[8]

He resumed his career in 1935, and played another 12 senior games before he announced his retirement after the 18 July 1936 (round 11) against Footscrary.[9]

"Walsh was an excellent ruck man with great natural ability and was big and powerful with plenty of dash and good on the ground. He played the game vigorously and was a reliable mark and could be devastating on his day. He won the best and fairest award in 1933."[10]

He was employed by the Melbourne and Metropolitan Fire Brigade[11][12] – as were his team-mates Garnet Campbell, Jack Vosti, Ernie Watson, and Len Webster.[13]

He was made a life member of the Essendon Football Club in 1961.[14]

VFL Representation

He was selected for VFL representative teams in thirteen Intra-State and Inter-State matches over six different years; however, although selected to represent the VFL in the 1930 ANFC Adelaide Carnival – in which he could have played another five games for the Victorian team in Adelaide (see: Carnival's Victorian Matches) – he was forced to withdraw from the team because he could not get leave from his employment as a fireman.[15]

Intra-State VFL team

  • 1927: VFL vs. Gippsland League, Bairnsdale.[16][17]
  • 1928: VFL vs. Ovens and Murray League, Wangaratta.[18]

Interstate VFL team

  • 1929: VFL vs. West Australian Football League, in Perth, 6 July 1929.[19][20]
  • 1929: VFL vs. West Australian Football League, in Perth, 9 July 1929.[21][22]
  • 1929: VFL vs. South Australian Football League, in Adelaide, 13 July 1929.[23][24]
  • 1930: VFL team for ANFC Adelaide Carnival (selected but withdrew due to work pressure).
  • 1932: VFL vs. Tasmania, at North Hobart, on 11 June 1932.[25][26]
  • 1932: VFL vs. South Australia, in Adelaide, on 6 August 1932.[27]
  • 1933: VFL vs. New South Wales (selected as follower/first ruck), at the Sydney Cricket Ground, on 2 August 1933, during the 1933 ANFC Sydney Carnival.[28][29]
  • 1933: VFL vs. West Australia (selected as nineteenth man, replaced Geelong's Jack Collins in the last quarter), at the Sydney Cricket Ground, on 5 August 1933, during the 1933 ANFC Sydney Carnival.[30]
  • 1933: VFL vs. South Australia (selected as back-pocket/second ruck), at the Sydney Cricket Ground, on 7 August 1933, during the 1933 ANFC Sydney Carnival.[31]
  • 1933: VFL vs. Tasmania (selected as back-pocket/second ruck), at the Sydney Cricket Ground, on 10 August 1933, during the 1933 ANFC Sydney Carnival.[32]
  • 1933: Final Match: VFL vs. South Australia (selected as back-pocket/second ruck), at the Sydney Cricket Ground, on 12 August 1933, during the 1933 ANFC Sydney Carnival.[33]

Hall of Fame (Tasmania)

He was one of the inaugural inductees (at No.25 of the total 130 selected) into the Tasmanian Football Hall of Fame in 2005.[34]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Football, The Age, (Friday, 13 December 1929), p.6.
  2. ^ Deaths: Walsh, The (Launceston) Examiner, (Wednesday, 12 August 1942), p.2; Legerwood: Obituary: Mr. Michael Walsh, The North-Eastern Advertiser, (Friday, 14 August 1942), p.2.
  3. ^ Mrs. M. Walsh, The North-Eastern Advertiser, (Friday, 5 December 1947), p.2.
  4. ^ Essendon's Tour: Match at Scottsdale, The (Launceston) Examiner, (Thursday, 29 July 1926), p.6; Local and General: A Popular Footballer, The North-Eastern Advertiser, (Friday, 30 July 1926), p.2; The North-Eastern Advertiser, (Friday, 30 July 1926), p.3.
  5. ^ "P. Walsh … has been approached by Essendon, and has accepted a contract to appear with the Dons next season in Melbourne. Walsh should do well in Victorian football, being an exceptionally fine high mark, and well experienced in ruck work": North-Eastern Players' Form, The (Launceston) Daily Telegraph, (Friday 27 August 1926) p.7..
  6. ^ Walsh Improves, The Sporting Globe, (Wednesday, 3 August 1927), p.9.
  7. ^ Over those ten seasons Essendon was far from being a successful club, finishing eighth in 1927, fifth in 1928, sixth in 1929, 1930, 1931, 1932, and twelfth in 1933.
  8. ^ Richmond's Fine Recovery, The Age, (Tuesday, 5 June 1934), p.4; Football Changes, The Argus, (Friday, 15 March 1935), p.13.
  9. ^ Around the Clubs: Walsh to Retire, The Argus, (Friday, 24 July 1936), p.15.
  10. ^ Mapleston (1996), p.562.
  11. ^ Disappointed, but Contented, The Sporting Globe, (Wednesday, 30 July 1930), p.9; Other Days—Other Ways, The (Melbourne) Herald, (Thursday, 28 July 1932), p.34.
  12. ^ 'Rover', "Wednesday League: Railways and Fire Brigade", The Argus, (Tuesday, 1 July 1930), p17.
  13. ^ Mapleston (1996), p.118.]
  14. ^ Mapleston (1996), pp.125,423.
  15. ^ Disappointed, but Contented, The Sporting Globe, (Wednesday, 30 July 1930), p.9.
  16. ^ Teams for the Country: League vs. Bairnsdale, The Argus, (Saturday, 30 July 1927), p.32.
  17. ^ Gippsland Match: League Wins Easily, The Argus, (Monday, 22 August 1927), p.6.
  18. ^ Match at Wangaratta, The Geelong Advertiser, (Monday 18 July 1928), p.8; League at Wangaratta, The Argus, (Monday, 18 June 1928), p.7; League Team at Wangaratta, The Age, (Monday, 18 June 1928), p.6.
  19. ^ Football: The Victorian Team, The Age, (Saturday, 6 July 1929), p.26; "(Photograph) Victorian Football League: Visit to Western and South Australia, 1st to 16th July 1929", State Library of Victoria.
  20. ^ Victoria's First Win in Perth, The Age, (Monday, 8 July 1929), p.6.
  21. ^ Football, The Age, (Tuesday, 9 July 1929), p.15.
  22. ^ Football, The Age, (Wednesday, 10 July 1929), p.17.
  23. ^ Victoria's Champion Football Team, The Age, (Friday, 12 July 1929), p.6; The Victorian Team, The Australasian, (Saturday, 20 July 1929), p.70.
  24. ^ Interstate Football, The Age, (Monday, 15 July 1929), p.6.
  25. ^ Victorian 18s, The Sporting Globe, (Wednesday, 8 June), p.8; Big Victorians Chosen for Matches in Tasmania, The Sporting Globe, (Wednesday, 8 June 1932), p.9.
  26. ^ 'Onlooker', "Football: Victoria's Easy Win", The (Hobart) Mercury, (Monday, 13 June 1932), p.8.
  27. ^ Sth. Australia Have 15 Points Win over Victoria at Adelaide, The Sporting Globe, (Saturday, 6 August 1932), p.4.
  28. ^ Thrilling Carnival Game, The (Melbourne) Herald, (Wednesday, 2 August 1933), p.2.
  29. ^ Successful Victorian Team, The Age, (Friday, 4 August 1933), p.6.
  30. ^ Thrilling Carnival Game, The Age, (Monday, 7 August 1933), p.8.
  31. ^ Football, The Age, (Tuesday, 8 August 1933), p.8.
  32. ^ Football: Victoria v Tasmania, The Sydney Morning Herald, (Thursday, 10 August 1933), p.13.
  33. ^ Victorians Champions, The Age, (Monday, 14 August 1933), p.6.
  34. ^ Tasmanian Football Hall of Fame: Paddy Walsh.

References

  • Maplestone, M., Flying Higher: History of the Essendon Football Club 1872–1996, Essendon Football Club, (Melbourne), 1996. ISBN 0-9591740-2-8

External links