Spida opens up.
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Spida opens up.
From the herald sun. Too interesting not to copy for you guys
"Sacked 2022: Spida Everitt opens up on his controversies, coaches and playing career
On the latest episode of the SACKED podcast, a key player in Tim Watsonâs reign as St Kilda coach details what led to the Essendon greatâs coaching downfall.
Glenn McFarlane and
Jon Ralph
May 17, 2022 - 12:59PM
It seems fitting that Peter âSpidaâ Everitt played a part in one of the most audacious, rollicking coaching recruiting coups in the history of Australian rules football.
It was staged on the Gold Coast in late 2000 as St Kilda attempted to land one of footyâs biggest fish, two-time premiership coach Malcolm Blight.
The bait was simple. The catch was a reluctant footy coach who was seeing more of the golfing fairways not far from the glitter strip than he was of the football field at that time.
A million dollar contract; a Chinese meal at Jupiters Casino; a posse of Saints hierarchy and players that included Everitt; and a boozy session, finally hooked Blight.
Everitt takes up the story, unveiling fresh details about what must constitute as one of the most unusual nights in the clubâs history.
âI still remember when we came up (to the Gold Coast) to get âBlightyâ,â Everitt told the Herald Sunâs Sacked podcast.
â(President) Rod Butterss went to the Chinese place at Jupiters.
âWe all came across on the monorail â myself, âLoeweyâ (Stewart Loewe), âBurkyâ (Nathan Burke), Barry Hall ⌠we had a few drinks and they said, âNo more drinksâ.
âThen we went into one of the private rooms in the Chinese restaurant. We were all in our suits and Blighty was like, âWhat are you doing? Loosen your ties and get a drink into you!â
âWe were like, âThis could be a good coach, for sureâ.
âHe had already been at dinner with Butterss then he had about three hours (drinking) with us. Burkey was trying to pass him a contract to sign after about 15 reds.â
Everitt wondered in hindsight: âIf we needed to do that to get him, he was probably not there for the right reasons.â
âHe was on the Gold Coast, heâs playing golf and heâs got his life there. But (the club thought), âLetâs entice him to Moorabbinâ. It was actually quite a big push to get a coach that lasted only 10 months.â
A versatile ruckman come full forward, Peter 'Spida' Everitt started his football journey with St Kilda in 1993. With dreadlocks and head bands Spida almost instantaneously became a cult figure. As Everitt's career was building, so too was the St Kilda Football club as the Saints made a charge to the 1997 Grand Final. A shoulder injury sustained in the Qualifying final against Brisbane would lead Everitt to miss the rest of the season thus making St Kilda's road to the elusive flag all that harder. After 180 games in the black, red and white of St Kilda, Everitt was on the move to Glenferrie Oval in 2003 where he'd win a best and fairest. After four seasons at Hawthorn, Everitt's final stop would be at the Sydney Swans capping off a 291 game career. In this episode Everitt opens up about his heat break on missing the 1997 Grand Final, the sacking of Stan Alves, wooing Malcolm Blight St Kilda and his strained relationship with Grant Thomas which would eventually lead to Spida's departure from the Saints.
The hangover from that wild Gold Coast night lasted just 15 games, before Blight was sensationally sacked.
Everitt liked Blight as he encouraged players who werenât confined by old conventions, as the big ruckman/forward was.
If you think that the Blight chase was one out of the box for Everitt, think again! A triple All-Australian who played 291 games with three clubs, Everitt rode the highs and lows during his journey.
He had fallouts with coaches for a variety of reasons, a season-ending injury that may have cost the Saints a flag and he balanced controversy with an athletic gift in his 203cm frame that made him one of the most exciting players of his era.
Everitt, 48, is not sure whether the chaos helped or hindered his career. But he has minimal regrets, other than the two racial vilification incidents that he wished never happened.
âEverybody would love to be a one-club player and if I had been a bit more mature and come through different systems when I was young, I probably would have been,â he said.
THE EVERITT FILE
PETER EVERITT
Born: May 3, 1974
Height: 203cm. Weight: 108kg
ST KILDA (1993-2002)
Games: 180
Wins: 73 (two draws)
Goals: 300
Honours: 2001 best & fairest; 1997-98 All-Australian
HAWTHORN (2003-06)
Games: 72
Wins: 20
Goals: 67
Honours: 2004 best & fairest; 2005 All-Australian
SYDNEY (2007-08)
Games: 39
Wins: 20 (1 draw)
Goals: 17
INJURY THAT MIGHT HAVE COST SAINTS A FLAG
It remains one of the sliding door moments in St Kildaâs modern history and it still pains Everitt more than a quarter of a century on.
As the Saints swept to a qualifying final win over the Brisbane Lions, Everitt broke his collarbone, ending his 1997 season. His absence cost the Saints dearly as they ultimately went down to Adelaide in the grand final.
Everitt said: âDarryl White hip and shouldered me ⌠it was a hip and shoulder you get each and every day (at training). There was no malice in it.
âI could just feel the bone rubbing against bone. When the physio came out I said: âIâm no goodâ. He said: âGive me a lookâ. I said: âMan, I know it is brokenâ.â
Everitt watched as the Saints were overrun in the second half by the Crows.
âThe sad thing is we thought it would happen the next year,â he said. âYou know, âweâve got a young teamâ, âweâve got some great older playersâ, âweâre up and aboutâ, âweâll be back next yearâ. Maybe it was me being naive.
âThe older you get, the more you look back. Iâm still a Saints fan and youâre just desperate to see them win a flag. You see other teams that havenât won one for 30 or 40 years and you just know what it would mean to so many suffering Saintsâ fans.
âIt hurts more now than it did then.â
Peter Everitt nurses his broken collarbone during the 1997 qualifying final against Brisbane Lions at Waverley Park.
Peter Everitt nurses his broken collarbone during the 1997 qualifying final against Brisbane Lions at Waverley Park.
RACIAL VILIFICATION
Everittâs fourth AFL game came in the famous Nicky Winmar-Victoria Park game against Collingwood in 1993 when the Indigenous star pointed to his skin and said, âIâm black and Iâm proud to be blackâ.
To Everittâs eternal regret, he went on to racially vilify two opposition players.
The first happened in 1997 against Essendonâs Michael Long.
âI had a crack at Michael Long and he brought it to the attention of the umpires,â Everitt said. âSo we went in for mediation with Kevin Sheedy and myself and Michael.
âWith mediation, I went in to listen but I still went in there pretty naive and pretty cocky.â
The second came in 1999 when he made shocking comments about petrol sniffing to Melbourneâs Scott Chisholm.
âI racially vilified him, it was heard and the complaint was made,â Everitt said. âWe didnât know anything about it during the game.
âThen after the game we saw the umpires coming down into the rooms and heard there was going to be a case.â
He blames himself for bringing the heat on his family, but more so for the offence he caused to the players and the Indigenous community.
He stood down from football for a month and agreed to pay $20,000.
âIt was no doubt the hardest time with my footy,â he said. âI was able to go to a facility in Melbourne and get proper education for several weeks.
âI was able to sit down with Scotty, which he was very reluctant to do, which I understand.
âI was able to slowly educate myself.
âThe hardest thing was walking back into your own changerooms. We had Nicky Winmar, we had Gilbert McAdam and all these great Indigenous players who I was very close to, but I didnât understand the history and background.â
His relationship with Winmar was âstrainedâ, but from his lowest moment, he emerged with a new perspective and a greater understanding.
He went on to play with Adam Goodes at Sydney and couldnât have been more pleased to see the Swans superstar back at the footy last weekend for the clubâs 2012 premiership reunion.
âAs hard as it was at the time, Iâve learnt so much,â Everitt said.
âI still remember (meeting) an Indigenous lady (at the Swans in 2008).
âI asked her where she was from and she said she lived about three hours west of Alice Springs in a place called Haasts Bluff.
âI said to her, âIâm going out there at the end of the year, Iâll come out and say helloâ. She goes, âYou will notâ. But I did and it was one of the best trips Iâve ever done.â
STAN AND TIM
Everitt says he had a âlove-hateâ relationship with Stan Alves, but he respected his passion.
âHe was very passionate, but he ran his own ship,â Everitt said. âIt was his way or no way.
âThere was a lot (going on) at board level. They thought he had pretty much run his race and said, âWeâll get new blood in and rejuvenate the sideâ.â
Alves was sacked. Essendon champion Tim Watson was installed as coach for 1999. But that appointment lasted only two seasons before Watson resigned.
âHe (Watson) made us go full-time from eight to four. We did media training and other kind of training rather than just concentrating on football,â Everitt said.
âTim tried to model us into more rounded footballers on and off the field rather than concentrating on what was really important â and that was what was happening on the field.â
HOW SAINTS STOPPED A SPIDA MOVE
After 10 seasons and 180 games with St Kilda, Everitt knew he had to leave â and he wanted to go to Collingwood.
But the Saints refused to do business with the Magpies in the 2002 trade period.
âI was going to Collingwood. I met with Mick Malthouse and Neil Balme ⌠but the (St Kilda) footy club wouldnât deal with Collingwood,â he said.
âHawthorn came into play late. There was around five minutes to go when the deadline was two oâclock. They said: âYouâve got five minutes (to make up your mind). Are you happy to go to Hawthorn?â They had come into play a day earlier. I said: âAbsolutelyâ.â
Everitt knew his future at St Kilda would be limited as long as Grant Thomas remained coach. He knew Thomas was âbest matesâ with the clubâs president Rod Butterss.
âThere was a perception out there that I wasnât fully committed,â Everitt said.
âI thought if I went to a different club, I was hopeful I could change that perception.
âThe other reason was myself and Thommo didnât see eye-to-eye. I challenged him and he challenged me.
âA coach is there as a coach. But Thommo was everything. He would do all the contracts, he would do all the football department stuff, and he wanted to be the coach as well.
âI knew he was going to be there for a long time as his best mate Butterss was at the top of the tree.â
Everitt ended up at Hawthorn, a move that lasted four seasons and 72 games.
PAYING THE FINES
Footyâs infamous âLine in the Sandâ game between Hawthorn and Essendon in 2004 resulted in suspensions that totalled 16 matches and record fines of $70,000.
Everitt had a plan to collectively pay for the fines, including his own $4500 penalty.
Realising that one of the few things the two bitter rivals had in common was their Puma sponsorship, he turned entrepreneur by having 10 one-off jumpers created. He then had the fined players sign them and auctioned off the jumpers.
âWe actually got into trouble with the AFL,â Everitt said. âWe got Puma to make 10 jumpers that were half Essendon and half Hawthorn and whoever got fined signed those jumpers. We sold them to pay for the fines.
âI was a marketing guru. Then the AFL said you arenât allowed to do that, thatâs ridiculous. They would still be out there (as collectorâs items); there were only 10 of them made.â
Everitt was called annually into AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriouâs office.
âAndrew Demetriou used to ring me once a year and he would say, âSpida, what are you doing on Thursday? Do you want to come into my office?â
âWe had our yearly meeting and he would say, âYou can say thisâ or âYou canât do thisâ. We had a few laughs on the way. He was actually helping me and trying to educate me.â
Everitt was nothing if not an opportunist.
Hawthorn played Sydney in the final home-and-away game of 2005 and as the final siren sounded he wished Swans ruckman Jason Ball all the best for the finals.
Ball floored him when he said regardless of what happened in September, he was retiring.
âWe were finished and Monday came around and I rang (Swans boss) Andrew Ireland, and I said to him, âI hear Bally is retiringâ at the end of the seasonâ and he said, âWhat?â
âI said, âI am willing to come up and try to have a crack at winning a premiership. I saw an opportunity and threw it out there.â
Hawthorn repelled the move at the 2005 trade period, but froze Everitt out in the second half of the following season, frustrated by the big manâs attempts to leave.
Spida, wife Sheree, and son Boston are selling up in Queensland and moving to Melbourne in the hope his son can get drafted into AFL.
Having won the 2005 flag, the Swans lost the 2006 playoff by one point, which left Everitt wondering what might have been if he had been allowed to move when he wanted to.
He got to Sydney in 2007, but wished he had been able to make more of an impact than his 39 games in two seasons.
âI loved that football club ⌠I felt privileged to go and play in the Sydney colours,â he said.
âIt was probably that (one year) too late.â
His last game came in the 2008 semi-final loss to the Bulldogs.
âI remember sitting down with Paul Roos and he said, âCan you do another pre-season?â I said, âNo, I am outâ.â
SPIDA MARK II
Everittâs teenage son, Boston, will move from Gold Coast to Melbourne next year to chase his AFL dream.
âHe is going to live in Melbourne for the next two years, doing Year 11 and Year 12 down there,â Everitt said. âHe has got his mumâs brains and he is a bit smarter than I was at school. He is going into the APS system and we will see how he goes.â
Boston is a member of St Kildaâs father-son academy and the Gold Coast Suns academy.
Everitt grew up idolising Collingwoodâs Peter Daicos; Boston idolises Nick and Josh Daicos and dreams of one day playing with or against them.
That led to Spida ringing Peter Daicos recently to get some advice on the best pathway.
âHe is a lot more disciplined than I was and Iâve got him on the 5am wake-ups,â Everitt said.
âHe is really passionate about his footy and he wants to have a crack.â
"Sacked 2022: Spida Everitt opens up on his controversies, coaches and playing career
On the latest episode of the SACKED podcast, a key player in Tim Watsonâs reign as St Kilda coach details what led to the Essendon greatâs coaching downfall.
Glenn McFarlane and
Jon Ralph
May 17, 2022 - 12:59PM
It seems fitting that Peter âSpidaâ Everitt played a part in one of the most audacious, rollicking coaching recruiting coups in the history of Australian rules football.
It was staged on the Gold Coast in late 2000 as St Kilda attempted to land one of footyâs biggest fish, two-time premiership coach Malcolm Blight.
The bait was simple. The catch was a reluctant footy coach who was seeing more of the golfing fairways not far from the glitter strip than he was of the football field at that time.
A million dollar contract; a Chinese meal at Jupiters Casino; a posse of Saints hierarchy and players that included Everitt; and a boozy session, finally hooked Blight.
Everitt takes up the story, unveiling fresh details about what must constitute as one of the most unusual nights in the clubâs history.
âI still remember when we came up (to the Gold Coast) to get âBlightyâ,â Everitt told the Herald Sunâs Sacked podcast.
â(President) Rod Butterss went to the Chinese place at Jupiters.
âWe all came across on the monorail â myself, âLoeweyâ (Stewart Loewe), âBurkyâ (Nathan Burke), Barry Hall ⌠we had a few drinks and they said, âNo more drinksâ.
âThen we went into one of the private rooms in the Chinese restaurant. We were all in our suits and Blighty was like, âWhat are you doing? Loosen your ties and get a drink into you!â
âWe were like, âThis could be a good coach, for sureâ.
âHe had already been at dinner with Butterss then he had about three hours (drinking) with us. Burkey was trying to pass him a contract to sign after about 15 reds.â
Everitt wondered in hindsight: âIf we needed to do that to get him, he was probably not there for the right reasons.â
âHe was on the Gold Coast, heâs playing golf and heâs got his life there. But (the club thought), âLetâs entice him to Moorabbinâ. It was actually quite a big push to get a coach that lasted only 10 months.â
A versatile ruckman come full forward, Peter 'Spida' Everitt started his football journey with St Kilda in 1993. With dreadlocks and head bands Spida almost instantaneously became a cult figure. As Everitt's career was building, so too was the St Kilda Football club as the Saints made a charge to the 1997 Grand Final. A shoulder injury sustained in the Qualifying final against Brisbane would lead Everitt to miss the rest of the season thus making St Kilda's road to the elusive flag all that harder. After 180 games in the black, red and white of St Kilda, Everitt was on the move to Glenferrie Oval in 2003 where he'd win a best and fairest. After four seasons at Hawthorn, Everitt's final stop would be at the Sydney Swans capping off a 291 game career. In this episode Everitt opens up about his heat break on missing the 1997 Grand Final, the sacking of Stan Alves, wooing Malcolm Blight St Kilda and his strained relationship with Grant Thomas which would eventually lead to Spida's departure from the Saints.
The hangover from that wild Gold Coast night lasted just 15 games, before Blight was sensationally sacked.
Everitt liked Blight as he encouraged players who werenât confined by old conventions, as the big ruckman/forward was.
If you think that the Blight chase was one out of the box for Everitt, think again! A triple All-Australian who played 291 games with three clubs, Everitt rode the highs and lows during his journey.
He had fallouts with coaches for a variety of reasons, a season-ending injury that may have cost the Saints a flag and he balanced controversy with an athletic gift in his 203cm frame that made him one of the most exciting players of his era.
Everitt, 48, is not sure whether the chaos helped or hindered his career. But he has minimal regrets, other than the two racial vilification incidents that he wished never happened.
âEverybody would love to be a one-club player and if I had been a bit more mature and come through different systems when I was young, I probably would have been,â he said.
THE EVERITT FILE
PETER EVERITT
Born: May 3, 1974
Height: 203cm. Weight: 108kg
ST KILDA (1993-2002)
Games: 180
Wins: 73 (two draws)
Goals: 300
Honours: 2001 best & fairest; 1997-98 All-Australian
HAWTHORN (2003-06)
Games: 72
Wins: 20
Goals: 67
Honours: 2004 best & fairest; 2005 All-Australian
SYDNEY (2007-08)
Games: 39
Wins: 20 (1 draw)
Goals: 17
INJURY THAT MIGHT HAVE COST SAINTS A FLAG
It remains one of the sliding door moments in St Kildaâs modern history and it still pains Everitt more than a quarter of a century on.
As the Saints swept to a qualifying final win over the Brisbane Lions, Everitt broke his collarbone, ending his 1997 season. His absence cost the Saints dearly as they ultimately went down to Adelaide in the grand final.
Everitt said: âDarryl White hip and shouldered me ⌠it was a hip and shoulder you get each and every day (at training). There was no malice in it.
âI could just feel the bone rubbing against bone. When the physio came out I said: âIâm no goodâ. He said: âGive me a lookâ. I said: âMan, I know it is brokenâ.â
Everitt watched as the Saints were overrun in the second half by the Crows.
âThe sad thing is we thought it would happen the next year,â he said. âYou know, âweâve got a young teamâ, âweâve got some great older playersâ, âweâre up and aboutâ, âweâll be back next yearâ. Maybe it was me being naive.
âThe older you get, the more you look back. Iâm still a Saints fan and youâre just desperate to see them win a flag. You see other teams that havenât won one for 30 or 40 years and you just know what it would mean to so many suffering Saintsâ fans.
âIt hurts more now than it did then.â
Peter Everitt nurses his broken collarbone during the 1997 qualifying final against Brisbane Lions at Waverley Park.
Peter Everitt nurses his broken collarbone during the 1997 qualifying final against Brisbane Lions at Waverley Park.
RACIAL VILIFICATION
Everittâs fourth AFL game came in the famous Nicky Winmar-Victoria Park game against Collingwood in 1993 when the Indigenous star pointed to his skin and said, âIâm black and Iâm proud to be blackâ.
To Everittâs eternal regret, he went on to racially vilify two opposition players.
The first happened in 1997 against Essendonâs Michael Long.
âI had a crack at Michael Long and he brought it to the attention of the umpires,â Everitt said. âSo we went in for mediation with Kevin Sheedy and myself and Michael.
âWith mediation, I went in to listen but I still went in there pretty naive and pretty cocky.â
The second came in 1999 when he made shocking comments about petrol sniffing to Melbourneâs Scott Chisholm.
âI racially vilified him, it was heard and the complaint was made,â Everitt said. âWe didnât know anything about it during the game.
âThen after the game we saw the umpires coming down into the rooms and heard there was going to be a case.â
He blames himself for bringing the heat on his family, but more so for the offence he caused to the players and the Indigenous community.
He stood down from football for a month and agreed to pay $20,000.
âIt was no doubt the hardest time with my footy,â he said. âI was able to go to a facility in Melbourne and get proper education for several weeks.
âI was able to sit down with Scotty, which he was very reluctant to do, which I understand.
âI was able to slowly educate myself.
âThe hardest thing was walking back into your own changerooms. We had Nicky Winmar, we had Gilbert McAdam and all these great Indigenous players who I was very close to, but I didnât understand the history and background.â
His relationship with Winmar was âstrainedâ, but from his lowest moment, he emerged with a new perspective and a greater understanding.
He went on to play with Adam Goodes at Sydney and couldnât have been more pleased to see the Swans superstar back at the footy last weekend for the clubâs 2012 premiership reunion.
âAs hard as it was at the time, Iâve learnt so much,â Everitt said.
âI still remember (meeting) an Indigenous lady (at the Swans in 2008).
âI asked her where she was from and she said she lived about three hours west of Alice Springs in a place called Haasts Bluff.
âI said to her, âIâm going out there at the end of the year, Iâll come out and say helloâ. She goes, âYou will notâ. But I did and it was one of the best trips Iâve ever done.â
STAN AND TIM
Everitt says he had a âlove-hateâ relationship with Stan Alves, but he respected his passion.
âHe was very passionate, but he ran his own ship,â Everitt said. âIt was his way or no way.
âThere was a lot (going on) at board level. They thought he had pretty much run his race and said, âWeâll get new blood in and rejuvenate the sideâ.â
Alves was sacked. Essendon champion Tim Watson was installed as coach for 1999. But that appointment lasted only two seasons before Watson resigned.
âHe (Watson) made us go full-time from eight to four. We did media training and other kind of training rather than just concentrating on football,â Everitt said.
âTim tried to model us into more rounded footballers on and off the field rather than concentrating on what was really important â and that was what was happening on the field.â
HOW SAINTS STOPPED A SPIDA MOVE
After 10 seasons and 180 games with St Kilda, Everitt knew he had to leave â and he wanted to go to Collingwood.
But the Saints refused to do business with the Magpies in the 2002 trade period.
âI was going to Collingwood. I met with Mick Malthouse and Neil Balme ⌠but the (St Kilda) footy club wouldnât deal with Collingwood,â he said.
âHawthorn came into play late. There was around five minutes to go when the deadline was two oâclock. They said: âYouâve got five minutes (to make up your mind). Are you happy to go to Hawthorn?â They had come into play a day earlier. I said: âAbsolutelyâ.â
Everitt knew his future at St Kilda would be limited as long as Grant Thomas remained coach. He knew Thomas was âbest matesâ with the clubâs president Rod Butterss.
âThere was a perception out there that I wasnât fully committed,â Everitt said.
âI thought if I went to a different club, I was hopeful I could change that perception.
âThe other reason was myself and Thommo didnât see eye-to-eye. I challenged him and he challenged me.
âA coach is there as a coach. But Thommo was everything. He would do all the contracts, he would do all the football department stuff, and he wanted to be the coach as well.
âI knew he was going to be there for a long time as his best mate Butterss was at the top of the tree.â
Everitt ended up at Hawthorn, a move that lasted four seasons and 72 games.
PAYING THE FINES
Footyâs infamous âLine in the Sandâ game between Hawthorn and Essendon in 2004 resulted in suspensions that totalled 16 matches and record fines of $70,000.
Everitt had a plan to collectively pay for the fines, including his own $4500 penalty.
Realising that one of the few things the two bitter rivals had in common was their Puma sponsorship, he turned entrepreneur by having 10 one-off jumpers created. He then had the fined players sign them and auctioned off the jumpers.
âWe actually got into trouble with the AFL,â Everitt said. âWe got Puma to make 10 jumpers that were half Essendon and half Hawthorn and whoever got fined signed those jumpers. We sold them to pay for the fines.
âI was a marketing guru. Then the AFL said you arenât allowed to do that, thatâs ridiculous. They would still be out there (as collectorâs items); there were only 10 of them made.â
Everitt was called annually into AFL chief executive Andrew Demetriouâs office.
âAndrew Demetriou used to ring me once a year and he would say, âSpida, what are you doing on Thursday? Do you want to come into my office?â
âWe had our yearly meeting and he would say, âYou can say thisâ or âYou canât do thisâ. We had a few laughs on the way. He was actually helping me and trying to educate me.â
Everitt was nothing if not an opportunist.
Hawthorn played Sydney in the final home-and-away game of 2005 and as the final siren sounded he wished Swans ruckman Jason Ball all the best for the finals.
Ball floored him when he said regardless of what happened in September, he was retiring.
âWe were finished and Monday came around and I rang (Swans boss) Andrew Ireland, and I said to him, âI hear Bally is retiringâ at the end of the seasonâ and he said, âWhat?â
âI said, âI am willing to come up and try to have a crack at winning a premiership. I saw an opportunity and threw it out there.â
Hawthorn repelled the move at the 2005 trade period, but froze Everitt out in the second half of the following season, frustrated by the big manâs attempts to leave.
Spida, wife Sheree, and son Boston are selling up in Queensland and moving to Melbourne in the hope his son can get drafted into AFL.
Having won the 2005 flag, the Swans lost the 2006 playoff by one point, which left Everitt wondering what might have been if he had been allowed to move when he wanted to.
He got to Sydney in 2007, but wished he had been able to make more of an impact than his 39 games in two seasons.
âI loved that football club ⌠I felt privileged to go and play in the Sydney colours,â he said.
âIt was probably that (one year) too late.â
His last game came in the 2008 semi-final loss to the Bulldogs.
âI remember sitting down with Paul Roos and he said, âCan you do another pre-season?â I said, âNo, I am outâ.â
SPIDA MARK II
Everittâs teenage son, Boston, will move from Gold Coast to Melbourne next year to chase his AFL dream.
âHe is going to live in Melbourne for the next two years, doing Year 11 and Year 12 down there,â Everitt said. âHe has got his mumâs brains and he is a bit smarter than I was at school. He is going into the APS system and we will see how he goes.â
Boston is a member of St Kildaâs father-son academy and the Gold Coast Suns academy.
Everitt grew up idolising Collingwoodâs Peter Daicos; Boston idolises Nick and Josh Daicos and dreams of one day playing with or against them.
That led to Spida ringing Peter Daicos recently to get some advice on the best pathway.
âHe is a lot more disciplined than I was and Iâve got him on the 5am wake-ups,â Everitt said.
âHe is really passionate about his footy and he wants to have a crack.â
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Re: Spida opens up.
Good read.
Liked this bit: âThe older you get, the more you look back. Iâm still a Saints fan and youâre just desperate to see them win a flag. You see other teams that havenât won one for 30 or 40 years and you just know what it would mean to so many suffering Saintsâ fans.
On Saints missing the 97 premiership: âIt hurts more now than it did then.â
Liked this bit: âThe older you get, the more you look back. Iâm still a Saints fan and youâre just desperate to see them win a flag. You see other teams that havenât won one for 30 or 40 years and you just know what it would mean to so many suffering Saintsâ fans.
On Saints missing the 97 premiership: âIt hurts more now than it did then.â
- stevie
- Saintsational Legend
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Re: Spida opens up.
I was at the QF in 97 after travelling around the world all season. Maybe I jinxed the team
Was also at the Gabba for what I think was Blightyâs last game before he was sacked
Was also at the Gabba for what I think was Blightyâs last game before he was sacked
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Re: Spida opens up.
Yep I was there too & probably the worst day of my life I can't remember any worse maybe the 2009 Grand Final but both were very traumatic
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Re: Spida opens up.
I was 13yo. First and only time I ever cried because of the football.bangaulegend wrote: âThu 19 May 2022 6:40pmYep I was there too & probably the worst day of my life I can't remember any worse maybe the 2009 Grand Final but both were very traumatic
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Re: Spida opens up.
Absolute Flog , Sadly this club has a history of holding on too players who are just grubs. One of the many great things Grant Thomas did for our club was to f*** this s*** stain off
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Re: Spida opens up.
Was?
I'm guessing you have never been subject to listening to him on Triple M Gold Coast.
And managed by that obese lying, stealing, piece of sh!t Rob Hession.
The best thing he ever did for society was to exit this mortal realm.
There's only one rule in the jungle! When the LYON's hungry, he eats!
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Re: Spida opens up.
Met him at the Kalgoorlie races had his own private marquee but he was pleasant enough a bit full of himself but was friendly & was willing to talk about the Saints & didn't bag the club in anyway.
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Re: Spida opens up.
Hawks B&F in 2004 and 2005. Imagine how we could've gone with him rucking instead of Trent Knobel.
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Re: Spida opens up.
toSebastian Tombs wrote: âFri 20 May 2022 12:25pm Absolute Flog , Sadly this club has a history of holding on too players who are just grubs. One of the many great things Grant Thomas did for our club was to f*** this s*** stain off
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Re: Spida opens up.
Yep. One of Grant's sillier moves.mad saint guy wrote: âFri 20 May 2022 10:56pm Hawks B&F in 2004 and 2005. Imagine how we could've gone with him rucking instead of Trent Knobel.