StPeter wrote: ↑Tue 11 Apr 2023 11:53am
saynta wrote: ↑Mon 10 Apr 2023 5:07pm
Sainter_Dad wrote: ↑Mon 10 Apr 2023 4:45pm
saynta wrote: ↑Mon 10 Apr 2023 4:29pm
Jim someone, kicked 4 goals.
Jim Wallis maybe?
I think Bob Murray also debuted.
Yeah, thanks mate. It was Jim Wallis. He was a ruckman from Quambatook and another Sainter whose career was cut short by a knee injury.
Bob Murray was a Sandringham boy recruited as a forward who became one of our greatest fullbacks. At just a tad over 6 foot, he wouldn't make the grade as a key defender these days. Back flanker maybe.
4 really good footballers.
It was Bob Murray who kicked 4 goals, playing full forward. See my earlier post about the day 4 players made their debut and were probably judged our 4 best players.
The other three were Carl Ditterich, Jim Wallis and Ian Stewart. I t was a memorable day I will never forget.
https://afltables.com/afl/stats/games/1 ... 30420.html
Kicked 5 goals in his third match though. I knew he kicked a bag early in 1963.
" St Kilda Football Club pauses to remember former player Jim Wallis, who passed away late last month aged 80.
By Russell Holmesby on Jun 2, 2022, 4:38pm
Jim Wallis was part of a four player debut day which was probably St Kilda’s greatest ever influx of talent in one match.
Jim passed away on May 27 at the age of 80.
He began with the Saints in Round 1 1963 alongside Carl Ditterich, Bob Murray and Ian Stewart. Those three would each go on to win club best and fairests in glittering careers, with Stewart earning three Brownlow Medals.
Statistically Jim Wallis’s career would only amount to 39 games due to a knee injury which stopped him in his tracks early in his third season. He would undoubtedly have become a 10 year player, but sadly the treatment of knee injuries in those times was nowhere near advanced as what it is today. Around that time St Kilda had a particularly bad run with career ending knee injuries. Ross Oakley, Jim Guyatt, Bill Stephenson and Ray Cross were all denied long careers. A few years earlier, the 1957 Brownlow Medallist Brian Gleeson suffered a similar fate that forced him out at the age of just 22.
Jim Wallis played 39 games for St Kilda between 1963-1965.
Jim Wallis was a 193 cm and 89 kg ruckman whose safe, one grab marking had parallels to that of Tim Membrey today.
Jim was described by one reporter as being an “accurate though wobbly left foot kick”. Yet despite the awkward style he booted five goals in his third game and had another five goal haul later in the season.
In another parallel to Tim Membrey, Jim would often be stationed in defence in tight last quarters where his reading of the play and intercept marking would provide a steadying influence."