Jump to content

Tim Evans (footballer)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tim Evans
Personal information
Date of birth (1953-08-13) 13 August 1953 (age 71)
Place of birth Tasmania
Original team(s) Penguin (NWFU)
Height 189 cm (6 ft 2 in)
Weight 96 kg (212 lb)
Position(s) Full forward, half back
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1971–1974 Geelong 59 (26)
1975–1986 Port Adelaide 230 (993)[1]
Total 289 (1019)
Representative team honours
Years Team Games (Goals)
1979–1983 South Australia 10 (41)
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1986.
Career highlights

Club

Representative

Honours

Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com

Tim Evans (born 13 August 1953) is a former Australian rules football player who played for Port Adelaide in the South Australian National Football League (SANFL) and Geelong in the Victorian Football League (VFL).

Early life

[edit]

Originally from Tasmania, Evans played for Penguin Football Club in the North West Football Union.[2]

Geelong (1971–1974)

[edit]

Evans was recruited by Geelong in 1971, where he spent four seasons at half back.

Port Adelaide (1975–1986)

[edit]

In 1975, he joined Port Adelaide and went on to play 230 games for the club. He won the club's goalkicking with 64 that year.

After a season used in defence, he was moved to full forward in 1977 by coach John Cahill and was an immediate success, leading the league with 88 goals, including seven in Port Adelaide's Grand Final win over Glenelg. He repeated the performance in 1978, kicking 90 for the season.

Evans first kicked over 100 goals in 1980 when he kicked a then-SANFL record 146 goals, and would win the league's inaugural Ken Farmer Medal in 1981 kicking 98 for the season.

Evans retired at the end of the 1986 season. He had kicked 993 goals, the second highest total in SANFL history behind North Adelaide's Ken Farmer (who kicked 1,417 between 1929 and 1941), and 1,019 in his career, the 12th highest total in elite Australian rules football.

Evans also kicked 41 goals in 10 games for South Australia in interstate football, and a further 51 goals in 18 games in pre-season and night series competition: if these are included, Evans kicked a total of 1,111 goals in his senior career, the ninth highest total in elite Australian rules football.

He played in Port Adelaide's 1977 and 1979–81 premiership teams as well as playing full back in the losing 1976 Grand Final to Sturt in front of the SANFL record crowd of 66,897 at Football Park, and also in the losing 1984 Grand Final.

Evans topped the SANFL's goalkicking six times, and was Port's leading goalkicker ten times.

Honours

[edit]

He was an inaugural inductee into the South Australian Football Hall of Fame in 2002 and was inducted into the Tasmanian Football Hall of Fame in 2008. Tim Evans is also a Port Adelaide Life Member, an SANFL player Life Member (for having played 200 games) and was selected at full forward in Port Adelaide's Greatest Team of players from 1870–2000.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ These totals refer to premiership matches (home-and-away and finals matches) only.
  2. ^ Devaney, J. "Tim Evans (Geelong and Port Adelaide)"[usurped]. Retrieved 13 October 2010.
[edit]