Fred Phillips (footballer)

Frederick Rowden "Flops" Phillips (27 May 1905 – 21 April 1933) was an Australian rules footballer who played with St Kilda in the Victorian Football League (VFL).

Fred Phillips
Personal information
Full name Frederick Rowden Phillips
Date of birth 27 May 1905
Place of birth Richmond, Victoria
Date of death 21 April 1933(1933-04-21) (aged 27)
Place of death Glenferrie, Victoria
Original team(s) Scotch College
Height 183 cm (6 ft 0 in)
Weight 74 kg (163 lb)
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1924–1932 St Kilda 134 (107)
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1932.
Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com

Family

The son of Frederick John Edmonds Phillips (1859-1931),[1] and Sylvia Amy Phillips (1870-1950), née Rowden,[2][3] Frederick Rowden Phillips was born in Richmond, Victoria on 27 May 1905. He was born with a "hare lip".[4]

Education

He was educated at Laing's Prahran College,[5] and, later, at Scotch College, Melbourne, where he excelled at both cricket and football.[4]

Football

Fred Phillips was a highly skilled and stylish footballer; and was said to be a strong overhead mark. Standing at 183 cm, Fred could hold down key positions in defence or attack. He had an added advantage, over many footballers of that era, because he could kick proficiently with both feet.
In those early days of football, many players were "branded" as "one-sided" which meant that they turned the same way on each occasion when winning possession of the ball. Such players were/are "predictable and therefore vulnerable" with close checking.[4]

St Kilda (VFL)

Phillips could play as a ruckman or in defensive key positions. A strong mark of the ball, Phillips was St Kilda's best and fairest in 1930. He finished eighth in the 1931 Brownlow Medal, and equal 9th the following season.

Hawthorn (VFL)

In early March 1933 he was appointed to the role of Hawthorn captain-coach[6] but by the time the season began a few weeks later he had died from blood poisoning caused by an elbow cut. It was believed the dye in the new club jumper was toxic.[7][8]

Interstate football

Originally selected as 19th man for the Victorian team to play against South Australia at the MCG on 11 June 1932, Phillips replaced Collingwood's Frank Murphy in the selected side.[9] Victoria beat South Australia by 8 points — 12.20 (92) to 12.12 (84 — and Phillips was one of the best on the ground;[10] and, along with Richmond's Frank Titus, he scored three goals.[11]

Death

He died in a private hospital in Glenferrie, Victoria on 21 April 1933.[12][13] The prevailing view is that he died from blood poisoning, caused by the (toxic) dye from his Hawthorn jumper running into a cut on his elbow.[4]

Funeral

Phillips was buried on Monday, 24 April 1933 at the Melbourne General Cemetery. A large crowd followed his coffin's journey to the cemetery.

A great tribute to the memory of the late St Kilda player and recently appointed coach of the Hawthorn Football Club, was paid by a crowd of 1500 which attended the burial service in the Melbourne Cemetery today. Mr Phillips, who had played for St. Kilda for nine seasons, and also represented Victoria in Interstate contests, died suddenly on Friday night, aged 27.
Almost every football and cricket organisation in Melbourne was officially represented. There was a large representation of present and past players, committeemen, coaches, secretaries and supporters of every league football club, and friends and relatives. In the crowd was a big sprinkling of women.
The funeral moved from the residence at 10 Meadow Street, East St. Kilda, of Mrs S. A. Phillips, the dead man's mother. Three-quarters of a mile long, it passed round the St. Kilda football Ground where the flags were at half mast, and passed by way of Queen's Road and St. Kilda Road, through the city, to the cemetery. More than 200 cars followed the hearse. The Riverine Herald, 25 April 1933.[14]

Footnotes

  1. Deaths: Phillips, The Age, Saturday, 15 August 1931), p.4.
  2. Marriages: Phillips—Rowden, The Argus, (Saturday, 12 July 1902), p.9.
  3. Deaths: Phillips, The Argus, (Friday, 13 October 1950), p.16.
  4. Spaul (2018).
  5. see: Advertisement, The Oakleigh Leader, (Saturday, 19 January 1895), p.4.
  6. "FOOTBALL". The Age (24, 307). Victoria, Australia. 8 March 1933. p. 7. Retrieved 24 March 2019 via National Library of Australia.
  7. "DEATH OF FOOTBALL COACH". The Argus (Melbourne) (27, 045). Victoria, Australia. 22 April 1933. p. 21. Retrieved 24 March 2019 via National Library of Australia.
  8. Sharland, W.S., "Greatly Loved Sportsman: Tragic Passing of Fred Phillips", The Sporting Globe, (Saturday, 22 April 1933), p.6.
  9. Members of the Victorian team lined up before the start of the game with South Australia, The Sporting Globe, (Wednesday, 15 June 1932), p.1.
  10. "Phillips played well throughout, his great marking dominating the ruck and half-forward in the first half, and full-forward positions in the second." ("Rover", "Victoria Wins Big Match by 8 Points", The (Adelaide) Advertiser, (Monday, 13 June 1932), p.10).
  11. Football, The Argus, (Monday, 13 June 1932), p.13; Interstate Football, The Age, (Monday, 13 June 1932), p.12.
  12. Deaths: Phillips, The Herald, (Saturday 22 April 1933), p.19; Deaths: Phillips, The Argus, (Monday 24 April 1933), p.1; Deaths: Phillips, The Age, (Monday 24 April 1933), p.1.
  13. "FRED. PHILLIPS DEAD". The Referee. Sydney: National Library of Australia. 26 April 1933. p. 13. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
  14. Footballer's Funeral: Tribute to F.R. Phillips, The Riverine Herald, (Tuesday, 25 April 1933), p.3.
gollark: They have low margins on the products but charge a monthly subscription fee for access.
gollark: Costco is quite a cool model in general.
gollark: ddg! Bra-ket notation physics
gollark: In hypothetical ideal world™, you could remove all spending on marketing and such, stick all the people working on products into well-incentivized teams as is optimal for development, spread the best innovations everywhere without patent/IP hurdles, etc.
gollark: Unfortunately, good luck constructing that!

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.