John Longmire

John Longmire (born 31 December 1970) is the current coach of the Sydney Swans. As a player, he represented the North Melbourne Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL) from 1988 to 1999.[1]

John Longmire
Longmire in June 2017
Personal information
Full name John Longmire
Nickname(s) Horse
Date of birth (1970-12-31) 31 December 1970
Original team(s) Corowa Rutherglen (OMFL)
Height 194 cm (6 ft 4 in)
Weight 102 kg (225 lb)
Position(s) Full-forward, Full-back, Ruckman
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1988–1999 North Melbourne 200 (511)
Coaching career3
Years Club Games (W–L–D)
2011– Sydney 214 (137–75–2)

2020
Representative
All Stars

1 (0–1–0)
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1999.
3 Coaching statistics correct as of State of Origin for Bushfire Relief Match.
Career highlights
Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com

Early years

Longmire began his playing career at the Corowa-Rutherglen club in New South Wales, where he nearly won the Ovens & Murray Football League's leading goalkicker title in 1987 as a 16-year-old, kicking 82 goals. His ability and size quickly attracted the interest of the North Melbourne VFL club's talent scouts.

Longmire's grandfather is former Fitzroy Football Club player, Keith Williams.

His Uncle, Robert Longmire is a former Collingwood Football Club player.

AFL career

Longmire's physique and size earned him the nickname Horse. His first match for North Melbourne was in the infamous Exhibition Match between North Melbourne and Carlton at The Oval in London in 1987. His first official match was in in 1988 against Footscray with a four-goal performance from full-forward, but struggled after that and near the end of the season coach John Kennedy Sr. moved him to full-back. He did well in that role during 1989 – holding Tony Lockett to five kicks in Round 14 – but North's lack of key position players in attack saw him moved back to the forward line in August.

1990 saw Longmire jump to the top of the tree: at only nineteen years of age he kicked 98 goals and won the Coleman Medal as the league's leading goal kicker.[1] In Round 2 of that year he kicked a North Melbourne record of twelve goals against Richmond, which he broke twelve weeks later when he kicked fourteen goals in round 14 against Melbourne. Going into the final round Longmire looked likely to reach the 100-goal milestone for the season, however terribly inaccurate kicking against a hard Collingwood defence resulted in a tally of two goals and eight behinds, leaving him just two goals short. Longmire went on the win North Melbourne's best and fairest that year and led the club's goal kicking list each season from 1990 to 1994.

At North Melbourne, he formed a powerful goalkicking partnership with centre half forward Wayne Carey. In six seasons between 1990 and 1995 Carey and Longmire collectively kicked 768 goals (of which Longmire contributed 464) and thirteen times they combined for ten goals or more in a game. Individually, Longmire kicked 5-plus goals in a game 36 times, 7-plus goals 18 times and 10-plus twice, before a serious knee injury forced Longmire out of the game for the 1996 season.[1] When he returned the following year, he played out the remainder of his career in defence and in the ruck.

Longmire missed out on playing on the winning side of the 1996 premiership with a knee injury and just made it back from an elbow injury to make his last career game the 1999 Grand Final, in which the Kangaroos defeated Carlton. This was his only year to also not score a goal, managing only to kick 1 point in 10 games.[1]

Coaching career

Sydney Swans

Longmire returned to New South Wales to take up an assistant coaching position with the Sydney Swans.[1] In 2006, he was considered to be a front-runner for the St Kilda Football Club coaching role, which was made vacant by the sacking of Grant Thomas, however, the role later went to then-fellow Swans assistant coach Ross Lyon.[2] In 2008 the coach, Paul Roos, appointed Longmire the Swans' "coaching co-ordinator". Longmire replaced Roos following his retirement at the end of the 2010 season.

Longmire's first game as the Sydney Swans coach ended in a draw against Melbourne, with both teams scoring 11.18 (84).[3] His first win as coach came the next week, against Essendon in Round 2.[4] Longmire had a relatively good start to his coaching career, with only five losses in the first fourteen rounds of the season (albeit against top-four opposition in Geelong, Carlton (twice), Hawthorn and Collingwood).

One of his best coaching achievements was engineering Sydney's upset 13-point victory over Geelong at Skilled Stadium in the penultimate round of the 2011 season. The Swans had not won there in more than 12 years and the home team had not lost at the ground in exactly four years and one day. Also, the Swans were the only team to beat top-four side West Coast at Patersons Stadium during the season. Those two sides won the rest of their home matches during the regular season.

Longmire took Sydney to the finals in 2011, his first year as senior coach in what was the club's 13th finals appearance in 16 seasons. After beating St Kilda in the elimination finals at Etihad Stadium, the Swans were defeated by Hawthorn in the semi-finals ending what was otherwise a promising first season for Longmire in the top job.

In 2012, his second year as coach, Longmire led Sydney to third place on the AFL ladder, compiling an impressive 166 record over the home-and-away season. He later coached the team to a 14.7 (91) to 11.15 (81) victory over Hawthorn in the 2012 AFL Grand Final. Subsequently, his contract was extended until the end of the 2015 season.[5]

In March 2014, Longmire signed a two-year contract extension that takes his tenure to at least the end of the 2017 AFL season.[6]

In round 4 of the 2019 AFL season, Longmire coached his 200th game, a career milestone. Three rounds later, he overtook Paul Roos as the longest serving coach of the club.[7]

In 2020, Longmire coached the All-Stars team in the one-off 2020 State of Origin match that was played on 28 February 2020 at Marvel Stadium.[8]

Statistics

Playing statistics

[9]
Legend
 G  Goals  B  Behinds  K  Kicks  H  Handballs  D  Disposals  M  Marks  T  Tackles
Led the league for the season only
Led the league after season and finals
Season Team No. Games Totals Averages (per game)
G B K H D M T G B K H D M T
1988 North Melbourne 431121127024945621.91.16.42.28.55.10.2
1989 North Melbourne 3516912994114031100.60.86.22.68.81.90.6
1990 North Melbourne 3522986023061291139104.52.710.52.813.26.30.5
1991 North Melbourne 3521915419961260128124.32.69.52.912.46.10.6
1992 North Melbourne 352064371645021490103.21.98.22.510.74.50.5
1993 North Melbourne 35207529151592108193.81.57.63.010.54.10.5
1994 North Melbourne 3523784617086256120133.42.07.43.711.15.20.6
1995 North Melbourne 352258321577823594102.61.57.13.510.74.30.5
1996 North Melbourne 350
1997 North Melbourne 3525101119610430096330.40.47.84.212.03.81.3
1998 North Melbourne 3510745035852840.70.45.03.58.52.80.4
1999 Kangaroos 3510015338912480.00.15.33.89.12.40.8
Career 200 511 298 1539 637 2176 887 121 2.6 1.5 7.7 3.2 10.9 4.4 0.6

Coaching statistics

Statistics are correct to the end of the 2017 season[10]
Legend
 W  Wins  L  Losses  D  Draws  W%  Winning percentage  LP  Ladder position  LT  League teams
Season Team Games W L D W % LP LT
2011 Sydney 241310156.3%717
2012 Sydney 25196076.0%318
2013 Sydney 25168166.0%418
2014 Sydney 25196076.0%118
2015 Sydney 24168066.7%418
2016 Sydney 26197073.1%118
2017 Sydney 24159062.5%618
2018 Sydney 22148063.6%618
colspan=2 Career totals 195 131 62 2 66.6%

Honours and achievements

Brownlow Medal votes
Season Votes
1988 0
1989 0
1990 9
1991 8
1992 0
1993 4
1994 8
1995 0
1996 0
1997 3
1998 1
1999 0
Total 33

Playing honours

Team

Individual

Coaching honours

Team

Individual

gollark: This is an excellent use case for SQLite, which would allow quick lookups in the metadata bit and not require coming up with a fiddly custom binary format.
gollark: As you can see from the file format docs (https://wiki.openzim.org/wiki/ZIM_file_format), it's basically big compressed blobs plus directory entry metadata and stuff.
gollark: It's designed for offline viewing of wiki/web content.
gollark: Not as compressed as it theoretically *could* be if they didn't have random access goals.
gollark: To some extent.

References

  1. Russell Holmesby; Jim Main (1 May 2009). The Encyclopedia of AFL Footballers: Every AFL/VFL Player Since 1897. BAS Publishing Pty Limited. ISBN 978-1-921496-00-4. Retrieved 28 August 2012.
  2. Fight for Longmire, farewell to Lyon, Sydney Morning Herald, 12 October 2006
  3. Stevens, Mark (27 March 2011). "Hairline decision for rookie coach John Longmire". Herald Sun. Retrieved 6 April 2011.
  4. Hassett, Sebastian (4 April 2011). "Goodes, Bolton to thank for breaking Longmire's duck". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 6 April 2011.
  5. Longmire's flag win bonus - AFL.com.au
  6. "Sydney Swans coach John Longmire re-signs with the club for another two years". Herald Sun. News Ltd. 24 March 2014. Retrieved 24 March 2014.
  7. "The numbers behind Longmire's rise to record". Sydney Swans. 3 May 2019. Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  8. Cleary, Mitch (15 January 2020). "Mate v mate: How the Vic v All Stars teams will be picked". Australian Football League. Retrieved 18 January 2020.
  9. John Longmire's player profile at AFL Tables
  10. "John Longmire's coaching profile". AFL Tables.
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