Tarkyn Lockyer

Tarkyn Lockyer (born 30 October 1979) is a former professional Australian rules football player who played for the Collingwood Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL). Lockyer currently serves as the Midfield Development coach at Collingwood,[1] having previously served as the head coach of the Collingwood VFL Football Club.

Tarkyn Lockyer
Personal information
Date of birth (1979-10-30) 30 October 1979
Place of birth Western Australia
Original team(s) North Albany / East Fremantle
Debut Round 8, 15 May 1999, Collingwood
vs. Fremantle, at Melbourne Cricket Ground
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1999–2010 Collingwood 227 (149)
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 2010.
Career highlights
Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com

Early life

Born in Albany, Western Australia Lockyer attended Albany Senior High School and played for a local club, North Albany Football Club as a teenager before leaving to go to Perth to further his football career. Lockyer played senior football with East Fremantle in the WAFL and was picked up by Collingwood in Round three (Pick #39) of the 1997 AFL Rookie draft.[2]

AFL career

Collingwood rookie listed Lockyer in 1998 and he made his debut in a Magpies win against Fremantle early in 1999.

In 2000 Lockyer was the runner-up in the Copeland Trophy to Nathan Buckley. He averaged 17 disposals in 21 games. He played even better in 2001, missing two games, but having over 370 disposals at over 18 disposals per game, and also kicked 19 goals for the year off the half-back line. In 2002 he was appointed vice-captain. He played all 25 games for the season, including the Grand Final and had just under 450 disposals for the year.

The Magpies made the Grand Final again in 2003, but Lockyer missed most of the season, when he suffered an Anterior Cruciate Ligament injury in Round 3 and had to be stretchered off the ground. The injury required knee reconstruction surgery which ended his season. In the 2005 season he had 430 disposals in 22 matches, playing in every game.

In 2006 he played every game.

2007

Lockyer began 2007 with a goal against the North Melbourne Kangaroos. Two weeks later, he had 32 possessions in a game against the Richmond Tigers.

Opposition coach, Chris Connolly claimed Lockyer would be the first player selected if State of Origin football was to be played this year.[3]

2009

Lockyer played his 200th AFL game in his home state against the West Coast Eagles at Subiaco Oval during Round 9 of the 2009 season.[4] Collingwood won the game by 22 points with Lockyer having 25 possessions and kicking 2 goals.[5]

2010

In and out of the side for the 2010 season, including being named as an emergency for both the Grand Final and replay,[6] he played 11 games[7] before retiring at the end of the season.[8] He has been named as the Coach of the VFL Side[9] for the 2011 Season.

gollark: Well, see, memecat is bad.
gollark: Use superglobals instead.
gollark: On that note, I just added generation count counting to potatOS!
gollark: I prefer potatOS superglobals, which are shared across all computers.
gollark: Never mind the certainly huge amount of bugs which could emerge from some hours running twice, or not at all, and the extreme hassle of dealing with also having to translate pre-DST-implementation and post-DST-implementation dates!

References

  1. "Tarkyn Lockyer". collingwoodfc.com.au. Collingwood Football Club. Retrieved 16 August 2015.
  2. "Footywire - Tarkyn Lockyer AFL Stats". 2010. Retrieved 26 September 2010.
  3. Beacham, D and O'Donoghue, C;Connolly wants Metro v Country;31 May 2007
  4. "Collingwood Football Club – Trusty Tarkyn set for 200 games". 2009. Retrieved 23 May 2009.
  5. "AFL News – Pies defeat Eagles by 22 points". 2009. Retrieved 23 May 2009.
  6. "Selection for AFL GF".
  7. "Tarkyn Lockyer Stats".
  8. "Anthony delisted by Magpies".
  9. "Lockyer to coach VFL Magpies".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.