Nicky Winmar

Player

Birthday September 25, 1965

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Kellerberrin, Western Australia

Age 58 years old

Nationality Australia

Height 183 cm

Weight 81 kg

#52455 Most Popular

1965

Neil Elvis "Nicky" Winmar (born 25 September 1965) is a former Australian rules footballer, best known for his career for and the in the Australian Football League (AFL), as well as in the West Australian Football League.

Neil Elvis Winmar was born on 25 September 1965 in Kellerberrin, Western Australia, to Neal and Meryle Winmar.

Neal Winmar was born in a tent under a tree.

Nicky grew up on an Aboriginal reserve in Western Australia’s Wheatbelt, near the town of Pingelly, in a windowless shack made of corrugated iron with a dirt floor, no running water or sewerage.

The reserve had a 6pm curfew, and discipline was harsh.

Winmar left school by the age of 15, and worked as a shearer.

Winmar played for the Brookton/Pingelly Football Club in the Upper Great Southern Football League (UGSFL) from an early age.

Aged 15, he won a senior best and fairest in an A-grade local competition.

He was subsequently recruited by South Fremantle in the Perth-based WAFL, after the club's coach at the time, Mal Brown, saw Winmar playing for Brookton/Pingelly.

1983

He made his senior debut for South Fremantle in round nine of the 1983 season, aged 17, and played a total of 13 games in his debut season.

In the beginning, he was used across the wings and half-forward flanks, but was later played as a rover, although he remained a regular goal-kicker.

In total, Winmar played 58 games for South Fremantle from 1983 to 1986 and kicked 98 goals.

Winmar became known as "Cuz", as it was his habit to address everyone by this word.

1987

Growing up in Pingelly in the Wheatbelt region of Western Australia, Winmar began his career with South Fremantle, playing 58 games at the club before being recruited prior to the 1987 season by St Kilda.

Winmar transferred to the St Kilda Football Club in the Victorian Football League (VFL) for the 1987 season, making his debut for the club in Round 1 against at Moorabbin Oval.

Having played 20 games in his debut season and kicking 37 goals, Winmar finished second in the club's best and fairest count behind Tony Lockett (who went on to win the Brownlow) and also polled 10 votes in the Brownlow Medal.

1988

In 1988, he kicked 43 goals from 21 games to be the club's leading goalkicker and again finished runner-up in the best and fairest count, this time to Danny Frawley.

1989

In a twelve-season career with St Kilda, Winmar won the club's best and fairest award, the Trevor Barker Award, in 1989 and 1995 and was also twice named in the All-Australian team.

After an outstanding season in 1989, Winmar won St Kilda's best and fairest award and was also named in the VFL's Team of the Year on a half-forward flank.

He also finished equal third in the 1989 Brownlow Medal, polling 16 votes from his 22 games.

1990

After a match against in Round 19 of the 1990 season, Winmar was suspended for 10 matches for kicking and eye-gouging Dermott Brereton.

Brereton later apologised to Winmar for racially abusing him during the game.

1991

He returned to football in round seven of the 1991 season, recording 33 disposals and one goal against Adelaide at Moorabbin.

Winmar's performances throughout the rest of the season led to him being named in the inaugural AFL All-Australian team.

1992

Winmar played a further 23 games in the 1992 season, including the club's semi-final loss to.

At the conclusion of the season, Winmar was named the winner of the Mark of the Year competition, for a spectacular mark taken at Subiaco Oval against.

1993

He was involved in several incidents of racial vilification during his career, and a photograph of Winmar responding to one such incident during the 1993 season has been described as one of the most memorable images in Australian sporting history.

In round four of the 1993 season, Indigenous players Winmar and Gilbert McAdam were racially abused by Collingwood supporters, eventually being awarded two and three Brownlow Medal votes in a game St Kilda won by 22 points.

The week after the game, Winmar was involved in a dispute with St Kilda over his level of pay, in particular, injury payments, and did not play for the next two weeks.

1994

Playing a total of 17 games in 1994, Winmar missed three weeks late in the season after being suspended for striking.

At the end of the season, Winmar was also refused clearance by St Kilda to play in the Aboriginal All-Stars game, held at Marrara Oval in Darwin.

1995

In 1995, Winmar played in each of St Kilda's 22 games, winning the club's best and fairest award for a second time and also being named in the All-Australian team.

1996

In the pre-season competition held prior to the start of the 1996 season, the 1996 Ansett Australia Cup, Winmar played in St Kilda's team which defeated Carlton by 58 points in the grand final held at Waverley Park and was awarded the Michael Tuck Medal as best on ground.

Having damaged the medial collateral ligament of his knee in the round three game against, Winmar missed nine matches in the early part of the 1996 season before returning in the latter part of the season.

1997

Winmar played his 200th game for the club in round 17 of the 1997 season, against the at Waverley Park, becoming the first Indigenous player to reach the milestone in the AFL.

He also played in St Kilda's loss to Adelaide in the 1997 Grand Final, having kicked three goals against in the preliminary final the previous week.

1998

He left St Kilda at the end of the 1998 season and was drafted by the Western Bulldogs, playing one further season in the AFL before retiring at the end of the 1999 season.

In 1998, in what was to be his last season for St Kilda, Winmar played 23 games and kicked 16 goals.

2003

Having represented Western Australia in eight interstate matches, Winmar was named in St Kilda's Team of the Century in 2003 and was inducted into the West Australian Football Hall of Fame in 2009.

2005

An Indigenous Australian man, he was the first Aboriginal footballer to play 200 games in the AFL, and was named in the Indigenous Team of the Century in 2005.