- Adrian Fletcher
Infobox afl player
firstname = Adrian
lastname = Fletcher
| birthdate = Birth date and age|1969|10|10|df=y
birthplace =
originalteam =Glenorchy Football Club
dead = alive
deathdate =
deathplace =
debutdate = 1989
debutteam = Geelong
debutopponent =
debutstadium =
playingteams = Geelong (1989-1991)23 games, 10 goalsSt Kilda (1992)
22 games, 10 goals
Brisbane Bears (1993-1996)86 games, 50 goals
Brisbane Lions (1997)21 games, 4 goals
Fremantle (1998-2001)
79 games, 25 goals
coach = notcoach
coachingteams =
statsend = 2005
careerhighlights =
Fremantle Best and Fairest 1999Adrian Fletcher (born 10 October 1969) is a former
Australian rules football er and current assistant coach. He is regarded as one of football's nomads with 4Australian Football League clubs behind him. Fletcher's play relied on being an excellent play reader which resulted in him being a prolific ball-winner.Early career
Fletcher was recruited from
Glenorchy Football Club ,Tasmania in 1988 as a 19 year oldWilliam Leitch Medal list by theGeelong Cats , playing 23 games there from 1989-1991 and kicking a total of 10 goals. From the Cats he transferred to St Kilda for a year in 1992, where he played 22 games and also kicked 10 goals.Playing for Brisbane
In 1993 Fletcher moved yet again to the
Brisbane Bears where he would make his name as a tough uncompromising midfielder. From 1993-1996, Fletcher played 86 of a possible 90 games, finishing fifth, fourth, second and fourth in the club champion awards. He was a significant player in the Bears' 1996 preliminary final loss toCarlton playing on the half back line. In 1997, however, his form slumped after the lack of a solid pre-season. He fought back, however, and ended up with a season average of 19 possessions per game in 21 games. However, despite a season that, although starting badly, was not considered by Fletcher to be his worst, he was traded to the Fremantle Dockers.Trade to Fremantle
However, despite a season that, although bad, was not considered by Fletcher to be "his worst," the Brisbane organization was not very forgiving. At the end of the 1997 season, he was called in to a meeting with the match committee, and was traded to the Fremantle Dockers.
Fremantle career
Fletcher had an immediate impact at Fremantle, finishing second in the club's Best and Fairest award in 1998 and winning it in 1999. He was one of the AFL's most underrated players, though the umpires recognised his value with regular Brownlow votes. Despite an average season by his heady standards, he was the club's leading handballer and showed great resilience to return from a fractured cheekbone after just two weeks. At the end of the 2001 season he was asked to retire by the Fremantle club despite his ability to regularly win possession of the football which was highlighted again by his 2001 match statistics. He was ranked in the AFL's top 20 for overall disposals and also was in the AFL's top five for handballs. He played 69 games for the Dockers ending up with 25 goals.
Post AFL and coaching career
After being delisted by Fremantle and not beind drafted by any other AFL clubs, Fletcher retired from the AFL after the 2001 season, and played for
Williamstown Football Club in the VFL for two years. He won the Williamstown best and fairest award in both these seasons and also won theNorm Goss Medal for best on ground in the 2003 VFL grand final in Fletcher's last game of senior football. He also was a development coach for theCollingwood Football Club during this time. In 2004 he joined theGeelong Football Club as an assistant coach, before returning to Collingwood in 2005. In 2007 he was sacked by Collingwood then he got a job as an assistant coach for theBrisbane Lions .He has made several appearances inAFL Legends Match es.
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