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Darren Jarman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Australian rules footballer, born 1967

Australian rules footballer
Darren Jarman
Personal information
Full nameDarren Robert Jarman[1]
Born (1967-01-28)28 January 1967 (age 58)
Original teamNorth Adelaide (SANFL)
DraftNo. 55,1986 national draft
Height186 cm (6 ft 1 in)
Weight96 kg (15 st 2 lb)
PositionMidfielder/forward
Playing career1
YearsClubGames (Goals)
1985–1990North Adelaide (SANFL)117 (211)[note 1]
1991–1995Hawthorn109 (122)
1996–2001Adelaide121 (264)
Total347 (597)
Representative team honours
YearsTeamGames (Goals)
South Australia12
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 2001.
Career highlights

AFL

SANFL

  • SANFL premiership: 1987
  • North Adelaide best and fairest: 1990
  • North Adelaide leading goalkicker: 1990
  • North Adelaide Team of the Century

Representative

Sources:AFL Tables,AustralianFootball.com

Darren Robert Jarman (born 28 January 1967) is a formerAustralian rules footballer who played for theHawthorn Football Club andAdelaide Football Club in theAustralian Football League (AFL), and for theNorth Adelaide Football Club in theSouth Australian National Football League (SANFL).

Jarman is recognised, along with older brotherAndrew, as one of the most skillful South Australian footballers of the late 1980s and 1990s. While Andrew was renowned for his constructive handball skills, Darren was regarded as one of the finest kicks on either foot, whether passing to a leading forward or shooting for goal.

SANFL career (1985–1990)

[edit]

Jarman played 117 games and kicked 211 goals forNorth Adelaide in the SANFL between 1985 and 1990. The highlight of this period was playing in the1987 SANFL Grand Final premiership victory with brotherAndrew. He was selected on the interchange in the club's Team of the Century at a gala dinner held on 7 October 2000.[2] He also played 27 night series/pre-season competition matches for North Adelaide, in which he kicked 25 goals.

Hawthorn (1991–1995)

[edit]

Jarman was initially drafted byMelbourne with pick 55 in the inaugural1986 VFL Draft.,[3] but chose to remain in Adelaide with the Roosters. Once the Demons' three-year rights to Jarman lapsed,Brisbane claimed him with a concessional pre-draft selection in the1989 VFL Draft.[4] Once again Jarman chose to stay in his home state.

In 1990 the turmoil that led to the creation of theAdelaide Crows and thereby automatically relegated the SANFL to secondary importance within South Australia caused Jarman to reassess his career. Following some friction with the Crows' football managerNeil Kerley, Jarman chose to head east, signing forHawthorn after the club traded pick 10 in the1990 AFL draft to the Bears for his contractual rights.[5]

In Round 1, 1991 Jarman made his debut in an 86-point loss to Adelaide.[6] Despite this early setback, the highly skilled midfielder made an immediate impact in his debut year, averaging 18 disposals and booting 41 goals[7] before his infamous performance in the Hawks' winning side on Grand Final day, when he was restricted to just 5 touches on the big stage.[8]

Jarman bounced back in 1992, winning his first All-Australian selection (at centreman) and stamping himself as one of the game's elite players. Following his excellent 1995 season where he won his second All-Australian selection, Hawthorn's Best and Fairest Award and finished with the second-most votes behindSydney'sPaul Kelly in theBrownlow Medal count[note 2][10]Jarman sought a return home to Adelaide to play with his brother Andrew at the Crows.

Homecoming (1996–2001)

[edit]

In the 1995/6 offseason, Jarman was traded to the Adelaide Crows in a complex three-way deal that involvedPaul Salmon moving fromEssendon to Hawthorn, promising defenderSean Wellman moving from Adelaide to Essendon and a handful of peripheral draft picks and players exchanged between the three clubs.[11]

As with his move to Glenferrie Oval five years earlier, Jarman had an immediate impact at his new club, winning his third All-Australian selection following a 400 disposal/46 goal season despite playing just 19 games.[12] In the following years as he passed the age of 30, Jarman increasingly spent more time up forward, capturing the imagination of fans everywhere with remarkable performances in the Crows' back-to-back Grand Final wins, booting six goals againstSt Kilda in 1997[note 3] and five goals in the 1998 triumph overNorth Melbourne.[14] Jarman's influence as a goalsneak in the twilight of his career was highlighted by his capture of the Crows' leading goalkicker award in 1998, 1999 and 2001.[15]

In 2000 Jarman was named in theforward pocket inAdelaide's Team of the Decade 1991–2000.

Playing statistics

[edit]
[16]
Legend
  G  
Goals
  K  
Kicks
  D  
Disposals 
  T  
Tackles
  B  
Behinds 
  H  
Handballs 
  M  
Marks
SeasonTeamNo.GamesTotalsAverages (per game)
GBKHDMTGBKHDMT
1991Hawthorn1124412829713643374391.71.212.45.718.03.11.6
1992Hawthorn11233030395148543112491.31.317.26.423.64.92.1
1993Hawthorn11212415319141460117631.10.715.26.721.95.63.0
1994Hawthorn1121161130415746195830.80.514.57.522.04.54.0
1995Hawthorn1120111134612747367710.60.617.36.423.73.43.6
1996Adelaide319461728611239896422.40.915.15.920.95.12.2
1997Adelaide3243917381125506104671.60.715.95.221.14.32.8
1998Adelaide323452923010133190412.01.310.04.414.43.91.8
1999Adelaide32158231796324296182.81.18.53.011.54.60.9
2000Adelaide31436121314817953202.60.99.43.412.83.81.4
2001Adelaide32040172176428185172.00.910.93.214.14.30.9
Career2303862103085122243079895101.70.913.45.318.74.32.2

Retirement and recognition

[edit]

An emotional Jarman retired after the 2001 Elimination Final loss toCarlton, closing the book on his playing career with a further 2 goals.[17]

After being inducted into the SANFL Hall of Fame in 2006,[18] on 19 July 2007 Jarman's outstanding 17-season career of top-flight football was recognised with induction into the Australian Football Hall of Fame.[19]

Jarman was awarded Life Membership of the Adelaide Football Club in March 2008.[20]

Coaching career

[edit]

From 2002 to 2004 Jarman re-joined the Adelaide Football Club as an assistant coach toGary Ayres. In 2006 he was appointed assistant coach to brotherAndrew Jarman at North Adelaide, ending in 2007.[21]

Personal life

[edit]

In March 2023, Jarman, alongside former AFL playerJay Schulz and the family of former AFL playerShane Tuck, launched a class action lawsuit in theSupreme Court of Victoria against the AFL and theRichmond,Port Adelaide,Hawthorn andAdelaide football clubs, with the plaintiffs alleging that the defendants failed to ensure proper concussion management during the plaintiffs' playing careers.[22]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^These tallies refer to premiership matches (home-and-away and finals matches) only.
  2. ^Jarman was however ineligible to place due to a suspension incurred in the opening round.[9]
  3. ^Five of these 1997 Grand Final goals were in the last quarter.[13]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"JARMAN, Darren Robert". North Adelaide FC.
  2. ^"NAFC Team of the Century".Official Website of the North Adelaide Football Club. Archived fromthe original on 20 July 2008.
  3. ^Lovett, M., ed. (2006).AFL Record Guide To Season 2007.Melbourne: AFL Publishing. p. 406.ISBN 978-0-9758362-7-9.
  4. ^Lovett, M. (ed.).AFL Record Guide To Season 2007. p. 411.
  5. ^Lovett, M. (ed.).AFL Record Guide To Season 2007. p. 372.
  6. ^"Adelaide vs. Hawthorn, Round 1, 1991".AFL Tables.
  7. ^"1991 Hawthorn player statistics".AFL Tables.
  8. ^"Hawthorn vs. West Coast, 1991 Grand Final".AFL Tables.
  9. ^Linnell, Stephen (26 September 1995). "Ripper! Paul Kelly Takes Out Brownlow".Sydney Morning Herald. AAP. p. 45.
  10. ^"1995 Brownlow Medal".AFL Tables.
  11. ^Lovett, M. (ed.).AFL Record Guide To Season 2007. pp. 344, 361, 373.
  12. ^"1996 Adelaide player statistics".AFL Tables.
  13. ^"St. Kilda vs. Adelaide, 1997 Grand Final".AFL Tables.
  14. ^"North Melbourne vs. Adelaide, 1998 Grand Final".AFL Tables.
  15. ^The Adelaide Football Club 2005 Year Book. Adelaide Football Club. 2005. p. 58.
  16. ^"Darren Jarman".AFL Tables.
  17. ^"Carlton vs. Adelaide, 2001 Elimination Final".AFL Tables.
  18. ^"Hall of Fame".SANFL Website. Archived fromthe original on 19 March 2009.
  19. ^Matthews, B. (20 July 2007)."AFL Hall of Fame swells".Herald Sun.
  20. ^"Life Members of the Adelaide Football Club".Official Website of the Adelaide Football Club. Archived fromthe original on 3 May 2008.
  21. ^"2008 Coaches & Support Staff".Official Website of the North Adelaide Football Club. Archived fromthe original on 20 July 2008.
  22. ^Pearson, Erin; Pierik, Jon (20 March 2023)."Jarman, Schulz reveal brain injuries: Fresh details of AFL concussion class action".The Age. Retrieved25 April 2023.

External links

[edit]
Hawthorn 20.19 (139) defeatedWest Coast Eagles 13.8 (86), atWaverley Park
Coach:Joyce
1997:Adelaide 19.11 (125) defeatedSt Kilda 13.16 (94), at theMelbourne Cricket Ground
1998:Adelaide 15.15 (105) defeatedNorth Melbourne 8.22 (70), at theMelbourne Cricket Ground
Coach:Blight
AFL
AFL Women's
North Adelaide Football Club • Team of the Century
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1992 All-Australian team
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1996 All-Australian team
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Darren Jarman in South Australian State of Origin teams
South Australia 19.13 (127) defeated Western Australia 14.17 (91), atFootball Park, 2 June 1993, crowd: 21,487
South Australia 16.13 (109) defeated Victoria 14.13 (97), at theMCG, 5 June 1993, crowd: 31,792
Both games
Semi-final vs. Western Australia
Final vs. Victoria
Coach:Cornes
The Advertiser Country All-Stars 23.15 (153) dThe News City All-Stars 14.28 (112) atFootball Park, 21 May 1990
The Advertiser Country All-Stars
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First round
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Fourth round
  • 40.Stephen Williams
  • 41. Brett Jaffray
  • 42. Anthony Lovell
  • 43. Andrew Gray
  • 44. Tim Britt
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  • 46. Gary Brooker
  • 47. Brendan Hogan
  • 48. Stephen Riley
  • 49. Craig Elias
  • 50.Alastair Lynch
  • 51. Andrew Herring
  • 52. Robin McKinnon
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