Six Australian athletes that should have been all-time greats

By Ryan O'Connell / Expert

There’s athletes who aren’t gifted. They have worked themselves harder than anyone else, despite their peers being more natural. There’s also the ones who are blessed with time, power, precision, seemingly without trying. Six Australian athletes that should have been all-time greats

Ian Harvey

The man was nicknamed ‘The Freak’ because his teammates regularly witnessed him do things on a cricket field that most players wouldn’t even dream of attempting.

Some of his freakish talents included: possessing arguably the best slower ball in cricket; slog sweeping quick bowlers for six; and fielding/throwing with either hand.

He was the first player to score a hundred in a Twenty/20 match, and is revered in English County cricket after winning numerous limited-over titles, almost single-handedly.

Steve Waugh said he had ‘too many natural gifts to choose from’ and called him ‘the most slumbering cricket talent in the world’. He was even named one of Wisden’s five cricketers of the year in 2004.

And yet, he never came close to maximising all that talent.

He holds the record for most one day appearances for a country without ever playing Test cricket. In his 73 one day internationals for Australia, he averaged just 17.87 with the bat, and never scored a half century. And despite being an excellent bowler ‘at the death’, his bowling average of 30 is hardly eye-popping.

For all of his ability and potential, he was more ‘useful’ than ‘vital’ for the Australian one-day team, and you can’t help but wonder what could have been.

Matt Giteau

It seems both harsh and premature to put ‘Gits’ on this list, considering he’s still playing top-level rugby and is just 28 years of age.

But considering he’s off to France to play for Toulon when the World Cup is over, you’d have to agree that he’ll need to play the best 6 months of rugby in the history of the game in order to be named in anyone’s all-time greats list.

In fact, it’s hard to believe ‘Kid Dynamite’ is already 28. It seems like just yesterday that he burst onto international rugby, aged 19, as the new Wallaby whiz kid.

Able to play halfback, five-eighth and inside centre, kick goals, defend, burst through tackles, and armed with just a little bit of unpredictable magic, it seemed he was destined to be the next Wallaby superstar and all-time great.

He did become a superstar, and was named one of the five best players in the world in 2004, neck-to-neck with Dan Carter as the best five-eight in rugby. But then Carter seemed to lift a notch, and Giteau started to fade a little.

The 2011 World Cup could be his last chance to be considered an all-time great. And thus leave egg all over my face. But his start to the Super Rugby season would indicate that I may be safe.

Dane Carlaw

Queensland State of Origin great Greg Dowling once said of Carlaw: “Looks like Tarzan; plays like Jane”. As you can imagine, it wasn’t a compliment.

Carlaw had it all: size, speed and skill. The majority of the NRL lay in fear that this monster was going to wreck havoc, week-in and week-out.

Yet it never happened.

He’d have a dominating game, consistently breaking through 4 or 5 tacklers like they were little kids, or out-running fullbacks to score tries from 30 metres out. And then he would go completely missing the next game.

He played for Queensland and Australia, but never went close to cementing a spot amongst the league’s elite players, despite having all the tools to do so.

For the 2011 NRL season, he has returned to the Brisbane Broncos after three years playing for the Catalans Dragons in France. But at age 31, it’s hard to imagine that his best football is ahead of him.

Aaron Trahair

Don’t remember Aaron Trahair? Never even heard of him? Well, it’s certainly not your fault, but you really should.

In 1995, he was named one of the five best under-20 basketball players in the world, and won an NBL championship whilst starting for the Perth Wildcats (in just his second year in the NBL).

In 1997, he signed a massive contract with the Sydney Kings, and then shot Australia to a gold medal at the Under-23 World Championships.

The world was his oyster, and some pundits even thought he had the talent to make it to the NBA. He was anointed the next Andrew Gaze/Shane Heal.

Needless to say, he never went close to approaching the lofty heights of those two basketball greats.

Showing flashes of brilliance, he was in-and-out of the Australian team, and never went to an Olympics or World Championships. Regularly dropping 30 points one night and literally zero the next, even non-basketball fans can surmise that consistency was an issue.

He played for 8 different NBL teams, all of them hoping that he might finally shed the ‘potential’ tag.

But he never really did.

Trent Croad

Croad played 222 games, earned All-Australian honours, played State of Origin for Victoria, represented Australia in International Rules, and won an AFL premiership.

Anyway you measure it, that’s fantastic career.

But like just everyone else on this list, you feel it could have been much, much more.

As an 18-year-old, he nominated for the 1997 AFL draft, and whilst in camp, set the record for a standing jump (83cm). He was then selected third in the draft by Hawthorn, and began a career in which he teased fans, coaches and teammates with his ability.

Athletic and versatile, it was massive news in AFL circles when the Hawks traded him to the Fremantle Dockers at the end of 2001. He was asked to be the focal point upfront for Freo, but after delivering a solid 42 goals in his debut season out west, he struggled in 2003 with just 18 goals.

Ending two disappointing seasons, Croad told the Dockers he was homesick and wanted to return home to Melbourne. He was traded back to the Hawks, and reinvented himself as strong, consistent and reliable defender, and helped the Hawks win the 2008 flag.

However, he broke his foot in that game, and never fully recovered, failing to play another AFL game and retiring in 2010.

And thus ended a very good career, but one many AFL fans felt could have been all-time great career.

Harry Kewell

This was a tough one. Surely Harry is an all-time great, I hear you ask? He is, but only if you put a ceiling of ‘Australian’ before ‘all-time’ – and there is no question that he is certainly that. In fact, he’s probably Australia’s all-time best football player.

But blessed with exquisite skills, speed to burn, and a confidence that only the greats carry themselves with, the sky seemed the limit for a young Harry Kewell.

Many English Premier League fans couldn’t care less whether or not he was anointed an Australian all-time great – they believed he had the chance to be a football all-time great.

But injuries ripped the prime of his career away from him, ruling him out of too many games to count, and robbing fans of witnessing a potentially great career.

Whilst the curtain is yet to fall on his illustrious career, you get the feeling Kewell will leave the game with a polarising legacy. Rightly or wrongly, he has been at the forefront of numerous controversies and debates.

What is not for debate is the fact he’ll be considered an all-time great for the Socceroos’s, but never mentioned as an all-time great of the world game.

The Crowd Says:

2012-12-23T11:01:05+00:00

amazonfan

Roar Guru


He was an all-time great.

2012-12-23T10:55:45+00:00

Football fan

Guest


Obviously question where the hell is GARY ABLETT SRN? Should easily be number 1.

2012-12-23T10:55:45+00:00

Football fan

Guest


2011-08-13T18:50:19+00:00

Scotty

Guest


Nicky Wood - what a tragic waste of a great surfing talent. And while I am at it, one of my heroes when I was a youngster, Cheyne Horan. If he had not gone all mystical and Nimbin at just the wrong time in his career he could have been a real all-time great of the sport, and had multiple world titles. It was a bloody shame. And then finally in his senior years, he wakes up from the dream, gets on a thruster, and blows everyone away in Hawaii - which only goes to show what we missed out on.

2011-07-26T01:13:29+00:00

Harley

Guest


What about you Rhino - you were a mad basketballer in the Muggsy Bogues mould

2011-07-17T14:04:53+00:00

Sam

Guest


There were many cricketers in the last 15 years who fit into this category. Add Lehman, Law, Elliot, Hodge Devinuto (probably a handful of others I've forgotten) to the list of Macgill and Blewett as great players who didn't get the opportunities they would today. Kewell's case is very different, in the UK he is laughed at, mostly because of his 2 cup performances for Liverpool where he was off injured before half-time and came back to celebrate in the team suit. They forget how good he was when fit. Most Australians realise he's our best ever though.

2011-06-20T18:48:09+00:00

Tommy

Guest


The Poo has to be on that list. Mitchell Johnson is doing his level best to make it as well.

2011-03-21T02:27:25+00:00

Tunja

Guest


Seriously - Matt Giteau? I suppose you think George Gregan was a great halfback as well. Reminds me of a saying - opinions are like..... It's just that yours stinks more than my bathroom after a big night on the curry! What about Greg Smith? The supposed ex NFL star who played one game on the wing for the Newcastle Knights? Or Mal Meninga for his foray into Politics? If you are going to put Giteau on the list then you have to include a whole heap of other pretenders as well.

2011-03-19T17:41:47+00:00

UK Steve

Guest


Top article and Philippoussis is a good candidate for the list. Here's a couple of quotes about Poo from Sampras in his autobiography "Mark maybe the most talented player of my time not to have won a major. Mark's problem appeared to be that deep down, he just didn't seem to want greatness badly enough. One year when he was rehabilitating a knee with my trainer, we tried to set it up so that Mark and I could work out in LA. But all Mark wanted to do was surf". Regarding Kewell, even though he had injuries, he could have been an all-time great but just as with Philippoussis, I don't think he wanted it badly enough. His spell at Liverpool was extremely disappointing and he seemed to be on the periphery in the majority of his matches.

2011-03-19T10:55:12+00:00

TboneAl

Guest


Adams went to 4 Olympic games starting with L.A in 1984. As my uncle I know him well, he also went to world champs, so not sure where you are getting the info. Unfortunately there are no olympic medals, but he still achieved a lot and doesn't deserve to be mentioned here.

2011-03-18T12:10:16+00:00

Whiteline

Guest


Ian 'The Freak' Harvey - you have to be kidding. He was the original Steve Smith - overated and surplus to requirements

2011-03-17T17:24:36+00:00

BennO

Guest


Andrew Leeds (now physio for Parra eels or West Tigers). Andrew Blades was a world cup winning prop. But Andrew Leeds was also fullback at the time of Roger Gould so Leed's was not hard done by. Having said that, he did have a pretty good career in league.

2011-03-17T16:53:28+00:00

Vas Venkatramani

Roar Guru


Harry Kewell will finish his career as one of Australia's greatest ever sportsman, for the basic fact he helped put football on the map in this country. Recall our perceptions of football in the 90s. We had Craig Johnstone as a true great player, but he earnt his legend for Liverpool, and never wore the Socceroos armband. However, with Leeds United, Harry Kewell was a true born and bred Australian that was a bona fide star in the making. His deeds at Elland Road gave football a public profile it never received up until that point. The arrival of Viduka sparked many Aussies to adopt Leeds United as their team, and white shirts were aplenty. His move to Liverpool should have culminated in greatness, but injury and poor management lead him to the Anfield exit. Many Reds fans continued to be shocked at how such a good player in his first season there could amount to nothing by the time he left. Kewell's created a footballing legacy in this country, which has since been furthered by Cahill, Emerton, Neill, Schwarzer, Viduka, Bresciano, Wilkshire and of course, Aloisi.

2011-03-17T12:45:54+00:00

Roarchild

Roar Guru


Guys like Kewell and Croad feel different than the others because they would have tried their guts out to get the most out of themselves but the body couldn't comply. From Football i would say Bosnich and Viduka while legends would be decent fits. Bosnich finally makes it to Manchester United and threw it all away and Viduka reached a pretty high level but you felt had the ability to go even further.

2011-03-17T12:41:09+00:00

Roarchild

Roar Guru


Harsh to say he wasted his talent as he didn't seem a natural athlete.

2011-03-17T11:56:11+00:00

Aidan

Roar Pro


Hey Ryan, I actually really like the topic and totally agree with Harvey and Trahair. For the football nominee I would throw Bosnich into the mix, such a wasted talent- Chelsea, Man Utd. For a rugby nominee it's a bit harder to decide. Rugby's not my sport but perhaps Gerard- the guy is a natural but by his own admission he never trained properly- I think he could have been a superstar of rugby.

AUTHOR

2011-03-17T11:23:36+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


In retrospect, the comments about Scud have been spot on. Leaving him off this list was an oversight on my behalf, and I'm happy to be picked up on it.

AUTHOR

2011-03-17T11:20:02+00:00

Ryan O'Connell

Expert


Hey Aidan, There was no magic formula to choosing 6 instead of 10, mate. Quite simply, if you look at the tabs at the top of The Roar website, I merely chose one athlete from each of the sports that I felt had the potential to be an all-time in that particular sport. And for 'other sports' I took the liberty of choosing basketball. It was tough choosing Giteau and Kewell, but I honestly thought, at various stages of their respective careers, that they may just make it to 'all-time' status. If you think there are others in rugby and football that are more deserving of being on my list, I'd love to hear to your thoughts. Fire away! Cheers Ryan

2011-03-17T09:39:12+00:00

Walt

Guest


Was discussing this kind of thing with a mate recently Mark Phillipousis - one of the most talented players I have ever seen but what a let down. He is broke now too. Stuart MacGill would have taken 500 wickets Shane Kelly - World championship medals out of the you-know-where but Olympic gold would have cemented it Shane Gould could have won 10 gold medals Scott Hodges - the Port Adelaide / Adelaide full forward was truly spectacular and unstoppable at times but never hit the heights

2011-03-17T08:31:54+00:00

Djsinnema

Guest


Mark Phillipousis defently should be added. Much like Kewell and Croad. Injuries prevented them from being able to preform at their peak for long enough to achieve anything. i would add Brendon Fevola to the list. a man who had the skills to do great things, and ether the team let him down (99 goal Season in 2008) or his own behavior led to him being sacked (2009 Brownlow Medal scandel and the 2011 sacking at Brisbane) I think cricket would clearly be overrepresented on this list. Lets Just name a few: Stewet Mc Gill: Was Number 2 test spinner for much of his career Brett Lee: Should still be in test cricket Micheal Beven: strugled in Test arena, despite obvious skill Shane Lee: Highly skilled, yet never retained a spot in the side. Yu getlemen could serously come up with much more

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