Shane giving the Giants plenty of happy Mummy's days

By Michael Cowley / Expert

Who would you prefer? Your Buddy, or your Mummy?

Well considering the significance of yesterday, many would probably say Mummy, but back at the end of 2013, it was all about Buddy.

Except for perhaps when Tony ‘Plugger’ Lockett moved to Sydney, it was expected to be the biggest AFL signing the Harbour City had made, when Lance ‘Buddy’ Franklin was about to sign with the GWS Giants.

The Giants had been considered certainties to gain Buddy’s signature, but at the last minute, he announced he was headed to the other Sydney club.

Within 24 hours, as the Giants were seemingly trying to play down missing out on what would have also been the biggest signing of their brief existence, they did announce they had snatched one from their cross-town rivals, with premiership winning ruckman Shane Mumford agreeing to move from East to West to become an Orange person.

At the time – and probably still now – some consider the Swans got the best of the deal, and quite obviously if the Giants had been able to secure Buddy they would have enjoyed so much publicity, and Franklin would have had an impact on the park.

But I now honestly believe the Giants would be laughing at the deal they ended up with.

Mummy – who was reportedly looking at an offer from Hawthorn at the time – would have cost a whole lot less than Buddy, and what he has already brought, and continues to bring to the club and his young teammates, is something not even the great Buddy would have been able to do.

I never thought I would be writing that when I look back at when the Swans paid what was considered at the time ‘overs’ – around a million over four years – for Geelong’s second or even third-string ruckman.

Mumford came to the Swans after they had lost ‘now renovator extraordinaire’ Darren Jolly to Collingwood. And he came to Sydney with more of a reputation for eating sausages than his football.

The story goes – and he did confirm it to me – that the then 130kgs Mummy, when he was living in Bunyip, Victoria, once ate around 20 sausages at a mate’s birthday barbecue. To be fair he “didn’t do it all in one sitting” but across the length of the afternoon and evening.

But that was the main focus of Mumford’s history when he arrived in Sydney.

He rapidly went about making all the media forget the story when he repeatedly was among Sydney’s best, and played a significant role in their 2012 premiership win. He admits he learnt a lot at the Swans working with their experienced midfield and the likes of Brett Kirk, Jude Bolton, Ryan O’Keefe and then Josh Kennedy and co.

And he’s now brought all that knowledge and skill to the Giants. The beneficiaries are their talented but raw group of youngsters.

Last Saturday night against the Hawks he was again a significant key – along with the likes of Jeremy Cameron and Callan Ward.

Stats say one thing, and Mummy’s were satisfying on Saturday – 14 touches (eight contested), 37 hit outs and a massive eight tackles. But you needed to watch to see the impact he had on so many other aspects of the game. He’s a leader by what he does off, and particularly on the park, and clearly his influence is rubbing off on his teammates.

In his first season with the Giants last year, Mumford played 17 matches, and averaged 12.7 touches, 36.4 hit outs, and 5.8 tackles. All were career highs.

In six matches this season, he is averaging 12.8 touches, 33.8 hit outs, and 5.8 tackles.

By comparison, in his premiership winning season in 2012, he averaged 27 hit outs, 10.3 disposals, and 4.4 tackles, although he did share the ruck duties back then with Mike Pyke.

Regardless, the soon-to-be 29-year-old is in arguably the best form of his career, not only as a player, but as a role model and teacher. While some may say Callan Ward, some may say Ryan Griffen, some may suggest Cameron or Lachie Whitfield, or even Izzy Folau from an exposure perspective, I say Mumford has clearly been the Giants’ best recruit.

And who would have thought that 24 hours after the devastation – and while externally they may claim it wasn’t devastating, it was – that the Giants would pull of their great recruiting coup?

Buddy? Buddy who? Shane is starting to make every weekend a Happy Mummy’s Day.

The Crowd Says:

2015-05-12T04:02:12+00:00

Mark II

Guest


CHAMPION MUMMY! GWS good to watch, developing well. Great for AFL. Two excellent teams in Sydney

2015-05-11T11:06:12+00:00

Mark

Guest


Smoky? I'd say he's on fire. Must be at least 100-1

2015-05-11T11:04:47+00:00

Mark

Guest


Nailed it

2015-05-11T10:22:57+00:00

Maggie

Guest


Your comment is not relevant Micko. The Swans contracted Tippett at the end of the 2012 season BEFORE they had any idea that Franklin was interested in coming to the Swans. At the time Tippett was recruited to fill an obvious gap in the Swans lineup - that of a dedicated full forward. It was only during the course of the 2013 season, when Franklin's manager approached the Swans, that the decision was made (I suspect with great regret) to let Mumford go for salary cap reasons and to play Pyke as the lead ruckman with Tippett as a forward/backup ruckman. Tippett's suspension + injuries meant that he didn't really play the backup ruckman role until this year. Had the timing of Tippett and Franklin's availability been reversed, you could very well be right. Mumford might still be playing for the Swans and Tippett might be somewhere else (Gold Coast perhaps?)

2015-05-11T07:36:12+00:00

Andy_Roo

Roar Guru


Now that GWS are winning a few games Mumford's contribution may get noticed more. Smokey for the Brownlow?

2015-05-11T04:12:25+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Guest


Nah - I think both teams have come out of it well. Tippett and Franklin are very different from each other, and in fact complement each other's styles quite well. Last weekend's game against the Demons was a good example - Buddy missed out on the goals, but Tippo kicked 4.

2015-05-11T02:55:20+00:00

slane

Guest


I remember a few years ago watching him come off the bench and run towards the ball that was being kicked into the wing. He could have probably killed the bloke who was standing under the ball, completely unaware of the Mummy monster thundering up behind him. Instead, Mummy held back just enough and took the mark. Clearly a top bloke as well as a top footballer.

2015-05-11T02:44:35+00:00

Micko

Guest


Swans shoulda kept Mummy and just gone with Buddy and not taken Tippett who has not shown much - yet.

2015-05-11T01:33:35+00:00

Rob

Guest


Have watched the Giants a few times this year and Mumford has been pivotal for them... He gives what is turning into an elite midfield first use of the ball and then - as all good ruckman do now - follows the ball around the ground making his presence felt at contests. I've always been a big fan and since moving to the west he has helped transform a team of easy beats into a real threat

2015-05-11T00:51:45+00:00

Dean

Guest


Played against him when he was a 100+kg teenager, he learnt from a young age how to use his size. I reckon he'd have sunk as many stubbies as sausages in that story too. Probably easier to learn to use your bulk as a youngster if you're that big rather than the athletic beanpoles who bulk up but never learn to use their size as effectively.

2015-05-11T00:18:15+00:00

Christo the Daddyo

Guest


It's his second and third efforts that are truly impressive - fantastic example to his less experienced team-mates.

2015-05-10T23:53:09+00:00

Rich_daddy

Roar Guru


I have to admit I have always been and remain a big mummy fan. He was fantastic on Saturday (particularly in the last quarter) and shows a big strong ruckman who works hard at ground level is a massively underrated commodity. Being able to flatten a couple of opposition players also comes in handy!

2015-05-10T23:09:13+00:00

Hawker

Guest


Love the way he intimidates and bulldozes people at stoppages. Wasn't happy he dropped the knees into a few of our players but then I can't really complain about hawthorn players receiving punishment after last week...

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