Show me a hero: Season ends but legend grows for Nat Fyfe

By Jay Croucher / Expert

With his streaming long brown hair, broad shoulders and thick, battle-hardened, muscular physique, Nat Fyfe already looks like a Greek warrior. You could slot him straight into ‘Troy’ at the expense of Eric Bana and that film wouldn’t have been any worse.

Fittingly, in the context of football at least, Fyfe’s preliminary final last Friday night was as Homeric as performances come. His game was less a game and more an odyssey.

He started the match on the bench and before he entered the field of play his team had kicked the first two goals of the match. Things were looking ominous for the champion Hawks – their opponents were 11 points up after three minutes and bringing in Football Jesus off the bench for further reinforcements.

Fyfe as we know him lasted 30 seconds and one contest. Liam Shiels collected him at centre half forward, knocking him off balance straight into the path of Brian Lake. The collision fractured the fibula in the Brownlow Medal favourite’s troublesome left leg, rendering him virtually immobile. But he persisted. His body wouldn’t allow him to play his customary role of dominating the midfield, so he decided to play the role of Greek hero instead.

Watching Fyfe limp through the first half on a broken leg, grimacing every time he tried and failed to get into second gear, gutting himself to every contest to make a single effort, physically unable to make another, was as tragic as it was compelling.

Seeing him run was like watching a racehorse try to gallop after being shot in one leg. We know what happens to them, but Fyfe refused to be euthanised by the red vest.

Fyfe, more than any other player in the AFL, seems like an extra-terrestrial at times. He’s the athletic successor to peak Chris Judd, and regularly makes impossibility vulnerable to his physical majesty. His violent aerial explosiveness is the most breathtaking individual talent in Australian football right now.

The explosiveness of stars like Patrick Dangerfield and Jake Stringer is brilliant, but it’s a variation of what we’ve already seen from players like Judd and Ben Cousins. They explode horizontally – Fyfe explodes vertically.

The first half of the season for Fremantle’s number seven was comically magnificent – in the sense that it was both ludicrous and out of a comic book. With Gary Ablett Jr on the shelf, Fyfe established himself as the undisputed best player in the league.

Nagging injuries curtailed his transcendence around mid-season and his output dropped from ‘religious figure’ to ‘mere superstar’. Nagging became crippling on Friday night though, and physically Fyfe became a sad, limping shadow of his typical glory. But even though he couldn’t walk properly, let alone run or sprint or leap, he found something deeper to add to his legacy.

Despite being incapacitated Fyfe had nine clearances, four more than anyone else on the ground, and 16 contested possessions, three more than anyone else. His six tackles were as many as anyone in purple. He generated the turnover that ignited Fremantle’s second half.

Fyfe didn’t play a great game. This wasn’t Isiah Thomas in the 1988 NBA Finals scoring 25 points in the third quarter of Game 6 with a severely sprained ankle. Fyfe’s touch was off, missing regulation handballs and unable to get penetration on his kicks because he couldn’t plant his leg. He couldn’t spread from the contest and his physical state made him essentially a one effort player.

But he still found a way to have a real, tangible impact on the game in the clinches, the one area of the ground where free movement runs secondary to toughness, desire and intelligence. Given his state, the simple fact that he didn’t kill his team is as great a testament to Fyfe’s ability as any of his three-vote performances.

The stats will say that Nat Fyfe finished the game with just seven kicks and his team lost by 27 points. But legends aren’t built on facts, they’re built on memories. And no-one will remember the inadequacies of Fyfe’s stat sheet years from now. Instead, people will remember the heroic images of him defiantly dragging himself around the ground, willing himself to contests and impacting them in any way he could.

They’ll remember the force of his continued presence becoming greater than the game itself. And they’ll remember believing that he could make a difference even if logic dictated he couldn’t, simply because he’s Nat Fyfe.

Eventually Fyfe’s performance will stand separate from the narrative of Fremantle’s failure, but on the night those two stories ran fittingly parallel to each other. It felt as though the story was set up for Fyfe to rise to the heavens for a game-altering mark or to kick an inspiring goal. It never happened though. Aside from a brilliant juggled second quarter mark in the centre square at Josh Gibson’s feet, Fyfe never really had his moment. And neither did the Dockers.

With five minutes to go and the result effectively decided, Fyfe leaped as a third man up to a boundary throw-in. It was the first time all night he had really taken to the air and he swung passionately and ferociously at the falling ball. He barely connected, brushing the side of it, and on the way down he clutched at the ball desperately but couldn’t hold onto it as it slipped out of his grasp.

It was symbolic of the Dockers’ night. Their effort and passion was unquestionable, but they just couldn’t hold onto it. They were gallant enough but not good enough. They matched Hawthorn’s intensity but not their execution.

With Tommy Sheridan starring in the 2015 remake of Rhyce Shaw’s 2003 grand final and Chris Mayne and Tendai Mzungu looking like they were going to burst into tears at times, the Hawks engine just kept on humming.

Cyril Rioli was clinical, Jarryd Roughead and Matt Suckling were clutch, and Luke Hodge and Sam Mitchell were impossibly calm and composed, dancing purposely and unselfconsciously in a cauldron of classless lava.

They’ve been written off before but it feels more than ever like the Dockers missed their best chance at a premiership in 2013. They might be done. Fyfe is not though. And that’s really what Dockers fans have to content themselves with in the coming months – they’ve still got the best weekly viewing spectacle in the league: Fyfe in flight.

And in the coming years the loss to Hawthorn will fade into a hazy collage of other painful losses, of which there have been many. What they, and we, will ultimately remember from Friday night is the image of Fyfe enduring – knowing in our minds that he probably didn’t have anything to give, but believing in our hearts that he might. Such is a champion.

The Crowd Says:

2015-09-28T06:08:15+00:00

andyl12

Guest


I have been here in between times, sorry if you're too blind to see that. You also said Hird wouldn't be sacked because he was a good coach who could take them places.

2015-09-28T04:32:57+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


I'll give you one more prediction, Andy. After your absence when Essendon was exonerated and your silence as Hawthorn plunged to their 7th loss...only to reappear when there are only 2 left, you have come back a week too soon. I'll predict you will not be heard from after the GF...and you'll be silent again when The Dons are exonerated...yet again. Front runner.

2015-09-28T04:28:57+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


You didn't predict the other 16 missing. How hopeless are you?

2015-09-28T04:00:09+00:00

andyl12

Guest


Well MattyB, if that's what a typical Freo fan really thinks then clearly the problem of crowd violence at Freo games won't be fixed any time soon.

2015-09-28T03:59:19+00:00

andyl12

Guest


Where are the 7.5? Are they in the same place as Freo's 7.5 premiership cups?

2015-09-28T03:53:56+00:00

mattyb

Guest


Violence against the vulnerable,sounds like Clarksons Hawthorn to a tee.Interesting Fremantle have one of the more joyous fan bases in the league but when Hawthorn come over all of a sudden there are a couple of loose cannons in the crowd.Would not surprise me one bit if Clarkson orchestrated putting a couple of Hawks fans in Freo jumpers and told them to do his dirty work as a tactic to neutralise the home crowd advantage.

2015-09-28T03:45:40+00:00

Balthazar

Guest


Never said it did. But it was a one-sided disgrace all the same and it will all be swept under the carpet (which is more my point). Stevic should not umpire Hawks games.

2015-09-28T03:23:17+00:00

mattyb

Guest


Are you fairdinkum Andy?I add it up to be 7 1/2 out of 8.Credit where it's due.Dons predictions were out of this world in accuracy especially compared to those who just took last year's results and predicted the same to occur this year.Add to that the summer predictions,Scorchers - Big Bash,Warriors - Ryobi Cup,Australia - World Cup,Adam Voges to VC Australia.It's extraordinary. nostraDONus for mine.

2015-09-28T03:13:57+00:00

andyl12

Guest


Hush don't mention that Brian. The minute Freo fans hear or see something that doesn't suit them they turn very violent, often against the most vulnerable people.

2015-09-28T03:12:57+00:00

andyl12

Guest


But they might still be found guilty by the highest court in the world. I also predicted Freo wouldn't win the flag. And I was dead right on that one.

2015-09-28T03:07:59+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


That's 4 more correct than you predicted and more that almost all "experts". I noticed you exclude my prediction for top 4...which probably would have attracted 200 to 1 odds pre-season. Keep trying but until you make predictions of your own, your comments are worth much. Btw, your one prediction that Essendon would be found guilty was wrong.

2015-09-28T03:06:25+00:00

Brian

Guest


If you guys are serious you'll know umpiring didn't cost you. Sheridan, ?De Boer, Griffen, Dawson & Mzungu did. The umpiring did favor us but no more then it favored WCE over us in Week 1. .

2015-09-28T02:43:57+00:00

andyl12

Guest


Hey Don I'm glad you said that because a look at your predictions from back in April show you're usually wrong: 1. “Hawks struggle to make top 6” 2. “SS struggle to make top 8”. 3. “PA will fly lower…to 6th, 7th or 8th.” 4. “NM contenders for the four… not the flag” 5. “Geelong might slip between 7 and 10 but eras don’t end anymore and they’ll look ominous again” 6. “There is no such thing as a premiership window…but Freo will be playing for one in this year’s GF” 7. “What a delight to see the totally exonerated Essendon end Hawthorn’s era too…in round 2. Will the Hawks still sneak into the 8? They are a bit shaky if they can pass an underdone Essendon and not be able to hold on themselves. 6th, 7th or 8th, I’d say.” 8. “When Hawthorn play some of the better sides, some pundits might be re-assessing how strong they are.” You got (4) right and I’ll give you half a point for each of (3) and (5). That’s a total of two out of eight- shows how wrong you usually are.

2015-09-28T02:38:43+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


If it gets the boys kicking straight, it's worth 5 to 6 goals a game. Nothing wrong with Rossie's attacking plans, the ball is always in our forward line. We just have to get it through the sticks.

2015-09-28T02:26:54+00:00

Ryan Buckland

Expert


Mhm. All of the "they're done" analysis has been so lazy. But tbh I don't expect much else from most elements of the media.

2015-09-28T02:20:42+00:00

ProfVonSchrodinger

Guest


Whilst it was brave to play on, it was a fractured fibula, that doesn't render a person incapable of walking or even running in short bursts. Lets not pretend he suffered a compound fracture and played on with one leg.

2015-09-28T02:19:05+00:00

Balthazar

Guest


Please God, no.

2015-09-28T02:18:46+00:00

Balthazar

Guest


Ah but he will. Check out the Fairfax media - Wayne Campbell is already saying that the complaints about the umpiring are irrational. He's said the free to Hodge was there and hasn't really decided whether or not Ballas should have been penalised because "if it's not a free kick does that mean that when someone's not facing you, you can knock them over" even though (a) he didn't knock him over and (b) he did not hit anyone from behind, he checked him from in front. Doesn't mention any of the frees that were not given to Freo of course. (Funny also that Fyfe did not get a free when flattened by Pyke from behind, right in front of the umpire during the EF but hey ho) Stevic will be there. The 3-pete is more important to the AFL than an Eagles victory but only just.

2015-09-28T02:05:01+00:00

Don Freo

Guest


That's a no contest. Stevic cannot possibly get a GF after last Friday. That is the end of Hawthorn's only advantage. WC by 35 to 45pts. The GF is now a non event.

2015-09-28T01:51:10+00:00

Doctor Rotcod

Guest


There is the small matter of a Grand Final to think of where a sub-par Hawthorn will have to match the sublimity of Naitanui and the excellence of Kennedy for 100 minutes

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