Lloyd Hagger

Australian rules footballer

Australian rules footballer
Lloyd Hagger
Personal information
Date of birth 7 December 1898
Date of death 27 June 1968(1968-06-27) (aged 69)
Original team(s) Barwon
Height 183 cm (6 ft 0 in)
Weight 72 kg (159 lb)
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1917–1929 Geelong 174 (389)
Coaching career
Years Club Games (W–L–D)
1924 Geelong 16 (8–8–0)
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1929.
Career highlights
  • 1925 Leading Goalkicker Medalist
  • Geelong Premiership side 1925
  • Geelong Captain 1924
  • Twelve times state representative.
Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com

Lloyd Hagger (7 December 1898 – 27 June 1968)[1] was an Australian rules footballer who played with Geelong Football Club in the Victorian Football League (VFL) from 1917 to 1929.

Football

Recruited from Barwon in the Geelong & District Football Association, Hagger played as a key position forward and was known for his high marking and ability to kick goals from difficult angles. Named captain-coach of Geelong in 1924, Hagger was captain for only one season, handing the job over to Cliff Rankin. In 1925 Geelong won the premiership and Hagger was the League's leading goalkicker, with 78 for the season. He also regularly played for Victoria in interstate matches.[2] At the 1924 Hobart Carnival, Hagger, playing for Victoria against Western Australia, kicked seven goals in Victoria's eight point win. Late in the match Hagger was momentarily knocked out but recovered in time to refuse to leave the ground after a stretcher had been called.[3]

He joined Hampden Football League club Camperdown as captain-coach in 1933.[4]

Hagger had a reputation for being very talkative during gameplay. He also worked as a cartoonist for The Sun News-Pictorial.

Notes

  1. ^ "Lloyd Hagger – Player Bio". Australian Football. Retrieved 27 December 2014.
  2. ^ Main, Jim; Holmesby, Russell (1992). The Encyclopedia of League Footballers. Melbourne, Victoria: Wilkinson Books. p. 41. ISBN 1-86337-085-4.
  3. ^ "WEST AUSTRALIA v. VICTORIA". The Mercury. Hobart, Tasmania. 11 August 1924. p. 5. Retrieved 5 August 2012 – via National Library of Australia.
  4. ^ "Now For Football". The Camperdown Chronicle. 20 April 1933. p. 7. Retrieved 4 January 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
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Geelong Football Club 1925 VFL premiers
Geelong 10.19 (79) defeated Collingwood 9.15 (69), at the Melbourne Cricket Ground
Coach: Rankin
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Captains of the Geelong Football Club
Pre-VFA
  • 1859: Mason/Fraser/Rennie
  • 1860: Mason/Wills
  • 1861: Rennie/Tait
  • 1862: Greenfield/Harrison/Nicholls
  • 1863–1865: Nichols
  • 1866: Groom
  • 1867: Robertson/Wills/Bowden
  • 1868: Wills/Harrison/Bowden
  • 1869–1870: Arthur
  • 1871: Dickenson/Bowden
  • 1872: Wills/Arthur
  • 1873: Wills
  • 1874: Down
  • 1875: Day
  • 1876: Thomas
VFA
VFL/AFL
AFL Women's
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Coaches of the Geelong Football Club
VFL/AFL
AFL Women's
  • 2019–2021: Hood
  • 2022 (S6)–: Lowther
Italics denote caretaker coach
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VFL Leading Goalkicker Medal winners
The Leading Goalkicker Medal was awarded from the VFL's first season, in 1897, until 1954, when the award was renamed the Coleman Medal.
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Geelong Football Club · leading goalkickers
AFL
AFL Women's
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Victorian squad1924 Interstate Carnival
Victoria 13.16 (94) defeated Tasmania 7.13 (55), at North Hobart Oval, 7 August 1924, crowd: 8,000

Victoria 15.13 (103) defeated Western Australia 14.11 (95), at North Hobart Oval, 9 August 1924, crowd: 15,687
Victoria 14.26 (110) defeated New South Wales 4.6 (30), at North Hobart Oval, 12 August 1924, crowd: 350

Victoria 17.16 (118) defeated South Australia 9.11 (65), at North Hobart Oval, 15 August 1924, crowd: 12,876
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