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・ Allan Waters
・ Allan Waters Humanitarian Award
・ Allan Rogers (footballer)
・ Allan Ronald
・ Allan Rosas
・ Allan Rosenfield
・ Allan Ross Welsh
・ Allan Rourke
・ Allan Rowe
・ Allan Roy Dafoe
・ Allan Roy Sefton
・ Allan Royal
・ Allan Rumbolt
・ Allan Rune Pettersson
・ Allan Russell
Allan Ruthven
・ Allan Rutter
・ Allan Ryan
・ Allan Ryan (attorney)
・ Allan S. Detsky
・ Allan Saint-Maximin
・ Allan Salangsang
・ Allan Sandage
・ Allan Savory
・ Allan Saxe
・ Allan Saxe Field
・ Allan Sayre
・ Allan Schnaiberg
・ Allan Schofield
・ Allan Schore


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Allan Ruthven : ウィキペディア英語版
Allan Ruthven

Allan Ruthven (17 April 1922 – 14 March 2003) was an Australian rules footballer in the (then) Victorian Football League. He played his entire 222 game career with Fitzroy. In 1950, Ruthven won the prestigious Brownlow medal.〔
== Playing career ==

A product of Falconer Street School in North Fitzroy, Ruthven joined Fitzroy in 1940 as a 17-year-old schoolboy star. So impressed with his skill and potential, the club subsequently gave Ruthven guernsey number 7, previously worn and made famous by triple Brownlow Medallist, Haydn Bunton.〔〔Sports Delivered (2003). (''Allan "The Baron" Ruthven - Fitzroy Great'' ). Retrieved on 9 July 2008.〕〔Full Points Footy (2008). (''Biographies: Allan Ruthven'' ). Retrieved on 9 July 2008.〕
Universally known as "the Baron", for his dapper dress sense, Ruthven reportedly earned his nickname when a teammate called out "here comes Baron Rothschild" after he turned up to the club in one of his flamboyant suits.〔
Ruthven stood only 173 centimetres tall and weighed 73 kilograms, but was renowned for his skill, fitness and flawless left-foot kicking.〔 Tough, talented and tenacious, Ruthven was also renowned for his ability to gain possession of the ball under the most challenging of circumstances, and use it purposefully. He was also dangerous near goal, winning Fitzroy's goal kicking award on three occasions.〔 Considered the greatest rover of the 1940s and early 1950s, Ruthven was instrumental in Fitzroy's 1944 premiership win.〔
His illustrious career was one which nearly ended before it reached its prime. In 1942, Ruthven spent three months in hospital recovering from a seious back injury and missed the entire season. However, he bounced back from injury and in 1946 won Victorian selection for the first time and a league newspaper award as the best player of the year.〔
Fitzroy almost lost Ruthven in 1949 after the Imperial Football Club offered him £18 a week to be captain/coach. Although he accepted, becoming one of the highest paid coaches in Victoria, Fitzroy refused him clearance, claiming that Imperial had approached Ruthven after they had denied permission to interview him for the position. Eventually, Fitzroy won a protracted battle to keep him. Shortly afterwards, Broken Hill offered Ruthven £36 a week; £20 as a player, £8 as the coach and a weekly bonus of £8. Again Fitzroy refused to clear Ruthven and again the controlling body upheld Fitzroy's claim.〔
In 1950, Ruthven was reappointed captain after Norm Smith retired as a player. Ruthven responded by winning the Brownlow medal with 21 votes, 3 clear of the next player.〔 In 1952, Ruthven was appointed captain/coach, taking Fitzroy to the preliminary final. One of the highlights of Ruthven's career as captain/coach was when he steered the side to a 1-point victory over Carlton in the 1952 first semi-final. Fitzroy won the game despite having 9 fewer scoring shots at goal than the Blues, with Ruthven snapping the match-winning behind in the dying seconds of the game, in a best on ground performance.〔
He retired at the end of the 1954 season after 222 games over 15 seasons, finishing second on the club's all-time games list behind Frank Curcio, at the time of his retirement.〔〔 Ruthven's 97 career Brownlow votes ranks in the top 5 of Fitzroy's all-time playing list.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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