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Graham Eadie
・ Graham Earl
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・ Graham Edwards (politician)
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・ Graham Edwards (Zimbabwean cricketer)
・ Graham Elliot
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Graham Eadie : ウィキペディア英語版
Graham Eadie

Graham "Wombat" Eadie (born 25 November 1953, Lidcombe, New South Wales), is an Australian former rugby league footballer of the 1970s and 80s who has been named amongst the nation's finest of the 20th century.〔(Century's Top 100 Players )〕 A New South Wales State of Origin and Australian international representative fullback, he played in Australia during Manly-Warringah's dominance of the NSWRFL competition during the 1970s. He won four premierships with them and his 1,917 points in first grade and 2,070 points in all grades were both records at the time of his retirement. Eadie also played in England for Halifax, winning the Challenge Cup final of 1987 with them. He also won World Cups with Australia and collected awards such as the Rothmans Medal and Lance Todd Trophy.
==Playing career==

* Manly 1971–1983: 237 games, 1,917 points (71 tries, 847 goals, 3 field goals)
* Australia 1973–1979: 20 Tests, 16 points (2 tries, 5 goals)
* New South Wales 1974-1980: 14 games, 35 points (3 tries, 13 goals)
Eadie was graded by Manly-Warringah in 1971 and showed immediate promise in the lower grades that season. The following year with the retirement of long serving Manly fullback Bob Batty, he established himself as the team's first grade fullback and his powerful running style was already a serious danger to all Manly's opponents. Though not excessively tall at just under 180 cm (5'10"), Eadie's solid build of around 95 kg (15 stone) gave him abundant pace and so much strength that once he was on the move, few opposing defenders were ever able to stop him when he ran into the backline. At the same time, Eadie was an accurate line kicker and extremely safe under the high ball in an era when the "bomb" was coming into prominence.
Although he had been used as a goal kicker in some games in 1972, it was only in 1973 that Eadie became Manly's major point scorer. That year, he kicked 14 goals in a match against Penrith, and for the following three years he was the leading point scorer in the competition, reaching a high of 242 points (14 tries and 100 goals) in 1975, a club record that would not be broken until New Zealand dual international fullback Matthew Ridge scored 257 points (11 tries, 106 goals and 1 field goal) in 1995.
Eadie was selected to the Australian team for the 1973 Kangaroo tour and, after an injury to Kangaroos Captain-coach Graeme Langlands, took over as Test fullback for the final two Ashes tests against Great Britain, marking his debut at Headingley in Leeds by kicking 5 goals in windy conditions. Though Langlands regained the test fullback spot in 1974, Eadie went on to be Australia's regular fullback from 1975 until he retired from representative rugby league following the experimental 1980 State of Origin match. Despite being a record point scorer for Manly, Eadie was never a prolific point scorer at Test level as Country Firsts and later Parramatta Mick Cronin was generally the first choice kicker in representative sides.
In 1974, Eadie won the Rothmans Medal as Sydney rugby league's best-and-fairest player, and at the end of the controversial 1978 finals series he produced one of the finest performances ever by a fullback in the Grand Final replay, scoring a try, going close to scoring a second time before passing for Russell Gartner to score, and charging consistently through an extremely strong Cronulla-Sutherland defence. Two years earlier, his accurate goal kicking under pressure won Manly the 1976 Grand Final where they scored only one try to Parramatta's two. Eadie's dominance in the '76 and '78 Grand Finals was recognised thirty years later with the awarding of retrospective Clive Churchill Medals for Man of the Match in those games.
Following the 1978 Grand Final, Eadie was selected to his second Kangaroo Tour. The coach of the 1978 Kangaroos was Eadie's Manly coach Frank Stanton, while the captain was his former Sea Eagles team mate Bob Fulton, who was at the time playing for Eastern Suburbs.
Despite Manly declining in surprising fashion to miss the semi-finals for the first time in twelve years in 1979, Eadie's form remained excellent, and even a major injury that forced him to miss half of the 1981 season failed to dim his brilliance: at the end of 1982, commentators were noticing how he was "more involved in the game than at any stage since 1973." Thus his retirement from Sydney rugby league after Manly's loss to Parramatta in the 1983 Grand Final was regretted by most lovers of the game – borne out by his comeback for English club Halifax three years later, when he scored sixteen tries (a record for a fullback) and helped Halifax to the 1986 Club Championship. Graham Eadie played , scored a try, and was man of the match winning the Lance Todd Trophy in Halifax's 19-18 victory over St. Helens in the 1987 Challenge Cup final during the 1986–87 season at Wembley Stadium, London on Saturday 2 May 1987, in front of 94,273 people

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