Robert Flower

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Robert Flower
Personal Info
Birth August 5th 1955, Melbourne
Recruited from Murrumbeena Districts


Playing Career¹
Debut June 9th 1973, Melbourne vs. Geelong, at Melbourne Cricket Ground
Team(s) Melbourne
¹ Statistics to end of 2006 season
Career Highlights

  • Club Captain 1981-1987
  • Victorian Captain

Robert Flower (Born August 5, 1955) was an Australian rules footballer with the Melbourne Football Club. His first game was against Geelong in 1973 and he captained the team from 1981 until his final game in 1987. He held the record for the number of games for his club - 272 until overtaken by present captain David Neitz in 2006.

In a radio interview in July 2006 on the Coodabeen Champions Flower stated that the club secretary Jim Cardwell rang to offer him the number 2 guernsey before his first senior game, an unofficial statement that the club saw great potential in the seventeen year old.

He was a wingman for most of his career and was characterised by his ability to create space for himself and kick and handpass the ball with extraordinary accuracy. He possessed speed, surefootedness and unrivalled tactical awareness.

In Ken Piesse's " The Complete Guide to Australian Football" Flower's player summary states that after you had beaten Flower as an opponent in a game there was little else to achieve in football.

Jim Main and Russell Holmesby mention Flower's thin physique and low playing weight-68 kilograms.It was assumed early in his career that he could not succeed because of his "wiry" frame.

Although he sustained injuries he still played 272 out of a possible 324 games and was never left out of the senior side when available.

It was not until 1987 that he played his first finals match, the last three games of his career were in the 1987 finals series.

He played for the club he had supported all his life and his dedication to a team which, before his final year at least, had never looked likely to win a premiership, was commendable.

His last game was against Hawthorn in the Preliminary Final. It was a disappointing end to a distinguished career, his team had been leading all day and it seemed there was a real possibility that his last game could be a Grand Final against Carlton and a chance for their first premiership since 1964.

Melbourne were leading when the final siren blew, however a free kick with a fifteen metre penalty saw Gary Buckenara kick the winning goal after many had thought the game had finished.

Flower recalls in his book "Robbie" that he started to run from the ground and paused to see the ball go through the goal and then went to the dressing rooms where he threw a can of drink against the wall in anger.

This was uncharacteristic of a man whose on field record was unblemished by reports for striking or other misconduct.

Had Melbourne won and played in the 1987 Grand Final a shoulder injury may have excluded him from the game although, considering the determination that marked Flower's career, it would have been unlikely.

  • Robbie by Robert Flower with Ron Reed (1987). Caribou Publications.
  • Ken Piesse The Complete Guide to Australian Football Pan Macmillan Australia (1995) ISBN 0-330-35712-3.
  • Jim Main and Russell Holmesby Encyclopedia of AFL Football Players AFL Publishing (2005) ISBN 1-920910-38-7.
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