Football Australia Hall of Fame
(Redirected from Football Federation Australia Football Hall of Fame)
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The aims of the Football Australia Hall of Fame (founded in 1999 as the Soccer Hall of Fame)[1] are to celebrate and highlight the achievements of retired players and other participants who have contributed significantly to the game.[2] These are made up of either Australian and/or non-Australian footballers, managers and other participants who have become significant figures in the history of the game in Australia. New members are generally added each year.
Selection
editAll nominees must be Australian citizens. For non-players, inclusion is based on criteria including and "overall sustained contribution to the game".
Awards
editOriginally, there were several categories based on the nature of an individual's contribution, including:
- Hall of Champions (players) / Hall of Honour (non-players)
- Medal of Excellence (players) / Roll of Honour (non-players)
- Award of Distinction (players) / Roll of Honour (non-players)
1999 Inaugural inductees
editPlayers
edit- George Smith
- Cliff Sander
- Graham McMillan
- John Perin
- Frank Parsons
- Jeff Olver
- Gordon Nunn
- Sergio Melta
- Gary Marocchi
- Alan Johns
- Tom Jack
- William "Bill" Henderson
- Jack Evans
- Sjel "Mike" de Bruyckere
- William Coolahan
- Jim Armstrong
- Ron Adair
- John Watkiss
- Ray Richards
- Graham Jennings
- Col Curran
- Charlie Yankos
- Connie Selby
- Harry Williams
- Manfred Schaefer
- John Nyskohus
- James McNabb
- William Maunder
- Jimmy Mackay
- Frank Loughran
- Bob Lawrie
- Julie Dolan
- Ray Baartz
- Peter Wilson
- Johnny Warren MBE
- Jimmy Rooney
- Alf Quill
- James "Judy" Masters
- Joe Marston MBE
- Ron Lord
- John Kosmina
- Reg Date
- Bob Bignell
- Attila Abonyi
Participants
edit- Ron Wright
- Sir William Walkley
- Joe Vlasits
- William Thomas
- Ron Smith
- Martin Royal
- Peter Nikolich
- Des Miles
- Frank McIver
- Zoran Matić
- Jack Logan
- Brian Lefevre
- Tony Kovac OAM
- Tom Grimson
- Keith Gilmour
- Pam Gilbert
- Harry Croft
- Donald Campbell
- Fred Barlow
- Eric Worthington
- Laurie Schwab
- Les Scheinflug
- Julius Re
- Sam Papasavas
- Dieter Klose
- Brian Corrigan
- Ian Brusasco AM
- Giacomo "Jim" Bayutti OA
- Frank Arok
- Michael Weinstein AM, BEM
- Elaine Watson OAM
- Vic Tuting MBE
- Robert Telfer
- Rale Rasic
- Theo Maramaris MBE
- Arthur Gibbs
- John Walter Fletcher
- Harry Dockerty
- Tony Boscovic
- Sir Arthur George AO
2000 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2001 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2002 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2003 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2004 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2005 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit- Roger Lamb
- Vic Dalgleish
- Harry Hetherington
- Phil Murphy
- Gary Wilkins
2006 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2007 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2008 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2009 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2010 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2011 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2012 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2013 inductees
editPlayers
edit2014 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2015 inductees
editPlayers
edit2016 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2018 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2019 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2021 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
edit2022 inductees
editPlayers
editParticipants
editSee also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Hall of Fame". Football Australia. 28 January 2021. Retrieved 28 January 2022.
- ^ "Hall of Fame – Eligibility". Football Australia. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
- ^ a b "2015 Inductees". Football Australia. 4 February 2021. Archived from the original on 21 October 2022. Retrieved 26 October 2022.
- ^ "Ex-Westfield Matilda Leigh Wardell one of four FFA Hall of Fame inductees". Football Federation Australia. 13 May 2019.
- ^ "Socceroos great Mark Schwarzer, Matildas duo Kate Gill and Heather Garriock inducted into Football Australia Hall of Fame". ABC News. 27 January 2022.
- ^ "Ange Postecoglou among six Football Australia Hall of Fame inductees". ESPN. 12 November 2022.