http://www.news.com.au/sport/afl/lookin ... 7219761814Quote:
N football terms, it’s been called the equivalent of the “Big Bang Theory”, that one seismic moment that changed everything.
A game that had been essentially that — a game — for more than 100 years was almost turned on its axis once and forevermore in the stifling summer of 1964-65, and the aftershocks are still being felt today.
Back then, players rarely changed clubs. If they were discarded, they might try their fortunes elsewhere.
But if they were stars, they remained in the same constellation, and kids who put their heroes’ numbers on the backs of their woollen jumpers were content in the knowledge that they didn’t need their mums to unstitch them at any stage.
Ron Barassi changed that, and 50 years on from the biggest transfer shock in the history of Australian Football, he maintains that he made the right decision.
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The Sunday Herald Sun took Barassi back to Visy Park (it was Princes Park back then) to mark a half century since his dramatic shift from Melbourne player to Carlton captain-coach.
The first rumbles came just a few months after Barassi had led Melbourne to its 12th flag in 1964. Then the shock of Barassi declaring a few days before Christmas that he had decided to take up Carlton’s offer was followed by almost two months of delays as Melbourne refused to release him.
In the end, a quick-fire phone call on February 16, 1965 — 50 years ago tomorrow — finalised the biggest player switch in the game’s history, and a clear reference point for all that was to come.