About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 25. Chapters: Alastair Lynch, Bradley Plain, Brendon Gale, Brett Stephens, Chris Bond (footballer), Colin Robertson (footballer), Craig Davis (Australian footballer), Danny Noonan (Australian footballer), Darrin Pritchard, Darryl Sutton, Denis Scanlon, Des James, Doug Barwick, Graham Hunnibell, Graham Wright, Greg Towns, Ian Marsh (footballer), Ian Paton, James Manson, John McCarthy (Australian rules footballer born 1967), Kerry Good, Matthew Armstrong, Michael Gale, Michael Mansfield (footballer), Michael Roach (footballer), Michael Young (footballer), Noel Carter, Paul Hudson (footballer), Paul Williams (Australian rules footballer), Peter Daniel (Australian footballer), Peter Hamilton (footballer), Peter Hudson, Peter Jones (Australian rules footballer), Phil Manassa, Robert Neal, Rodney Eade, Ron Stubbs, Shane Fell, Simon Atkins, Simon Minton-Connell, Stephen Carey, Stephen MacPherson, Stephen Mount, Stephen Nichols (footballer), Steve Goulding (footballer), Tony Martyn, Tony Pickett, Trent Nichols. Excerpt: Peter Kevin "Percy" Jones (born in Tasmania, 20 October 1946), the son of Kevin and Mollie Jones (nee Macleod), is a former Australian rules footballer who played 249 games for the Carlton Blues in the VFL. He played as a forward and ruckman. He played first grade football with North Hobart Football Club, winning a place in the Tasmanian State Team in 1965 (when just 18 years). Jones was initially supposed to play with Richmond. Graeme Richmond, the Secretary at Richmond, who had visited Jones in Tasmania, had given him several gifts, including a suit, in consideration of Jones remaining in Tasmania for the 1966 season and moving to Victoria to play for Richmond in 1967. However, Carlton officials visited him shortly after and promised that if he came over to Victoria immediately they would play him in 1966. Jones had worked as an apprentice auto electrician in Tasmania. Carlton promised him that, upon his arrival in Melbourne, through the intervention of a rabid Carlton fan in the Accounts Section of the Department's Melbourne organization, they would be able to arrange for him to appointed to a junior administrative position with the Melbourne office of the Commonwealth Department of Social Services, where Adrian Gallagher (and his uncle Murray) also worked. Jones had no qualms about moving to Melbourne because his grandmother lived in St Kilda. He nearly died in a very serious car accident when a car, driven by a Carlton supporter, smashed at high speed into a tree in Royal Parade on the way home from a 1966 early pre-season practice session at Carlton's home ground, Princes Park. Jones had no driver's license at the time, and the supporter had offered him a lift to St Kilda, where Jones lived with his grandmother. Due to the speed of the car's impact with the tree, Jones suffered extremely serious skull, facial and eye-socket injuries, nearly lost one eye, badly broke his nose, and broke both of his ankles (the broken ankles were the reason he never played with