Greeves is the namesake of the Carji Greeves Medal, the Geelong Football Club's best and fairest award.
Family and personal life
In the 1860s, Greeves' grandmother Julie (née Anderson) was briefly engaged to Tom Wills, the famed cricketer and founder of Australian rules football. Historian Col Hutchinson noted that "If Tom Wills had married Julie, we wouldn't have had Carji Greeves".[1]
Greeves was given the nickname "Carji" as a baby by a friend of the family, the New South Wales golfer Michael Scott,[2] most likely after a character in A Country Girl, a popular musical play of the day.[3]
Greeves also attended The Geelong College after receiving his early education at the Struan Dam School, South of Lismore, Victoria, where he was a schoolmate of Geelong champion Reg Hickey.
VFL career
Greeves played with the Geelong Football Club from 1923 to 1931 and wore jumper number 20.
Greeves was honoured with having the Geelong Football Club's best-and-fairest award named after him, the Carji Greeves Medal. In 1996, Greeves was inducted into the Australian Football Hall of Fame. He also won the first Brownlow Medal, the award given to the player deemed to be the "fairest and best." "Best" refers to the players being voted upon by officials for who was best on ground, and "fairest" means that the player did not serve a suspension during the competition.
Greeves represented Victoria in interstate matches seven times.
Post Football
Greeves kicking prowess had him head hunted by college football club UCLA in 1928 as a kicking coach and he moved to the United States.[4] He would study at Stanford University, where he coached students there in Australian Rules.[5]
^Ross, John (1999). The Australian Football Hall of Fame. Australia: HarperCollinsPublishers. p. 71. ISBN0-7322-6426-X.
^"Greeves, Edward Goderich (Carji) (1903–1963)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
^"Teams for America". Sporting Globe. No. 1014. Victoria, Australia. 27 April 1932. p. 8 (Edition2). Retrieved 30 September 2021 – via National Library of Australia.
^"Our Game in America". The Herald. No. 15, 996. Victoria, Australia. 24 August 1928. p. 15. Retrieved 6 October 2021 – via National Library of Australia.
^Austin, A. G., "Greeves, Edward Goderich (Carji) (1903–1963)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 27 September 2021
Victoria 13.16 (94) defeated Tasmania 7.13 (55), at North Hobart Oval, 7 August 1924, crowd: 8,000
Victoria 15.13 (103) defeated Western Australia 14.11 (95), at North Hobart Oval, 9 August 1924, crowd: 15,687 Victoria 14.26 (110) defeated New South Wales 4.6 (30), at North Hobart Oval, 12 August 1924, crowd: 350
Victoria 17.16 (118) defeated South Australia 9.11 (65), at North Hobart Oval, 15 August 1924, crowd: 12,876