Reginald Joseph Hickey (27 March 1906 – 13 December 1973) was an Australian rules footballer who was a player, the captain, the captain-coach, and the non-playing coach for the Geelong Football Club in the Victorian Football League (VFL) between 1928 and 1940 (player), and between 1949 and 1959 (non-player).
In the 34 seasons from 1926 to 1959 he was involved in four Geelong VFL premierships: one as a player (1931), one as captain-coach (1937), and two as non-playing coach (1951, and 1952) – he was also the non-playing coach of a losing Grand Final team (1953), where an inaccurate Geelong (8.17 (65)) lost to Collingwood (11.11 (77)).
He married Doreen Stella Markin (1916–1963) on 26 October 1938. Geelong Football Captain Married, The Argus, 1938), p.18.
He was the nephew of Fitzroy (VFA & VFL) footballer Pat Hickey, and Fitzroy (VFA) footballer and Fitzroy (VFL) administrator Con Hickey. Great Loss to Football: Con Hickey Dies, 72, The (Adelaide) News, (Wednesday, 27 October 1937), p.9. He is the grandfather of former Port Adelaide coach and captain Matthew Primus, and AFL Women's (AFLW) player Melissa Hickey is the granddaughter of his cousin.
He was in the same class as the inaugural Brownlow Medal winner, Carji Greeves at the Struan Dam State School (3730), near to Cressy and Lismore in Western Victoria. Edward Greeves & Reg Hickey, Monument Australia; Where Big Cats Prowl, The Camperdown Chronicle, Friday, 3 June 2011.
Hickey coached Geelong in 304 matches, including 91 matches as playing coach. As coach, he had a 60% winning record.
He retired as a player in May 1940. Reg. Hickey Resigns, The Age, (Friday, 24 May 1940), p.6.
Hickey's finest moment as captain-coach came in the 1937 Grand Final against Collingwood. Until the three quarter time break (when the scores were level), the contest had been relatively even between, with neither side being able to get ahead by more than a few points. In an effort to break the deadlock, and in a coaching move almost unheard of in those days, Hickey made wholesale positional changes: Winning Move by Geelong, The Argus, (Monday, 27 September 1937), p.18.
His strategy worked, and Geelong comfortably won the match, kicking 6.6 (42) to Collingwood's 1.4 (10) in the last quarter. Pennant to Geelong in Greatest Game of the Year: Win Popular and Merited, The Sporting Globe, (Wednesday, 29 September 1937), p.2.
Players transferred to other clubs; when Geelong rejoined the competition in 1944 season, but not all of those transferred returned to Geelong. The club finished close to or on the bottom of the ladder for the rest of the 1940s, claiming the wooden spoon in 1944 with a 1–17 record, and narrowly avoiding the 1945 wooden spoon on percentage.
Hickey was appointed coach for the third time in 1949,"In 1940 Hickey was sacked as Geelong's playing-coach for unknown reasons, and spent eight years away from the club": Button (2016), p.24. with immediate success. Though the club failed to make the finals, they showed marked improvement.
Hickey had a policy of fast, direct play, relentlessly drilling his players to ensure they made every possession count.Ross & Hutchinson (1998). In 1950, Geelong made the finals for the first time in ten years. For the next two and a half years, Geelong was the strongest side in the competition, winning two consecutive flags, and establishing a VFL/AFL record of 23 wins (unbeaten streak of 26) in a row during 1952 and 1953. It wasn't until the end of 1953 that Collingwood, with the use of ugly and restrictive football, were able to inflict defeat on Hickey's side. Geelong lost the Grand Final, and saw little success for the rest of Hickey's tenure — he retired from coaching at the end of the 1959 season.
Death
Recognition
Footnotes
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