Bob Rush | |
Fullname: | Robert Thomas Rush |
Birth Date: | 1880 10, df=yes |
Birth Place: | Richmond, Victoria |
Death Place: | Northcote, Victoria |
Originalteam: | CBC Parade |
Statsend: | 1908 |
Coachstatsend: | 1930 |
Years1: | 1899–1908 |
Games Goals1: | 143 (1) |
Careerhighlights: |
1930 (caretaker) |
Robert Thomas Rush OBE (9 October 1880 – 13 March 1975) was an Australian rules footballer who played for the Collingwood Football Club in the Victorian Football League (VFL).
The son of Roger Robert Rush (1856–1941),[1] and Mary Rush (1856–1943),[2] née Berry,[3] Robert Thomas Rush was born at Richmond, Victoria, on 9 October 1880.[4]
He married Eileen Mary Maguire on 28 November 1911.[5]
Four of his seven brothers also played VFL football (they are the only set of five brothers to play in the VFL/AFL):[6]
Rush was a pacy defender and played mainly on a half-back flank, although he was also used in the back pockets. He was a member of Collingwood's 1902 and 1903 premierships.
After retiring as a player, Rush continued to serve Collingwood in a variety of roles over the years, including committeeman, assistant secretary and treasurer.[7] He eventually resigned from his last official position, that of committeeman, in mid-1950[8] as a consequence of the controversy that ensued over the appointment of Bervin Woods as coach of the First XVIII.[9]
In 1930, Rush performed match-day coaching duties to lead the club to its fourth consecutive premiership, filling in for Jock McHale who was ill; however, following a decision by AFL historians in 2014, McHale is now credited as Collingwood's sole coach in the game for the purposes of coaching statistics.[10]
He is credited with having coined the Collingwood club motto of Floreat Pica ("May the Magpies Prosper").[11]
Rush was president of the Australian National Football Council from 1935 to 1946, heading the body that was in charge of the laws of Australian football.
He died on, aged 94, and was buried at Melbourne General Cemetery.[12]