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Les Mogg

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Full name
  
Leslie Thomas Mogg

Years
  
Club

Date of birth
  
27 August 1929

Name
  
Les Mogg

Place of death
  
Cobram

Weight
  
76 kg

Height/Weight
  
180 cm / 76 kg


Date of death
  
2 May 2012(2012-05-02) (aged 82)

Died
  
May 2, 2012, Cobram, Australia

Original team
  
St Patrick's College, Ballarat

Leslie Thomas "Les" Mogg (27 August 1929 – 2 May 2012) was an Australian rules footballer who played with North Melbourne in the Victorian Football League (VFL).

Mogg came to North Melbourne from Ballarat and was a regular member of the team from the second half of the 1950 season. He was a wingman for North Melbourne in the 1950 VFL Grand Final.

Also used as a half forward flanker during his career, Mogg kicked 16 goals in 1952. Injuries restricted him to just five games in 1953 but he played all but two of North Melbourne's matches the following year.

He left the club after the 1954 season to take up the position of captain-coach for Cobram Football Club in the Murray Football League (MFL).

In 1955, his first season, he led Cobram to a grand final win and captain-coached them to three further premierships, all in succession, from 1959 to 1961.

As a player, he had a particularly strong season in 1961, winning the O'Dwyer Medal as the league's "Best and Fairest". He topped the MFL goal-kicking that year as well, with 85 goals. It was the second time he had won the goal-kicking award, which is now named after him, having also kicked a league record 132 goals in 1960, 148 after finals.

He also had the distinction of being the captain-coach of the MFL combined team which upset VFL club St Kilda by 14 points in a 1960 practice match. It is believed to have been the first time since 1914 that a country side had beaten a VFL team.

References

Les Mogg Wikipedia