Vale Ian Hannaford

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Vale Ian Hannaford

Postby DOC » Fri Mar 11, 2022 8:21 am

THREE-TIME Port Adelaide premiership player Ian Hannaford has died.
The 17-time South Australian representative and renowned architect passed away on
Thursday, aged 82.
Hannaford was a centre half-forward, ruckman and a big-game player who kicked 108
goals for the Magpies in 123 matches from 1958-64.
He was among the club’s best in its three-point grand final triumph over West Adelaide
in 1962 and also won premierships in 1958 – as an 18-year-old – and 1963. Hannaford
pulled the pin on his SANFL career at the age of just 24 to focus on becoming an
architect.
He went on to design the original Rundle Mall, the Victor Richardson gates at Adelaide
Oval, as well as resorts and apartments in the Northern Territory and Queensland, and
private residences.
Magpies legend and former teammate Geof Motley said Hannaford was the complete
player and if he did not retire at 24 “we’d still be talking about him today as of Port
Adelaide’s greatest” of all time.
“He had great hands, could fly for a mark, could kick the ball a country mile and was a
magnificent athlete,” Motley said.
“And yet he didn’t reach his peak as a player.” Motley said Hannaford was very
intelligent, humble and loyal.
“Ian was as good a mate as I’ve had in my whole life,” he said. Hannaford was born and
raised on a farm in Riverton in South Australia’s Mid-North as the eldest of four
children.
He was wooed to Port Adelaide by club greats Fos Williams and Bob McLean.
Atypically for a Magpies player of that era, Hannaford arrived from Prince Alfred
College, but fit in well with teammates and around the club.
He was also part of the famous SA side that beat Victoria at the MCG in 1963.
In 2020, an Advertiser panel named Hannaford among Port Adelaide’s 150 greatest
players in the club’s 150 years.
Port Adelaide chief executive Matthew Richardson said Hannaford was brilliant both
on and off the field.
“Ian played a pivotal role in the Port Adelaide side through the golden era of the late
1950s and early 1960s that has created such a great legacy for our club today,”
Richardson said.
Artist Robert Hannaford described him as a wonderful big brother.
“He was always encouraging in my early years and instrumental in my progression
through life,” Robert said.
Hannaford is survived by his children Nick and Rachel, grandsons Darcy, Oliver and
Jesse, and stepchildren Sam, Digby and Fiona, and their families.
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