Almanac Footy: That’s Fyfe by Les Everett

• From Fremantle Dockers an Illustrated History by Les Everett
I’ve only had one encounter with Nat Fyfe. It was kind of like a speed date.
Just about everything was done for the 20-year history of the Fremantle Dockers – a book that was one win away from the perfect ending. But there was a section subtitled ‘Club Heroes’– captains, Doig Medal winners and All-Australians. The Doig Medal winner for 2013 hadn’t been decided and I wasn’t going to be told ahead of time. If it was a new winner I’d be given a few minutes to get enough information for a story in the book.
Fyfe won his first Doig Medal and after a press conference with the real media was ushered into a room for an interview for the book.

• Doig Medal photoshoot 2013. Photo by Les Everett.
Two contrasting comments have stuck with me and both say a lot about this young man. When told by the club’s media boss Luke Morfesse that he was to first have an interview with me before celebrating with family and team mates he said, “Wow, I am gonna be in the book?” They were the words of a humble country boy. During the interview he talked of how much he’d learned in Lake Grace from his next-door neighbours Mitch, Jarryd and Cale Morton who all became AFL players: “They were a lot older and more skilful than me so I learned a lot from them—you had to come up to their grade quickly otherwise you didn’t hang around for long.”
But then when reflecting on the fact he’d just been named an AFL club champion in a Grand Final season, his words were those of a driven and professional sportsman: “I’ve always had strong goals and strong focuses. This is where I envisaged myself being at some stage.” He wasn’t a dual Brownlow Medal winner yet, but wouldn’t have thought such achievement beyond him.
Fyfe was articulate, interesting and precise in his responses and quick to acknowledge team mates, coaches and support staff for his success. All good for the in-their-own-words style for the book.
After winning the Doig Medal again along with the AFL’s Brownlow Medal in 2014 and 2019 injury sent Fyfe’s career into a slow decline. In the four seasons from 2020 to 2023 he played just 45 games. Kicking was an issue when he did play. Kicking for goal seemed traumatic.
Something like full fitness retuned in 2024 and Fyfe played 22 games as a kind of big support act in the midfield for young guns Andrew Brayshaw and Caleb Serong and later Hayden Young. It was different, useful and selfless – he was “playing a role”.
After eyeing a top four spot Fremantle lost their last three games and didn’t make the finals. In the last game of the season against Port Adelaide Fyfe looked like he couldn’t keep up… I wasn’t only the one who thought his time might have come. I think he did too. But just before half time there was cause for a rethink. Fyfe outpointed an opponent in the goal square, pulled in a one-handed mark and kicked a goal. Maybe he could go on.
More injury in 2025, a couple of appearances in the WAFL, a new useful job as substitute and an end-of-season retirement announcement.
Nothing left to prove. Lots more to gain.
Fremantle Dockers an Illustrated History by Les Everett was published by Slattery Media and the Fremantle Football Club in 2014.
More from Les Everett Here.
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About Les Everett
A Footy Almanac veteran, Les Everett is the author of Gravel Rash: 100 Years of Goldfields Football and Fremantle Dockers: An Illustrated History. Co-founder with Vin Maskell of scoreboardpressure.com. Founder of australianrules.com.au and the Instagram page https://www.instagram.com/abandonedcricketpitches/












Wonderful footballer and seems a very genuine person.
I have a lasting memory of a skinny young Fyfe in a Derby at Subiaco. Taking the ball under pressure in the forward pocket. Deciding to turn toward the boundary onto his left – worsening the angle but escaping his pursuers. Glancing back over his shoulder to size up the angle and perfectly executing the left foot snap goal from 30 metres out on an acute angle. Sublime. As skilful a goal as I’ve seen.
In subsequent years as he bulked up to become an inside midfield bull, I thought he lost that silky skill edge. He became Dusty, when he could have been Pendlebury.
Ross Lyon never met a footballer he couldn’t put through the mincer to mould into a defensive hamburger.