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#afl #footy #rugby #rugbyleague #aussierulesfootball #leighmatthews #nevillebruns #stevensmith #barrycable #andrewdemetriou #michaeltuck #stevehocking He was crazy. That is how Neville Bruns described Leigh Matthews decades after their infamous encounter. Bruns was not exaggerating. This was the same man who broke a goalpost with his body. The same man who earned the nickname Lethal. And the same man who became the only player in AFL history to be criminally convicted for on-field violence. Matthews was officially named the greatest player of the 20th century. But he was also the most feared enforcer the game has ever seen. What made even hardened AFL legends terrified of this man? Leigh Matthews did not just play Australian Rules Football. He dominated it. His career statistics are staggering. He played 332 games and kicked 915 goals for Hawthorn between 1969 and 1985. The 915 goals remain the highest tally by any non-full-forward in VFL and AFL history. He won eight Peter Crimmins Memorial Trophies. That is Hawthorn's Best and Fairest award. No one else comes close. In 1982, his peers voted him the inaugural VFLPA MVP. The award was later renamed the Leigh Matthews Trophy in his honor. He captained Hawthorn to the 1983 premiership. He was a four-time premiership player overall. The AFL officially named him the best player of the 20th century.