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Barassi and for
The elite Legend status was bestowed on 12 members of the Hall of Fame in 1996: Ron Barassi, Haydn Bunton Senior, Roy Cazaly, John Coleman, Jack Dyer, Polly Farmer, Leigh Matthews, John Nicholls, Bob Pratt, Dick Reynolds, Bob Skilton and Ted Whitten ( see above list for further details ).
As a teenager, Barassi was determined to follow in his father's footsteps at the Demons, but the zoning system of the day required him to play for either Collingwood or Carlton.
When the time came for Barassi to be signed up, Melbourne picked him up from Preston Scouts in 1952 and he became only the second player signed under the new rule.
With administrators Allen Aylett and Ron Joseph, Barassi recruited a new batch of stars for North Melbourne.
Barassi had implemented a tough training regime in 1974 which he modified for 1975 finals where he introduced lighter training sessions to keep his squad mentally focussed and not over trained and exhausted.
In 1993 Barassi returned to coaching for the Sydney Swans.
An Italian Australian community has also been present in St Kilda for over a century, and a prominent member is Ron Barassi.
Although Pagan's dwindling form and the club's reassessment of its squad in the aftermath of 1974 loss, Pagan then moved back to his original roots ( excepting Carlton, where Barassi expelled him in 1966 ) to South Melbourne for two seasons, 1975 – 1976, playing 23 games and kicking 0 goals.

Barassi and would
New president George Harris was desperate to have Barassi at Princes Park, and was willing to offer a lucrative contract if Barassi would cross to Carlton as captain-coach.
Carlton offered Barassi a chance to test his skills as coach with a professional wage which would help with his children ’ s education.

Barassi and become
Drawing from his own experience under Norm Smith, Barassi forced his squad to become more disciplined and committed to the club, and their career.

Barassi and Melbourne
Barassi was a six-time premiership player and two-time premiership captain at Melbourne during its most successful era, and at the age of 28 was still one of the biggest names in the game.
The young Barassi spent his latter teenage years living with Norm Smith, coach of the Melbourne Football Club and a former teammate of his father.
The following year, Barassi Snr moved to Melbourne to play VFL football with the Melbourne Football Club.
On his decision to leave Melbourne Barassi stated “ Inevitably with many decisions in life there will be a downside.
In 1981 Barassi returned to Melbourne to assist long-term under-19 coach Ray ' Slug ' Jordon.
Statue of Ronald Dale Barassi at the Parade of Champions, Melbourne Cricket Ground
Wagga's location approximately midway between Melbourne and Sydney on the " Barassi Line " contributes to high levels of participation in Rugby league, Rugby union and Australian rules football in the town.
Here, despite having one of the strictest taskmasters and legends of the game in Ron Barassi as coach, Jackson released his bag of tricks on the Melbourne fans.

Barassi and side
Within a week, Barassi had picked his side up from this disappointment to lead North to a memorable triumph.

Barassi and .
In 1978, the term Barassi Line was used to describe the dichotomy that existed in Australia's football culture, where Australian Football was most popular in all states bar New South Wales and Queensland.
The 70s Essendon sides were involved in many rough and tough encounters under Tuddenham, who himself came to logger heads with Ron Barassi at a quarter time huddle where both coaches exchanged heated words.
Ottorino Barassi, the Italian vice-president of FIFA and president of FIGC, secretly transported the trophy from a bank in Rome and hid it in a shoe-box under his bed to prevent the Nazis from taking it.
In a major coup, the great Ron Barassi was appointed coach in 1973.
Barassi took North to a Grand Final ( defeated by Richmond ) in 1974 and brought success in his 1975 and 1977 seasons.
Barassi continued as coach into 1980, but only a Night Premiership in that year was to result from his last years at Arden Street.
The Italian Vice-President of FIFA, Dr. Ottorino Barassi, hid the trophy in a shoe-box under his bed throughout the Second World War and thus saved it from falling into the hands of occupying troops.
Harris then signed legend Ron Barassi serve as coach from 1965.
Under Barassi, Carlton reached three consecutive Grand Finals between 1968 and 1970, resulting in two premierships: 1968 against Essendon and 1970 against traditional rivals Collingwood.
Carlton missed the finals in 1971, and Barassi left the club at the end of the season, but Carlton returned to prominence the following year, and contested back-to-back Grand Finals.
Of the legendary players from the Barassi era, none was more important than John Nicholls, who captained all three premierships and took over as captain-coach upon Barassi's departure.
Midfielders Sergio Silvagni and Adrian Gallagher, half-forward Robert Walls, and ruckman Percy Jones were also prominent throughout the Barassi era, and in 1970, Alex Jesaulenko became the first ( and to date, only ) Carlton forward to kick 100 goals in a season.
Ronald Dale Barassi, Jr AM ( born 27 February 1936 ) is a former Australian rules football player and coach.
During a long and decorated career, Barassi has been one of the most important figures in the history of Australian football.
His father, Ron Barassi, Sr., was the first Australian footballer killed at Tobruk during World War II.
The only child of Ron Barassi Snr, Ron was born in the central Victorian town of Castlemaine in 1936.
A pugnacious rover, Barassi Snr was a reserve in the Demons ' 1940 premiership team before leaving to serve with the army in North Africa.
Barassi unintentionally changed the game without taking to the field.
The club had gone to great lengths to recruit the young Barassi, and coach Norm Smith took him under his wing after his mother moved to Tasmania.

laid and some
Later, riding in for some lusty enjoyment of the liquor and professional ladies of Cheyenne, he laid claim to the killing with the vague insinuations he made.
He and other Soviet leaders responsible for the document were proud of having brought forward some new formulas, such as the early replacement of the dictatorship of the proletariat by an `` All People's State '', and also of having laid down the lines for a much greater `` democratization '' of the whole hierarchy of Soviets, starting with the Supreme Soviet itself.
The last-named is a fine-looking, large colt, who has been unfortunate to be laid off for some time due to injuries.
They are laid a minimum of 24'' '' deep and in some areas four feet down, particularly under roads, to stay clear of all other piping such as water and sewers and to minimize shocks from heavy trucking.
As the plans were laid, some several thousand fat cats were to be ensconced in the armory's $100 seats and in 68 ringside boxes priced at $10,000 each.
Between the first meeting of Clerfayt and Lillian and this dismal denouement, Mr. Remarque has laid down many pages of junior-philosophical discourse, some demure and rather fetching love-making, pleasant talk about some of the countryside and restaurants of Europe, and a modicum of automobile racing.
At the same time, after initial setbacks, Grant laid siege to Vicksburg and the Union navy attained some success in Charleston harbor.
Reptiles, birds and mammals are amniotes, the eggs of which are either laid or carried by the female and are surrounded by several membranes, some of which are impervious.
The Lord Jesus Christ gave His Spirit to His Apostles ; they in turn laid their hands on those who should succeed them ; and these again on others ; and so the sacred gift has been handed down to our present bishops, who have appointed us as their assistants, and in some sense representatives.
However, it was not until 21: 00 that the Marquis de Blanzac, who had taken charge in Clérambault's absence, reluctantly accepted the inevitability of defeat, and some 10, 000 of France's best infantry had laid down their arms.
Ivinskaya writes that Pasternak " raced frantically all over town, telling everybody that he was not to blame and denying responsibility for Mandelstam's disappearance, which for some reason he thought might be laid at his door.
Claudius ' temple was left unfinished after only some of the foundation had been laid down.
With the string section laid off, synthesisers took a dominating role, as was the trend in the larger music scene of the time, although studio strings were present on some of the tracks conducted by Rainer Pietsch, the overall soundscape had a more electronic feel in keeping with the futuristic nature of the album.
These influences have led some scholars to suggest that Islamic law may have laid the foundations for " the common law as an integrated whole ".
Some villas such as Great Casterton in Rutland and Hucclecote in Gloucestershire had new mosaic floors laid around this time, suggesting that economic problems may have been limited and patchy, although many suffered some decay before being abandoned in the 5th century ; the story of Saint Patrick indicates that villas were still occupied until at least 430.
In some species, the ovipositor has become modified as a sting, and the eggs are laid from the base of the structure, rather than from the tip, which is used only to inject venom.
Acts 5: 15 reports that " people brought the sick into the streets and laid them on beds and mats so that at least Peter's shadow might fall on some of them as he passed by.
The clutch is normally 3-6 eggs, but may contain any number of eggs up to seven ; even more eggs may be laid in total when some are removed during the laying time, which lasts about 2 days per egg laid.
In some versions, she laid two eggs from which the children hatched.
In 1904, Weber began to publish some of his most seminal papers in this journal, notably his essay The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, which became his most famous work and laid the foundations for his later research on the impact of cultures and religions on the development of economic systems.
These in turn in some cases became highways – with attendant problems all over New Zealand ( but especially in the more mountainous regions ), as the geography and contours of a slow-speed road laid out in the first half of the 20th century usually do not conform to safety and comfort criteria of modern motor vehicles.
* The world's oldest known paved road was laid in Egypt some time between 2600 and 2200 BC.
Section 504 of the original Rehabilitation Act laid some of the groundwork for the ADA in the areas of rehabilitation, training and employment of disabled people.

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