Coleman Medal


The Coleman Medal is an Australian rules football award given annually to the Australian Football League player who kicks the most goals in the home-and-away season. It is named after John Coleman, a full forward and Australian Football Hall of Fame Legend who scored 537 goals in 98 games for Essendon. The award was first presented in 1981 to Richmond's Michael Roach, who scored 86 goals for the season. At the time, the competition was known as the Victorian Football League ; it would become the AFL in 1990.
Although the recipient is known on completion of the home-and-away season, the medal itself is not given immediately. Its presentation venue has varied; it has been given at the preliminary and grand finals, the All-Australian awards ceremony, and club award ceremonies.
In September 2001, the AFL decided to recognise all leading goalkickers prior to Roach's victory; leaders from 1955 – the year after Coleman's last match – to 1980 were named retrospective Coleman Medallists, while winners prior to 1955 were named Leading Goalkicker Medallists. Medals were presented to winners or their surviving relatives in a ceremony at Melbourne Town Hall in July 2004. Jack Collins, who had been a leading advocate for naming the award after Coleman and honouring leading goalkickers prior to 1981, was the only player to receive both a Coleman and a Leading Goalkicker Medal. Upon receiving the accolades, he was "bloody angry" and complained to the AFL Commission, as he perceived the Leading Goalkicker Medal to be an inferior award.
There have been two occasions when players have tied for the most goals: in 1897, the VFL's inaugural season, when Geelong's Eddy James and Melbourne's Jack Leith kicked 22 goals apiece; and in 1900, when Geelong's Teddy Lockwood and Collingwood's Albert Thurgood both scored 24 goals. In both cases, each player retrospectively received a Leading Goalkicker Medal.
Collingwood is the club most frequently represented by medallists; its players have won on 23 occasions. The majority of these awards have been contributed by Dick Lee and Gordon Coventry. Lee's seven medals are a league record; Coventry sits outright second, on six. Five players have been four-time medallists; another five have won the award three times, while 15 players have been dual medallists. Greater Western Sydney's Jeremy Cameron kicked 67 goals in 2019, making him the most recent recipient.

Recipients

RecipientYearClubGoals
189722
189722
189831
189931
190024
190024
190134
190230
190333
190439
190538
190645
190745
190850
190955
191051
191146
191256
191353
191457
191565
191646
191750
191835
191947
192062
192161
192254
192364
192475
192570
192678
192788
192878
1929118
1930105
193172
1932109
1933108
1934138
193597
1936101
193764
1938102
193998
194092
194188
194267
194362
194487
194567
194663
194797
194886
194985
1950112
195175
1952103
195396
195473
195577
195656
195774
195867
195969
196067
196154
196262
196369
196468
196556
196673
196779
1968125
1969122
1970146
1971140
1972130
197384
197491
197567
197699
197799
1978118
197991
1980107
198186
198294
1983106
1984102
198593
1986100
1987117
1988124
1989128
199098
1991118
1992139
1993124
1994113
1995118
1996114
199781
1998107
199988
200094
200196
200275
200387
200490
200574
200684
200777
2008102
200986
201078
201171
201265
201368
201467
201575
201680
201769
201865
201967

Multiple recipients

PlayerWinsClubYears
71907, 1908, 1909, 1914, 1916, 1917, 1919
61926, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1933
51949, 1950, 1951, 1952, 1953
41943, 1944, 1945, 1947
4/1962, 1967, 1969, 1974
41968, 1970, 1971, 1977
4/1987, 1991, 1996, 1998
4/2008, 2011, 2014, 2017
31963, 1964, 1965
31988, 1989, 1992
31993, 1994, 1995
32000, 2001, 2003
32010, 2012, 2018
21897, 1899
21900, 1903
21911, 1912
21934, 1935
21934, 1935
2/1942, 1948
21954, 1957
21959, 1960
21972, 1973
21978, 1979
21980, 1981
21983, 1984
22004, 2005
22006, 2009
22015, 2016

Club totals

Club no longer participates in the AFL
LGNumber of Leading Goalkicker Medals
C'manNumber of Coleman Medals