Chris Lewis
Personal information
Full name Christopher Lockley Lewis
Date of birth (1969-03-17) 17 March 1969
Original team(s) Claremont (WAFL)
Height 186 cm (6 ft 1 in)
Weight 80 kg (176 lb)
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1986–2001 Claremont 53 (25)
1987–2000 West Coast Eagles 215 (259)
Coaching career
Years Club Games (W–L–D)
2007 Swan Districts (WAFL) 16 (6–10–0)
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 2000.
Career highlights
Sources: AFL Tables, AustralianFootball.com

Christopher Lockley Lewis (born 17 March 1969) is a former Australian rules footballer who played over 200 AFL senior games for the West Coast Eagles.

An indigenous Australian, Lewis is one of the sons of Irwin Lewis, a notable scholar, sportsman, public servant, and indigenous Australian artist. Like his father and older brothers Clayton and Cameron, he attended Christ Church Grammar School, one of the elite independent schools in Western Australia, for his secondary education, and later played Australian rules football for the Claremont Football Club in the West Australian Football League.

At the time Lewis attended Christ Church, the school apparently did not allow Year 10 students to play in the First XVIII football team (which was reserved for Year 11 and 12 boys, for safety reasons). However, Lewis' ability meant that an exception was made in his case. He was also a very good cricketer whilst at Christ Church.

Lewis first came to prominence during WA’s 1985 Teal Cup win as a member of the so-called “Magnificent Seven” along with future Eagles teammates John Worsfold, Guy McKenna, Peter Sumich, Chris Waterman, Paul Peos and Scott Watters.

Equal parts tenacious and silky-skilled, Lewis went on to become a member of the inaugural West Coast Eagles side that defeated Richmond in round 1, 1987. In the last game of that season he kicked a career-high 7 goals against St Kilda.

In 1990, he won the West Coast Eagles Club Champion Award. He was a member of the 1992 and 1994 WCE premiership teams, as well as the 1996 Claremont premiership team in the WAFL.

As a player, Lewis was considered as highly skilled - his passing skills were amongst the best in the AFL. The main criticism of Lewis was his frequent suspensions. However, fans and teammates felt that he was given particularly unfair treatment from both umpires and the tribunal. Lewis played much of his early football career prior to the AFL taking action against racial abuse, and thus racial taunts from opposition players were a frequent source of provocation.[1]

Lewis has also been known for many unusual suspensions, including the most infamous case of biting Todd Viney's finger in 1991. It’s now well known that this, amongst most of Lewis’s suspensions, where in the act of defence or retaliation for being directly targeted by opposition teams. At the time of the Viney case AFL legend Ron Barassi defended Lewis saying that he would have done the same thing if another man stuck his fingers in his mouth.

Multiple previous opponents of Lewis, who targeted him with racial slurs and abuse to throw him off his game have since publicly apologised for their actions. Most notably former players Dermott Brereton and Gary Lyon during an episode of the Footy Show in 2011 which Lewis was a guest.

The AFL’s longest serving coach Mick Malthouse once wrote that Lewis was the most talented footballer to come out of Western Australia, and that if he had played under the AFL’s current day stance against racial vilification and discrimination, he would have been a 300+ game player.

Malthouse described the abuse Lewis copped from opposition players as "absolutely disgraceful".

"I don't think eras have anything to do with it. Chris was reported on a couple of occasions. In my mind, I have no doubt he was vilified.

"We accepted it, and we have got a lot to pay for that, as a nation, as a league and as individuals.

"Football wore him down. From a young man, when I first went to that football club, who had a beautiful big smile, that became more and more tested through his career."

After missing the entire 1999 season with a foot injury, Lewis attempted to play on in 2000 but managed just three games before announcing his retirement.

Finishing his AFL career as a well decorated, duel premiership, 200+ game player. Lewis’s career total of 259 goals is in the top 10 of the Eagles’ all-time list.

He coached Swan Districts in 2007 before moving to Port Hedland.[1] He remains involved in football by umpiring the reserves grade in the North Pilbara Football League.

Following his retirement Lewis has been honoured for his contribution to football by selection in the AFL’s Indigenous Team of the Century in 2005, being named as half forward flanker in the Eagles' 20th anniversary team in 2006, and the 25th anniversary team in 2011, as well as being inducted into the Eagles Hall of Fame in 2011.

Statistics

[2]
Legend
  G  
Goals
  K  
Kicks
  D  
Disposals 
  T  
Tackles
  B  
Behinds 
  H  
Handballs 
  M  
Marks
Season Team No. Games Totals Averages (per game) Votes
G B K H D M T G B K H D M T
1987 West Coast 281929202276829591421.51.111.93.615.54.82.23
1988 West Coast 281215151082513328151.31.39.02.111.12.31.30
1989 West Coast 281618132478333080351.10.815.45.220.65.02.23
1990 West Coast 2822241734611846468591.10.815.75.421.13.12.79
1991 West Coast 282131192779937661541.50.913.24.717.92.92.63
1992 West Coast 282317262699336264530.71.111.74.015.72.82.31
1993 West Coast 281522121834622951441.50.812.23.115.33.42.90
1994 West Coast 282539373068238897411.61.512.23.315.53.91.61
1995 West Coast 282120172348732155551.00.811.14.115.32.62.66
1996 West Coast 2886452277925100.80.56.53.49.93.11.30
1997 West Coast 281523132368131761281.50.915.75.421.14.11.97
1998 West Coast 281514121294317235180.90.88.62.911.52.31.23
1999 West Coast 280
2000 West Coast 28310111324270.30.03.74.38.00.72.30
Career 215 259 205 2625 865 3490 718 461 1.2 1.0 12.2 4.0 16.2 3.3 2.1 36

References

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