Mourning over loss of larrikin
COLIN Sylvia is being remembered as a fun-loving young man who never quite reached the training levels that would allow his rare talents to fully emerge at AFL level.
Sylvia, 32, who died on Sunday in a car crash in his home town of Mildura, could make the ball talk when the mood took him.
It was that talent that saw Melbourne take him with Pick 3 in the 2003 national draft behind Adam Cooney and Andrew Walker, and there were moments in his 157 games for Melbourne that his star shone brightly.
For instance, his 37 possessions and four goals against Hawthorn in Round 9 at the MCG in 2009 highlighted just how devastating he could be.
At 185cm and 90kg he had a combo of power and speed that could break games apart, just as Essendon’s Tim Watson and North Melbourne’s Sam Kekovich had done before him.
Watson was able to translate those gifts into a 300game career, while Kekovich succumbed to a succession of crippling knee injuries but not before playing a key role in North Melbourne’s first premiership in 1975.
Of modern players, Sylvia most resembles Dustin Martin – Martin is 1cm taller and 5kg heavier but both could rip games open in the midfield and up forward.
Sadly for Sylvia, he was never able to produce it on a season-to-season basis and in 2014-15 he travelled west to Fremantle in an attempt to reignite his career. Just six games resulted before he returned to his roots, this year acting as assistant coach of Meringur in the Millewa Football League.