The Gold Coast Bulletin

Murphy to be thought of as a club great

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CAPTAIN Bob Murphy will retire as one of the Western Bulldogs’ all-time AFL greats.

Coach Luke Beveridge, who famously presented his medal to Murphy after last year’s historic premiershi­p, said the 35year-old deserved to be spoken of among the club’s pantheon.

The Bulldogs sit outside the top eight and Murphy’s dream of becoming a premiershi­p player is unlikely to be fulfilled.

But Beveridge said Murphy’s influence on their first flag since 1954 was profound and he deserved to be compared with famous Bulldogs such as Ted Whitten Snr, Charlie Sutton, Doug Hawkins and Chris Grant.

“He should be in there with all those guys,” Beveridge said.

“The premiershi­p was built off momentum and people forget what he did in 2015 – an All-Australian captain.

“As much as he didn’t take the field as part of the 22, we wouldn’t have gotten there if it hadn’t been for him.”

Murphy is yet to watch a replay of last year’s grand final and the scenes on the presentati­on dais, when Beveridge gave him the medal.

“It will be an ache that I didn’t have my footy boots on,” Murphy said of how he will feel when he watches the footage.

“But there’s no bigger Bulldogs supporter than me.

“You inherit a club’s mission when you arrive ... the ‘54 heroes, they were like ghost stories in some regard.

“So I’m filled with enormous joy and satisfacti­on that I had a pretty good seat to witness it.”

Murphy missed most of last season with a knee reconstruc­tion and said yesterday that he nearly called it quits three times last year.

The flanker is glad he decided to keep playing for one more season.

“It’s a pretty good rule to live by – if your wife (Justine) and your coach say you should play on, that’s probably not a bad place to start,” he said.

The media conference was classic Murphy, one of the game’s most likeable and intriguing characters.

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