Gavin Crosisca was the kind of player teammates love to have on their side: tough, unrelenting, a guy who left everything out on the field every time he played. He was a Premiership player at 22, and an under-19s flag-winner before that. He placed in the Copeland three times, and won three “Wrecker” awards for his bone-jarring tackles and penchant for the one-percenters. His final tally of 246 games tally puts him among the club’s elite. Yet for all those achievements, it may well prove to be that his most important contributions to the Collingwood Football Club – and to his teammates – came years after he finished playing. Crosisca was born in Brisbane and played his junior footy with the Moorooka Roosters. By the age of 16 he had starred in the 1984 Teal Cup competition (making the all-Australian team alongside names such as Garry Lyon, Darren Bewick, Steve Silvagni, Ron McKeown and Craig Starcevich), had played senior football for Western Districts, and represented his native Queensland. It was former defender and later gun footballing administrator Andrew Ireland who saw the talent and first recommended him to the Magpies. Gavin moved to Melbourne in 1986 and started with our under-19s under coach Keith Burns. His mother Kay packed up her own life when he moved to Melbourne, coming with him and taking her support beyond simply watching all his games by taking charge of the club’s Coventry House, where a host of Magpies from interstate and country Victoria nested.