In the 2000s, there were plenty of football teams that would have killed for a player with Trevor Steer’s combination of talents. Here was a player tall and skilled enough to hold down a key position either forward or back, but also good enough as a ruckman to win a Copeland in that role. He could palm to perfection in the ruck, take marks around the ground, kick goals up forward or clamp down on tall forwards while in defence. He really was the ideal swingman. Yet his career lasted only six seasons, and he would join contemporaries such as Ian Graham, David Norman and Mick Bone, all of whom – for different reasons – played less senior football than might have been expected.