Rex Hunt

For the British diplomat, see Rex Hunt (governor).
Rex Hunt
Personal information
Full name Rex Hunt
Date of birth (1949-03-07) 7 March 1949
Place of birth Mentone, Victoria, Australia
Original team(s) Parkdale
Position(s) Full-forward / Centre Half Back
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1968 1974
1974 1975
1976 1978
Total
Richmond
Geelong
St Kilda
113 (121)
032 0(44)
057 (111)
202 (276)
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1978.
Career highlights

Rex James Hunt (born 7 March 1949) is an Australian television and radio personality, and a former Australian rules football player. He is also a veteran Australian rules football commentator known for his habit of making up quirky nicknames for players. He has also been known around the world for fishing and wildlife programs on the Seven Network and overseas stations. He is a former police officer who reached the senior rank of Sergeant in Victoria Police at age 30.[1] He also previously owned a restaurant, the D'lish Fish located in Port Melbourne.

Early life

Hunt was born in Mentone, Victoria, and attended Mordialloc High School. He joined the police force as a cadet after leaving school.[1] In 1970 he was called up to national service.[2]

Football career

Hunt was recruited from Parkdale by Richmond and made his debut in the then Victorian Football League in 1968. He was a key position player who was usually positioned at full-forward or centre half-forward. Later he played at centre half-back. He was part of Richmond's premiership sides in 1969 and 1973. In the middle of 1974, Hunt moved to the Geelong Football Club due to his work as a policeman. The big strong forward played at Geelong in 1974 and 1975, playing only 32 games for the club before moving back to the city and playing with St Kilda. He retired from VFL football at the end of 1978 but continued to play in the lower-level VFA in 1980 and 1981 with Sandringham.

Statistics

[3]
Legend
 G  Goals  B  Behinds  K  Kicks  H  Handballs  D  Disposals  M  Marks  T  Tackles
Season Team # Games G B K H D M T G B K H D M T
Totals Averages (per game)
1968 Richmond 43 13 16 25 144 15 159 97 N/A 1.2 1.9 11.1 1.2 12.2 7.5 N/A
1969 Richmond 5 20 55 45 153 14 167 93 N/A 2.8 2.3 7.7 0.7 8.4 4.7 N/A
1970 Richmond 5 16 36 34 140 28 168 104 N/A 2.3 2.1 8.8 1.8 10.5 6.5 N/A
1971 Richmond 5 20 4 3 240 24 264 141 N/A 0.2 0.2 12.0 1.2 13.2 7.1 N/A
1972 Richmond 5 14 1 2 156 16 172 66 N/A 0.1 0.1 11.1 1.1 12.3 4.7 N/A
1973 Richmond 5 23 4 3 270 18 288 114 N/A 0.2 0.1 11.7 0.8 12.5 5.0 N/A
1974 Richmond 5,6 7 5 11 65 8 73 40 N/A 0.7 1.6 9.3 1.1 10.4 5.7 N/A
1974 Geelong 5,6 15 26 17 221 20 241 137 N/A 1.7 1.1 14.7 1.3 16.1 9.8 N/A
1975 Geelong 6 17 18 12 139 17 156 85 N/A 1.1 0.8 8.7 1.1 9.8 5.3 N/A
1976 St Kilda 2 22 21 31 259 40 299 168 N/A 1.0 1.4 11.8 1.8 13.6 7.6 N/A
1977 St Kilda 2 18 52 31 180 18 198 103 N/A 2.9 1.9 10.0 1.0 11.0 5.7 N/A
1978 St Kilda 5 17 38 29 163 35 198 106 N/A 2.2 1.8 9.6 2.1 11.6 6.2 N/A
Career 202 276 243 2130 253 2383 1254 N/A 1.4 1.2 10.6 1.3 11.9 6.3 N/A

Commentary career

After his retirement as a player, Hunt became a popular football commentator for 3AW. He also hosted Sunday morning panel shows on the Seven Network, the Sportsworld Footy Panel and I'm Rex Hunt and You're Not. Early in the 2007 season, Rex celebrated his 1500th game as a commentator of VFL/AFL games. . Hunt announced his resignation from 3AW to join Triple M on 17 November 2009[4] Hunt announced his retirement from mainstream metropolitan commentary in 2011,[5] however he continues as a commentator for Crocmedia's AFL coverage, calling alongside Peter Donegan. In 2015, Hunt called his 2,000th game of AFL football[6]

In April 2014, Hunt started a new radio show on SEN 1116 called 'This Is Your Football Life' exploring the lives and achievements of various AFL/AFL football legends. The show is produced by Crocmedia and airs on Sunday mornings.[7]

In 2017, Hunt will return to 3AW as host of a new post-match talkback program.[8]


Nicknames

See also List of nicknames used in Australian rules.

Hunt is best known for his commentary on 3AW and has a penchant for making up nicknames for players such as "not a well man" for Sean Wellman of the Essendon Football Club, "Doctor Christian Barnard" for Essendon Football Club player Paul Barnard, "Ot 'n' Sticky" for Geelong footballer Brad Ottens; "Yellow Brick Croad" for Hawthorn footballer Trent Croad; "Oysters Kilpatrick" for Geelong footballer Glenn Kilpatrick; "Special Fried Rice" for ex-Carlton footballer Dean Rice; "Premium Light" for Western Bulldogs footballer Mitch Hahn; "The Mediator" for Kangaroos footballer Troy Makepeace; "Heavy Overnight Dew" for Port Adelaide footballer Stuart Dew; "Horney Torney" for Richmond and Adelaide footballer Jason Torney; "Awesome Wells" for Kangaroos player Daniel Wells;"Hooligan" for Blues player Ryan Houlihan; Thomas the Tank for Collingwood player Dale Thomas; "Brogan Josh" for Port Adelaide player Dean Brogan; Yaaaablett!! for Geelong star Gary Ablett; "Presti-gee-a-perry-como" for Collingwood player Simon Prestigiacomo. He is also known for his fat lady sings impression and the build up that surrounds it when he (she) bellows out a tune declaring the match over.

Fishing journalist career

In 1981 Hunt was giving regular radio fishing reports and had made two videos on the subject. His first television fishing show was Angling Action on the Ten Network. Two series of 13 episodes were made and were shown in 1981 and 1982 respectively. His 3DB radio fishing show began in 1982. Throughout the 1980s, Hunt continued to write for a number of newspapers and magazines. In 1991 a series of Rex Hunt's Fishing World was made and broadcast in Victoria on Channel Seven. A new and longer series of the show went national as Rex Hunt's Fishing Australia the following year. In 1992, the name changed again to Rex Hunt's Fishing Adventure, which remained on air until 2004. He also had a show on radio 1116 SEN hosting a fishing program 'Off The Hook' with son in law Lee Raynor.

Hunt's two most famous catchphrases from these shows were "Folks, it doesn't get any better than this!" as he reeled in a huge fish from the waters of one of Australia's most beautiful natural areas and, at the end of each episode, "It's yibbida-yibbida time!", a parody of the Warner Brothers' cartoon character Porky Pig saying "Be-bidda be-bidda be-bidda be... That's all, folks." He also had a famous habit of kissing the fish he didn't keep before releasing them.[9][10][11][12][13]

Hunt also made public pronouncements regarding the "thugs in the scallop industry" and their dredging of Port Phillip Bay, describing their actions as "dizzy stuff". He and a group of anglers and activists were successful in removing the dredging boats and restoring fish populations within the bay.

Controversies

Airline incident

In May 2004, Hunt made a curious attempt to make a statement about airline security, which has been markedly increased in Australia after terrorist threats. Hunt was agitated at having to remove his pants and footwear after setting off a metal detector. He then took ten metal forks from the Qantas Club and took them on board a Qantas flight from Adelaide headed for Melbourne in an attempt to prove that airport security was totally flawed. A concerned passenger who did not recognise Hunt alerted the flight crew and he was detained on arrival in Melbourne, where he was questioned for approximately 30 minutes and let go without any charges filed against him.

Leon Davis controversy

Hunt was involved in a controversial incident involving a racial slur in 2005, when he called Collingwood's Leon Davis, who is of Aboriginal descent, 'as black as a dog' during the call against Essendon mid-way through the season. Hunt made the comment when he trailed off while saying "Neon Leon hasn't lit up tonight; he's as black as a dog's guts in the night", to describe Davis' poor form in that match in terms of a neon lights metaphor; other members of the commentary team had been using different neon lights metaphors in the same context. Hunt's apology to Davis was initially rejected,[14] and only accepted later in the week after a face-to-face meeting.[15]

Byron Bay fight

In 2005, Hunt and his son were involved in an incident in Byron Bay where he claimed to have been attacked by local teenagers.[16] The teenagers involved, however, claim Hunt was extremely intoxicated at the time and his son had thrown the first punch.

Infidelity

On 17 May 2006 News Ltd exposed Hunt's 15 years of secret sexual liaisons.[17] When confronted Hunt confessed he had paid three women in succession for ongoing sexual relationships over a period of more than 15 years. The final relationship, with a beautician in her 30s, began in 1997 and cost Hunt $1000 a week. Hunt acknowledged he is a hypocrite given his repeated attacks on other media personalities for sexual infidelity.[18] Hunt followed this by an interview with radio broadcaster Neil Mitchell on Melbourne radio 3AW. A quote from Rex Hunt's radio comments,

That's what a fool does. I'm invincible, I'm paying money ... uh ... The girl's happy, she's got no money, I got my rocks off. How good is this?

has gained its own notoriety when being featured repeatedly on national Triple M radio program Get This hosted by Tony Martin, Ed Kavalee and Richard Marsland. Robyn Hood, 40, one of the three women subsequently sold her story to New Idea magazine. Robyn was quoted as saying:

Rex was never unfaithful to Lynne. "We never had sex... he was affectionate, very touchy-feely... then he'd either, in the car or out of it, depending on how cold it was, fling off all his clothes. The more public, the greater the danger and the more exciting Rex apparently found it.[19]

Rex Hunt's wife of thirty four years, Lynne, said she would stand by Hunt and also revealed she suffers from bipolar disorder, which had placed pressure on the couple's relationship.[17]

Road rage incident

Hunt has been charged with assault over allegations he bashed a cyclist in a Melbourne road rage attack.[20]

Personal life

Rex is married to wife Lynne and has one son, Matthew, and one daughter, Rachel.

References

  1. 1 2 "Rex Hunt". Victoria Police Amateur Sports & Welfare Society. Victoria Police Amateur Sports & Welfare Society. 2014. Retrieved 8 April 2014.
  2. "Talking Heads with Peter Thompson: Rex Hunt". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. 19 May 2008.
  3. "Rex Hunt statistics". AFL Tables. Retrieved 7 August 2015.
  4. "Rex Hunt may leave 3AW after shock offer from Triple M". News Corporation). 16 November 2016. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
  5. "Legendary footy commentator Rex Hunt is leaving Triple M". Southern Cross Austereo. 29 August 2011. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
  6. "How footy legend Rex Hunt revolutionised AFL broadcasting". News Corporation. 16 May 2015. Retrieved 8 April 2016.
  7. "Rex Hunt to host This Is Your Football Life". Radio Today. Radio Today. 7 April 2014. Retrieved 8 April 2014.
  8. "Rex Hunt to return to 3AW". 3AW. Fairfax. 18 November 2016. Retrieved 22 November 2016.
  9. http://www.rexhunt.com.au/adventure
  10. http://www.prweb.com/releases/2006/09/prweb442200.htm
  11. http://www.saxton.com.au/rex-hunt/
  12. http://www.americaone.com/shows/Rex_Hunts_Fishing/Rex%20Hunt_Bio.pdf
  13. "Rex Hunt's controversies". The Age. Melbourne. 17 May 2006.
  14. Hogan, Jesse (19 July 2005). "Hunt apologises for racial 'stuff up'". The Age. Melbourne, VIC. Retrieved 14 Dec 2011.
  15. "Contrite Hunt says Davis accepts appology (sic)". AAP General News (Australia). 21 July 2005. Retrieved 14 Dec 2011.
  16. Sydney Morning Herald: Rex Hunt and son attacked by gang
  17. 1 2 The Age: Mrs Hunt: I'll stand by Rex
  18. The Age: Football, fish and farce: when celebrity culture blurs the media's ethical lines
  19. The Age: We never had sex
  20. The Daily Telegraph: Rex Hunt charged over alleged road-rage
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