Sean Wight and Jim Stynes – Remembering two AFL Legends

Melbourne's Irish recruits Jim Stynes and Sean Wight in 1988 Picture: Photo File Source: Herald Sun
Picture: New recruits, Jim Stynes and Sean Wight in 1988. Photo File Source: Herald Sun

When Sean Wight and Jim Stynes came to Australia as part of the “Irish Experiment” (Wight himself was Scotland-born) the legacy they would leave for AFL, for friendship, and for cancer patients around Australia could not have been guessed at.

Sean Wight was one of the first AFL players recruited to the Melbourne club as part of the “Irish Experiment”: a push to bring Gaelic footballers Down Under in the 1980s to try their hand at the Australian game. Jim Stynes, another budding young Gaelic Footballer also came to Australia as part of this program.

Wight and Stynes became two of the most famous players in this era of Australian football and even after retiring from the game, the pair made their lives in Australia.

Sadly however, both of these athletes followed the same path through a battle with cancer. They were both diagnosed in their 40s, and after a brave fight, they passed away within a few months of each other.

When Wight was undergoing treatment, family and friends held a cancer fundraising event last year. Part of the proceeds were dedicated to supporting Wight and his family through their medical expenses, but the ACRF was also humbled to recently receive the rest of the proceeds. A generous $10,000 from the money raised will thus go towards world-class cancer research and will leave a lasting legacy in Sean’s name.

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