Peter Bennett was born 11 July 1926. In a career spanning nine seasons he kicked 258 goals. He was about 6ft tall and played football at around 80kgs. I was only five years old when he retired but, his deeds on the football field remain larger than life, via my dim memories and those passed down by my father and his many friends who braved the windswept terraces of the Junction Oval in the late 40s and early 50s. Peter Bennett stories were my early favourites.

My clear memory is that as a child, I knew very little about school, but a hell of a lot about sport and I mean any sport. I apparently failed Grade 2 because of St Kilda Football Club, Flemington, Moonee Valley and Caulfield racecourses and of course that Mecca of cricket the MCG where even as a five to seven year old I found myself at almost every cricket game whether it be Shield or Test.

There was not one player in any football club that I couldn’t converse with adults about and you could ask me anything about the great Rising Fast winner of the 1954 Melbourne Cup. Sport was my complete interest. I can’t say the Nuns at St Colmans Balaclava shared my love of sport and I was a very worried little boy when my parents copped the berating about my inability to concentrate on learning the catechism, arithmetic and any other strange unimaginative work they placed before me.

I have a suspicion that my parents were not overly concerned, as I seemed to have a strange ability to read the sports pages of the dailies word for word and retain complete memory of all they contained. I could tell all who asked the number of any player in the VFL and I could work out the odds and subsequent payout of any horse racing at the time, and in my scorebooks at home I had managed to work out the batting and bowling averages of every cricketer representing Victoria, but that was of no interest to the nuns.

Peter Bennett in action for St Kilda.

But let’s get back to Peter Bennett. I love Full Forwards and Peter Bennett was a great one. He was a lovely kick, deadly accurate. He first started at the Saints in 1944 but war service intervened and he didn’t resume until 1947. He often kicked bags of goals and he was the Saints' leading goalkicker in 1947, 1948, 1950, 1951 and 1953. He represented Victoria and for years at the Junction Oval in the club rooms there was a photo of Peter Bennett and Bruce Phillips together in Victorian jumpers, Full Forward and Full Back for Victoria. One hopes this historical photo has survived and is safely in a Saints collection. 

Peter Bennett was unusual in that he combined playing football at the elite level with an elite Olympic sport Water Polo. Peter is a dual Olympian representing Australia at Helsinki in 1952 and Melbourne in 1956. He Captained the Australian Water Polo Team at Helsinki in 1952.

1952, Helsinki, Finland

Peter Bennett, Jack Foster, Malcolm Hastie, William Orchard, James O'Doherty, Keith Whitehead, Anthony Fenech, Frank Jordon, Doug Laing, Ray Smee.
Eliminated (lost 2-10 v Yugoslavia, lost 0-6 v Austria).

The caption above was a promotional card for the Helsinki Olympics and the team that represented Australia and their results are listed. This was a fledgling time for Australian Water Polo but it was the foundation of the excellent Australian Water Polo teams of today. Peter Bennett can be regarded as one of the fathers of Australian Water Polo and he did this while he played at the elite level of VFL Football.

In 1955 Peter Bennett retired from VFL football and the Saints to concentrate on gaining selection in the Australian Water Polo team for the Melbourne Olympics in 1956. He gained that selection and although not selected as Captain, I doubt he was upset being second in command to the still legendary New South Welshman Ray Smee.

1956, Melbourne, Australia

Peter Bennett, Jack Foster, Doug Laing, William McCabe, John O'Brien, William Orchard, Edward Pierce, Ray Smee, Keith Whitehead. Emergencies: James Farrell, Allan Charleston.
9th (lost first-round matches 2-4 v Romania, lost 1-9 v Yugoslavia, lost 0-3 v USSR, won 3-2 v Singapore, lost 2-5 v Great Britain; lost 2-4 v Romania in losers' round).

The Melbourne Olympics were a success for Australia as we were now a competitive nation in Water Polo. We only won one game but the games if you relate it to football were like the Killigrew era where they were contested vigorously and the scores were much closer.

Peter Bennett was extraordinary in that he was one of the pioneers of water Polo in Australia as well as being an elite footballer. It would seem to be impossible to combine these two sports in this day and age. There are many multi talented sportsmen but they cannot combine sports.

 Peter Bennett also witnessed one of the most remarkable Water Polo matches in history.  The game played between Hungary the eventual Gold Medal winners and Russia was literally a bloodbath. A quote from a publication of the era reads:

1956 Melbourne Olympic Games was shadowed by Soviet Union's invasion of Hungary and England, France and Israel's attack against Egypt. In order to protest these events, some countries did not participate in the Games. During the water-polo match between Hungary and the Soviet Union, a fight broke out between the players. When a Russian player hit his Hungarian opponent in the head, the pool became red with blood.

Some years ago I asked Brian Gleeson about his memories of Peter Bennett and his response was as follows:  

Peter Bennett was a delightful fellow who served St Kilda well. At his peak, he did well enough at full forward to gain interstate selection in the early 1950's (before I arrived).  I recall a photo in the St Kilda rooms with Peter Bennett and Bruce Phillips in the 'big V guernseys, as the St Kilda Representatives. I played alongside Peter for two seasons, (1953 & 1954) when he was nearing the end of his football career. A mark of the man was that he remained always friendly and supportive, even though the selection choice was sometimes between him and me.” Peter Bennett had a sporting heritage. His father Horrie was General Manager of the Australian Olympic team that went to Antwerp in 1920. He witnessed history for Australia with the first brother and sister representatives at the Olympics Aussies Lily and Frank Beaurepaire. Peter Bennett’s dad is remembered as the “Father of the Australian Swimming Association.  

Peter kept sport in the family. At the 1948 Olympics the teenager Marjorie McQuade was selected to represent Australia in swimming. The youngest competitor at the 1948 Olympics in London. 

Marjorie McQuade also represented Australia at the 1950 Auckland Commonwealth Games and the 1952 Helsinki Olympics. Two great sporting greats of Australia Peter Bennett and Marjorie McQuade met at those Olympics and married.

When I spoke to her many years ago Peter and Marjorie’s daughter Tracey described Peter, as a man of charismatic personality, who at the time before he passed away in 2012 was positive about all in his life, and he still had a great interest in the Saints.

Peter Bennett was not only a great Saint, and a great sportsman, he was a great Australian. All Saints supporters should be proud to know about Peter Bennett and that his extended family are all still Saints supporters and Saints for life.