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Nick Vlastuin Biography
Nicholas Alexander Leendert Vlastuin (pronounced [flɒs təʊn] ; born 19 April 1994) is a professional Australian rules footballer playing for the Richmond Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL). He is a two-time premiership player with the club, winning in 2017 and 2019. He plays as a hybrid defender, adept at directly defending small forwards, taking intercepting marks and rebounding from defensive 50.
Vlastuin completed high school at St Helena Secondary College in 2011. In addition to football commitments, he worked as a pool lifeguard during 2012.
In 2011 Vlastuin represented the premiership winning Victorian Metro side at the Under-18 National championships. He returned to the team in 2012, this time captaining the side to the competition title. He was also named All-Australian for his performances in the tournament. As an Under-18 player Vlastuin was also a member of the AFL-AIS academy; an elite training program for 30 of the country’s best young footballers.
Vlastuin was drafted with Richmond’s first pick and the ninth selection overall in the 2012 AFL Draft .
Vlastuin made his AFL debut in round 5 of the 2013 AFL season in an away game against Fremantle at Subiaco Oval. In round 7 of the same season he was nominated for the 2013 AFL Rising Star after a 23 possession game against Port Adelaide. He also kicked his first career goal in the match. He would go on to play 18 games in his first season, recording an average of 16.3 disposals and 4.8 marks per game and placing sixth in the Rising Star award. In addition he received the Cosgrove-Jenkins award as the club’s best first-year player.
Vlastuin began 2014 in the club’s best-22, playing in round one against Carlton. In fact, he played in each of the club’s first seven matches before suffering a broken finger in round 9 against Melbourne. He would return to football relatively quickly however, missing just two rounds of AFL action. Between rounds 15 and 18 he was prolific floating forward, kicking a goal in each of the three matches. He finished the season having played 20 matches at AFL level, including a finals series appearance for the second straight season. Vlastuin placed seventh at the club for tackles and ninth for rebound 50s in 2014.
In his third year at the club, Vlastuin managed to play in all 23 possible matches. He recorded double digit possessions in every match in 2015 and finished top-ten at the club for tackles and rebound 50s. He placed sixth in the club’s best-and-fairest award, his highest place to date. He was also nominated for the AFLPA’s 22 Under 22 team but would fail to make the final team. At season’s end he underwent minor hip surgery.
At the beginning of the 2016 season, Vlastuin adopted the #1 guernsey, worn the previous year by retiring former club captain and personal backline mentor, Chris Newman. In an under strength side for the club’s first pre-season tournament match he played the role of captain, despite not being a member of the club’s leadership group. He played in each of the club’s first four matches that season before a leg injury kept him out of action for two matches. Upon his return in round 7 he took on a midfield role, replacing the injured Trent Cotchin. He recorded 16 disposals, six tackles and a goal in the match but did not reprise the role on a regular basis that season. Vlastuin suffered a concussion in the second quarter of the club’s round 11 loss to North Melbourne. In addition to missing the remainder of the match he sat out two more games, not returning until after the bye, in a round 14 match against Brisbane Lions. From that point forward he did not miss a match, finishing the season having played 19 games in 2016. He was again nominated to the 22 Under 22 squad that season but would go unselected for the second straight season. He placed ninth in the club’s best and fairest count in 2016.
Due to a cut on his face that had stitches, Vlastuin was unable to shave for the early part of the 2017 season. He became superstitious and grew out the beard for the remainder of the season, a habit that he repeated during the 2018 season.
Prior to the 2017 season, Richmond’s coaches pegged Vlastuin for a move to a more stoppage focused role. He ceased training with the club’s backline specific group and moved into the club’s midfield training group. Vlastuin was a key member of Richmond’s strong start to the 2017 season, playing in the club’s round 1 victory over Carlton. He kicked a goal during the match while his 12 tackles for the match set a career best. Vlastuin suffered a broken nose and concussion in the club’s round 3 win over West Coast. He played with the lingering effects of the injury in round 4 before concussion symptoms saw him sit out the club’s round 5 match against Melbourne. Vlastuin suffered a shoulder injury in the second quarter of his side’s round 7 match against the Western Bulldogs. Scans later revealed a small scapula fracture with initial estimations suggesting he would miss three to four weeks of play. He ultimately missed more than two months of AFL football, returning to the club’s senior side in round 17 following a fortnight of matches in the VFL. He would however return to his previous home in the backline, with his midfield move scuttled by his injury, by previous injuries to key backline personnel and by the emergence of young midfielder Jack Graham. Vlastuin was back to his best in that role, lifting his metres gained average from 20th at the club to third as well as his intercept possession count from 1.8 to 8.3, good for ninth in the whole league. In round 18 he was among the Tigers’ best, recording 11 marks and 21 possessions (including 13 intercept possessions) in the club’s win over the GWS Giants. He held his form into the finals series, playing a “pivotal” role in Richmond’s qualifying final win over Geelong. When Vlastuin and the Tigers won over Greater Western Sydney in the preliminary final, he was lined up to defend Adelaide’s Eddie Betts in the grand final. Vlastuin started slow, giving up a goal to Betts early in the first quarter. He turned his performance around however and contributed 16 possessions and six rebound 50s to Richmond’s first premiership winning side in 37 years. He played 16 matches that season and finished 2017 as a premiership player.
Vlastuin traveled to the Indonesian jungles of Sumatra in 2018 as part of Richmond’s tiger conservation partnership with the World Wildlife Fund.
After playing well in each of Richmond’s two 2018 pre-season matches, Vlastuin contributed 12 disposals in the club’s season-opening win over Carlton. He suffered a delayed concussion from that match however, forcing him to miss round 2’s grand final re-match with Adelaide. Vlastuin returned after just one match on the sidelines but was handed a $2,000 fine for a rough conduct charge picked up during that round 3 win over Hawthorn. Two weeks later Vlastuin was ruled out of the club’s round 5 ANZAC Day eve match against Melbourne with a minor calf strain. He again missed just a single match, returning to play his 100th career match in round 6’s win over Collingwood. After season-best totals of 26 disposals and 12 marks against North Melbourne in round 8, Vlastuin ranked second at Richmond for intercept possessions with an average of 7.5 per game. In round 10 Vlastuin was forced to play the second half of a match against St Kilda as a forward after Richmond full-forward Jack Riewoldt sustained a concussion mid-match. Vlastuin performed strongly in the role, kicking an equal career-best three goals. In round 13’s win over Geelong, Vlastuin was named among the best players on the ground by AFL Media and the Australian Associated Press and received best on ground honours from the coaches with nine votes in the coaches association award following a 21 disposal and 11 mark performance. To that point he ranked 14th in the league for intercepts per game. Following the bye Vlastuin was again prolific, notching 21 disposals, 10 marks, a goal and six coaches votes that also saw him named in AFL Media’s Team of the Week. However, he also attracted a one match suspension for an elbow to the face of Sydney midfielder Luke Parker that saw him miss one match in round 16. At the beginning of August Fox Footy analyst David King labelled Vlastuin “a Luke Hodge clone” and the “AFL’s most prolific intercept marker across the half-back flank (in 2018)”. Vlastuin closed out the home and away season with win’s in each of Richmond’s last six matches that saw the club finish as minor premiers. Despite being unselected in the league’s All-Australian squad, Vlastuin was named to the best 22 in The Age chief football reporter Jake Niall’s team of the year, “in recognition of his rise to become an elite backman”. Richmond opened the finals series with a qualifying final victory over Hawthorn where Vlastuin was identified by AFL Media as a key part of his club’s “almost impassable” defence. His finals run would extend just one more match however, when Richmond was eliminated with a shock preliminary final loss to rivals Collingwood. Following the conclusion of the 2018 finals series, Vlastuin was named as a close miss by the Herald Sun’s chief football writer Mark Robinson in his list of the 50 best players from the 2018 season. After 21 matches and new career highs in marks and disposals per game, Vlastuin placed eighth in the club’s best and fairest award.
Vlastuin plays as a hybrid defender, adept at directly defending small forwards, taking intercepting marks and rebounding from defensive 50. He is highly capable at playing as a spare defender, assisting backline teammates in aerial contests while they are directly matched up on an opponent. Since the injury-absence and eventual retirement of teammate Alex Rance in 2019, Vlastuin has become particularly adept at this role as an intercept marker, leading Richmond that year in total intercepts, marks and rebound-50s.
The 2019/20 off-season retirement of fellow defender Alex Rance reconfirmed the need for Vlastuin to repeat his important defensive role of 2019, which he showcased by participating in each of the club’s two pre-season matches in March. Vlastuin suffered a head knock and concussion in round 1’s win over Carlton, ruling him out of most of the second half of the match which was being played under extraordinary conditions imposed on the league as a result of the rapid progression of the coronavirus pandemic into Australia. In what the league planned would be the first of a reduced 17-round season, the match was played without crowds in attendance due to public health prohibitions on large gatherings and with quarter lengths reduced by one fifth in order to reduce the physical load on players who would be expected to play multiple matches with short breaks in the second half of the year owing to the likelihood of an extended break in play that season. The lingering effects of concussion ruled Vlastuin out from the following week’s scheduled match within three days of his side’s round 1 win, but it would prove an unnecessary consideration later that same day when the AFL Commission suspended the season for a period of at least 10 weeks after multiple states enforced quarantine conditions on their borders. Vlastuin spent the hiatus working as a carpenter while maintaining fitness with make-shift weights and unsupervised running sessions necessitated by the closure of public gyms and the club’s own facilities.
Vlastuin started the 2019 season with appearances in each of the club’s two pre-season matches, though played only restricted game time in second due to minor soreness. He was fully fit for the club’s season opening match against Carlton, where he contributed 14 disposals. The loss of All-Australian defender and teammate Alex Rance to an ACL injury in that match however, would force Vlastuin into a more defensive role that in seasons past, becoming responsible for negating oppositions teams’ third forward. In the week following Rance’s injury, Fox Footy analyst David King labelled Vlastuin the Richmond player most capable of replacing Rance’s prowess as an intercept player. When all three members of Richmond’s leadership group were ruled out from playing in round 4, AFL Media named Vlastuin the front runner to captain the side that weekend, though he would eventually be passed over for the role in favour of veteran Shane Edwards. He was however added to the club’s de facto leadership group of five, who served in the role during the appointed leaders’ playing absence. Two weeks later Vlastuin would show leadership of another kind, named best on ground with a maximum ten coaches award votes for a 28 disposals performance for which he was also named to AFL Media’s Team of the Week. In his next match in round 7, Vlastuin would suffer a minor ankle injury during a loss to the Western Bulldogs. Though he would return to the field to play out the match, a mid-week flare up on symptoms would cause Vlastuin to miss the following week’s match as a result of the injury. Vlastuin returned to the side in round 9, playing a dual role as defender and midfielder while kicking his first goal of the year and adding 24 disposals. He suffered a knock to the hip in round 12 that saw him in some doubt for round 13’s match against Adelaide, but eventually recovered in time to post 24 disposals. Vlastuin recorded more than 20 disposals in three of his next five games following that match, including in round 19 where he received one coaches award vote for a performance that included his then season-best total of eight rebound-50s. He was named among Richmond’s best for 24 disposals in round 20, before earning four coaches votes and selection to AFL Media’s team of the week in round 21. Vlastuin closed out the home and away season with a nine mark, 13 intercepts best-on-ground performance that earned him nine coaches votes and yet another selection to the AFL Media team of the week in round 23. He finished the home and away season with the third most intercepts of any player that year and placing 14th for marks, while rating as ‘elite’ for intercepts and intercept marks by the AFL’s statistical partner, Champion Data. In the lead up to the finals series, Vlastuin was named to the best 22 in The Age chief football reporter Jake Niall and the Herald Sun chief football reporter Mark Robinson’s teams of the year in 2019. Despite that recognition, he was left out of both the final team and even the squad of 40 players for the official All-Australian award and was identified by Fox Footy and the Herald Sun as one of the most notable omissions. In Richmond’s qualifying final win over the Brisbane Lions at The Gabba, Vlastuin recorded a career-best 12 rebound-50s in what Fox Footy described as a ‘damaging’ performance as a ball carrier at half-back. That earned his side a home preliminary final against Geelong, where Vlastuin’s defensive efforts helped his side through to a grand final match up against Greater Western Sydney. To that point, Vlastuin ranked fourth in the league for total intercepts that season. In the grand final, Vlastuin was part of a Richmond defence that kept the Giants to 25 points, their lowest score in the club’s eight-year history and the lowest score by any team in a VFL/AFL grand final since 1960. He took a match-high 12 marks, was one of only five players to receive coaches award votes (three votes) and was described by AFL Media as “one of the Tigers’ best” players on the day. Vlastuin finished the season with a second premiership in three years and placed fourth in the club’s best and fairest count, his best finish to date. He was also named at number 41 in Herald Sun chief football reporter Mark Robinson’s list of the league’s best players in 2019 and was ninth among all defenders on that same list.
What's Nick Vlastuin Net Worth 2024
Net Worth (2024) | $1 Million (Approx.) |
Net Worth (2023) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2022) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2021) | Under Review |
Net Worth (2020) | Under Review |
Nick Vlastuin Family
Father's Name | Not Available |
Mother's Name | Not Available |
Siblings | Not Available |
Spouse | Not Available |
Childrens | Not Available |