Seymour’s David Mundy’s legacy on Western Australian football has been rubber-stamped.
The former Fremantle superstar was inducted into the Western Australia Football Hall of Fame this week, three-and-a-half years after the 40-year-old retired from the AFL.
Mundy played a club record 376 games at the Dockers over a 19-year career, winning the Dockers’ best-and-fairest in 2010 and earning an All-Australian blazer in 2015.
The one-club stalwart also captained the side in 2016.
Mundy’s induction coincided with other former AFL guns Josh Kennedy (West Coast) and WA-born Geelong dual premiership hero Harry Taylor.
Mundy most recently pulled up the socks for his Victorian home town in 2024, playing four games for Seymour in the Goulburn Valley League season, where he was named in the best on three occasions.
Since then, Mundy has moved back to the state he achieved his footballing greatness, but has yet to tie his boot laces at another local club.
In other Seymour AFL news, Sam Durham’s 2026 campaign with Essendon gets underway on Friday night, as the Bombers take on Hawthorn at the MCG.
The Lions export recently signed a long-term deal to stay a Bomber until at least the end of 2032.