During the early 1960s, Stannage played Australian rules football in the Western Australian National Football League. He was a left-footed wingman whose small frame did not stop him taking spectacular marks. Stannage showed skills with and former Swans coach John Todd said, "he would have been one of the game's greats had he not chosen academia." His biggest game was the 1965 WANFL Grand Final when he kicked two goals. Commentator Dennis Cometti said, "the Swans led by 21 after three-quarters, but East Fremantle surged to win." That year he made his debut for Western Australia and he was fifth in the Sandover Medal count. His career included interstate games and he played against Victoria. At 22, he left football to continue his studies having played 54 games for Swan Districts between 1964 and 1967. Stannage was a member of the West Australian Football Leagueboard of directors in 1986, when it was announced that the West Coast Eagles would join the Victorian Football League. Stannage took on the role chairman of selectors during the Eagles' first season. His son Chris was president of Swan Districts between 1996 and 1999, and the two worked closely together.
Academic career & later life
Stannage returned to Perth in 1971 to take up a position lecturing in history at UWA and was later appointed Professor of History there. As the sesquicentennial of Western Australia approached, Stannage was asked to undertake two major works. Perth City Council commissioned a history of the city: The People of Perth: A Social History of WA's Capital City. UWA Press asked Stannage to edit A New History of Western Australia, an 836-page reference work. These acclaimed works and others by Stannage wove together the strands of Aboriginal experience into white settlement and he formulated ways for WA history to be simplified and taught in schools. In 1991, Stannage was foundation chairman of the Heritage Council of Western Australia. He was made a Member of the Order of Australia, for services to the study of history and museum development, in the 1997 Australia Day Honours.. That same year he won the inaugural Prime Minister's Award for Australian University Teacher of the Year. Stannage was appointed a professor and executive dean, Division of Humanities at Curtin University, Perth, in 1999. He was one of the recipients of the Centenary Medal, awarded only in 2001, the centenary year of the federation of Australia, to people who had "made a contribution to Australian society or government". As a prominent Australian historian, Stannage was invited by federal Minister for Education, Julie Bishop to attend the Australian History Summit, 2006. That same year he was on a panel of five to select The West Australian's 100 most influential people in WA. Stannage died in Perth on 4 October 2012 at Sir Charles Gardiner Hospital. He was in a coma after suffering a heart attack eight days earlier. He had two children with his wife. Chris, a lawyer, and Katie, an orthopaedic surgeon. His older sister, Miriam Stannage, was a prominent artist.
Publications
The People of Perth: a Social History of Western Australia's Capital City