Career
He played Australian rules football with South Melbourne in the Victorian Football League (VFL). Tampion, a wingman recruited from the University Blues in the Victorian Amateur Football Association, played 16 VFL games for South Melbourne over three seasons, from 1958 to 1960. His most noted moment as a football player was a goal he kicked during the 1958 VFL season, in which he made a career high nine appearances.
As he was the centre wing around 80-yards from goal, he decided he was too far out and handed the ball to the umpire, only to be told by South Melbourne"s coach Ron Clegg that he should take the kick.
Tampion, who had the wind behind him, kicked a drop punt which cleared the surprised Street Kilda defenders who had not pushed back. Street Kilda"s Bob Kupsch raced back towards the goals but the ball beat him to register what was described in The Age as the goal of the season.
He made two appearances for South Melbourne in the 1959 season, then a further five in the 1960 season. In 1961 he played reserves football for the Carlton Football Club.
With his partner, Tampion set up the Church of the New Faith in Melbourne in 1968, which was able to circumvent these laws.
He later sued Justice Kevin Anderson for loss and damages, a result of the Board of Inquiry which he headed. Tampion believed both Anderson and the counsel assisting were biased and went beyond their proper terms of reference. In the writ, Tampion claimed the judges had shown misfeasance, breach of duty and recklessness.
The lawsuit was dismissed in the Supreme Court as "frivolous and vexatious" and an "abuse of the process of the court".
Tampion died of cancer at the age of 59.