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AFL FAQs - AFL Clubs
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After operating with twelve Victorian
Suburban teams for over fifty years, the Victorian Football
League (V.F.L) as it was then called, expanded in 1982
when South Melbourne became the Swans after moving to
Sydney. In 1987, the West Coast Eagles and the Brisbane
Lions joined the league.
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In 1990,
the league became known as the Australian Football League
(A.F.L). The Adelaide Crows entered the league in 1991,
followed by the Fremantle Dockers in 1995 and finally
Port Adelaide Power in 1996.
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Adelaide
Crows |
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| Joined league:
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1991 |
| Home venue: |
Football Park, Adelaide |
| Official
Colours: |
Navy blue guernsey, with red and gold
hoops |
| Premierships:
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2 |
After an audacious bid by Port Adelaide
to enter the competition, the AFL gave Adelaide the
green light to become the first South Australian team
in 1991. Under coach Graham Cornes, who played only
a handful of games in the VFL, but was considered one
of the greatest footballers of his era, the Crows proved
competitive in their first season winning 10 matches
to miss the finals by only three games.
And it is certainly no picnic for visiting
teams making the trip to the hostile surroundings of
Football Park where an opposition goal is met with a
stunned silence.
The Crows finished ninth in their first
two years, but the fear Victorians felt for the new
Adelaide team was well-founded by 1993.
With glamour full-forward Tony Modra booting
129 goals that year, the Crows led Essendon by 41 points
at half-time in the preliminary final only to be overrun
by 11 points at the final siren.
It was thought to be only a matter of
time before the Crows won their first premiership, but
in the comfort zone of their new success and, an inability
to win in Melbourne, they finished 11th in the next
two seasons.
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At the end of 1994, Cornes was made the
scapegoat - amid claims of dissension with the players
- and was replaced by former Fitzroy coach Robert Shaw.
But Shaw had little success and the Adelaide hierarchy
- with fans demanding success and the team considered
a joke outside South Australia - turned to former South
Australian and AFL champion Malcolm Blight in 1997 to
lead it to the promised land. Blight was quick to stamp
his personal authority when he publicly lambasted the
players early on after a loss as he attempted to change
the 'soft' culture of the club.
A number of previous stalwarts such as
Andrew Jarman and Tony McGuinness left the club and
Blight put his faith in youngsters and by the end of
1997 the Crows had made the Grand Final.
While going in as underdogs against St
Kilda, Blight's coaching experience and the brilliance
of Darren Jarman and youngsters Andrew McLeod and Shane
Ellen realised the Victorians' worst nightmare as the
Crows took home their first premiership.
After a slow start to the 1998 season
many pundits had written the Crows off by the time they
were soundly beaten by Melbourne in the first week of
the finals. But after brushing past Sydney and the hapless
Bulldogs in two successive away finals, the supremely
confident Crows staged a magnificent come-from-behind
win over North Melbourne to win back-to-back premierships.
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Brisbane
Lions |
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| Joined league:
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1987 |
| Home venue: |
The Gabba, Queensland |
| Official
Colours: |
Maroon guernsey, with gold 'V' and
white trim |
| Premierships:
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0
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Thursday, 4th July,
1996, was a landmark day not just for AFL football but
for sport in Australia. It was the birth day of the
Brisbane Lions, formed via an historic merger between
the Brisbane Bears and the Fitzroy Lions.
For the first time in elite level sport
in Australia two professional organisations joined forces
to form one, ending a lengthy period of uncertainty
and media speculation over the entire issue.
Fitzroy, a member of the VFL/AFL, had
fought a long and seemingly endless battle against financial
instability. Often it had seemed they would go under,
and just as often there was merger speculation.
As far back as 1986, when the Brisbane
Bears were being formed, Fitzroy came within a whisker
of relocating north to become the Queensland-based side.
But a private benefactor saved the day.
Every year thereafter they found a similar
"escape route". They battled on, driven by
the spirit of history and tradition, until at last financial
problems caught up with them.
Ironically, the Nauru Insurance Corporation,
who two years earlier had saved the club from extinction
with a sizeable injection of loan capital, had appointed
an Administrator to recoup their debts of $1.25million.
Now, with nowhere else to turn, a merger,
with the lure of a $6million "carrot" offered
by the AFL, became the only option.
Public opinion, driven by strong media
speculation, suggested Fitzroy would merge with North
Melbourne, but in the last days before the deadline
the Bears hierarchy snuck under the Kangaroos' guard.
They snatched a deal that would preserve the history
and tradition of Fitzroy and provide the Brisbane-based
club with a critical Melbourne supporter base, some
key ex-Fitzroy players and a cash injection that would
ensure on-going financial stability.
So, on 1 November, 1996, after Fitzroy
supporters had bid farewell to their club as it was
known, and Brisbane Bears supporters had prepared for
the change, the merger club was officially introduced
to the AFL.
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The "new" team would wear a
new jumper, featuring a maroon body, with a gold Lion
on the front, blue shoulders, a gold collar and gold
trim. The number on the back would be gold, with white
trim, the shorts would be maroon. Socks would be maroon,
with blue and gold bands at the top.
They would play 11 "home" games
at the Gabba in Brisbane, and as many "away"
games as possible in Melbourne, thereby satisfying the
needs of two distinct supporter bases.
The history of both clubs was preserved
and life members from both were recognised jointly.
Slowly, the difficult task of merging two clubs into
one in such a passionate industry as football took place.
Roger Merrett, the Bears' favorite son,
was honoured in the twin naming of the Brisbane Lions'
Club Champion trophy. A subsequent poll of ex-Fitzroy
members chose Kevin Murray as the other person to be
recognised in this fashion.
The Brisbane Lions' club song adopted
the music of the old Fitzroy club song - the stirring
tune of the Marseillaise, or the French National Anthem.
The words were adapted accordingly, taking different
lines from the previous songs of the Bears and Fitzroy.
It was a merger which brought together
the old and the new of the AFL. There was the proud
history and tradition of Fitzroy, a one-time power club
of the competition who had struggled in recent times.
And there was the youthful exuberance of the Bears,
who, after a diabolical beginning, in 1996 had stamped
themselves as a legitimate force in the AFL when they
went within one game of the Centenary grand final.
And so, in 1997, the Brisbane Lions joined
the AFL competition. It was the end of an era for two
clubs, and the beginning of an era for one.
Their 1998 season was one of disappointment
and coach John Northey was replaced mid-way through
the season by hardman Roger Merrett.
The Lions continuing struggle for success
saw a board cleanout and Merrett passed over for the
ongoing coaching job at the end of the season.
Hawthorn legend Leigh Matthews was coaxed
north to coach the Lions in one of the most anticipated
appointments in recent AFL history.
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Carlton
Blues |
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| Joined league:
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1897 |
| Home venue: |
Optus Oval, Victoria |
| Official
Colours: |
Navy blue guernsey with white monogram |
| Premierships:
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16
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One of the proudest and most successful
clubs in the league with 16 premierships. Carlton struggled
to make any impact when it first joined the league in
1897.
But under former Test cricketer and Fitzroy
player John Worrall, the Blues stamped themselves as
a power within 10 years when they won three consecutive
premierships from 1906 and only missed a fourth by two
points.
During the war, the Blues collected back-to-back
flags in 1914-1915, but failed to win another flag until
1938.
Seven years later, the Blues were involved
in another premiership in a Grand Final, later labelled
the 'Bloodbath' when nine players were reported in one
of the most vicious matches on record.
Aside from another premiership two years
later, the Blues failed to add to their collection until
1968 and 1970 - the latter in one of the greatest comebacks
this century under coach Ron Barassi.
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Trailing by 44 points at half-time, Barassi
instructed his players to handball at every opportunity
and with unknown Teddy Hopkins chiming in with four
goals, the Blues overhauled Collingwood to win the flag
- and enhance one of the most bitter rivalries in the
league that still stands today.
Carlton continued to be succesful with
a flag in 1972 and then started a reign of dominance
when it won three premierships in four years from 1979-1982.
The Club also claimed another flag under Robert Walls
in 1987.
By the early 1990s, the Blues had what
was considered an ageing list, but under David Parkin
- who had success with the Blues in 1981 and 82 before
being sacked in 1985 - delivered the faithful their
16th flag - an AFL record until Essendon equalled it
in 2000.
Carlton has been littered with some of
the game's greatest players including champion full-forward
Harry 'Soapy' Vallence, Alex Jesaulenko, John Nicholls,
Serge and Steve Silvagni, Bruce Doull and Stephen Kernahan.
During the 1970s and 1980s the Blues have
often found themselves in the news through the affairs
of outspoken presidents George Harris and John Elliott
and, while at times they have been ruthless in their
pursuit of success, it has paid dividends.
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Collingwood
Magpies |
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| Joined league:
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1897 |
| Home venue: |
Melbourne Cricket Ground |
| Official
Colours: |
Vertical black and white striped
guernsey |
| Premierships:
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14
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You either love them or hate them is the
catchphrase associated with the Magpies. Although their
success has been limited in the modern era, they still
draw the big crowds and their fans still believe the
club is the greatest in Australia. Collingwood was involved
in the league right from the start and was quickly identified
as representing the working class. It did not take long
for the Magpies to achieve success with back-to-back
premierships in 1902-03.
They collected another flag in 1910 and,
in 1913, the legendary Jock McHale, who played in the
centre in the 1910 flag, turned the club into the most
feared combination with eight premierships in the next
38 years.
He also guided the club to four consecutive
flags - 1927-1930 - a record unlikely to be broken.
In the 1940s, the Magpies failed to win
a flag, but by the 1950s returned to the top with flags
in 1953 and 1958.
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The 1958 flag was one of the greatest
in the club's history and most pundits agreed Melbourne
was the better team. But the Magpies, desperate to halt
the Demons' charge towards four consecutive flags, took
a physical approach into the Grand Final, and while
the Demons were intent on evening up the bumps, the
Magpies went on to win the flag. But success from then
on was impossible to attain.
In the next 32 years, the Magpies were
to contest nine Grand Finals only to be foiled at the
last hurdle - along the way having the unflattering
term of Colliwobbles attached to them - a reference
to the fact they 'choked' in the big games. But in 1990
under former Hawthorn champion Leigh Matthews, the Magpies
broke the drought by defeating Essendon in a Grand Final
that produced one of the biggest brawls ever seen.
The Magpies have produced some of the
game's greats including Bob Rose, Lou Richards, Harry
Collier, Jack Regan, Peter McKenna, Tony Shaw, Murray
Weideman, Wayne Richardson and Gordon Coventry who for
many years held the goalkicking record with 1299 goals.
After a disappointing 1998 season, media
personality Eddie McGuire swept to power at Victoria
Park, bringing with him a new board and vowing to return
the Pies to their glory days.
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Essendon
Bombers |
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| Joined league:
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1897 |
| Home venue: |
Colonial Stadium |
| Official
Colours: |
Black guernsey with red sash |
| Premierships:
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16
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For the trivia buffs, it was Essendon
who won the first VFL premiership in 1897. Since then
the Bombers have been one of the most consistent clubs
in the competition, winning premierships on a regular
basis to be, along with Carlton, the most successful
club in the league.
The Bombers first address was at Jolimont
Street before making Windy Hill their home in 1921.
They attained their nickname because of their closeness
to the Essendon Airport.
They have had many fine players including
the great Dick Reynolds, who won three Brownlow Medals;
captained the club for 12 years and coached it to four
premierships during the 1940s and 1950s.
Arguably, the Bombers produced the greatest
full-forward of all time in John Coleman, who played
only 98 games, but kicked 537 goals. Coleman was a freakish
mark with great skills around the ground. He played
in the 1949-50 premierships, and many fans argue his
suspension cost their team the 1951 flag.
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Essendon also has the distinction of producing
the Daniher brothers - Terry, Chris, Neale and Tony
who, aside from Neale, created league history by playing
in the same team late in 1990.
Coleman also coached the Bombers to the
1962 and 1965 flags, but success eluded the club until
former Richmond defender Kevin Sheedy took over the
reins in 1981. Within five years, Sheedy had coached
the club to back-to-back flags and added another to
the cupboard with his 'Baby Bombers' in 1993.
In 1992 Essendon was one of the first
clubs to take to the league's rationalisation plans
and base itself at the MCG where it thrived with membership
and crowd size.
The Bombers were the first club
to climb aboard as Colonial Stadium's first tenant
for the 2000 season, where they proceeded to have an
incredible season. After winning the pre-season Ansett
Cup they only lost once in the regular season, before
clinching their 16th flag with a victory over Melbourne.
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Freemantle
Dockers |
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| Joined league:
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1995 |
| Home venue: |
Subiaco, Western Australia |
| Official
Colours: |
Purple guernsey with green and red
chest. Panels separated by a white anchor |
| Premierships:
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0
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After West Coast started to dominate the
competition in the early 1990s, it was only a matter
of time before another club would emerge from such a
football-talented state as Western Australia.
In 1995, the Fremantle Dockers were given
the green light and although they failed to dominate
in their first year they won eight games and played
an exciting brand of free flowing football.
Early on, the Dockers were able to entice
back Ben Allan from Hawthorn, Peter Mann from North
Melbourne and Stephen O'Reilly from Geelong to help
bolster their young line-up.
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The Dockers were reasonably consistent
in their first three seasons without setting the league
alight, winning eight games in their first season, seven
in their second and 10 in their third. But they faltered
in 1998, winning only seven games and failing to make
any real headway after high expectations.
Coach Gerard Neesham had been loathe to
use taggers or employ ultra-defensive tactics preferring
to allow his players to create their own opportunities.
But his game plan became too predictable and other clubs
eventually found it easy to exploit.
Neesham was replaced at the end
of the 1998 season by former Geelong player and Sydney
reserves coach Damian Drum. That coupled with the signing
of such players as Adelaide star Tony Modra and Kangaroos
premiership player Peter Bell will undoubtedly instil
renewed optimism in their growing supporter base.
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Geelong
Cats |
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| Joined league:
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1897 |
| Home venue: |
Kardinia Park, Victoria |
| Official
Colours: |
Navy blue and white hooped guernsey |
| Premierships:
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6
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Geelong is the second oldest club in the
league with links to the game's founder Thomas Wentworth
Wills. The club has had a number of nicknames from Seagulls,
to the Pivotonians because the club was the railway
pivot between Melbourne and Ballarat, but they are best
known as the Cats which they adopted in the 1950s.
While Geelong was the most powerful team
in the old Victorian Football Association with seven
premierships in 10 years between 1878-1876, the Cats
failed to make the grade when it entered the VFL in
1897.
In fact, it was not until 1925 that it
had won its first premiership and success was only spasmodic
until back-to-back flags in 1951-52 under Reg Hickey.
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Their
last success came in 1963 under the legendary Bob Davis,
but since then the Cats have been a source of great heartbreak
for their fans - especially from the late 1980s.
Under coach Malcolm Blight, the Cats were
involved in one of the great Grand Finals of all time
when they failed by just six points to overhaul the
powerful Hawthorn team in 1989, despite the great Gary
Ablett kicking nine goals to win the Norm Smith Medal
for best player on the field.
In the next six years, the Cats were to
play in another three Grand Finals and, despite some
top-line players in their team, were unable to break
the drought.
But despite this heartbreak, Geelong fans
can point to the fact they have produced two of the
greatest players in history in ruckman Polly Farmer
and Ablett.
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Hawthorn
Hawks |
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| Joined league:
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1925 |
| Home venue: |
Melbourne Cricket Ground |
| Official
Colours: |
Vertical brown and gold striped guernsey |
| Premierships:
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9
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Anyone watching Hawthorn win four premierships
in the mid-1980s may have been forgiven for thinking
the team had a long and rich history behind it, but
the opposite was the case.
Hawthorn had a less than flattering record
in the Victorian Football Association and may have surprised
many by being admitted to the VFL in 1925.
Originally adopting the nickname of the
Mayblooms before becoming better known as the Hawks,
the club languished near the bottom of the ladder for
many years and it was not until 1957 that it tasted
its first finals appearance.
But success would finally find its way
down to Glenferrie Oval in 1960 with the appointment
of four-time club best and fairest John Kennedy as coach.
The Hawks soon became known as Kennedy's
Commandos as he instilled a new discipline and fitness
structure into the club and success soon followed with
the club's first premiership the following year and
further flags in 1971 and 1976.
By the time Kennedy had stepped down at
the end of 1976, the Hawks were no longer the laughing
stock of the league, but their most successful period
was still to come.
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David Parkin collected another flag in
1978, but three years later Allan Jeans took over and
oversaw the club dominate the competition in a way rarely
seen before.
After winning the flag in 1983, the Hawks
never finished worse than first or second until 1990
and in that time collected another three flags including
back-to-back flags in 1988 and 89 - although Alan Joyce
took over in 1989 with ill-health forcing Jeans out
for the year.
The Hawks collected another flag in 1991,
but since then success has eluded them. Many people
believe no other team will dominate the competition
the way Hawthorn did during that era.
After taking out the 1999 pre-season Ansett
Cup and finishing 6th in 2000, many are predicting the
Hawks to be big improvers after a period of rebuilding
through the mid-1990s.
Some of the great names to have played
for the Hawks include Leigh Matthews - regarded as one
of the greatest players of all time - champion full-forward
Peter Hudson, Michael Tuck - the league games record
holder with 426 games, Dermott Brereton and Chris Langford
to name just a few.
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Melbourne
Demons |
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| Joined league:
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1897 |
| Home venue: |
Melbourne Cricket Ground |
| Official
Colours: |
Navy blue guernsey with red yolk |
| Premierships:
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12
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The oldest club in the league formed by
the game's founder Thomas Wentworth Wills in 1858. Melbourne
was known as the 'Invincible Whites' early on, but adopted
the Redlegs tag in 1872 which is still used today.
Melbourne's other nickname - the Demons
- was not used until after the second World War.
The Demons won their first VFL premiership
in 1900, but it was another 25 years before success
came again. Under the leadership of Checker Hughes,
the Demons started to make an impact with a hat-trick
of flags from 1939-1941, but it was under the genius
of Norm Smith that Melbourne dominated the competition.
The Demons reigned supreme with Smith
as coach and the on-field leadership of Ron Barassi
in the 1950s with five premierships in six years - 1955-57
and 1959-60 - and then added another in 1964.
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But then a double blow - from which many
believe the Demons never recovered - happened in 1965
when Barassi switched to Carlton and Smith was sacked
mid-way through the year.
Smith returned, but the Demons had lost
their momentum missing the finals for the first time
since 1954 and the club languished for many years afterwards.
In the early 1980s, the Demons brought
back their favourite son in Barassi, but he failed to
make any impact and it was not until John Northey took
over in 1986 that they started the climb back to respectability.
They made the Grand Final in 1988, only to be crushed
by a record margin of 96 points by Hawthorn.
In recent years, Melbourne was mooted
as a potential merger partner, but new president, businessman
Joe Gutnick and new coach Neale Daniher turned the club
around in 1998, finishing fourth after being wooden
spooners in 1997 and making the grand final in 2000.
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Kangaroos
(Formerly North Melbourne) |
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| Joined league:
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1925 |
| Home venue: |
Melbourne Cricket Ground |
| Official
Colours: |
Vertical royal blue and white striped
guernsey |
| Premierships:
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4
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Another club that was a late entry into
the league in 1925, North Melbourne had been known as
the Shinboners before it adopted the Kangaroos as its
official name and emblem.
For almost a quarter of a century, North
Melbourne gave few reasons why it should have been in
the competition languishing near the bottom of the ladder.
It had two brief moments of glory making
the finals in 1945 and and the Grand Final against Essendon
in 1950.
It was not until the arrival of supercoach
Ron Barassi in 1973, that the once easybeats started
to make rivals sit up and take notice.
After finishing sixth in 1973, the Kangaroos
made their first Grand Final in 1974 only to go down
to Richmond, but the following year, amid wild celebrations,
the Roos took their first flag home to Arden Street.
Bridesmaid again in 1976, North Melbourne
was again in the thick of things when it was involved
in the sensationally drawn Grand Final of 1977 against
Collingwood and then won the replay comfortably the
following week.
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Through the mid-1980s, Barry Cable, Malcolm
Blight, John Kennedy and champion defender, Wayne Schimmelbusch,
all had stints as coach, but, while at times very competitive,
no flags were forthcoming.
In the 1990s, as market forces started
to bear down on Melbourne-based clubs, North Melbourne
followed in Essendon's footsteps to the MCG and then
embarked on the bold step of making night football their
own.
They found success and a new breed of
fans. Denis Pagan, one of the most successful coaches
at under-19 and reserves level, was finally given a
senior role as coach in 1993 and, after three consistent
years near the top, broke the drought with the help
of champion forward Wayne Carey to win the flag in 1996
and once again deny the critics who had predicted the
demise of the club.
Despite being touted as grand final favourites
in 1998, the Roos kicked poorly and surrendered a significant
half-time lead to enable the Crows to collect their
second flag. With regular matches in Sydney and Canberra
since 1999 and the name change from North Melbourne
to the Kangaroos, a move North is likely within the
next five years.
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Port
Adelaide Power |
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| Joined league:
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1996 |
| Home venue: |
Football Park, Adelaide |
| Official
Colours: |
blue, black and white guernsey |
| Premierships:
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0
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Port Adelaide is the oldest club in South
Australia and the most successful with 34 premierships
and 34 second placings.
With such an abundance of football talent
in South Australia - similar to that of Western Australia
- it was only a matter of time before a second team
emerged from that state.
Port Adelaide had already made one bid
in 1990 to enter the AFL, but was rebuffed by the local
clubs from the South Australian Football League.
But in 1997, the Power's wish was fulfilled
and with a rich tradition and history of football, it
was time to mix it with the best of the best.
Most experts looked at the playing list
of Port and were struggling to work out if it could
even win a game let alone several, but the Power was
about to shock even its loyal supporters.
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In
one of the most creditable performances in a debut season,
Port won 10 of its 22 games to finish ninth on the ladder,
including a victory over arch rivals Adelaide early in
the season.
With John Cahill at the helm and a handful
of stars such as captain and Brownlow Medallist Gavin
Wanganeen, Port continually amazed both fans and foes
alike with their tenacious and disciplined play.
The Power maintained their middle ranking
on the ladder but were disappointed with their second
season in 1998.
But after recruiting well, a new coach
in favourite son Mark Williams, and a strong showing
in the pre-season 1999 Ansett Cup, expectations were
high for the Power's third AFL season. And the club
did not let their fans down, making the finals for the
first time.
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Richmond
Tigers |
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| Joined league:
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1908 |
| Home venue: |
Melbourne Cricket Ground |
| Official
Colours: |
black guernsey with gold sash |
| Premierships:
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10
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Richmond entered the VFL in 1908, but
had to wait until 1920-21 before grabbing its first
two flags. The Tigers were ultra competitive during
the late 1920s making the Grand Final in 1927/28/29,
but in three successive years were conquered by the
talented and tough Collingwood team.
But the Tigers' persistence paid off when
they picked up flags in 1932 and again in 1934. Under
the legendary Jack Dyer - considered by many as one
of the meanest and toughest players to pull on a boot
- the Tigers had more success in 1943.
But after that there was little joy at
Tigerland until a relatively unknown coach from Shepparton
in Tom Hafey took over the coaching role in 1966.
Hafey's philosophy was fitness, fitness
and more fitness and a year later the power of the Tigers
emerged with a 1967 premiership, followed by another
one in 1969.
There was more success for Hafey's heroes
with back-to-back flags in 1973 and 74 and after his
departure Tony Jewell took the Tigers to a flag in 1980,
but that was when the rot started to set in.
Despite making the Grand Final in 1982
under Francis Bourke, the Tigers managed to cull six
coaches until 1993 when the underrated John Northey
was appointed coach.
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Northey's Tigers struggled in their two
seasons together, but he finally moved the club in the
right direction with a finals berth in 1995.
Yet inexplicably, depending on who you
believe, club and Northey fell out and Robert Walls
was appointed coach and the Tigers stumbled and returned
to the dark old days, missing the finals the following
season.
The following season, 1997, was again
a poor return for the Tigers and, true to form, Walls
was sacked and Jeff Gieschen was given his first senior
AFL position.
Whatever you say about the Tigers' on-field
performances they have certainly provided plenty of
headlines off the field in their relentless and ruthless
approach to achieving success. But sadly for Tigers
supporters the club has achieved little in the way of
premierships for a very long time.
The Tigers stumbled again in 1998 and
1999, missing out on the finals after capitulating in
the last game of the season. The club held high hopes
when former St Kilda star Danny Frawley was appointed
coach for the 2000 season, but unfortunately the Tigers
once again just missed out on the finals.
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St
Kilda Saints |
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| Joined league:
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1897 |
| Home venue: |
Colonial Stadium |
| Official
Colours: |
Vertical red, white and black striped
guernsey with crest |
| Premierships:
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1
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While St Kilda is one of the oldest clubs
in the league, it has one of the poorest records.
Known as the Seasiders early on - but
later more popularly as the Saints - St Kilda was invited
to join the VFL in 1897 largely because of its favourable
home base, the Junction Oval. St Kilda had one of the
worst starts in history playing 48 games before it registered
a victory.
It was not as if St Kilda lacked champions
with players such as Hugh Cumberland, Roy Cazaly and
goalkicking machines Bill Mohr and Neil Roberts who
won successive Brownlow Medals in 1957-58, but as a
team the Saints failed to fire.
Their only Grand Final appearance was
in 1913 and it was not until the 1960s that the Saints
started to show some on-field spirit. Allan Jeans was
appointed coach in 1961 and for the next few years,
the Saints either made the finals or were thereabouts
until 1965 when they reached their second Grand Final,
but went down to Essendon.
But glory was near and in one of the most
nail-biting Grand Finals contested in history, the Saints
defeated Collingwood by just one point in 1966 with
the great Darrel Baldock captaining the team and Barry
Breen kicking the winning point - something that to
this day he is constantly reminded about.
Despite stars such as Baldock, firebrand
ruckman Carl Ditterich and star centreman Ian Stewart
the Saints were unable to add to their premiership collection
although they were runners-up to Hawthorn in 1971.
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After that brief period of success the
Saints wallowed for the next 20 years and during that
time used six coaches, sacking five of them.
Ken Sheldon took over the club and with
champion full-forward Tony Lockett on fire the Saints
made a brief finals appearance in 1992, but a year later
Sheldon was replaced by Stan Alves.
From 1993 to 1996 the Saints struggled
under Alves and his tenure looked shaky after the club's
poor performances early in 1997, but the players rallied
and they made it into the Grand Final only to be outplayed
by Adelaide.
The Saints went backwards in 1998, finishing
also rans after an inexplicable loss of form in the
second half of the season. Coach Stan Alves was held
responsible for the downturn, and was replaced by former
Essendon champion Tim Watson at the end of the season.
Based at Waverley in recent years, the
Saints reluctantly abandoned their south-eastern suburbs'
base to become Colonial Stadium co-tenants in 2000.
The 2000 season was a disaster for the
Saints, finishing with the wooden spoon after only winning
two games. Watson stood down and was replaced by AFL
legend Malcolm Blight. His appointment, coupled with
the arrival of several big name players, has the club
very optimistic about its future.
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Sydney
Swans |
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| Joined league:
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1897 (South Melbourne)
1982 (Sydney) |
| Home venue: |
Sydney Cricket Ground |
| Official
Colours: |
White guernsey with red yoke incorporating
Opera House insignia |
| Premierships:
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3
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Sydney was created from the old South
Melbourne in 1982. With South Melbourne struggling under
a weight of debts and the league keen to explore new
territory in New South Wales, the bold move was made
for South to head to Sydney.
South Melbourne was one of the original
members of the league in 1897, but had limited success
with premierships in 1909, 1918 and 1933.
The club will long be remembered for the
1945 Grand Final against Carlton dubbed the 'Bloodbath'
in which nine players were reported on 15 charges in
a game that the Swans lost.
Although legends such as goalkicking star
Bob Pratt - who still holds the record along with Peter
Hudson of 150 goals in one season - Laurie Nash and
triple Brownlow Medallist Bob Skilton made their mark
with the club, the Swans always struggled for success.
After making the move to Sydney - much
to the anger and disgust of many supporters - the club
had some success under Tommy Hafey making the finals
in 1986 and 1987. These were the days when Dr Geoffrey
Edelsten waved money around and brought big-name players
and when the flashy Warwick Capper, forever remembered
for his tight shorts, made his name in the goal square.
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But eventually the money ran out and the
Swans struggled financially and on the field. But the
league was determined that a team survive in the NSW
market, and the Swans were given financial help and
draft choices in a bid to turn things around.
After hitting rock-bottom under Colin
Kinnear and Gary Buckenara, the great Ron Barassi took
over the reins in 1993 with a long-term plan of rebuilding
the club for a younger man to take over.
That man was Rod Eade, who took over in
1996, and guided the club into the Grand Final where
it was outgunned by North Melbourne.
But the Swans are no longer a laughing-stock
and have made great inroads into the Sydney market attracting
a large and loyal following, to the point where there
is now talk of a second club eventually coming out of
Sydney.
Goal-kicking collossus Tony Lockett set
the AFL world on fire in 1999 when he broke the all-time
AFL goal-kicking record, eventually retiring with 1357
goals.
After just missing the finals in 2000,
and courageous captain Paul Kelly back from a knee injury,
the Swans will be looking for big things in 2001.
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West
Coast Eagles |
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| Joined league:
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1987 |
| Home venue: |
Subiaco, Western Australia |
| Official
Colours: |
Royal blue guernsey with gold eagle
wings incorporating emblem |
| Premierships:
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2
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When West Coast first joined the league,
Essendon coach Kevin Sheedy was one of the first to
warn of the potential power from the team out west -
and it did not take long before he was proven right.
In its first season in 1987 under coach
Ron Alexander and captain Ross Glendinning, the Eagles
won 11 of their 22 games to finish only one match outside
the finals.
But the Eagles hierarchy, although new
to the AFL, were quick to pick up the ruthlessness of
their Victorian counterparts and despite the team's
impressive inaugural season, Alexander was replaced
by John Todd.
Todd was quick to capitalise on the good
work and the Eagles made their first finals appearance
the following year and were beaten by just two points
by Melbourne in the elimination final when Murray Wrensted
ran into an open goal in the dying moments of the game
and missed.
The Eagles slipped back to 11th the following
year, and the Eagles decided it was time for some Victorian
influence and Mick Malthouse was appointed coach.
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Malthouse had almost immediate success
in 1990 lifting his team into the finals where they
were involved in a sensational tied game with Collingwood
in the qualifying final when Peter Sumich failed to
convert with only minutes left.
The Eagles were thrashed the following
week, but they had put other clubs on notice - they
were a power waiting to happen.
They were runners-up to the powerful Hawthorn
line-up the following year, but in 1992 and again in
1994 won premierships defeating Geelong both times.
The Eagles ageing list caught them out
in 1998. They dipped to seventh and were well off the
pace, being thrashed by the Western Bulldogs in the
first week of the finals.
Several veterans of the Eagles' golden
era retired before the 1999 season, including captain
John Worsfold, but the club still made the finals for
the 10th consecutive year, an outstanding achievement.
Following the departure of Malthouse to
Collingwood, former Hawthorn champion Ken Judge took
over the coaching job in 2000.
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Western
Bulldogs (Formerly Footscray) |
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| Joined league:
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1925 |
| Home venue: |
Optus Oval, Victoria |
| Official
Colours: |
Royal blue guernsey with red and
white bands |
| Premierships:
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1
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Formerly known as Footscray, the club
was a power in the Victorian Football Association winning
nine premierships before being admitted to the VFL in
1925.
But success was very rare for the club
dubbed the 'Bulldogs', with only three finals appearances
before the 1950s.
In 1951, Charlie Sutton took over as coach
and in his second season, the Bulldogs started to give
their fans some hope with a finals appearance a year
later.
In 1954 with a young Teddy Whitten at
centre half-forward, the Bulldogs finally tasted success
with a premiership.
Whitten went on to become a living legend
of the game playing in 10 finals, coaching the team
for 13 years and captaining it for 14.
His games record of 321 games was eventually
broken by Doug Hawkins who went on to play another eight
for the Dogs.
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During the 1980s, the Bulldogs enjoyed
little success except for a brief finals appearance
in 1985 when the club was beaten in the preliminary
final by Hawthorn.
In the 1990s the club has been competitive
and in 1998 the club hierarchy decided to change the
name of the club to give it more of a western suburbs
flavour.
Alan Joyce was sacked in 1996 and Terry
Wallace took over, promising a more attacking football
style in 1997. He delivered as the Bulldogs jumped from
15th position to third after the home and away season
only to be bundled out in the preliminary final by Adelaide.
History repeated itself in the cruellest
fashion when the Bulldogs lost their second consecutive
preliminary final in 1998. They finished 6th in 1999
and 8th in 2000.
With finances short for Victorian-based
clubs, the Western Bulldogs have made every effort to
ensure their long-term viability by taking their home
matches away from their beloved Whitten Oval (formerly
the Western Oval) to Optus Oval and now Colonial Stadium
as a permanent base.
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