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==SANFL presence post AFL entry==
==SANFL presence post AFL entry==
In 1994 the Port Adelaide Football Club obtained an AFL licence, however the club had to wait until 1997 to partake in the competition as the Adelaide Crows had a clause preventing another club entering the national competition from South Australia until the end of 1996. Initially Port Adelaide's proposed model was to use its SANFL side as its reserves team. However other SANFL clubs did not agree to this model out of fear it would be too strong. In addition to this for the first few years after 1997, Port Adelaide's SANFL side was forced to train at Ethelton to ensure they would not gain an advantage using the Alberton training facilities. Australian football historian John Devaney described the forced separation of Port Adelaide's SANFL and AFL operations as being "akin to the enforced splitting up of families associated with military conquest or warfare".<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://australianfootball.com/clubs/bio/Port%20Adelaide/9|title=Australian Football - Port Adelaide Football Club - Bio|last=Soda|first=Programmable|website=australianfootball.com|language=en|access-date=2017-09-27}}</ref> {{External media|video1=[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=moe63vNTUHU The journey of the Port Adelaide Magpies since 1999 - Port Adelaide FC official YouTube channel (September 2017)]}}
<!-- Discussion about the contents of this section has been created at the talk page [[Talk:Port Adelaide Football Club]]. Perhaps engage there before kicking off an edit war? -->
When the Port Adelaide Football Club entered the AFL, a new state league team was created at the request of the SANFL and its clubs to fill the void left by the club. The new club was called the Port Adelaide Magpies Football Club as opposed to the original counterpart, the Port Adelaide Football Club, now playing in the national competition.<ref>{{Cite web|title = Australian Football - Port+Adelaide+Magpies Football Club - Bio|url = http://australianfootball.com/clubs/bio/Port%252BAdelaide%252BMagpies/318|website = australianfootball.com|accessdate = 2015-10-16}}</ref>
On 20 August 2010, the "One Port Adelaide Football Club" movement was launched by former player [[Tim Ginever]] to merge Port Adelaide's AFL and SANFL operations. A website was created that claimed 50,000 signatures were needed for the merger. On 15 November 2010, all nine SANFL clubs agreed that the off-field merger between the two operations would proceed.<ref>[http://onepafc.com.au/ Stop Press! One Club has been approved! See you at Alberton Oval at 11am Tuesday 16 November! #pafc]</ref><ref>[http://www.portadelaidefc.com.au/one%20pafc/tabid/16808/default.aspx One PAFC – Official AFL Website of the Port Adelaide Football Club]</ref> On 10 September 2013, Port Adelaide and the SANFL agreed to a model to allow all its AFL-listed players (not selected to play for Port Adelaide in the AFL) to play for the SANFL side. From 2015 onward, the club lost its recruiting zones and could no longer field sides in the junior SANFL competition. Port Adelaide subsequently started an Academy team composed of 18 to 22-year-olds.<ref>{{Cite web|title = Statement: Port Adelaide accepts SANFL invitation|url = http://www.portadelaidefc.com.au/news/2013-09-10/statement-port-adelaide-accepts-sanfl-invitation|website = portadelaidefc.com.au|accessdate = 2015-10-16}}</ref>

Australian football historian John Devaney described the forced separation of Port Adelaide's SANFL and AFL operations as being "akin to the enforced splitting up of families associated with military conquest or warfare".<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://australianfootball.com/clubs/bio/Port%20Adelaide/9|title=Australian Football - Port Adelaide Football Club - Bio|last=Soda|first=Programmable|website=australianfootball.com|language=en|access-date=2017-09-27}}</ref> On 20 August 2010, the "One Port Adelaide Football Club" movement was launched by former player [[Tim Ginever]] to merge the Port Adelaide Football Club and the Port Adelaide Magpies Football Club as one club. A website was created that claimed 50,000 signatures were needed for the two entities to merge. On 15 November 2010, all nine SANFL clubs agreed that the off-field merger between the two clubs would proceed.<ref>[http://onepafc.com.au/ Stop Press! One Club has been approved! See you at Alberton Oval at 11am Tuesday 16 November! #pafc]</ref><ref>[http://www.portadelaidefc.com.au/one%20pafc/tabid/16808/default.aspx One PAFC – Official AFL Website of the Port Adelaide Football Club]</ref>

On 10 September 2013, Port Adelaide and the SANFL agreed to a model to allow all its AFL-listed players (not selected to play for Port Adelaide in the AFL) to play for the club in the SANFL League competition. From 2015 onward, the club lost its recruiting zones and could no longer field sides in the junior SANFL competition. Port Adelaide subsequently started an Academy team composed of 18 to 22-year-olds.<ref>{{Cite web|title = Statement: Port Adelaide accepts SANFL invitation|url = http://www.portadelaidefc.com.au/news/2013-09-10/statement-port-adelaide-accepts-sanfl-invitation|website = portadelaidefc.com.au|accessdate = 2015-10-16}}</ref>

{{External media|video1=[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=moe63vNTUHU The journey of the Port Adelaide Magpies since 1999 - Port Adelaide FC official YouTube channel (September 2017)]}}
On the field in the SANFL, Port Adelaide has struggled to replicate their historic dominance of the competition. The club won back-to-back premierships in [[1998 SANFL season|1998]] and [[1999 SANFL season|1999]] but have failed to win a premiership since then. The Magpies went through a barren spell through most of the 2000s, often missing out on [[Playoffs|finals]] and struggling for success. In [[2014 SANFL season|2014]], in the first season of being permitted to select AFL-listed players, Port Adelaide won the [[minor premiership]] but lost to arch-rivals [[Norwood Football Club|Norwood]] in the Grand Final. The club next returned to the SANFL Grand Final in [[2017 SANFL Grand Final|2017]], though once more fell at the final hurdle, being defeated by [[Sturt Football Club|Sturt]] by just one point. The current captain of Port Adelaide's SANFL team is Steven Summerton and the coach is [[Chad Cornes]].<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.portadelaidefc.com.au/news/2014-02-26/sanfl-captain|title=Summerton to captain Magpies in 2014|work=Port Adelaide Football Club|date=26 February 2014}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.portadelaidefc.com.au/football/players-and-coaches/coaches/chad-cornes|title=Chad Cornes, SANFL coach|date=1 February 2017|work=Port Adelaide Football Club}}</ref>


== Women's teams ==
== Women's teams ==

Revision as of 08:05, 26 October 2017

Port Adelaide Football Club
Names
Full namePort Adelaide Football Club Ltd[1]
MottoWe Are Port Adelaide[2]
2017 season
After finals7th
Home-and-away season5th
Leading goalkickerCharlie Dixon (49 goals)
John Cahill MedalPaddy Ryder
Club details
FoundedMay 12, 1870; 154 years ago (1870-05-12)
ColoursAFL:   Black,   white,   teal
SANFL:   Black,   white
CompetitionAustralian Football League
Power–senior men
South Australian National Football League
Magpies–reserves men
South Australian Women's Football League
Magpies–senior women
SANFL reserves
Academy–development
ChairmanDavid Koch
CoachKen Hinkley (AFL)
Chad Cornes (SANFL)
Emma Sampson (SAWFL)
Captain(s)Travis Boak (AFL)
Steven Summerton (SANFL)
Kathryn Reynolds (SAWFL)
PremiershipsAFL (1): 2004
Championship of Australia (4):
1890, 1910, 1913, 1914
SANFL pre AFL entry (34):
1884, 1890, 1897, 1903, 1906, 1910, 1913, 1914, 1921, 1928, 1936, 1937, 1939, 1951, 1954, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1962, 1963, 1965, 1977, 1979, 1980, 1981, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1994, 1995, 1996
SANFL post AFL entry (2):

1998, 1999
WWI Patriotic League (2):
1916, 1917
WWII Patriotic League (1):
1942 (as Port-Torrens)
Ground(s)Adelaide Oval (capacity: 53,583)
 Alberton Oval (capacity: 17,000)
Former ground(s)Football Park (1974–2013)
Training ground(s)Alberton Oval
Uniforms
Home
Away
Alternate
Other information
Official websiteportadelaidefc.com.au

The Port Adelaide Football Club is a professional Australian rules football club based in Alberton, Port Adelaide, South Australia. The club's senior team plays in the Australian Football League (AFL) under the nickname Power, whilst its reserves and development teams compete in the South Australian National Football League (SANFL) under the nickname Magpies.[3] Port Adelaide is the oldest professional sporting club in South Australia and the fifth-oldest club in the AFL. Since the club's first game on 24 May 1870, the club has won 36 South Australian league premierships, including six in a row. The club also won the Champions of Australia competition on a record four occasions.[4][5] In 1997, the club joined the Australian Football League as the only pre-existing non-Victorian club—and subsequently added the 2004 AFL premiership to its achievements.

Club history

Inaugural club president John Hart, Jr..

1870–1876: Formation years

By the late 1860s Port Adelaide's river traffic was growing significantly causing John Rann, Mr. Leicester and Mr. Ireland to form a sporting club to benefit local wharf workers.[6] The Port Adelaide Football Club was established on 12 May 1870 as part of a joint Australian football and cricket club with the first training session taking place two days later.[7] It played its first match against a team called the "Young Australians" on 24 May 1870 at inaugural club president John Hart's family property in Glanville. Football in South Australia at this stage was yet to be organised by a single body and as a result there were several sets of rules in use across the state.

1877–1889: SAFA founder, Alberton Oval and first premiership

In 1877 Port Adelaide joined seven other clubs to form the South Australian Football Association (SAFA), the first league of its type in Australia.[8] It competed its first few seasons wearing magenta guernseys and white shorts.[9] In 1878 the club hosted its first game against the recently established Norwood Football Club with the visitors winning 1-0. A rivalry between these clubs would soon develop into one of the fiercest in Australian sport (See Port Adelaide-Norwood SANFL rivalry).[10]

Left: Junior Port Adelaide players at Alberton Oval in 1880, the first year the ground was used by the club for football.
Right: Port Adelaide's first premiership team from the 1884 season.

In 1880 the club moved to Alberton Oval. In 1881 the club played an interstate team for the first time against Carlton at Adelaide Oval. Later that year the club travelled to Victoria and played its first game outside South Australia against Sale.[11] During the 1882 season Port Adelaide overcame Norwood for the first time after nine previous attempts winning by 1 goal at Adelaide Oval. On 2 July 1883 Port Adelaide played its first game at the MCG against Melbourne.[12] In 1884 Port Adelaide won its first SAFA premiership, ending Norwood's run of six premierships. On 25 May 1885, Port Adelaide played at the MCG against South Melbourne, drawing with the eventual VFA premiers in front of 10,000 spectators.[13]

In 1887 immense interest led into the round 8 meeting against Norwood as the previous two matches between the clubs resulted in draws. Norwood won in front of a then-record 11,000 spectators at Adelaide Oval.[14] During 1889 the club played against the Richmond at Punt Road, with Port prevailing by a goal.[15] The 1889 SAFA season ended with Port Adelaide and Norwood equal top, leading to the staging of Australia's first grand final. Norwood went on to defeat Port Adelaide by two goals.

1890–1901: First national success and last wooden spoon

1890 Championship of Australia G B Score
Port Adelaide 7 10 7
South Melbourne 6 13 6
Venue: Adelaide Oval
Left: Harry Phillips won the clubs best and fairest in 1888, 1891, 1892 and 1893.
Right: Port fan Willy Whicker wearing a striped magenta guernsey used by the club until dye became too costly (1883-1901).

In 1890 Port Adelaide won its second SAFA premiership and would go on to be crowned "Champions of Australia" for the first time after defeating VFA premiers South Melbourne. In 1891 the club defeated Fitzroy at Adelaide Oval with Indigenous Australian Harry Hewitt playing for Port Adelaide.[16]

During the 1890s Australia was affected by a severe depression and many players were forced to move interstate to find work translating into poor on field results. By 1896, the club was in crisis and finished last causing the clubs committee to meet with the aim of revitalising the club. Historian John Devaney suggested that there was a "conscious and deliberate cultivation by both the committee and the team's on field leaders of a revitalised club spirit, whereby playing for Port Adelaide became a genuine source of pride".[17] It had immediate results and in 1897 Port Adelaide won a third premiership finishing the season with a record of 14-2-1 with a scoring record two and a half times its conceded total. This is one of only four occurrences since 1877 that the team that finished last won a premiership the following year. Stan Malin won Port Adelaide's first Magarey Medal in 1899.

During the 19th century the club had nicknames including the Cockledivers, the Seaside Men, the Seasiders and the Magentas. In 1900, Port finished bottom in the six-team competition, which it has not done in any senior league since.

1902–1915: Black and white and the pre-war invincibles

Left: Port Adelaide adopted the black and white "Wharf Pylon" guernsey and the Magpie emblem in 1902.
Right: Port Adelaide's 1903 premiership team were the first to win a Grand Final in the "Wharf Pylon" guernsey.

In 1902, Port Adelaide took the field in black and white guernseys for the first time after it was having trouble finding dyes that would last for its blue and magenta guernseys.[18] The first year in the new guernsey would be a controversial year for the club. After finishing the 1902 season on top of the ladder was disqualified from a game with South Adelaide after disputing the use of an unaccredited umpire.[19] The 1902 SAFA premiership would subsequently be awarded to North Adelaide after they defeated South Adelaide in the Grand Final a week later.[20] Port Adelaide offered to play North Adelaide in a premiership deciding match, but the association refused.[21] The first premiership after the dispute came the following year when Port Adelaide defeated South Adelaide 6.6 (42) to 5.5 (35) in the 1903 SAFA Challenge Final. A further premiership came in 1906 when Port defeated North Adelaide 8.12 (60) to 5.9 (39) in the year's Grand Final. During the early stages of the 1907 season, Port Adelaide travelled to Sydney to play a combination of the cities best players. The game was marketed as 'Port Adelaide vs. Sydney' with the harbour city side taking the honours 8.9 (57) to 5.14 (44).[22]

1910 Port Adelaide vs. WAFL[23] G B Total
WAFL 6 12 48
Port Adelaide 6 17 53
Venue: Fremantle Oval
1910 Championship of Australia G B Total
Port Adelaide 15 20 110
Collingwood 7 9 51
Venue: Adelaide Oval

Port Adelaide won the SAFL premiership in 1910 defeating Sturt 8.12 (60) to 5.11 (41) in the Grand Final. The club would go on to defeat Collingwood for the 1910 Championship of Australia title. During the 1910 post season, seeking revenge for their loss the year before, Port Adelaide travelled to Western Australia and beat East Fremantle by 12 points. To conclude the trip Port Adelaide played a combination of some of the WAFL's best players and achieved a remarkable victory scoring 6.17 (53) to 6.12 (48), with Sampson Hosking named best on ground.[24] Along with beating the premiers from South Australia, Victoria and Western Australia in 1910, Port Adelaide also invited North Broken Hill, the premier team of New South Wales, to a game at Adelaide Oval. Port Would win this game 14.20 (104) to 5.5 (35).[25]

The following two seasons for Port Adelaide would be frustrating dropping only one game during the 1911 minor round and going undefeated the following year in 1912 only to be knocked out of contention by West Adelaide both times, the second of these encounters in front of a pre war South Australian record crowd of 28,500. During the 1912 preseason, Port Adelaide travelled to Tasmania and took on a combination of players from various Tasmanian Football League (TFL) sides. The game would prove to be very competitive with Port Adelaide defeating the TFL combination 7.13 (55) to 6.6 (42).[26]

1913 Championship of Australia G B Total
Port Adelaide 13 16 94
Fitzroy 4 7 31
Venue: Adelaide Oval

During the 1913 preseason, Port Adelaide travelled back to Western Australia to play East Fremantle again with the local side winning for a second time 6.6 (42) to 4.12 (36). Despite this inauspicious preseason the club would break through in 1913, dropping only two games during the minor round and eventually defeating North Adelaide 7.12 (54) to 5.10 (40) for the SAFL premiership and Fitzroy 13.16 (94) to 4.7 (31) for the 1913 Championship of Australia.

1914 Port Adelaide vs. SAFL[27] G B Total
SAFL 5 10 40
Port Adelaide 14 14 98
Venue: Jubilee Oval
1914 Championship of Australia G B Total
Port Adelaide 9 16 70
Carlton 5 6 36
Venue: Adelaide Oval

The 1914 Port Adelaide Football Club season is widely regarded as one of the best in Australian rules football history. It won all its pre season matches, won all fourteen SAFL games by an average margin of 49 points and the 1914 SAFL Grand Final where it held North Adelaide to a single goal for the match 13.15 (93) to 1.8 (14). The club would then meet VFL premiers Carlton on Adelaide Oval, defeating the Victorian club by 34 points to claim a record fourth Championship of Australia. At the end of 1914 season a combined team from the six other SAFL clubs played Port Adelaide and lost to the subsequently dubbed "Invincibles" by 58 points.[28] Key players from this team are Harold Oliver, Angelo Congear and Sampson Hosking who all share the unique distinction of playing in three Championships of Australia together as well all taking part in South Australia's first victorious Australian National Football Carnival in 1911.[29]

1919–1949: Two World Wars, the Great Depression and post war struggles

Port Adelaide players hold up their 1921 SAFL premiership flag

During World War I the club lost three players—William Boon, Joseph Watson and Albert Chaplin—to the war. A scaled-back competition referred to as the 'Patriotic League' was organised during wartime in which Port Adelaide won the 1916 and 1917 instalments.

1921 SAFL Grand Final G B Total
Port Adelaide 4 8 32
File:Norwood Jumper Design.png Norwood 3 6 24
Venue: Adelaide Oval crowd: 34,000

After World War I, Harold Oliver, arguably the state's best player, was close to retiring from league football playing only 1 game in 1919 and 8 in 1920. However keen supporters of the club hoping to replicate its pre-war success raised funds and bought him a motorbike so he could commute from his farm in Berri for the 1921 season.[30] Oliver would captain the club to the 1921 premiership, winning his fourth in the process. In 1922 after playing only 5 league matches for the season his football career came to an end due to commitments regarding his farm and disputes regarding game compensation. His contract termination meant he was paid ₤76 of ₤100 pounds for the season making him one of the highest-paid footballers of the era.[31] At the end of the 1922 SAFA season, Port Adelaide travelled to Sydney and played a combined New South Wales side on the Sydney Cricket Ground winning the match.[32] In following seasons most of Port Adelaide's champion players from before the war started to retire and the club's performances declined.[33] As was the case in the 1890s, the depression of the early 1930s hit the club hard with players moving interstate to secure employment.[33]

Bob Quinn chaired off after the 1939 Grand Final win. In 1947 he would be selected as the first captain of an All-Australian team by Sporting Life magazine.
1939 SANFL Grand Final G B Total
Port Adelaide 16 28 124
West Torrens 11 11 77
Venue: Adelaide Oval crowd: 44,885

By the late 1930s, the economy and Port Adelaide's form both recovered and after two narrow grand final losses in 1934 and 1935 the club won premierships in 1936, 1937 and 1939. During 1939, Bob Quinn, in his third year as a player for the club, coached the team to a Grand Final win over West Torrens. Many Port Adelaide players also enlisted for military service during this time.[34] In 1941 Port Adelaide suffered its first player casualties from war since World War I with Lloyd Rudd and Jack Wade both killed on the Allies' front in France. Four more players would be killed through the war: Maxwell Carmichael, George Quinn, Christopher Johnston and Halcombe Brock.[35][36]

1942 Wartime fundraiser G B Total
Port Adelaide/West Torrens 20 23 113
"The Rest" 20 21 111
Venue: Adelaide Oval [37]

Just as had happened in 1914, the league was being hit hard by player losses in World War II. Due to a lack of able men the league's eight teams were reduced to four with Port Adelaide merging with nearby West Torrens from 1942 to 1944. The joint club would play in all three Grand Finals during this period, winning the 1942 instalment but losing the 1943 and 1944 editions to the Norwood-North Adelaide combination. Normal competition resumed in 1945. After finishing his military service Haydn Bunton Sr., now a triple Brownlow and Sandover medallist, joined the club for his final season.[38] However, despite this addition Port Adelaide was unable to regain its pre-war success and played in only one grand final for the rest of the 1940s.

1950–1973: Fos Williams era and Jack Oatey rivalry

At the end of the 1949, having missed two finals series in a row, the Port Adelaide Football Club had become desperate to improve its on-field performances. The club's committee subsequently sought out a coach that could win the club its next premiership.

Eventually a decision was made which would influence the next 50 years of the Port Adelaide Football Club with Foster Neil Williams, a brilliant rover from West Adelaide, being appointed captain-coach of the club. Williams brought to the club a new coaching style based on success at any cost which was succinctly encapsulated in the legendary club creed he eventually wrote in 1962. During his second season as coach in 1951, Williams led Port to their first official premiership (excluding World War II competition) for 9 seasons, defeating North Adelaide by 11 points. At the end of the 1951 season the VFL premiers Geelong visited South Australia to play the local premiers Port Adelaide on Adelaide Oval. Geelong won the match 8.14 (62) to 6.18 (54) in front of 25,000 people.[39] Port Adelaide would make the Grand Final again in 1953 against local rivals West Torrens in what would be the Eagles last appearance before merging with Woodville. West Torrens would disappoint Port Adelaide, winning the 1953 premiership by 7 points.

1957 SANFL Grand Final G B Total
Port Adelaide 15 15 105
File:Norwood Jumper Design.png Norwood 13 16 94
Venue: Football Park Crowd: 58,924

Port Adelaide's run of disappointment from the 1952 and 1953 seasons would prove to be short lived with the club subsequently going on to win a national record six Grand Finals in a row from 1954 to 1959. The club had a win-loss-draw record of 105-16-1 (86%) over the six-year period. During the 1950s Port Adelaide and Melbourne, often the premiers of South Australian and Victorian leagues, played exhibition matches at Norwood Oval. The most notable game was the 1955 match with an estimated crowd of 23,000. The game being a thriller going down to the last 15 seconds with Frank Adams kicking a behind and sealing the game 9.11 (65) to 9.10 (64) in favour of Norm Smith's demons.[40][41] The following year Melbourne was full of praise for their cross border challenger with those in the Demons camp agreeing that "Port Adelaide could take their place in the V.F.L. competition and do themselves credit".[42]

The 1965 SANFL Grand Final attendance of 62,543 between Port Adelaide and Sturt remains the largest for a sporting event at Adelaide Oval.

Geof Motley took over the captain-coaching role at the club in 1959 when Williams left to take a break from the game. That year the club won the premiership setting a national record of sixth consecutive Grand Final victories. Port Adelaide's hope of winning 7 consecutive premierships was brought to an end in the 1960 preliminary final when Norwood won by 27 points. For the following two seasons Port Adelaide would finish third.

1965 SANFL Grand Final
Fos Williams ninth premiership.
G B Total
Port Adelaide 12 8 80
Sturt 12 5 77
Venue: Adelaide Oval Crowd: 62,543[43]

Fos Williams returned in 1962 and Port Adelaide won three of the next four premierships taking his personal tally to nine and the clubs record to 10 of the last 15 premierships. The 1965 premiership, the last that Williams coached, was played in front of 62,543 people, the largest ever crowd at Adelaide Oval. In that game Port Adelaide defeat Sturt by 3 points. After the 1965 Grand Final, Port Adelaide would be frustrated by the dominance of Sturt, which won seven premierships over this period under the leadership of Jack Oatey. In all, despite playing in 6 of the next 10 grand finals, Port Adelaide would fail to win a premiership until 1977.

1974–1998: John Cahill, SANFL domination and AFL entry

One of Port Adelaide's finest players during the Fos Williams era was John Cahill. He eventually became William's protégé and ultimately took over as coach in 1974. In 1975 a dispute between the Port Adelaide City Council and the SANFL over the use of Alberton Oval forced Port Adelaide to move its home matches to Adelaide Oval for two seasons. In 1976 Cahill would subsequently take Port Adelaide to its first Grand Final under his leadership against Sturt with an official attendance of 66,897, the record for football in South Australia. The actual crowd was estimated at 80,000, much bigger than the official figure as Football Park ran out of tickets early and were forced to shut the gates 90 minutes before the bounce as people were being crushed on entry.[44] Sturt won in an upset by 41 points. In 1977 the dispute regarding Alberton Oval was resolved and the club moved back to its home ground and won that years premiership breaking an 11-year drought which at the time was Port Adelaide longest since competing in an organised football competition.

1977 SANFL Grand Final G B Total
Port Adelaide 17 11 113
Glenelg 16 9 105
Venue: Football Park Crowd: 56,717[45]

It has taken us a bloody long time but by gee it was worth it!

— Russell Ebert during the post game award presentations of the 1977 SANFL Grand Final.[46]

The 1980 season was Port Adelaide's most dominant since 1914. All SANFL divisions of the club made finals with both the league and reserve sides winning their respective premierships. Russell Ebert won his record 4th Magarey Medal. Tim Evans set the then-league goal kicking record of 146 goals in a season. The club provided seven players to the state league team (Ebert, Evans, Cunningham, Phillips, Williams, Giles and Faletic). The club set a new record for most points scored during the whole season at 3,421 whilst also having the best defence conceding only 1,851 points. Overall Port Adelaide lost 2 games from 24 for the year.

Russell Ebert became coach in 1983 when Cahill left to coach Collingwood for two seasons. This period saw the club fail to reach the grand final. The period also marked the rise of the VFL as Australia's premier football competition. Many SANFL players were moving to the VFL larger salaries. In 1982 the SANFL, Norwood and East Perth all approached the VFL in regards to entering the league. All were ignored at the time.[47] Port Adelaide's report from 1982 showed that the failure of these attempts impacted the understanding of its future.[48] From this point onwards the club restructured in regards to economics, public relations and on-field performance for an attempt to enter the league. There was genuine feeling that failure to do this would result in the club ceasing to exist in the future.[47] Talk of a side from South Australia entering the VFL was fast tracked in 1987 when a team from Western Australia, the West Coast Eagles, and a team from Brisbane, the Brisbane Bears joined the VFL. South Australia was left out as the only mainland state without a team.

John Cahill returned as coach for the 1988 season. During that year, one of Fos Williams sons, Anthony, was tragically killed in a building accident. The following day the club played against Norwood and managed to overcome an early deficit to win the emotional charged game. The club would go on to win the 1988 premiership.

In 1989 seven out of ten SANFL clubs were recording losses and the combined income of the SANFL and WAFL had dropped to 40% of that of the VFL.[49] During early 1990 the SANFL decided to wait three years before making any further decision in regards to fielding a South Australian side in the VFL until it could be done without negatively affecting football within the state. Frustrated with lack of progress, Port Adelaide were having secret negotiations in the town of Quorn for entry in 1991.[50] From these discussions Port Adelaide Football Club accepted an invitation from the VFL to join what had now become the AFL. The AFL signed a Heads of Agreement with the club in expectation that Port would enter the competition in 1991, meaning the Port Adelaide Football Club would field two teams, one in the AFL and one in the SANFL. During the 1990 preseason Port Adelaide played a practice match against the Geelong at Football Park in front of 35,000 spectators with Gary Ablett Snr and Gavin Wanganeen prominent.

When knowledge of Port Adelaide's negotiations to gain an AFL licence were made public, many in the SANFL saw it as an act of treachery. SANFL clubs urged Justice Olssen to make an injunction against the bid, which he agreed to.[51] The AFL suggested to the SANFL that if they didn't want Port Adelaide to join the AFL, they could put forward a counter bid to enter a composite South Australian side into the AFL. After legal action from all parties, the AFL finally agreed to accept the SANFL's bid and the Adelaide Football Club was born.[52]

"These twenty blokes are sensational people and to our friends in the press the one thing that really matters is that there will always be a Port Adelaide Football Club."

— George Fiacchi upon accepting the 1990 Jack Oatey Medal for best on ground at the 1990 SANFL Grand Final.[53]
1990 SANFL Grand Final
Last season without AFL in SA.
G B Total
Glenelg 13 15 93
Port Adelaide 16 12 108
Venue: Football Park Crowd: 50,589[54]

During December 1994 Max Basher announced that Port Adelaide had won the tender for the second South Australian AFL licence.[55] However a licence did not guarantee entry and although a target year of 1996 was set, this was reliant upon an existing AFL club folding or merging with another. In 1996, the cash-strapped Fitzroy announced it would merge with the Brisbane Bears to form the Brisbane Lions. A spot had finally opened and it was announced that in 1997, one year later than expected, Port Adelaide would enter the AFL.

Once an entry date had been confirmed, the Port Adelaide Football Club set about forming a side fit for competition in the AFL. It was announced that existing Port Adelaide coach, John Cahill would make the transition to the AFL and Stephen Williams would take over the SANFL coaching role. Cahill then set about forming a group which would form the inaugural squad. Brownlow Medallist and 1990 Port Adelaide premiership player, Gavin Wanganeen was poached from Essendon and made captain of a team made up of six existing Port Adelaide players, two from the Adelaide Crows, seven players from other SANFL clubs and 14 recruits from interstate. Of the 35 players on Port Adelaide's inaugural AFL list 13 had played for the club before. The AFL's father son rule for the club was set at 200 games for players before 1997. This compared to only 100 for Victorian clubs.

1997 West End Showdown I G B Total
Adelaide Crows 11 6 72
Port Adelaide 11 17 83
Venue: Football Park Crowd: 47,265

On 29 March 1997, Port Adelaide played its first AFL premiership match against Collingwood at the MCG, suffering a 79-point defeat. Port won its first AFL game in round 3 against Geelong, and defeated cross town rivals and eventual premiers Adelaide by 11 points in the first Showdown in round 4. At the conclusion of round 17, the side sat fifth – only one win and percentage off the top spot in what was an unusually close season – but it fell out of the finals after recording only a draw from its final five games. Port Adelaide finished its first season 9th, missing the finals on percentage behind Brisbane. The 1998 season was looking very similar to the previous year as they hovered around ninth position for most of the year and looked like a threat for finals after round 14; but they lost six of their last eight games to finish in 10th place, with a record of 9 wins, 12 losses and 1 draw.

1999–2012: Mark Williams, first AFL premiership and Primus period

Left: 2004 club leading goalkicker, Warren Tredrea.
Right: The 2004 AFL premiership was Port Adelaide's first since joining the league.

In 1999 Mark Williams took over as coach of Port Adelaide. The earned a spot in the AFL finals for the first time. They were eliminated by eventual premier, North Melbourne, by 44 points in the Qualifying Final. After finishing 14th in 2000, Port Adelaide had a very successful 2001 season, starting with a maiden pre-season competition victory, defeating the Brisbane Lions. Port Adelaide finished their 2001 home and away season in third place with 16 wins and six losses. The club travelled to Brisbane for the Qualifying Final, losing by 32 points, then lost its home Semi Final against sixth-placed Hawthorn to be eliminated. Port Adelaide started 2002 strongly, winning the pre-season competition for the second time in a row, defeating Richmond by 9 points. The side built on its success and won its first AFL minor premiership with an 18–4 record. However, they lost to the eventual premiers, the Brisbane Lions, by 56 points in the preliminary final. Port Adelaide continued its minor round dominance in 2003 and again finished top to claim the minor premiership; however like the previous year, Port Adelaide was eliminated in the preliminary final, losing to Collingwood by 44 points.

Port Adelaide opened the 2004 season well with four straight wins, but then won only four of its next eight games. From rounds 12–17, Port Adelaide turned their fortunes around and had six consecutive wins, and with five rounds remaining were equal top of the ladder with Brisbane, St Kilda and Melbourne. After losing in round 18 to Essendon, Port Adelaide won its remaining four games – including wins against minor premiership contender Melbourne and cross town rivals Adelaide to claim the minor premiership for the third consecutive year. Port Adelaide easily won its qualifying final against Geelong, earning a home preliminary final. Port Adelaide made it through to its first AFL grand final after defeating St Kilda in a thrilling preliminary final by just six points with Gavin Wanganeen kicking the winning goal with a minute to go.

The following week Port Adelaide faced a highly fancied Brisbane side attempting to win a record-equalling fourth straight AFL premiership. Only one point separated the sides at half time, however late in the third quarter Port Adelaide took the ascendency to lead by 17 points at three-quarter time, and dominated the final term to win by 40 points: 17.11 (113) to 10.13 (73). Byron Pickett was awarded with the Norm Smith Medal after being judged the best player in the match, tallying 20 disposals and kicking three goals.

2004 AFL Grand Final G B Total
Port Adelaide 17 11 113
Brisbane Lions 10 13 73
Venue: Melbourne Cricket Ground Crowd: 77,671

"Port Adelaide are the winningest team in Australia. The old Port Adelaide have won 36 premierships, today, at the MCG, may just be their finest hour."

— Tim Lane's statement at the conclusion of the 2004 AFL Grand Final.[56]

After a slow start to the 2005 season, Port finished eighth on the ladder, and defeated the Kangaroos by 87 points in the elimination final. In the semi-final, Port faced minor premiers Adelaide and lost by 83 points.

Justin Westhoff (pick No. 71) made his debut in the 2007 season, along with Robert Gray (pick No. 55) and Travis Boak (pick No. 5).

After missing the finals in 2006 Port Adelaide made a strong recovery in 2007, and with strong performances from midfielders Shaun Burgoyne and Chad Cornes and strong debut seasons from Justin Westhoff, Robert Gray and Travis Boak, Port Adelaide finished the minor round second on the ladder with 15-7 record. Port Adelaide started their finals campaign against the West Coast Eagles at Football Park and won by three points. That win gave Port the bye, and they easily defeated the Kangaroos in the preliminary final to win by 87 points. This win delivered Port its second Grand Final berth in four years. However, in the grand final they were defeated by Geelong by an AFL record margin of 119 points, 24.19 (163) to Port Adelaide's 6.8 (44) in a crowd of 97,302.

The 2008 season was disappointing one for a Port Adelaide side keen to build on its 2007 grand final appearance, dropping to 13th on the ladder and out of the finals. By 2009 Port Adelaide had accumulated a consolidated debt totaling $5.1 million and was unable to pay its players; they had lost $1.4 million the season before. Financial assistance was denied by the league, with AFL Chief Executive Andrew Demetriou saying that they would have to undergo an intensive application process and work with the SANFL, who owned Port Adelaide's AFL licence.[57] On 20 May, Port were handed $2.5 million in debt relief by the SANFL, and on 15 June were handed a $1 million grant by the AFL commission.[58][59] The SANFL had announced it would not support Port Adelaide in both the AFL and SANFL. Plans for a re-merging the two teams was rejected by the SANFL. Amidst these off-field struggles, the club finished 10th in 2009. The 2010 season would see Mark Williams step down as senior coach marking the end of the Williams era for the club.

"He (Demetriou) said he could not imagine an AFL competition without Port Adelaide in it. I thought that was a really strong statement of leadership.”

— Keith Thomas at a press conference upon the retirement of Andrew Demetriou.[60]

Matthew Primus took over as caretaker coach for Port Adelaide after Mark Williams stood down.[61] The club finished the 2010 season with five wins from its last seven games to finish tenth. On 9 September, Matthew Primus was appointed as the senior coach of the club for the next three years. The SANFL sought to take control of Port Adelaide in 2011. Despite underwriting $5 million of Port's debt in 2010, the takeover failed when the SANFL was unable to get a line of credit to cover Port Adelaide's future debts. The AFL announced it would underwrite $1.25 million in debt to protect its $1.25 billion television rights. AFL Chief executive Andrew Demetriou, offered $9 million over the next three years to help the club, ahead of the move to the Adelaide Oval. The AFL gave the money to the SANFL with strict conditions that they give Port Adelaide three million dollars a year, for three years.[62] Statistically, 2011 was Port Adelaide's worst season in 141 years, finishing 16th with only three wins from 22 games. Rounds 20 and 21 saw the club lose to Collingwood and Hawthorn by record margins of 138 and 165 respectively. The 2012 season was marginally better but a loss against Greater Western Sydney resulted in senior coach Matthew Primus stepping down. Assistant coach, Garry Hocking, took over for the remaining four games, with a draw in the final round against Richmond the best result.

2013–present: Ken Hinkley, Adelaide Oval return and independence

In 2014, Port Adelaide returned to Adelaide Oval as its home ground for the first time since 1976.

On 8 October 2012, Ken Hinkley was announced as the new senior coach of the club. This marked the first time that the club had appointed someone not associated with the club before since Fos Williams in 1950. Television personality David Koch was named chairman of the club and numerous board members were replaced. The 2013 preseason also saw Travis Boak succeed Domenic Cassisi as captain of the club.[63] The club finished the home and away season 7th on the ladder, making it the first time that they had qualified for the finals since 2007. Port travelled to Melbourne to play Collingwood at the MCG in an Elimination Final where they won by 24 points; they then lost to Geelong by 16 points the following week in a Semi Final.

The 2014 season saw both Port Adelaide and Adelaide move their home ground from Football Park to the redeveloped Adelaide Oval. Port Adelaide signed up a record 55,715 members for the 2014 season and averaged 44,429 at home games, a 65% increase from the previous year. Port Adelaide had its best first half of an AFL season, sitting first with ten wins from eleven matches. They then won only four of their remaining eleven matches to finish fifth on the ladder. They hosted Richmond in the elimination finals, kicking the first seven goals of the game and leading by as much as 87 points before recording a 57-point victory. After defeating Fremantle in the semi-finals the club's 2014 season ended with a three-point loss to Hawthorn in the preliminary finals.

With great expectation Port Adelaide started the 2015 season playing all of the year's finalists in the opening 10 rounds and entered the mid-season break with a 5-7 record. The club had a better second half of the year, recording 7-3, but would miss out on finals by one win.

On 11 February 2016, the men's Port Adelaide Football Club merged with the Port Adelaide Women's Football Club.

In 2017, Port Adelaide had made a massive improvement from the previous 2 seasons, winning 14 of 22 games to finish 5th on the ladder. Port Adelaide's season came to an end in an elimination final loss to West Coast by 2 points in extra time. After the match, Koch expressed skepticism over whether the club should have put more experienced players in the team rather than a younger side, and said that if players weren't committed to helping the club win a premiership then they weren't wanted at Port Adelaide.[64]

SANFL presence post AFL entry

In 1994 the Port Adelaide Football Club obtained an AFL licence, however the club had to wait until 1997 to partake in the competition as the Adelaide Crows had a clause preventing another club entering the national competition from South Australia until the end of 1996. Initially Port Adelaide's proposed model was to use its SANFL side as its reserves team. However other SANFL clubs did not agree to this model out of fear it would be too strong. In addition to this for the first few years after 1997, Port Adelaide's SANFL side was forced to train at Ethelton to ensure they would not gain an advantage using the Alberton training facilities. Australian football historian John Devaney described the forced separation of Port Adelaide's SANFL and AFL operations as being "akin to the enforced splitting up of families associated with military conquest or warfare".[65]

External videos
video icon The journey of the Port Adelaide Magpies since 1999 - Port Adelaide FC official YouTube channel (September 2017)

On 20 August 2010, the "One Port Adelaide Football Club" movement was launched by former player Tim Ginever to merge Port Adelaide's AFL and SANFL operations. A website was created that claimed 50,000 signatures were needed for the merger. On 15 November 2010, all nine SANFL clubs agreed that the off-field merger between the two operations would proceed.[66][67] On 10 September 2013, Port Adelaide and the SANFL agreed to a model to allow all its AFL-listed players (not selected to play for Port Adelaide in the AFL) to play for the SANFL side. From 2015 onward, the club lost its recruiting zones and could no longer field sides in the junior SANFL competition. Port Adelaide subsequently started an Academy team composed of 18 to 22-year-olds.[68]

Women's teams

An early example of a Port Adelaide Women's team was in 1918 when a game took place at Alberton Oval against a club representing Thebarton. Port Adelaide was captained by Eileen Rend.[69]

The Port Adelaide Women's Football Club was founded in 2003 and competes in the South Australian Women's Football League. In 2016 the club merged with the men's club with the intention of further developing the game among women in the Port Adelaide area and South Australia more generally.[70]

Club symbols and identity

Guernsey

Harold Oliver wearing Port Adelaide's famous "Wharf Pylon" guernsey. The guernsey has long been a point of contention with the Collingwood Football Club who also wear a black and white guernsey.

The Port Adelaide Football Club won 32 grand finals after adopting the black and white "Wharf Pylon" guernsey in addition to the Champions of Australia three times. When Port Adelaide entered the AFL, it was forced to find a new nickname to replace its longtime nickname of "Magpies." Existing AFL club Collingwood were already using the magpie emblem and "Magpies" nickname, so when Port Adelaide initially sought to join the AFL in 1990, the league simply asked Port Adelaide to simply find a new nickname and logo to avoid a clash.[71] However, after the unsuccessful 1990 bid, Collingwood successfully lobbied the AFL to force Port Adelaide to change not only its logo and nickname but also its guernsey and colours. In 1995, a new guernsey was created incorporating teal.

In May 2007 chief executive John James stated that Port Adelaide received more correspondence from its supporters about the heritage guernsey than all other issues and that the club would "fight for its heritage and what is right". Port Adelaide decided not to participate in the 2006 heritage round when the AFL declined the club's 1980s guernsey for its 80s-themed heritage round.[72]

In 2007 the club was waiting for confirmation from the AFL that it could wear its 1970s' "Wharf Pylon" guernsey for a match against the Western Bulldogs and wanted confirmation it would be able to continue to honour its heritage in any future heritage rounds. On 14 May 2007 the AFL and Port Adelaide reached an agreement whereby the club could wear its traditional guernsey in the heritage round, with the proviso that in future seasons its players can only wear it in home heritage round games and provided that such a game is not against Collingwood.[73] No heritage rounds have been held since this agreement was reached.

"This team from South Australia – this Port Power – why would they pick black and white? Did the competition really need another club in navy or dark colours?".

— Collingwood Football Club president Eddie McGuire's 2003 statement regarding Port Adelaide wearing its traditional guernsey.[74]

Collingwood club president Eddie McGuire has been a vocal opponent of Port Adelaide wearing the "Wharf Pylon" guernsey, claiming that Collingwood has an exclusive right to wear black and white in the AFL, even in the heritage round.

"It should have nothing to do with Eddie McGuire and Collingwood ... I'll say that for a start."

— Leigh Matthews during a discussion regarding Port Adelaide's traditional guernsey during the 2014 Elimination Final.[75]

Support for the guernsey remains extremely high with a limited batch of jumpers raising over $400,000 for the club for the one off game against Carlton in 2013.[76] The most recent instance of the club trying to wear its traditional guernsey was in celebration of 100 years since its 1914 Championship of Australia.[77] The AFL denied the club the right. There was controversy in 2014 during the lead-up to the final against Richmond when the AFL told Port Adelaide they had to wear their clash guernsey. On 2 September 2014 the AFL cleared them to use the traditional guernsey for the match.

"I've always regarded that strip that Port are wearing today as the best uniform in Australian Football".

— Dennis Cometti describing Port Adelaide's traditional guernsey during the 2014 Elimination Final.[78]

Current guernseys

Home
2010–present [note 1]
Clash
2010–present [note 2]
Heritage/SANFL
1902–present [note 3]
Notes
  1. ^ Worn in 2009 as the winning design from a competition, it became permanent in 2010.
  2. ^ Clash guernsey.
  3. ^ the Wharf Pylon ("Prison Bar") guernsey was adopted in 1902 and has been worn on four occasions in the AFL. It is the home guernsey in the SANFL.

Old guernseys

Inaugural
Home 1870–1876 [note 1]
Magenta
Home 1883–1901 [note 2]
Wharf pylons
Home 1902–1996 [note 3]
First AFL home
Home 1997–2009 [note 4]
Notes
  1. ^ The first uniform worn by the club.
  2. ^ The "Magenta" uniform, worn until 1901.
  3. ^ With this guernsey the club had won 32 Grand Finals since 1902. Nevertheless, Collingwood FC successfully lobbied the AFL to force Port Adelaide to change not only its logo and nickname but also its guernsey and colours. As a result, a new guernsey was created incorporating teal in 1995.
  4. ^ "First AFL Home" guernsey adopted upon entry into AFL to avoid clash with Collingwood.

Club songs

The AFL side's victory song is "Power to Win", written for the club by Quentin Eyers and Les Kaczmarek. Since 2016, an alternative Pitjantjatjara language version of the song ('Nganana wanangara kanyini' - literally, 'We have the lightning bolt') has been used by the club on occasions such as Indigenous Round.

The SANFL side's victory song is "Cheer, Cheer the Black and the White", to the tune of "Notre Dame Victory March".

"Never Tear Us Apart"

Since March 2014, Port Adelaide has used "Never Tear Us Apart" by the Australian band INXS as the club's unofficial anthem leading up to the opening bounce at its new home of Adelaide Oval. The song is used as a reference to the various and unique difficulties the club faced when trying to enter the AFL.

Port Adelaide's use of the song stemmed from a trip the club took to Anfield in November 2012 while they were in England to play an exhibition match against the Western Bulldogs.[79] In light of the very positive reviews given by the club's players towards the Anfield crowd's rendition of "You'll Never Walk Alone", Matthew Richardson, Port's general manager of marketing and consumer business, along with the club's management, sought to replicate the pre-match experience they experienced at Anfield. At a meeting in mid-2013, the idea of an anthem was raised; a number of various songs were suggested, including "Power and the Passion" by Midnight Oil and "Power to the People" by John Schumann. Eventually, "Never Tear Us Apart" by INXS was suggested by Port Adelaide's events manager, Tara MacLeod. It was eventually accepted, due to the fact that the song resonated with the club's history.[79]

Initially the song was introduced to coincide with the 60-second countdown before the start of a match, with the music playing over the top of a video montage. The song proved to be a success among the fans, with them adopting the song as well as raising scarves above their heads as the song was being sung.[79] So successful was the song that by June 2014, the club were forced to print club coloured scarves with the words "Never Tear Us Apart" on them that fans would hold aloft and sing in unison prior to the start of matches.

Home grounds

On 15 May 1880, Port Adelaide played its first match at Alberton Oval. In 1881 the decision was made by the club to start leasing the oval from the Port Adelaide Council for the sum of 10 shillings a year. Situated at the eastern end of the suburb of Alberton in Adelaide, the playing surface is surrounded by the Allan Scott club headquarters, the Robert B. Quinn MM Stand, the Fos Williams Family Stand, the Port Adelaide Bowling Club and the N.L. Williams Scoreboard. As well as the facilities facing the oval, along Queen Street there is The Port Club and The Port Store.[80]

Current playing list

Senior list Rookie list Coaching staff

Head coach

Assistant coach


Legend:
  • (c) Captain(s)
  • (vc) Vice-captain(s)
  • (B) Category B rookie
  • italics - Inactive player list
  • Long-term injury
  • (ret.) Retired

Updated: 26 October 2017
Source(s): [81]


Template:Port Adelaide Reserves

Corporate

Guernsey sponsors
Period Front sponsor Back sponsor
1978 Lensworth Finance
1979
1980 Jetspress
1981
1982
1983 Standard Chartered
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988 Standard Chartered
1989
1990
1991
1992 Alpine Retreat
1993 Bee-Jays Roadlink
1994 Seaton Hotel Cash Converters
1995 Scott's Transport
1996
1997 Vodafone
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008 Bianco Construction & Industrial Supplies
2009
2010 MyATM AussieATM
2011 Soaring Securites
2012 VIP Home Services Foodbank
2013 Renault^ VIP Home Services
2014 EnergyAustralia Renault^
2015
2016
2017 OAK^

Administrative positions

Sponsors

Current major sponsors

Key China game sponsors

Current clothing sponsor

  • ISC (2013–present)

Former clothing sponsors

China partnership

On 14 April 2016, Port Adelaide announced a three-year multimillion-dollar partnership with leading Chinese property developer Shanghai Cred. Within this partnership, Port Adelaide will take primary responsibility for developing Australian rules football in China. The partnership will see Port Adelaide hold annual training camps and provide sponsorship in China, as well as producing AFL programs and broadcasting games in the country via China Central Television and other networks.[82] The first AFL game played for premiership points was played in May 2017 between the Gold Coast Suns and Port Adelaide.[83]

Supporters

The Port Adelaide Football Club has historically drawn its supporter base in and around historical working class Port Adelaide. However, this support has spread to many coastal locations in Adelaide (from Outer Harbour down to West Beach), in much of the inner-Western suburbs, throughout the North-Eastern suburbs in Campbelltown and Tea Tree Gully, in many of the Southern suburbs (such as Aberfoyle Park and Flagstaff Hill), as well as throughout the Adelaide Hills and country South Australia.

After historically being the largest football club in South Australia, Port Adelaide has reemerged as one of the largest sporting organisations in Australia, with over 60,000 members and an average attendance nearing 45,000 in 2015.

Supporter groups

Port Adelaide has many supporter groups, with every state or territory containing at least one supporter group. In addition, many country towns within South Australia have their own supporter group, many of which travel to both home and away games, including the Port Adelaide Cheer Squad, the Outer Army, The Alberton Crowd and The Portress Podcast.[84]

Number one ticket holders

Current

Former

Notable followers

Membership and attendance

Year Membership
AFL audited
Membership
change
Minor
round
Finals Home crowd
average
Home crowd
average change
1997
35,809
N/A
9th
-
35,703
N/A
1998
38,305
Increase 2,496
10th
-
31,657
Decrease 4,046
1999
37,166
Decrease 1,139
7th
7th
31,270
Decrease 387
2000
34,935
Decrease 2,871
14th
-
26,376
Decrease 4,894
2001
33,296
Decrease 999
3rd
5th
30,789
Increase 4,413
2002
36,299
Increase 3,003
1st
3rd
30,414
Decrease 375
2003
35,425
Increase 126
1st
4th
31,845
Increase 1,431
2004
36,340
Increase 915
1st
1st
29,877
Decrease 1,968
2005
36,834
Increase 494
8th
6th
32,911
Increase 3,034
2006
33,648
Decrease 1,186
12th
-
28,546
Decrease 4,365
2007
34,073
Decrease 1,575
2nd
2nd
27,870
Decrease 676
2008
34,185
Increase 112
13th
-
22,126
Decrease 5,744
2009
30,605
Decrease 3580
10th
-
24,349
Increase 2,223
2010 29,029
Increase 783
10th
-
24,256
Decrease 93
2011 32,581
Increase 5,236
16th
-
23,066
Decrease 1,190
2012 35,543
Increase 1,003
14th
-
19,911
Decrease 3,155
2013 39,838
Increase 3,383
7th
5th
26,915
Increase 7,004
2014
48,968
Increase 9,130
5th
3rd
44,429
Increase 17,514
2015 54,057
Increase 5,089
9th -
43,749
Decrease 680
2016 53,743
Decrease 314
10th - 39,665
Decrease 4,048
2017 52,129
Decrease 1,614
5th 7th 38,136
Decrease 1,529

*

Club honour boards

See Also

Honour roll

Port Adelaide Football Club honour roll
Interclub matches
Year Position

W-L-D

% Chairman CEO Coach Captain Best and fairest Leading goalkicker
1870 3 0-1-2 50 John Hart Jr. Richard Leicester John Wald John Wald
George Dale
John Wald John Wald (2)
1871 3 1-2-1 0 John Hart Jr. George Ireland Fred Stone Fred Stone Fred Stone
1872 2 (Runner Up) 0-1-2 0 John Hart Jr. George Ireland George Middleton George Middleton
1873 2 (Runner Up) 1-2-0 25 John Hart Jr. F.Ireland H.Sparnon H.Sparnon
George Middleton
Samuel Tyzack Samuel Tyzack (1)
1874 2 (Runner Up) 2-3-1 100 John Hart Jr. F.Ireland John Rann John Rann
Charles Wells
1875 2 (Runner Up) 3-3-1 140 John Hart Jr. F.Ireland Robert Sandilands Robert Sandilands Henry Ford Henry Ford (2)
Warren (2)
1876 5 2-6-0 38 John Hart Jr. Charles Wells William Fletcher William Fletcher Ernest LeMessurier Samuel Tyzack (1)
John Rann (1)
E.LeMessurier (1)
South Australian Football Association era
1877 4 9-4-2 177 John Hart Jr. Charles Wells William Fletcher William Fletcher Thomas Smith Alfred LeMessurier (5)
1878 2 (Runner Up) 5-2-4 400 John Hart Jr. Charles Wells William Fletcher William Fletcher Thomas Smith E.LeMessurier (3)
Joseph Carter (3)
1879 2 (Runner Up) 5-2-2 183 John Hart Jr. Charles Wells William Fletcher William Fletcher Thomas Smith E.LeMessurier (4)
1880 6 3-3-5 89 John Formby J.W.Channon J.A.Atkins J.A.Atkins
Joseph Carter
John Sidoli E.LeMessurier (3)
1881 5 2-6-5 43 John Formby E.LeMessurrier
Joseph Carter
J.H.Sandilands William Fletcher
J.H.Sandilands
John Sidoli Henry Watt (6)
1882 3 7-7-0 157 John Formby E.C.LeMessurier Charles Kellett Charles Kellett James Munro George Slatter (6)
1883 2 (Runner Up) 7-5-2 114 John Formby E.C.LeMessurier Nowell Turpenny Ernest Le Messurier
Nowell Turpenny
Robert Kirkpatrick James Litchfield (13)*
1884 1 (Premiers) 11-2-2 252 John Formby E.C.LeMessurier Nowell Turpenny Nowell Turpenny Charles Kellett
George Cairns
Robert Roy (25)*
1885 3 6-8-1 120 John Formby E.C.LeMessurier Nowell Turpenny Nowell Turpenny
Charles Kellett
Michael Coffee Robert Roy (13)
1886 4 (Wooden Spoon) 3-11-1 64 John Formby James Litchfield Jack McGargill William Bushby Charlie Fry Michael Coffee (6)
1887 2 (Runner Up) 12-3-2 239 John Formby E.C.LeMessurier Jack McGargill William Bushby William Bushby
Richard Walsh
Alfred Bushby (22)
1888 2 (Runner Up) 14-2-1 280 John Formby John Sweeney Jack McGargill William Bushby Harold Phillips Harold Phillips (24)
1889 2 (Grand Finalist) 14-3-1 385 John Formby Robert Cruickshank Jack McGargill William Bushby Goody Hamilton Charlie Fry (32)*
1890 1 (Premiers)
Champions of Australia
16-2-0 388 John Formby Robert Cruickshank Jack McGargill Ken McKenzie Charlie Fry John Mckenzie (54)*
1891 2 (Runner Up) 12-4-0 288 John Formby Robert Cruickshank
Alfred Bushby
Jack McGargill Ken McKenzie Harold Phillips John Mckenzie (37)
1892 2 (Runner Up) 11-4-1 193 John Formby John Sweeney Jack McGargill Ken McKenzie Harold Phillips Alexander McKenzie (43)
1893 3 10-6-2 202 John Cleave John Sweeney Jack McGargill Ken McKenzie Walter Murray
Harold Phillips
Alexander McKenzie (59)
1894 3 9-9-0 114 John Cleave John Sweeney Jack McGargill Ken McKenzie Alfred Miers Alexander McKenzie (36)
1895 3 8-7-1 141 W.Fisher John Sweeney Jack McGargill Alfred Miers Oscar L'estage Alexander McKenzie (25)
1896 5 (Wooden Spoon) 4-13-1 69 W.Fisher
Charles Tucker
Henry Hills Jack McGargill Ken McKenzie George Linklater Adam Lees (19)
Modern scoring system adopted
1897 1 (Premiers) 14-2-1 266 W.Fisher
Charles Tucker
Henry Hills Jack McGargill Ken McKenzie Ken McKenzie Adam Lees (26)*
First regular SAFA Grand Finals held
1898 2 (Grand Finalist) 12-6-0 199 W.Fisher Henry Hills
John Sweeney
Jack McGargill Ken McKenzie Archibald Hosie William Stark (31)
1899 3 9-5-0 155 W.Fisher John Sweeney Jack McGargill Harold Phillips Stan Malin William Stark (13)
1900 6 (Wooden Spoon) 2-12-0 66 W.Fisher John Sweeney Jack McGargill Harold Phillips Jack Quinn Hedley Tompkins (16)
Federation of Australia
1901 2 (Grand Finalist) 12-7-0 131 Robert Cruickshank John Sweeney Jack McGargill Archibald Hosie Ted Strawns Jack Quinn (27)
1902 3 (Disqualified by SAFA) 10-2-0 198 William Mattinson John Sweeney Jack McGargill Archibald Hosie Lewis Corston Matthew Healy (25)
1903 1 (Premiers) 12-2-1 248 William Mattinson John Sweeney Jack McGargill Archibald Hosie Jimmy Tompkins Jimmy Tompkins (40)
1904 2 (Grand Finalist) 10-3-1 173 William Mattinson John Sweeney Jack McGargill Archibald Hosie
Jack Quinn
Lewis Corston Jimmy Tompkins (28)
1905 2 (Grand Finalist) 11-2-1 170 William Mattinson John Sweeney Jack McGargill Jack Quinn Jack Quinn James Mathison (30)*
1906 1 (Premiers) 12-2-0 213 William Mattinson James Hodge Jack McGargill Jack Fletcher
Lewis Corston
Ted Strawns James Mathison (42)*
South Australian Football League era
1907 2 (Grand Finalist) 11-4-0 192 William Mattinson James Hodge Jack McGargill Lewis Corston Jack Mack Jack Quinn (32)*
1908 3 8-5-0 137 William Mattinson James Hodge Jack McGargill Ted Strawns
Mick Donaghy
James Dickson James Mathison (33)*
1909 2 (Grand Finalist) 9-5-0 134 William Mattinson James Hodge Archibald Hosie Mick Donaghy James Dickson Angelo Congear (12)
1910 1 (Premiers)
Championship of Australia
14-2-0 150 William Mattinson James Hodge Archibald Hosie John Woollard Sampson Hosking Frank Hansen (46)
1911 2 (Grand Finalist) 12-3-0 171 Robert Cruickshank James Hodge Mick Donaghy
John Woollard
George Dempster Harold Oliver Frank Hansen (41)*
1912 2 (Grand Finalist) 12-2-0 205 Robert Cruickshank James Hodge Sampson Hosking Clifford Cocks
Sampson Hosking
Harold Oliver Frank Hansen (37)*
1913 1 (Premiers)
Championship of Australia
12-2-0 160 Alexander Benson James Hodge Jack Londrigan Jack Londrigan Henry Eaton Frank Hansen (39)*
1914 1 (Premiers)
Championship of Australia
14-0-0 209 Alexander Benson James Hodge Jack Londrigan Jack Londrigan Jack Ashley Jack Dunn (33)*
1915 2 (Grand Finalist) 9-4-1 175 Alexander Benson James Hodge Alex McFarlane Alex McFarlane Henry Eaton Angelo Congear (21)
South Australian Patriotic League (World War I)
1916 1 (Premiers) 11-0-1 246 Charles Tyler John Hayman (40)
1917 1 (Premiers) 11-0-1 164 Charles Tyler John Hayman (37)
1918 3 Charles Tyler
Return to South Australian Football League administration
1919 4 6-6-1 127 Alexander Benson Charles Tyler Frank Hansen Horrie Pope
Alexander McFarlane
Jack Ashley Len Lackman (26)*
1920 3 8-5-0 119 Alexander Benson Charles Tyler Frank Hansen John Robertson
Albert Olds
Charlie Adams Eric Dewar (24)
1921 1 (Premiers) 13-4-0 182 Alexander Benson Charles Tyler Sampson Hosking Harold Oliver Charlie Adams Maurice Allingham (43)
1922 5 7-7-0 101 Herbert Skipper Charles Tyler Samuel Howie Samuel Howie Clement Dayman Maurice Allingham (47)
1923 7 5-9-0 99 Herbert Skipper Alexander McKelvie Clement Dayman Clement Dayman Les Dayman Maurice Allingham (42)
1924 4 9-6-0 121 Herbert Skipper Alexander McKelvie Archibald Hosie Clifford Keal Les Dayman Maurice Allingham (28)
1925 3 10-5-0 127 Herbert Skipper Alexander McKelvie Archibald Hosie Clifford Keal Peter Bampton Harold Logan (56)
1926 3 10-5-0 123 Percival Cherry Alexander McKelvie Maurice Allingham Maurice Allingham Laurie Hodge Harold Logan (36)
South Australian National Football League era
1927 3 10-8-0 118 Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Sampson Hosking Peter Bampton Clifford Keal Harold Logan (66)
1928 1 (Premiers) 15-4-0 119 Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Sampson Hosking Victor Johnson Les Dayman Les Dayman (41)
1929 2 (Grand Finalist) 15-5-0 156 Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Sampson Hosking Victor Johnson Ernest Mucklow Les Dayman (86)*
1930 2 (Grand Finalist) 12-7-1 116 Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Sampson Hosking Victor Johnson Victor Johnson Les Dayman (89)
1931 3 14-5-0 127 Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Sampson Hosking Victor Johnson Maurice Allingham Les Dayman (70)
1932 4 10-8-0 99 Clement Gun Charles Hayter Sydney Ween Sydney Ween Ernest Mucklow Ned Hender (55)
1933 5 9-7-1 104 Clement Gun Charles Hayter Henry Dewar Sydney Ween Jack Dermody Ned Hender (48)
1934 2 (Grand Finalist) 11-7-1 121 Clement Gun Charles Hayter Len Ashby Victor Johnson Albert Hollingworth Jim Prideaux (73)
1935 2 (Grand Finalist) 13-6-0 125 Clement Gun Charles Hayter Len Ashby Robert Johnson Jack Dermody Jim Prideaux (95)
1936 1 (Premiers) 16-4-0 127 Clement Gun Charles Hayter Sampson Hosking Jack Dermody Albert Hollingworth Jim Prideaux (86)
1937 1 (Premiers) 15-4-0 131 Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Sampson Hosking Jack Dermody Robert Quinn Robert Quinn (51)
1938 2 (Grand Finalist) 12-8-0 118 Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Sampson Hosking Ned Hender Robert Quinn Albert Hollingworth (45)
1939 1 (Premiers) 15-4-0 126 Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Robert Quinn Robert Quinn Allan Reval Howard Abbott (49)
1940 3 14-5-0 118 Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Robert Quinn
Allan Reval
Robert Quinn
Allan Reval
Reginald Schumann Allan McLean (47)
1941 4 11-6-1 106 Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Allan Reval Allan Reval Jack Skelley Allan McLean (62)
Temporary geographical merger with West Torrens during World War II
1942 1 (Premiers) Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Sampson Hosking Llewellyn Roberts Merv Shaw (42)
(West Torrens)
1943 2 (Grand Finalist) Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Sampson Hosking Llewellyn Roberts Merv Shaw
(West Torrens)
1944 2 (Grand Finalist) Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Sampson Hosking Llewellyn Roberts Merv Shaw (69)
(West Torrens)
Competition returns to unaligned teams
1945 2 (Grand Finalist) 16-3-0 133 Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Robert Quinn Robert Quinn Robert Quinn Robert Quinn (51)
1946 2 (Grand Finalist) 13-7-0 121 Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Robert Quinn Robert Quinn Llewellyn Roberts Ken Jolly (46)
1947 3 14-5-0 131 Percival Cherry Charles Hayter Robert Quinn Robert Quinn Robert Quinn Allan McLean (80)*
1948 7 4-13-0 86 Percival Cherry Charles Hayter
Les Dayman
Llewellyn Roberts Llewellyn Roberts Richard Russell Allan McLean (48)
1949 6 7-10-0 94 Percival Cherry Allan McLean Jack McCarthy Reginald Schumann Richard Russell Lloyd Zucker (51)
1950 3 13-6-0 113 Walter Baudinet Allan McLean Fos Williams Fos Williams Fos Williams Fos Williams (40)
1951 1 (Premiers) 19-1-0 156 Walter Baudinet Allan McLean Fos Williams Fos Williams Richard Russell Noel Clark (37)
1952 3 13-6-0 149 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams Fos Williams Ray Whitaker Roger Clift (26)
1953 2 (Grand Finalist) 16-5-0 144 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams Fos Williams Harold McDonald Ray Whitaker (35)
1954 1 (Premiers) 17-3-0 147 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams Fos Williams Roger Clift Tom Garland (44)
1955 1 (Premiers) 15-5-0 132 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams Fos Williams Fos Williams Fos Williams (35)
1956 1 (Premiers) 19-1-0 187 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams Fos Williams Edward Whelan Rex Johns (70)*
1957 1 (Premiers) 17-2-1 170 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams Fos Williams Neville Hayes Rex Johns (77)
1958 1 (Premiers) 18-3-0 146 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams Fos Williams Geof Motley Rex Johns (55)*
1959 1 (Premiers) 19-2-0 160 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Geof Motley Geof Motley Geof Motley Wally Dittmar (74)*
1960 3 14-6-0 148 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Geof Motley Geof Motley Neville Hayes Wally Dittmar (69)*
1961 3 15-6-0 141 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Geof Motley Geof Motley Jeffrey Potter Rex Johns (54)
1962 1 (Premiers) 19-2-0 156 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams Geof Motley Peter Obst Rex Johns (76)
1963 1 (Premiers) 15-7-0 152 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams Geof Motley Geof Motley Rex Johns (54)*
1964 2 (Grand Finalist) 18-4-0 183 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams Geof Motley Jeffrey Potter Jeffrey Potter (30)
1965 1 (Premiers) 19-3-0 129 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams Geof Motley Geof Motley Eric Freeman (74)
1966 2 (Grand Finalist) 15-7-0 143 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams Geof Motley John Cahill Eric Freeman (81)*
1967 2 (Grand Finalist) 16-7-0 134 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams John Cahill Jeffrey Potter Eric Freeman (74)
1968 2 (Grand Finalist) 16-7-0 139 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams John Cahill John Cahill Russell Ebert (44)
1969 6 9-11-0 92 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams John Cahill Jeffrey Potter Mark Dittmar (28)
1970 3 17-4-1 150 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams John Cahill John Cahill Eric Freeman (75)
1971 2 (Grand Finalist) 17-7-0 138 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams John Cahill Russell Ebert Eric Freeman (50)
1972 2 (Grand Finalist) 16-8-0 122 Bert Harvey Allan McLean Fos Williams John Cahill Russell Ebert Max James(62)
1973 5 11-11-0 105 Ken Duthie Allan McLean Fos Williams John Cahill John Cahill John Cahill (59)
1974 3 19-5-1 123 Ken Duthie Allan McLean John Cahill Russell Ebert Russell Ebert Darrell Cahill (54)
1975 3 14-7-0 123 Ken Duthie Allan McLean John Cahill Russell Ebert Peter Woite Tim Evans (64)
1976 2 (Grand Finalist) 18-5-0 135 Ken Duthie Allan McLean John Cahill Russell Ebert Russell Ebert Randall Gerlach (90)
1977 1 (Premiers) 19-4-1 146 Ken Duthie Allan McLean John Cahill Russell Ebert Russell Ebert Tim Evans (88)*
1978 3 16-9-0 111 Ken Duthie Allan McLean John Cahill Russell Ebert Stephen Clifford Tim Evans (90)*
1979 1 (Premiers) 17-8-0 112 Ken Duthie Allan McLean John Cahill Brian Cunningham Milan Faletic Tim Evans (82)
1980 1 (Premiers) 21-2-1 188 Ken Duthie Allan McLean John Cahill Brian Cunningham Stephen Clifford Tim Evans (146)*
1981 1 (Premiers) 18-7-0 122 Ken Duthie Ron Taylor John Cahill Brian Cunningham Russell Ebert Tim Evans (98)*
1982 3 16-7-1 127 Ken Duthie Ron Taylor John Cahill Brian Cunningham Craig Bradley Tim Evans (125)*
1983 6 10-12-0 91 Ken Duthie Ron Taylor Russell Ebert Russell Ebert Stephen Clifford Tim Evans (63)
1984 2 (Grand Finalist) 18-6-0 127 Ken Duthie Ian McKenzie Russell Ebert Russell Ebert Craig Bradley Tim Evans (137)
1985 7 8-14-0 88 Ken Duthie Ian McKenzie Russell Ebert Russell Ebert Craig Bradley Tim Evans (96)
1986 4 13-11-0 103 Bruce Weber Ian McKenzie Russell Ebert Russell Johnston Martin Leslie Darren Smith (49)
1987 4 15-9-0 112 Bruce Weber Ian McKenzie Russell Ebert Russell Johnston Bruce Abernethy Darren Smith (71)
1988 1 (Premiers) 18-6-0 127 Bruce Weber Ian McKenzie John Cahill Russell Johnston Greg Phillips Scott Hodges (74)
1989 1 (Premiers) 21-4-0 139 Bruce Weber Robert Clayton John Cahill Russell Johnston Russell Johnston Scott Hodges (79)
1990 1 (Premiers) 19-4-0 150 Bruce Weber Robert Clayton John Cahill Russell Johnston Scott Hodges Scott Hodges (153)*
1991 5 14-9-0 109 Bruce Weber Robert Clayton John Cahill Greg Phillips Paul Northeast Darryl Borlase (25)
1992 1 (Premiers) 20-4-0 137 Bruce Weber Brian Cunningham John Cahill Greg Phillips Nathan Buckley Mark Tylor (97)*
1993 3 16-7-0 118 Greg Boulton Brian Cunningham John Cahill Greg Phillips Troy Bond Mark Tylor (90)*
1994 1 (Premiers) 18-8-0 131 Greg Boulton Brian Cunningham John Cahill Tim Ginever Tim Ginever Scott Hodges (130)*
1995 1 (Premiers) 19-6-0 131 Greg Boulton Brian Cunningham John Cahill Tim Ginever Robbie West Mark Tylor (53)
1996 1 (Premiers) 16-8-0 129 Greg Boulton Brian Cunningham
Robert Clayton
David Hutton
John Cahill
Stephen Williams
Tim Ginever Scott Hodges Scott Hodges (117)
Australian Football League era
1997 9 10-11-1 92 Greg Boulton Brian Cunningham John Cahill Gavin Wanganeen Darren Mead Scott Cummings (70)
1998 10 9-12-1 96 Greg Boulton Brian Cunningham John Cahill Gavin Wanganeen Adam Kingsley Warren Tredrea (33)
1999 7 12-11-0 90 Greg Boulton Brian Cunningham Mark Williams Gavin Wanganeen Stephen Paxman Warren Tredrea (40)
2000 14 7-14-1 84 Greg Boulton Brian Cunningham Mark Williams Gavin Wanganeen Brett Montgomery Warren Tredrea (32)
2001 5 16-8-0 129 Greg Boulton Brian Cunningham Mark Williams Matthew Primus Warren Tredrea Warren Tredrea (51)
2002 3 19-6-0 132 Greg Boulton Brian Cunningham Mark Williams Matthew Primus Matthew Primus Stuart Dew (51)
2003 4 19-6-0 127 Greg Boulton Brian Cunningham Mark Williams Matthew Primus Gavin Wanganeen Warren Tredrea (58)
2004 1 (Premiers) 20-5-0 132 Greg Boulton Brian Cunningham Mark Williams Matthew Primus
Warren Tredrea
Warren Tredrea Warren Tredrea (81)
2005 6 12-11-1 98 Greg Boulton John James Mark Williams Matthew Primus Warren Tredrea Warren Tredrea (65)
2006 12 8-14-0 89 Greg Boulton John James Mark Williams Warren Tredrea Brendon Lade Josh Mahoney (29)
2007 2 (Grand Finalist) 17-8-0 113 Greg Boulton John James Mark Williams Warren Tredrea Kane Cornes Brett Ebert (56)
2008 13 7-15-0 96 Greg Boulton John James
Mark Haysman
Mark Williams Warren Tredrea Kane Cornes Daniel Motlop (57)
2009 10 9-13-0 89 Brett Duncanson Mark Haysman Mark Williams Domenic Cassisi Warren Tredrea Warren Tredrea (51)
2010 10 10-12-0 82 Brett Duncanson Mark Haysman Mark Williams
Matthew Primus
Domenic Cassisi Kane Cornes Jay Schulz (33)
2011 16 3-19-0 65 Brett Duncanson Mark Haysman
Keith Thomas
Matthew Primus Domenic Cassisi Travis Boak
Jackson Trengove
Robbie Gray (32)
2012 14 5-16-1 79 Brett Duncanson
David Koch
Keith Thomas Matthew Primus
Garry Hocking
Domenic Cassisi Kane Cornes Jay Schulz (42)
2013 5 13-11-0 102 David Koch Keith Thomas Ken Hinkley Travis Boak Chad Wingard Jay Schulz (49)
Administrative independence from the SANFL
2014 3 16-8-0 130 David Koch Keith Thomas Ken Hinkley Travis Boak Robbie Gray Jay Schulz (66)
2015 9 12-10-0 106 David Koch Keith Thomas Ken Hinkley Travis Boak Robbie Gray Chad Wingard (53)
2016 10 10-12-0 106 David Koch Keith Thomas Ken Hinkley Travis Boak Robbie Gray Chad Wingard (38)
2017 7 14-9-0 130 David Koch Keith Thomas Ken Hinkley Travis Boak Paddy Ryder Charlie Dixon (49)

Hall of Fame

{{{Current team Name}}}
Hall of Fame
South Australian Football Association (1877-1906)

Harold Phillips

South Australian Football League (1907-1927)

Angelo Congear

Leslie Dayman

Sampson Hosking

Harold Oliver

South Australian National Football League (1928-1996)

Bruce Abernethy
Brian Cunningham
Neville Hayes
Lloyd Zucker
Bob Quinn

John Abley
Russell Ebert
Scott Hodges
Edward McMahon
Allan Reval
Fos Williams

Dave Boyd
Tim Evans
Ron Hoffman
Geof Motley
Richard Russell
Stephen Williams

Craig Bradley
Brian Fairclough
Henry Kneebone
Greg Phillips
Llewellyn Roberts
Edward Whelan

John Cahill
Tim Ginever
Allan McLean
Jeffrey Potter
Darren Smith

Australian Football League (since 1997)

Gavin Wanganeen

Players listed in bold are inductees in the Australian Football Hall of Fame.
Players listed in bold and italics are legends in the Australian Football Hall of Fame.

Greatest Team

Port Adelaide's Greatest Team 1870–2000
B: Richard Russell John Abley Edward Whelan
HB: Neville Hayes Greg Phillips Geof Motley
C: Craig Bradley Russell Ebert (vc) John Cahill
HF: Dave Boyd Les Dayman Harold Oliver
F: Scott Hodges Tim Evans Bob Quinn
Foll: Russell Johnston Allan Reval Fos Williams (c)
Int: Harry Phillips Jeffrey Potter Peter Woite
Lloyd Zucker
Coach: Fos Williams

Military service

War Roll of Honour [103]
World War I
Maurice Allingham Frederick Badcock Arthur Biscombe William Boon †
David Bower Howard Bungey Hugh Challinder Arnold Channon
Albert Chaplin † Robert Coffen Henry Davis Clement Dayman
William Dempster Henry Dewar William 'Roy' Drummond M.M. Edward Foggo
Archibald Gosling † Matthew Healy Horace Hoare Samuel Howie
Gordon Inkster Clarence Latimer Lawrence Levy William Marshall
Tom McDonald D.C.M Frederick Meadows Edward Oatey John W. Robertson
Edwin Rose Thomas Sard Stedman Stidson William Theodore
Harry Tobin Arthur Tubel Arthur Turner Douglas Walsh M.C.†
Joseph Watson † Edward Weeden
World War I – officials
Dr Alexander Benson Charles Hayter Dr Edward Morris
World War II
Howard Abbott James Allingham Charles A. Andersen Charles H. Andersen
Basil Bampton Harold Beer Halcombe George Brock Maxwell Carmichael †
George W.F. Chapman Clarence Christensen Noel Clark John Coppin
Ivor Dangerfield Lindsay Darling Ralph Dawe Clarance L. Dayman
John Dermody Edward Dorian James Doyle Drozena Eden
Bert Edwards James Farr Dennis Fitzgerald Frederick Galliford
Laurence Gates Geoffrey Germein Francis Gibaut Arthur Gower
Colin Grant Claude Greening Donald Gregg Colin Grimm
John Heaton Colin Herbert John Johnson Kenneth Johnson
Clyde Kellaway Peter Keough Lyall Kretschmer Robert Lander
Peter Marrett Richard Mayne Harold McDonald Norman McInnes
Malcolm McKiggan † Allan R.C. 'Bob' McLean Harold Mills Brian Moore
George Neaylon John Oehme William Owens Alexander Pender
Harry Perry Frederick Peters James Prideaux George U. Quinn †
John M. Quinn Robert B. Quinn M.M. Lew Roberts Herbert Robertson
Bertram Robinson Lloyd Rudd † Leonard Salvemini Reginald Schumann
John Skelley Kenneth Slade Gordon Temby William Trigg
Arthur Tunbridge Arthur Utting John Wade † Hercules Waldron
John White Geoffrey Wiese Foster Williams John Woollard
World War II – officials/staff
Kenneth Aubert Archibald Dowsett Henry Naismith William Adair
Vietnam War
Peter Chant † Lindsay McGie John A. Quinn

† denotes killed in action or died while serving

Club achievements

Club achievements
Competition Level Wins Year won
AFL
Premiers 1 2004
Runners up 1 2007
McClelland Trophy 3 2002, 2003, 2004
Championship of Australia Champions 4 1890, 1910, 1913, 1914
SAFA/SAFL/SANFL Premiers 36 1884, 1890, 1897, 1903, 1906,
1910, 1913, 1914, 1921, 1928,
1936, 1937, 1939, 1951, 1954,
1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959
1962, 1963, 1965, 1977, 1979,
1980, 1981, 1988, 1989, 1990
1992, 1994, 1995, 1996, 1998,
1999
Runners up 38 1878, 1879, 1883, 1887, 1888,
1889, 1891, 1892, 1898, 1901
1904, 1905, 1907, 1909, 1911,
1912, 1915, 1925, 1926, 1929
1930, 1934, 1935, 1938, 1945,
1946, 1953, 1964, 1966, 1967
1968, 1971, 1972, 1976, 1984,
1997, 2014, 2017
Minor premiers 44 1889, 1902, 1903, 1904, 1906,
1907, 1909, 1911, 1912, 1913
1914, 1915, 1921, 1928, 1931,
1934, 1935, 1936, 1939, 1940
1945, 1951, 1953, 1954, 1955,
1956, 1957, 1959, 1960, 1961
1962, 1964, 1965, 1970, 1976,
1977, 1980, 1982, 1984, 1988
1990, 1992, 1999, 2014
South Australian Patriotic League Premiers 3 1916, 1917, 1942
Runner up 2 1943, 1944

Player achievements

Competition awards

Magarey Medal (SANFL best and fairest)

Dutschke Medal (SAWFL best and fairest)

  • 2011 - Emma Sampson

AFLCA Champion Player of the Year

AFL Rising Star (Best player under 21)

Grand final best on ground awards

Norm Smith Medal (AFL Grand Final best on ground)

Jack Oatey Medal (SANFL Grand Final best on ground)

All-Australian

Sporting Life Magazine

Interstate carnivals

Australian Football League

Club awards

John Cahill Medal (best and fairest)

Allan Robert McLean Medal (SANFL best and fairest)

Gavin Wanganeen Medal (Best player under 21)

John McCarthy Medal (Community Award)

Club records

As at the end of 2017:

Overall win/loss record

  • AFL – 485 matches / 248 wins / 232 losses / 5 draws (51.65%)
  • SANFL – 2675 matches / 1744 wins / 882 losses / 65 draws (66.02%)
  • Both leagues – 3160 matches / 1992 wins / 1114 losses / 70 draws (63.82%)

Best league record against another club

Minimum 10 league matches against a current club:

  • AFL – St Kilda – 18 wins / 10 losses / 0 draws (64.29%)
  • SANFL – Glenelg – 180 wins / 69 losses / 3 draws (72.02%)

Worst league record against another club

Minimum 10 league matches against a current club:

  • AFL – Sydney – 8 wins / 20 losses / 0 draws (28.57%)
  • SANFL – Norwood – 197 wins / 193 losses / 17 draws (50.49%)

Highest score

  • AFL – 29.14 (188) vs Hawthorn, round 13, 2005, Football Park
  • SANFL – 37.21 (243) vs Woodville, 19 April 1980, Football Park

Lowest score

  • AFL – 3.3 (21) vs Collingwood, round 20, 2011, Football Park
  • SANFL – 1.1 (7) vs North Adelaide, 5 May 1900, Alberton Oval

Greatest winning margin

  • AFL – 117 points vs Hawthorn, round 13, 2005, Football Park
  • SANFL – 179 points vs Woodville, 8 August 1970, Woodville Oval

Greatest losing margin

Most wins in a season

1 This record is unbreakable under the current SANFL fixturing rules (current maximum is 20 wins: 18 home-and-away plus two finals).

Fewest losses in a season

  • AFL – 5 losses (2004)
  • SANFL – 0 losses (1914)

Largest home attendances (minor round)

Largest away attendances (minor round)

  • AFL – 51,883 at MCG (round 1, 1997 vs Collingwood)
  • SANFL – 30,618 at Adelaide Oval (round 11, 1977 vs South Adelaide)
  • SANFL – 22,015 at Unley Oval (round 9, 1968 vs Sturt)

Largest finals attendances

Longest undefeated streak

  • AFL – 8 wins (round 8 → 15, 2002, round 15 → 22, 2003, round 4 → 12, 2014)
  • SANFL – 33 games (21 June 19131914 → 3 July 1915)

Longest winless streak

  • AFL – 11 games (round 11 → 23, 2011)
  • SANFL – 7 games (14 May 2002 → 1 June 2002)

Player records

Most games played

Most games coached

  • AFL – 274 – Mark Williams (1999–2010)
  • SANFL – 444 – Fos Williams (1950–1958, 1962–1973)
  • Combined – 488 – John Cahill (SANFL: 1974–1982, 1988–1996; AFL: 1997–1998)

Most premierships as player

Most premierships as coach

Most goals at Port Adelaide

Most goals in a match

  • AFL – 8 – Warren Tredrea (1998, round 7, vs Carlton, Princes Park) and Jay Schulz (2014, round 14, vs Western Bulldogs, Adelaide Oval)
  • SANFL – 16 – Tim Evans (1980, round 5, vs West Adelaide)

Most goals in a season

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Australian Football League clubs