North Melbourne Football Club
North Melbourne Football Club | |
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North Melbourne Football Club logo | |
Names | |
Full name | North Melbourne Football Club |
Nickname(s) | North, Northeners, Kangas, Roos, Rooboys, Shinboners, Northboys, Bluebirds, Poppies. |
Motto | Victoria Amat Curam |
2008 season | |
Leading goalkicker | David Hale |
Best and fairest | Brent Harvey |
Club details | |
Founded | 1869 |
Colours | Royal Blue and White |
Competition | Australian Football League |
Chairman | James Brayshaw |
Coach | Position Currently Vacant |
Captain(s) | Brent Harvey |
Ground(s) | Etihad Stadium (capacity: 56,000) |
Arden Street Oval (capacity: 15,000) | |
Other information | |
Official website | www.kangaroos.com.au |
Guernsey: |
The North Melbourne Football Club, nicknamed The Kangaroos, is the fourth oldest Australian rules football club in the AFL and is one of the oldest sporting clubs in Australia. It is based at the Arden Street Oval in the inner Melbourne suburb of North Melbourne, but plays its home matches at the nearby Docklands Stadium.
The club mascot, dating from the middle of the twentieth century (1950s), is a grey or red kangaroo. The club is also unofficially known as the "Shinboners", a term which dates back to its 19th century abattoir-worker origins. The club's motto is victoria amat curam, Latin for "Victory Demands Dedication".
Club history
""In two aspects North Melbourne stands second to none. One is the loyalty of its supporters. The other is the determination to carry on, despite its disadvantages. In the face of adversity, which might well have broken the spirit of most men, we find that from the earliest days there were always enthusiasts to fight for North Melbourne""
— The Australasian 15 June 1940.
Formative years
The North Melbourne Football Club arose from lowly origins in 1869, purportedly established to satisfy the needs of local cricketers who were keen to keep themselves fit over the winter months. One view is that the club was connected to the St Mary’s Church of England Cricket Club, nonetheless the establishment was nothing official, rather a general gathering to play some competitive sport. Information on the club’s first ever match is sketchy, but it is known that it took place in Royal Park (which served as the clubs home ground until 1882) and that the ball used in the match was purchased by a local resident called Tom Jacks, who sold some roofing iron to pay for it.
Today, the founder of the club is regarded as James Henry Gardiner, a pivotal and legendary figure who served the club diligently both on the field and off the field right up until his death in 1921.
In 1870, Victoria for the first time saw the introduction of regular premiership matches of Australian Football. North Melbourne was apart of this, but was classed as a “Junior Club” having not yet graduated to senior ranks. The Australasian noted them as being “one of the best of many Junior Clubs” during those early years.
The club continued to evolve, graduating to senior ranks in 1874 and acquitted themselves remarkably well, finishing 4th. Along with the promotion, the club adopted its first uniform of blue and white horizontal stripes.
By 1876 North had ceased to function due to troubles, but managed to secure an amalgamation with Albert Park to form “North Melbourne Cum Albert Park”. The football world assumed that the amalgamation was the death kneel of the club, but they underestimated the spirit of the “founding fathers” and the local community who dug deep and came up with the funds to re-establish the club under the new name of “Hotham” in early 1877.
Association years
Football took a giant step forward in 1877, with the formation of the first colonial football league, the VFA. Hotham were prime movers in establishing this league and were afforded a place in light of their previous contributions to Australian Football.
The 1880s marked the emergence of the modern identity we now associate with North today. In 1882, the club amalgamated with the Hotham Cricket Club and moved into the North Melbourne Recreation Reserve (Arden St Oval) which has remained as the home of the Club up until this day. The joint venture was aimed at affecting improvements at the Hotham Cricket Ground, which was the name of the Reserve at the time. Four years later the club adopted the traditional uniform of blue and white vertical stripes at the insistence of the VFA, who wanted there to be a visible contrast between Geelong’s and Hotham’s uniforms. The third significant development occurred in 1888 with the club reverting back to its original name as the North Melbourne Football Club. This was done to keep inline with the towns renaming from Hotham to North Melbourne.
The 1880’s also saw the club's penchant for inter-colonial travel with trips to Tasmania in 1881 and 1887, and South Australia in 1889. Hotham also found itself well represented at the first ever inter-colonial game in 1879 with 4 players from the Club gaining selection for the "Big V".
Disregarded by the VFL
The VFA became unwieldy by the 1890s having swelled to 15 Clubs. Led by Geelong, and fuelled by Essendon, the largest clubs of the VFA revolted and formed their own break away league, the Victorian Football League (VFL) in 1896. Despite finishing 6th North was rudely excluded from the competition, a fact not lost on their supporters today. The main reasons for being excluded are as follows:
- North had not won a premiership yet, and thus was not considered a powerful club
- The industrialisation of the locality had drained the club’s income streams
- The club had a strong reputation for hooliganism from their fans
- There was a lot of bad blood between Collingwood and North following a torrid engagement in the previous season
- Essendon felt threatened by the close proximity of North Melbourne
- A court case against the North Melbourne Cricket Club had damaged the Football Club’s status
Undaunted, North continued on in the depleted VFA emerging as a powerhouse finishing 2nd in both 1897, 98 and 99. In 1903 the Club’s ultimate aspirations were reached when they were crowned premiers against Richmond. It had taken 34 years of hardship, and adversity, but North finally tasted absolute triumph. The club went back to back premiers in 1904 after Richmond forfeited the final.
In 1907 as an amalgamation with fellow football club West Melbourne (which at the time had lost their home ground) saw their chance of promotion and applied for admission to the VFL but missed out as Richmond and University were admitted.
The local community re-established the North Melbourne Football Club as a new entity and the VFA re-admitted the new club to the Association for the 1908 season.
"The Invincibles"
The reformation of the Club necessitated a massive clean out of the team leaving only two players remaining from the previous season. The 1910 season was marked with one of the most sensational transfers in Victorian Football history, when Andy Curran masterminded the clearance of Carlton’s famed “Big Four” of ‘Mallee’ Johnson, Fred Jinks, Charlie Hammond and Frank ‘Silver’ Caine to North Melbourne. These signings secured the Northerners third premiership in 1910.
The 1912 finals series was one of the most amazing ever, with the Semi Final having to be replayed 3 times after North and Brunswick drew twice. North were eventually victorious and moved on to the final, but unfortunately without the Big Four they lost the game by a mere four points with the last kick of the day.
The next few years were punctuated by “The Invincibles”. In the Northerners most illustrious period ever, the club went undefeated from 1914 to 1919, collecting premierships in 1914, 1915 and 1918. As well as this, the club won the championship in both 1915 and 1918 for finishing on top of the ladder, and accounted for VFL side St Kilda comfortably. During this period the club won 58 consecutive matches including 49 successive premiership matches, a record that has remained unmatched in Association or League History since.
Despite being rejected from the VFL in both 1896 and 1907, North still persisted relentlessly to gain admission into what was the premier league of the land. On 30 June 1921, North dropped a bombshell mid-season and told its players it would disband and try to gain entry to the VFL by the ‘back-door’. Essendon League Football Club had lost its playing ground at East Melbourne and had decided to acquire the North Melbourne Recreation Reserve as a new playing ground. North accepted their proposal in the idea that the club’s would amalgamate. All of North’s players were urged to join the Essendon League Club to help facilitate the amalgamation. The amalgamation was foiled when some members of the Essendon Committee launched a successful legal challenge. As a result the Essendon League Club moved instead to the Essendon Oval kicking the original occupants the Essendon Association Club out.
North was now without a playing team and Essendon Association was now without a ground, so as a matter of convenience the two clubs amalgamated so they could compete in the 1922 season. With the same resilience it had displayed fifteen years earlier, North had once again rose Phoenix-like from the ashes to avert self-destruction.
Entering the VFL
After 3 attempts, 29 years of waiting and numerous other applications to enter the VFL, finally North was rewarded for its relentless persistence with admittance to the League in 1925, along with Footscray and Hawthorn. Even then, the opportunity almost slipped out of the club’s grasp as the League delegates debated into the early hours of the morning on which clubs should be invited to join the intake. It was only after much deliberation that North Melbourne’s name was eventually substituted for Prahran's making North “the lucky side” of the invitees that included Footscray and Hawthorn.
Two main reasons for North being accepted over Prahran was that North had been the most popular choice in a recent poll conducted in a Melbourne newspaper on who should be promoted. The other reason was that the Club’s committee, in an unprecedented move, had visited every single League Club as well as the VFL Headquarters to make their case for why they should be included in the intake.
But two big conditions were attached to North’s entry. One was that the club had to change their uniform and another was that they had to give up their recruiting grounds to the Essendon Football Club.
North Melbourne were cellar dwellers for the first twenty-five years of VFL membership, but by the late 1940s had developed a strong list and significant supporter base. In 1949 North secured the VFL Minor Premiership, finishing top of the ladder at the end of the home-and-away season with 14 wins and 5 losses. They failed to make the Grand Final that year (eventually won by Essendon), but in 1950 they did reach the last Saturday in September, gallantly going down to defeat by a more efficient Essendon. It was in this year that the club adopted the "Kangaroos" mascot.[1]
The 1950s and 1960s were lean years for North Melbourne, though the club did secure two consecutive Night Premierships in 1965 and 1966. Allen Aylett was a brilliant player in the late 1950s and captain between 1961 and 1964, and Noel Teasdale who lost the Brownlow Medal on a countback in 1965 (he was later awarded a retrospective medal when the counting system was amended).
Golden Era
Towards the end of the 1960s, and under the dynamic leadership of Dr. Allen Aylett, North Melbourne began its climb to supremacy. As part of a major recruitment drive, Barry Davisfrom Essendon and Doug Wade ,Geelong, John Rantall,(South Melbourne), Barry Cable (WA),and lesser known star John Burns who played a pivotal role in securing the 1975 premiership. In a major coup, the great Ron Barassi was appointed coach in 1973. His ruthless and inspiring coaching methods took North to a Grand Final (defeated by Richmond) in 1974 and brought success in his 1975 and 1977. North made six consecutive Grand Finals from 1974-1978)and defeated Norwood in the 1975 national championship to be declared Champions of Australia.
Also, in 1973 and 1974, North's wingman Keith Greig won consecutive Brownlow Medals. He was joined in 1978 by the mercurial forward Malcolm Blight, whose victory was known as the "worst kept secret in football". Doug Wade also secured the Coleman medal in 1974 with his 103 goals for the season.
Barassi continued as coach into 1980, but only a Night Premiership in that year was to result from his last years at Arden Street. North then entered another period of decline, though Malcolm Blight kicked 103 goals to take out the Coleman medal in 1982, and another Brownlow win came through the talented Ross Glendinning in 1983. In that year, North Melbourne won a third Minor Premiership (the second had come in 1978) with 16 wins and 6 losses for the season, but failed to make the Grand Final.
Team of the '90s
The capable coaching of John Kennedy aside, the 1980s and early 1990s were lean years for the Kangaroos.However, the rebuilding of the club was taking place. The Krakouer brothers (Jim and Phil) brought a spark into the side and lifted many hopes for North supporters and the excitement to the general football public. The innovative idea of night games was intsigated by the club and meeting the challenges, the club survived. One major highlight was the recruitment of the gun forward John Longmire in 1989, who topped the club goalkicking over five consecutive seasons (1990-1994) and won the Coleman medal in 1990 with 98 goals - just two short of the magic ton. At the beginning of the 1993 season, in a dramatic and controversial move, the board of the club sacked coach and long-time playing stalwart Wayne Schimmelbusch and appointed Denis Pagan in his place. Results were immediate, as North reached the finals for the first time in nearly a decade. Pagan was also instrumental in appointing the brilliant Wayne Carey as the club's youngest-ever captain. Carey had been recruited at the same time as Longmire, but taken longer to develop as a player. Carey's leadership over the next nine seasons was inspirational, and he came to be regarded as the standout player in the league, called 'the King' by media commentators and fellow footballers alike.
Narrow misses in 1994 and 1995 were finally avenged in 1996 when North defeated the Sydney Swans to take out the gold centenary AFL cup. Glenn Archer won the Norm Smith Medal . Late season injuries in 1997 North lost to St. Kilda in the Preliminary Final (during which key ruckman Corey McKernan dislocated his shoulder). 1998 seemed to all to be North's year, as the club won both the pre-season Ansett Cup and topped the ladder with 16 wins and 6 losses (narrowly tipping out the Western Bulldogs in the final home-and-away game of the season). However, poor kicking and a lack of discipline allowed the Adelaide Crows to win their second premiership in as many years.
In 1999, the Kangaroos finished in second position on the ladder, thanks to good form of the key members of the playing group ( Carey, McKernan, Archer, Stevens). Thus, the 1999 Grand Final was won easily by the Kangaroos [the first premiership won without the name 'North Melbourne' attached to the logo], with former Sydney midfielder Shannon Grant taking out the Norm Smith Medal.
Since its inception, the club has often had to contend with financial hardship and a fairly modest support base. The club has been subject to several merger attempts, including attempts at takeover by Essendon in the early twentieth century and an almost-completed merger with Fitzroy during the uncertain 1990s.
Seeking new markets and greater financial security in an increasingly corporatized AFL environment, the title "North Melbourne" was officially dropped from the logo in 1999, from which time the team played only as the "Kangaroos". During the successful 1999 season, North Melbourne played home games in Sydney with a view of becoming a second team in New South Wales. Perhaps partly because of North's victory over the Sydney Swans in the 1996Template:AFL Grand Final, the experiment was not successful, with crowds averaging only 12,000. Since the South Melbourne Football Club moved to the city and took many years to become accepted, most Sydney people had become aware and cynical of the concept of relocating Melbourne teams.The club maintains their home ground in Victoria at Arden Street Oval, North Melbourne, which from 2006 underwent the first stages of a $12 million upgrade of training and other facilities.
21st century
The twenty-first century did not begin well for the North Melbourne Football Club. Its decade-long onfield potency was in decline, questions were raised about its financial position and long-term sustainability and three of the pillars that had underpinned its 1990s dominance - coach Denis Pagan, captain Wayne Carey and chief executive Greg Miller - left the club under acrimonious circumstances. They went from finishing a reasonable 4th in 2000, before slumping to 13th position at the end of 2001.
Revelations that emerged only a few weeks before the beginning of the 2002 season that champion captain Wayne Carey had been having an extramarital affair with the wife of teammate and vice-captain Anthony Stevens shook the club, and the football world in general. Carey resigned in disgrace. However, despite this turmoil on the eve of the season commencing, Denis Pagan against all odds guided the Kangaroos to the 2002 finals series. Unfortunately, Melbourne proved too strong in the elimination final and defeated the club. This was also John Blakey's and Craig Scholl's (Scholl kicking a record equaling 7 goals in a final) last game.
The resignation of Pagan at the end of the 2002 season after being poached by Carlton president John Elliot further accelerated the process of decline, though North Melbourne remained competitive, and often a significant threat to the emerging powerhouses of Port Adelaide and Brisbane. Pagan was replaced by 1996 premiership player Dean Laidley. A talented player and wily coach, Laidley had previously been an Assistant Coach at Collingwood from 1999 until the end of season 2002.
The 2003 season was mostly uneventful, with one major exception — the emotional return of Jason McCartney from severe burns suffered in the 2002 Bali bombing on June 6 against Richmond. McCartney's statistics were modest, but he set up the winning goal with seconds remaining. He retired immediately after the game.
""If the world were consumed by a nuclear holocaust tomorrow, the North Melbourne Football Club and cockroaches would be the only two things left scurrying round the earth.
For the second week in a row, the Kangaroos showed why they are the hardest team to kill in the AFL.""
— The Australian 8 August 2005.
In the 2005 season, the Kangaroos fought back from a mid-season slump finishing fifth on the ladder and in doing so helped to silence critics who had labelled the club and new coach as 'ineffective' and 'useless'. Unfortunately, these critics returned when in the 1st Elimination Final, the Kangaroos lost by a shattering 87 points to reigning Premiers Port Adelaide.
2006 was anticipated as a major turning point for the Kangaroos. The club was consistent in its policy of swapping early draft picks for experienced players. There was a perception from outsiders that the club was facing an aging squad, with Daniel Wells shaping as the only young prospect for the Kangaroos. However, 2006 saw good performances from many of the other youngsters on North's list, including Daniel Harris, Hamish McIntosh, Corey Jones, Drew Petrie, David Hale and Andrew Swallow.
In July 2006, the Kangaroos' training ground, Arden Street suffered minor damage in a fire, which occurred at 4:30am, after a massive 72-point loss to the Adelaide Crows at AAMI Stadium the night before. Arson was believed to be the cause of the fire, and it forced the Kangaroos to train at Etihad Stadium for the remainder of the 2006 AFL Season.
Apart from highlights such as the victories over Port Adelaide , Hawthorn ,Carlton and Essendon, as well as Nathan Thompson kicking 54 goals and 13 votes in the Brownlow medal count the 2006 season was largely a disappointment.
At the conclusion of the 2006 Premiership Season, the North Melbourne Football Club changed their logo, mainly due to strong supporter pressure. The design includes an image of stream-lined Kangaroo, backed by a blue and white shield, with 'Kangaroos' underneath. Under 'Kangaroos' is the wording 'North Melbourne Football Club', back on the logo, much to the delight of thousands of North Melbourne traditionalists.
Early 2007 saw the club in the media spotlight on a number of fronts. With the retirement of personally troubled key defender Jonathan Hay and season ending injuries to the club's top two goal kickers of 2006, Nathan Thompson and Leigh Harding, the club was overwhelmingly tipped to receive the wooden spoon at season's end. Conflict between members of the club's board, and speculation of a relocation of the club to the Gold Coast, also gave the North Melbourne Football Club unwanted media attention. Midseason, inexplicable speculation about whether Dean Laidley would be re-signed as coach of the club despite its impressive performance thus far in 2007 was prominent in the media for a ten day period and then, just as inexplicably, faded away.
In spite of negative media attention, the club has had a significant resurgence on field, with its performances being more than respectable. A semi-finals berth in the pre-season competition was a preview of what was to come. Unfortunately the Kangaroos didn't get the start they hoped for, losing their first 3 matches including a heartbreaking Round 1 defeat at the hands of Collingwood by 3 points with losses against Port Adelaide and Hawthorn following.
An example of the new running game of the Kangaroos was in Round 4 against the Lions in the Roos first Carrara home game, in which they won by 24 points, 12.15.87 to 8.15.63. Leigh Brown kicked 3 goals for the Roos, while Hamish McIntosh had his best game of his career to that point, with 20 possessions. Daniel Wells, Jess Sinclair, Glenn Archer and Shannon Grant also had stellar performances.
The Kangaroos won 6 games in a row from round 4 to round 9, including a shock win over eventual premiers Geelong at Skilled Stadium, before eventually losing to West Coast by a whopping 66 points at Subiaco in Round 10. Following this loss, the Roos bounced back to defeat St. Kilda by a margin of 22 points at Etihad Stadium. However, possibly due to inexperience, the Kangaroos have not always appeared to have the ability to close out a game until late in the fourth quarter, with the notable exception of the Round 9 game against the
The club was victorious between Rounds 13 to 17 after the loss to Adelaide in Round 12. One of these victories, perhaps one of the most important to the club this year, was the Round 13 game against the Western Bulldogs where North Melbourne champion and Shinboner of the Century Glenn Archer celebrated his milestone 300th game.
Round 15 saw the Kangaroos upset the Fremantle Dockers at Subiaco by 4 points in a nailbaiting contest the whole way through with less than 6 points the difference at each break. Round 16 had the Kangaroos demolish Melbourne by 64 points and another Kangaroos victory followed a week later, this time a comfortable 37 point upset win over a higher placed Hawthorn at Aurora Stadium. This victory lifted North Melbourne to outright second on the AFL ladder by the conclusion of Round 17, with many football observers reluctantly having to revisit their assessments of both the ability of the North Melbourne squad for 2007 and the likelihood of the team playing in the finals.
The 2007 campaign hit an obstacle late in the season when, at the beginning of a difficult run to the finals, the club was defeated by the Lions at the Gabba by 37 points in Round 18. While the Kangaroos retained their position of second on the AFL ladder following this defeat, they did so with a lower percentage and with one less game as a buffer.
Following the defeat by the Brisbane Lions, the Kangaroos lost against fellow top 2 contenders and reigning premiers West Coast by 17 points at Etihad Stadium in a tight hard fought contest for most of the game. A week later in Round 20 the Kangaroos challenged Geelong who had wrapped up the minor premiership the week before. The Kangaroos being the last team to beat Geelong went in hoping that they could do it again, but unfortunately it wasn't to be as Geelong won by 27 points in a match that could've gone either way half way through the 3rd quarter. This loss pushed the Kangaroos down to 5th with the double chance looking dim but when they demolished a pathetic Carlton by 82 points the following week they sealed their place in the finals and also saw a chance to steal 4th spot had results fallen their way in the final round.
In the final round of the 2007 home and away season, the 5th placed Kangaroos played the Western Bulldogs winning by an impressive 64 points. Not only was this loss disappointing for the Western Bulldogs but in the 2nd term they were held to their first scoreless quarter of football since they played West Coast at Subiaco Oval in Round 6 1999. This was also the first time this season that a team has been kept scoreless in a quarter of football. On the same day, the Sydney Swans recorded an upset 72 point win against Hawthorn at the SCG which allowed the Kangaroos to leapfrog the Hawks to claim 4th spot and win the double chance plus a spot against the minor Premiers Geelong in the 1st qualifying final.
In the first week of the 2007 AFL finals when the club was beaten by the Geelong Football Club by 106 points, the fifth highest losing margin in finals history.
The Roos then defeated Hawthorn Hawks by 33 points in the semi final . They qualified for an preliminary final against the Port Adelaide Power at AAMI Stadium. Power won by 87 points
Push to the Gold Coast
In 2006 the Kangaroos agreed to play 3 home games at Carrara Stadium in the Gold Coast throughout 2007, which has fuelled speculation of a possible relocation there by 2010. With 10 of the 16 AFL clubs based in and around Melbourne, the AFL has always pushed for more involvement interstate. The Kangaroos, much to the dismay of the very loyal North Melbourne fans, are one team that many suggest may be the next to move, due to their smaller membership and poor existing Melbourne training facilities. In 1996, North Melbourne and the Fitzroy Lions agreed to merge, but their plans were scuttled by Richmond who feared the creation of a 'super club'. Fitzroy was sent to the Brisbane Bears, who in turn became the Brisbane Lions. The Kangaroos then signed an agreement to play some home games at the Sydney Cricket Ground in 1999 until 2001. Following this the Kangaroos played home games at Canberra's Manuka Oval from 2002 until 2006, when the Kangaroos received a better offer to move home games to the Gold Coast.
The Kangaroos had full AFL backing for their Gold Coast experiment, and the team had filmed a television commercial shown in South East Queensland promoting their team and the game. The AFL had stated that it wanted one game a week played in Queensland by 2015.[2]
The club denied speculation of a permanent move to the Gold Coast, but things could have been re-assessed based on how well the team was accepted there over the next few years.[2] In an after match at AAMI Stadium vs Port, Roos CEO Rick Aylett mentioned that the Kangaroos or the AFL have never mentioned the much despised "R" word (relocation), but it has been the work of the media. He also said that they will begin work on the Arden Street ground soon, and it will begin the roos push to become a 21st century club. Aylett then finished by saying that the Kangaroos would never leave their Victorian faithful, and therefore wanted the name "North Melbourne" to be cemented for the next 100 years despite their almost certain move to the region from 2009 onwards.
Despite this, the club has recently engaged consultants to look at the viability of such a move and the online survey sent to members appeared to be skewed so that the idea of relocation to the Gold Coast was more palatable.[citation needed]
On 2 December, 2007, media reports from The Age stipulated that the AFL had garnered support from 75% of the Kangaroos Board to move the club to the Gold Coast. With the club having a unique shareholder 'system' which gives members little say in the matter, the fact that the majority of the board would like to see the future of the club lie on the Gold Coast does not bode well for the future.
The Kangaroos answered their critics with a 24 point win in their first "home" game at Carrara against the Lions. Hamish McIntosh picked up 20 possessions while Leigh Brown kicked three goals. Jess Sinclair, Glenn Archer and Daniel Wells were the Kangaroos best.
During October, supporters started to mobilise in opposition to the proposed relocation. A group called We Are North Melbourne emerged and launched a public campaign, calling for the Club's shareholder structure to be wound-up and for ordinary members to be given the final say on the relocation issue. The group also raised questions about the viability of the AFL's relocation offer which grabbed national media attention.
Another group staged a "Roosistence" rock concert, headed by You Am I frontman, Tim Rogers, to raise funds for the club to remain in Melbourne.
On 6 December, the North Melbourne board rejected the AFL proposal to relocate to the Gold Coast.
On 7 December they announced an intention to return to the name North Melbourne (instead of being known only as "Kangaroos"), underlining their desire to stay based in Melbourne.
The club announced a major upgrade to their Arden Street facilities in an attempt to remain competitive off the field.
Shortly after, Rick Aylett quit as CEO of the club, citing personal reasons and an inability to work with a board which was split on the issue of relocation to the Gold Coast.[3] Following the announcement, James Brayshaw named a new board, committed to remaining in Melbourne.[4]
On 8 December news of a new major sponsorship deal broke, suggesting Vodafone will put up to Au$2 million into the club over the next 2 years for primary naming rights.[5]
Identity
Name and mascot
The club was widely known as the 'Shinboners' for much of their early history. The origins of this nickname are unknown but it may have had something to do with the club's reputation for targeting the shinbones of opposition players, or to do with local butchers who showed their support for North by dressing up beef leg-bones in the club colours. By 1926, the club was known as the 'Blue Birds' but this nickname did not last. It was Phonse Tobin, North president from 1953-56, who finally gave the club a proper mascot when he adopted the Kangaroos emblem in 1954. Tobin found the image of a Shinbone unsavoury and wanted the club to have a mascot it could show with pride. In selecting a new name, he wanted something characteristically Australian and got inspiration from a giant Kangaroo he saw on display outside a city store.
The official name of the club is North Melbourne, but the club has gone under several other aliases over the years. The club was originally founded as the 'North Melbourne Football Club', but changed to 'North Melbourne cum Albert Park' after merging with Albert park in 1876. Following the reformation of the club in 1877, it was known as the 'Hotham Football Club' but later retook the name 'North Melbourne' in 1888. In 1998 the club proposed changing its name to the 'Northern Kangaroos', but it was rejected by the AFL. Between 1999 and 2007, the club traded without much success as the 'The Kangaroos' in a bid to increase its appeal nationally. At the end of 2007 this decision was officially resindicated, and the club has once again reverted back to the name 'North Melbourne'.
Logo
Logo |
---|
Monogram logos were popular with cricket and football clubs during the 1800s and early 1900s.
This monogram design featured on official club publications prior to the 1960s. |
This is the club's official coat of arms and was used alongside the monogram design during the early 1900s up to the 1960s. |
In 1977 the VFL introduced official logos for the first time. Prior to 1977 logos were generally done by outside companies for sales of merchandise, but were in no way official. All the club's logos were printed on shields and had navy blue top halfs to represent the VFL. |
In 1983 the Kangaroo was reversed to face forwards instead of backwards to symbolise the direction the club was heading. |
In 1984 the light blue was dropped and the actual club colours of royal blue were adopted on the stripes. This logo lasted till 2001 and was the last of the 'VFL shield' logos to be discontinued by any of the clubs in the AFL. |
This was the club's secondary logo during the 1990s and by 2002 had been adopted as the official logo. The shield was dropped, the North Melbourne name was removed and more stripes were added. The change was made to coincide with the 'Kangaroos' rebranding of the club after 1998. |
In May 2005 the club invited fans to have their say on the current logo with a view to updating it. Three important elements for the fans were the retention of the stripes, kangaroo and North Melbourne name to reaffirm the club's commitment to its history. The logo was unveiled in 2007 with the chief executive, Geoff Walsh, describing it as "exciting and progressive, and keeps in line with the clubs core values and future direction." |
Home grounds
Homegrounds | Years |
---|---|
Royal Park | 1869 – 1875 |
Albert Park | 1876 |
Royal Park | 1877 – 1882 |
Arden Street Oval | 1882 – 1964 |
Coburg City Oval | 1965 |
Arden Street Oval | 1966 – 1985 |
Melbourne Cricket Ground | 1985 – 2002 |
Docklands Stadium | 2002 – present |
Guernsey
North Melbourne is recognised throughout Australian football for its vertically striped royal blue and white guernsey.
The design, first used in 1884, pre-dates any of the other vertically striped jumpers worn by other clubs in the Australian Football League.
The design has proven itself popular in Australian football having been adopted by hundreds of other clubs across the country.
Guernsey details | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Season | Manufacturer | Guernsey sponsor(s) | Short sponsor | |||
1975 – 1978 | — | Courage | — | |||
1979 – 1984 | — | Budget | — | |||
1985 – 1992 | — | Qantas | — | |||
1993 – 1995 | — | NZI Insurance | — | |||
1996 | Nike | Hypertec PCs | NZI Insurance | |||
1997 | Hewlett-Packard | SmokeFree | ||||
1998 | ||||||
1999 | Mazda, SmokeFree | Wentworth | ||||
2000 | ||||||
2001 | Russell Athletic | iPrimus | ||||
2002 | Mazda | |||||
2003 | ||||||
2004 | Bont | Mazda, Primus | Primus | |||
2005 | ||||||
2006 | Reebok | |||||
2007 | ||||||
2008 | Mazda, Vodafone | Blackwoods | ||||
2009 | Blades | Mazda |
Club song
"Join in the Chorus" is the official anthem of the North Melbourne Football Club. It is sung to the tune of a Scottish folk song "A wee Deoch and Doris", from around 1911. [6]
The famed song is generally sung, in accordance to common football tradition, after a victory. It is also played before every match.
"Join in the Chorus" is believed to be the oldest club anthem of any AFL club, and has been associated with North from its early VFA days. The preamble of the song originates from a score of a Theatre Musical called 'Australia: Heart to Heart and Hand to Hand" written by Toso Taylor in the 1890s in pre-federation Australia.[7] It is traditionally sung (or shouted) in great spirit by players and fans alike. The second verse is unknown in origin and was presumably added later by members of the North Melbourne Football Club when the song was chosen as the club theme. The chorus was appropriated from a song written and performed by Scottish musician Harry Lauder.
The song has a strong Victorian heritage, and has been traditionally song by the Victorian State Football and Victorian Cricket teams respectively.
- Lyrics
- 1st Verse
- Hearts to hearts and hands to hands
- Beneath the blue and white we stand
- We shout God bless our native land
- North Melbourne, North Melbourne!
- 2nd Verse
- Out we come, out we come, out we come, to play
- Just for recreations sake to pass the time away
- Lots of fun, heaps of fun, enjoy yourselves today
- North Melbourne boys are hard to beat when they come out to play!
- Chorus
- So join in the chorus, and sing it one and all
- Join in the chorus, North Melbourne's on the ball
- Good old North Melbourne, they're champions you'll agree
- North Melbourne will be premiers, just you wait and see!
During the 90s, the last line was sung as North Melbourne will be premiers in 1993, and changed according to what year it was. The last line has also been sung as North Melbourne is the team and place to win for you and me or North Melbourne is the team that plays to win for you and me. The 2nd line in the 2nd verse was originally sung as We train so hard, we play the game, we must win every day.
A more gritty opening verse exists that goes as;
- Shovels to shovels and picks to picks
- On the North Melbourne ground you stick like shit
- Get up you dirty mug or we'll hit you with a brick
Between 2000 and 2004 the club song was updated to keep it inline with 'Kangaroos' rebranding. The song went as follows;
- 1st Verse
- Hearts to hearts and hands to hands
- The length and breadth of this great land
- A Club deep in tradition held high in esteem
- From North Melbourne a national team
- 2nd Verse
- Out we come, out we come, out we come to play
- To take on all those other teams
- And blow them all away
- Lots of strain, with heaps to gain
- Is the way we play
- The Kangaroos will beat any team
- On any given day
- Chorus
- So join in the chorus, and sing it one and all
- Join in the chorus, the Roos are on the ball
- Good old Kangas, they're champions you'll agree
- The Kangaroos will be premiers
- Just you wait and see.
Shinboner spirit
"At clubs with bigger memberships, their supporters only touch their colours, but at North we have the Shinboner spirit. North people can touch that spirit - they are the real Shinboners, they are the club,"
— Ron Joseph
The origin of North Melbourne's 'Shinboner' nickname and the so called 'Shinboner Spirit' remains one of footy's great mysteries. Several theories exist as to how the club came to be known as the Shinboners. The general belief is that it became associated with North because so many of its players worked in the nearby meatworks. The players wore shorts whilst working at the abattoirs and would attend the evening training sessions with blood splashed over their legs, which gave rise to the nickname 'Shinboners'.
Likewise, local butchers on Abottsford St, used to proudly hang shinbones decorated in blue and white streamers from their veranda. It all started from the early North sides being so close knit that it reminded the butchers of blowflies on a shin of beef, and so the nickname was born. The hanging of shinbones decorated in blue and white became a tradition of the area, before health inspectors put an end to the practice.
Other theories exist that it started as a result of the Irish immigrants who played hurling on the North Melbourne Recreational Reserve during the 1930s who had a tendency to whack their opponents on the shinbones with their sticks. With other more derogatory theories coming from opposing teams that North Melbourne players were used to kicking people in the shins.
Whatever the answer, the Shinboner Spirit refers to the camaraderie and gutsy determination that was shown by the club in those early days. Nowadays it is a phrase attributed to the Kangaroos' ability to fight back against overwhelming odds with their backs against the wall.
This fighting spirit was forged by the club in its relentless persistence to gain admissions to the VFL. Despite folding 3 times in those early years, the community rallied together to re-establish the club like a phoenix from the ashes.
Former player and coach Denis Pagan is arguably responsible for rejuvenating the nickname when he began coaching the club's under 19's squad in 1982. Running the team off the smell of an oily rag, Pagan coached the squad to nine consecutive Grand Finals, before becoming senior coach in 1993 where he lead the poorest club in the league to another 2 Premierships in a decade of dominance.
During those years the team gained a legendary reputation for mateship that transcended the football field which is what kept the team so successful. The 1996 season was the epitome of the Shinboner Spirit when it became obvious that the club would not exist beyond the season unless it merged with Fitzroy. Despite all of the turmoil off the field, the club went on to win the 1996 centenary premiership and avert self-destruction.
After the drama of the Carey and Pagan walkouts in 2002, when North lost the two biggest faces of the club, the football world forecasted doom for club. Again, the club punched above it’s weight putting in competitive showings year after year, going against the doom and gloom predicted by the pundits.
2004 produced a memorable performance of Shinboner Spirit when the team rallied from a 40 point deficit at three-quarter-time to record a win in favourite son Glenn Archer's 250th game. Other evident performances were seen in the 2005 and 2007 seasons, where the club recorded a number of record comeback wins that earnt them the tag of being the team that can't be killed.
In 2005, to celebrate the club's 80th anniversary of senior competition in the VFL and the thirtieth anniversary of the first VFL premiership, the Kangaroos held a massive "Shinboner Spirit" gala event, attended by almost the entire surviving playing list. In the awards ceremony, the key "Shinboners" of the past eighty years were acknowledged, with Glenn Archer being named the "Shinboner of the Century" to almost unanimous acclaim.
Evidently what once a derogatory term, is now a badge of honour.
Membership base
North Melbourne has one of the most passionate and loyal supporter bases in the league. The club enjoys the 2nd highest supporter to member conversion rate, behind only the Fremantle Dockers. Despite this, the club still had the 2nd lowest membership base in 2007, having risen only by 200 people since 2000.
In 2007, research conducted by Roy Morgan estimated that 228,000 people Australia-wide followed the club. This is 2nd only to the Melbourne Demons as the smallest supporter base in the league. Decisions to play more games interstate and to change the club's name, have alienated their Melbourne based supporters, and this is reflected in Roy Morgan's research which suggests that North has lost 14% of its supporter base since their golden era ended in 2000.
Contrary to popular opinion, North Melbourne hasn't always had a small supporter base. In the early 20th century the club was known for its large supporter base, once setting an all-time league record for memberships in 1937 when the club signed up 2,400 members, but the club's popularity dwindled after spending decades at the bottom of the ladder after promotion to the VFL in 1925.
Ever since North Melbourne rejected the AFL's proposal to relocate to the Gold Coast, club membership has soared, exceeding the previous record set in 2006 by almost ten thousand in 2008.
Season | Members | Change from previous season | Finishing position | Average Attendance | Total Attendance
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1984 | 6,374 | — | 11th | 17,675 | 388,856 |
1985 | 6,520 | 146 (+2.29%) | 4th | 24,042 | 577,019 |
1986 | 5,318 | 1202 (-18.44%) | 7th | 21,592 | 475,032 |
1987 | 3,430 | 1888 (-35.50%) | 5th | 21,108 | 485,491 |
1988 | 4,415 | 985 (+28.72%) | 11th | 15,662 | 344,558 |
1989 | 3,411 | 1004 (-22.74%) | 9th | 17,759 | 390,693 |
1990 | 5,201 | 1790 (+52.48%) | 6th | 19,526 | 429,565 |
1991 | 6,683 | 1482 (+28.49%) | 8th | 20,574 | 452,617 |
1992 | 6,083 | 600 (-8.98%) | 12th | 19,652 | 432,350 |
1993 | 6,851 | 768 (+12.63%) | 5th | 27,213 | 571,481 |
1994 | 10,296 | 3445 (+50.28%) | 3rd | 33,177 | 796,254 |
1995 | 14,027 | 3731 (+36.24%) | 3rd | 35,379 | 884,477 |
1996 | 14,438 | 411 (+2.93%) | 1st | 37,827 | 945,678 |
1997 | 19,368 | 4930 (+34.15%) | 4th | 36,873 | 921,829 |
1998 | 20,196 | 828 (+4.26%) | 2nd | 38,336 | 958,394 |
1999 | 22,080 | 1884 (+9.33%) | 1st | 34 814 | 870,349 |
2000 | 22,156 | 76 (+0.34%) | 4th | 33,471 | 836,765 |
2001 | 21,409 | 747 (-3.37%) | 13th | 30,209 | 664,601 |
2002 | 20,831 | 578 (-2.70%) | 7th | 26,879 | 618,211 |
2003 | 21,403 | 572 (+2.76%) | 10th | 29,812 | 655,854 |
2004 | 23,420 | 2017 (+9.42%) | 10th | 28,300 | 622,580 |
2005 | 24,154 | 734 (+3.13%) | 7th | 31,511 | 724,757 |
2006 | 24,700 | 546 (+2.26%) | 14th | 28,849 | 634,686 |
2007 | 22,372 | 2328 (-9.43%) | 3rd | 33,458 | 836,445 |
2008 | 34,342 | 11970 (+53.50%) | 8th | 29,569 | 680,095 |
2009 | 30,231*[8] | 4111 (-11.97%)* | — | — | — |
* ongoing figures (as of 11 June 2009)
Ownership
The North Melbourne Football Club is a non-profit organisation limited by guarantee. Members of the club serve as the guarantees of capital, and have full voting rights at AGMs to elect directors to the club’s board.
The club’s board compromises nine directors with each director serving a 3 year term before their position is put up for re-election at an AGM. Only one-third of the board is contested at each AGM due to the rolling structure of the terms of the directors. This structure safeguards the entire board from being ousted at a single AGM, and has made North Melbourne immune to a lot of the in house fighting witnessed at other AFL football clubs. The board governs the club as well as selecting a Chairman to head the club through a majority vote of directors.
North Melbourne is unique in its structure, because from 1986 to 2006 the club was privately owned and limited by shares. The club was floated in 1986 through a membership vote lead by then Chairman Bob Ansett. At the meeting, members were encouraged to buy into the club trough purchasing shares. The float ended up raising over $3 million and helped to keep the club solvent through the next decade.
In 1991, the John Elliot-led Carlton Football Club attempted a hostile take over North Melbourne by purchasing a large parcel of shares formerly owned by Bob Ansett. The Blues acquired 20 per cent of the capital but that stake was eventually bought back by John Magowan, the former head of Merrill Lynch Australia, in 2001. The resulting melodrama saw the formation of B-Class shareholders who had the effective power of veto over any attempt to merge or relocate the club.
Further takeover attempts were made in the 2000s by the Southport Sharks. Then Chairman Allan Aylett knocked back a proposal from the Sharks that would have seen them gain a majority stake in the club in exchange for an injection of capital. In early 2006, another proposal from Sharks to underwrite Kangaroos games on the Gold Coast, in exchange for a slice of the shareholder structure at the club was knocked back after AFL intervention.
Due to an Australian Tax Office ruling in 2006, the club proposed a shareholder restructure that would have seen the B Class shareholders power reduced significantly and some voting rights returned to members. This was done to avoid extraordinary taxes being placed on the club, but the move was blocked in December by Bob Ansett and his proxies who feared that the restructure would make the club vulnerable to further takeover bids.
On the 28th of February 2007, another meeting was called to resolve the shareholder issue, and a motion was passed that would return see some voting rights return to members and stop any future tax increments.
In April 2007 it was revealed the AFL was attempting to buy out the shareholders of the club in a bid to gain full ownership, and force a relocation of the club to the Gold Coast.
During October 2007, a group called We Are North Melbourne emerged and launched a public campaign, calling for ordinary members to be given the final say on the relocation issue. While the group became synonymous with the push to keep the Club in Melbourne, its first priority was to see the Club's shareholder structure wound-up and control returned to ordinary members.
North Melbourne reverted back to public company in November 2008. A moratorium was passed at an Extraordinary General Meeting that will allow James Brayshaw’s board to serve unopposed until 2010, so as to allow his ticket the maximum time to enact their policies to make the North Melbourne Football Club financially viable.
Reputation
Football pioneers
Many of the traditions and initiatives that have become entrenched in the fabric and psyche of Australian Football were thought up by North Melbourne. North has a proud history of footy firsts that has given them the reputation of being the footy pioneers.
Apart from co-founding the first ever football league in Victoria - the VFA, and being the first club to install seats at their home ground, they were also the first club to introduce:
- Club memberships
- Jumper sponsorships
- League fixtures
- Club songs
- Separate pre-season jumpers
- Clash jumpers
- Corporate Entertainment
- Pre-match entertainment
- Coterie Memberships
- Social Clubs
- Mid-week discos
- Grand Final Breakfasts
- Doubleheader Football
- Friday Night Football
- Footy flags
- Cheersquads
All of these ideas were quickly copied by other footy clubs across the country.
North has never been afraid to try out new ideas. In the early 1970s North were the first club to try and convert an athlete from from another country and sport, when they recruited 'Wee Willie' Anderson, who was a professional African American basketballer. He never played a senior game.
In 1977, North became the first team to be telvised in colour, live across Australia, in the 1977 Grand Final. Eight years later, North became the first club of the modern era to move away from their local suburban suburban ground, in favour of better facilities at the centrally located MCG. The resulting move kicked off ground rationalisation in the VFL and saw clubs abandon their home grounds for larger stadiums at the MCG, Waverly and Etihad Stadium. In 1986, North became the first privatised club in the league, which was followed by Sydney and Fitzroy.
Other minor achievements are that they were the first club to play games interstate when in 1998 they trialled a home game in Canberra, which has now been copied by Carlton, Hawthorn, Melbourne, Richmond, St Kilda and the Western Bulldogs. North also were the first club to introduce headbands which became popular in the 90s, with the inspired "Operation Kangaroo" headbands in 1990.
Even today North continues to innovate, with the Orange sponsored Kangaroo jumper in 2001, and the introduction of an Argentine inspired soccer jumper in 2009.
Night and wet weather specialists
North Melbourne has the special reputation of being the night and wet weather specialists of the AFL.
In 1985, North Melbourne introduced the world first concept of playing football on a Friday Night. Since then, North Melbourne has played the most Friday Night games of any AFL club. North Melbourne's Friday Night dominance peaked during the 90s when they were almost invincible on the night stage. Their exploits in Friday and Saturday Night games became the stuff of legend. Lead by superstars like Wayne Carey, John Longmire and Wayne Schwass, North swept aside almost all opposition it faced. Their strong performances under lights have continued to this day.
Similarly, North has the same reputation of dominance in wet weather games. The history of North and wet weather football extends back to the days when the team played at the water logged Arden St. Their strength in wet weather football culminated in the 1997 Qualifying Final where an injury depleted, 7th placed North Melbourne side defeated 2nd placed Geelong in torrential rain at the MCG.
Together, these efforts have earnt North the tag of being the Night and Wet Weather Specialists respectively.
Indigenous Pride
Throughout the history of Australian Football Aboriginal footballers have thrilled crowds with their skill and flare, but unfortunately they have had to overcome great racial prejudices in order to compete at the highest level.
Despite being a traditionally catholic club, North Melbourne has a strong history of supporting Aboriginal footballers and fostering Aboriginal talent in the VFL and AFL. The first indigenous footballer to play for the club was Percy Johnson in the 1950s, and was ably followed by other fan favorites like Bertie Johnson, Barry Cable and the Krakouer brothers in the following decades. Despite the attitudes of some other fans and clubs to indigenous footballers, North Melbourne has always been inclusive of Aboriginal talent.[9]
The following is a list of Indigenous footballers to have played senior football at the club:
- Percy Johnson (1951-1955)
- Bertie Johnson (1965-1968)
- Barry Cable (1970, 1974-1977)
- Craig Holden (1982-1983)
- Jim Krakouer (1982-1989)
- Phil Krakouer (1982-1989)
- Derek Kickett (1989)
- Andrew Krakouer (1989-1990)
- Adrian McAdam (1993-1995)
- Warren Campbell (1994-1995)
- Winston Abraham (1998-2001)
- Byron Pickett (1997-2002)
- Gary Dhurrkay (1999-2000)
- Shannon Motlop (1999-2003)
- Daniel Motlop (2001-2005)
- Daniel Wells (2003-present)
- Eddie Sansbury (2004-2008)
- Djaran Whyman (2007)
- Matt Campbell (2007-present)
- Lindsay Thomas (2007-present)
- Cruize Garlett (2009-present)
Other Aborignal footballers who did not play senior football:
- Warren Benjamin
- Robert Cockatoo
- Rodney Cockatoo
- David Ross
- Christian Woodley
This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. |
Rivalries
Main
File:EssendonDesign.jpg Essendon - North and Essendon have a chequered history that dates back to the late 1800s. Firstly in 1896, Essendon had North excluded from the VFL, because both clubs drew supporters from the same area. Later on in 1922, Essendon stole the cream of North's squad after the two clubs went through a failed merger. To add insult to the rivalry, when North was accepted to the VFL in 1925, North were forced to cede all of their neighbouring recruiting territory to Essendon.
North supporters have long been bitter with Essendon for excluding them from the VFL, and have blamed that for their small supporter base in comparison to Essendon's.
North's first VFL Grand Final was against Essendon in 1950. Although Essnendon were the victors, North won the casualty count in a torrid enagement.
The rivalry was reignited in the 90s, and in 1998 some North fans decided to inform Essendon of their softness by throwing marshmallows at coach Kevin Sheedy.
North Melbourne's Grand Final victories in 96 and 1999 have both came against opponents that had defeated Essendon by a point in the preliminary final. For a while, Essendon saw defeating North as the flags they should have had.
File:HawksDesign.jpg Hawthorn - North and Hawthorn have a fierce rivalry that dates back to the 1970s when they played off against each other in 3 Grand Finals in the space of 4 years. From 1974 to 1978 the two clubs played against each other in 10 finals, and took each other on for the Australian Championship in Adelaide in 1976. During the 80s Hawthorn dominated North, and during the 90s the results were reversed with North dominating Hawthorn. The rivalry with the Hawks has been getting more fierce in the past few years, due to some questionable trading between the two clubs.
Minor
Carlton - North Melbourne was once listed on the stock market and Carlton tried to buy out North and take their top players. Later there was talk of a merger, or more specifically, Carlton increasing its shareholdings. North fans didn't think kindly of either option which made defeating Carlton in the 1999 Grand Final that much more special.
Current squad
October 19, 2008
North Melbourne Team of the Century
At a special function in August 2001 the North Melbourne Team of the Century was announced. There was no minimum number of games set for selection. Wayne Carey was named as captain and Denis Pagan as coach. The selection panel was Geoff Poulter (journalist), Father Gerald Dowling (club historian), Keith McKenzie (former coach), Lloyd Holyoak (former president), Max Ritchie (former player and chairman of selectors) and Greg Miller (chief executive).
David King, John Blakey, Wayne Schwass and Gary Dempsey were selected as emergencies.
Shinboner of the Century
On the 18th of March 2005, the North Melbourne football club held a special gala dinner entitled the "North Story" to celebrate the 80th anniversary of North's admission to the VFL, and the 30th anniversary of the club's first VFL premiership. Over 3500 people attended the historic event held at the prestigious Royal Exhibition Building, including almost all surviving North Melbourne players. Glenn Archer was voted the Shinboner of the Century by his peers as the player who most represents the 'Shinboner Spirit'. The following players were voted 'Shinboners' of their era:
- Les Foote - Shinboner of the early era (1925-50)
- Allen Aylett - Shinboner of the 50's
- Noel Teasdale - Shinboner of the 60's
- Malcolm Blight - Shinboner of the 70's
- Wayne Schimmelbusch - Shinboner of the 80's
- Wayne Carey - Shinboner of the modern era (1990-05)
Honours
Club
VFA
VFL
AFL
Other
Individual honoursPremiership ResultsBest and FairestHonour Roll
Records
References
External links |