Port Adelaide Football Club (SANFL)
Port Adelaide Magpies Football Club | |
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File:Port logo.jpg | |
Names | |
Full name | Port Adelaide Magpies Football Club |
Nickname(s) | The Magpies |
Club details | |
Founded | 1870 |
Colours | Black White |
Competition | South Australian National Football League |
Chairman | Bruce McFarlane |
Coach | Tony Bamford |
Captain(s) | James Meiklejohn |
Ground(s) | Alberton Oval (capacity: 15,000) |
Other information | |
Official website | www.portmagpies.com.au |
Guernsey: |
The Port Adelaide Magpies Football Club (PAMFC) is an Australian rules football club, formerly known as the Port Adelaide Football Club, which was rebranded in 1996[1] after a licence to enter the Australian Football League (AFL) was granted to the club. From that decision, two clubs effectively existed, allowing an AFL entity, the Port Adelaide Power to play in the AFL competition, while the other club, the Port Adelaide Magpies, continued the Magpies' presence and history in the the South Australian Football League (SANFL). The PAMFC have won two premierships in that time, to take the club's overall tally to 36.[2]
History
Port Adelaide Football Club
The Port Adelaide Football Club was first founded on 20 April 1870 and played its first match on 24 May 1870 at Buck's Flat in Glanville.[1] Based in the north-western suburbs of Adelaide, its traditional supporter base is among the working-class residents of Port Adelaide and its surrounding areas; a strong rivalry naturally ensued with clubs of the wealthier suburbs, such as Norwood and Glenelg.
In 1877, Port Adelaide was a founding member of the South Australian Football Association (later renamed the SANFL). Port Adelaide won its first premiership in 1884. Its colours and mascot changed several times in the early years; shortly after the turn of the century it had settled on a distinctive "prison bar" strip in black and white with the nickname "the Magpies". Its 1914 team went through the season undefeated and then defeated Victorian champions Carlton in a match mooted as deciding that year's "Champions of Australia".[2] In the 1950s, under coach Fos Williams, the club was exceptionally dominant, winning seven premierships, including six in a row.[1]
Throughout the 20th century, the Victorian Football League became richer than its interstate counterparts (notably the SANFL and the WAFL) and consequently the quality of its players and play increased. Port Adelaide's dominance of the SANFL led to frequent calls, of varying degrees of seriousness, for it to join the VFL. The VFL expanded into Perth, Sydney and Brisbane during the 1980s and then renamed itself the Australian Football League in 1989. Port Adelaide reached an agreement to join the renamed AFL competition.[3]
Port Adelaide Magpies Football Club
The Port Adelaide Football Club, in effect, was a reverse-merger. From one club were created two entities, one to join the AFL and another to retain and continue in the SANFL. The AFL entity was renamed "The Power", wearing black, teal, white and silver colours. The SANFL entity was renamed as the "Port Adelaide Magpies Football Club".
The Port Adelaide Magpies Football Club and the Port Adelaide Football Club would therefore be able share the statistical history of the former PAFC from 1870 to 1996 even though they are both separate clubs.[3]
Stephen Williams was appointed coach of the Port Adelaide Magpies Football Club when John Cahill stepped aside mid-season in 1996 to concentrate solely on his job as coach of the Port Adelaide Football Club that had joined the AFL. Williams guided the club to three more premierships (one in 1996 as the previous PAFC and two as the PAMFC) before announcing his resignation at the end of the 2003 season.
The 2005 season saw club legend John Cahill return to coach the Magpies for a year, leading the club to finish in third position. Recruit Jeremy Clayton dominated the competition until a rupturing his spleen in the qualifying final victory over the Eagles ended his season and meant that he had to watch from his hospital bed as won the 2005 Magarey Medal. In 2006 Tim Ginever, who was Cahill’s assistant in 2005, took over the reins as senior coach and Mark Clayton as the new captain of the club.
Premierships
SANFL premierships
Port Adelaide Football Club (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
Port Adelaide Magpies Football Club (2)
1998, 1999
Champions of Australia
Port Adelaide Football Club (4)
1890, 1910, 1913, 1914
Magarey Medal winners
Port Adelaide Football Club
- Stan Malin (1899)
- Jack Mack (1907)
- Sampson Hosking (1910 & 1915)
- Jack Ashley (1914)
- Charlie Adams (1921)
- Peter Bampton (1925)
- Bob Quinn (1938 & 1945)
- Dave Boyd (1956)
- Geof Motley (1964)
- Trevor Obst (1967)
- Russell Ebert (1971, 1974, 1976 & 1980)
- Peter Woite (1975)
- Greg Anderson (1986)
- Scott Hodges (1990)
- Nathan Buckley (1992)
Port Adelaide Magpies Football Club
- Tony Brown and Ryan O'Connor (tied) (2001)
- Brett Ebert (2003)
- Jeremy Clayton (2005)
Records
- Most Goals: 1044 by Tim Evans (1975–86)
- Most Goals in a Season: 153 by Scott Hodges (1990)
- Most Years as Coach: 21 by Fos Williams (1950–1958, 1962–1973)
- Most Years as Captain: 9 by Fos Williams (1950–1958)
"Greatest Team": 1870–2000
In June 2001, a five man panel composed of Bob Quinn, Fos Williams, Dave Boyd, Russell Ebert and Greg Phillips was given the task of announcing the "Greatest Team" composed of Port Adelaide Magpies players between 1870–2000.
There are 201 premiership medals held by the 22 players in the Greatest Team; 532 state games; 16 Magarey Medals and a long list of football accolades and achievements.[4]
The "Greatest Team":
- HF: Dave Boyd, Les Dayman, Harold Oliver
- B: Dick Russell, John Abley, Ted Whelan
- Foll: Russell Johnston, "Bull" Reval, Fos Williams
- Int: Harry Phillips, Jeff Potter, Peter Woite, Lloyd Zucker
- Coach: Fos Williams
References
- ^ Port Adelaide Magpies Football Club — about the club from the official website.
- ^ Port Adelaide Magpies Football Club — about the club from the official website.
- ^ Port Adelaide Magpies face extinction
- ^ The Greatest Team Of All