Bankers Football Club
Bankers | ||
---|---|---|
Names | ||
Full name | Bankers Football Club | |
1877 season | ||
Home-and-away season | 8th (Last) | |
Club details | ||
Founded | 28 March 1877 | |
Dissolved | 15 September 1877[1] | |
Colours | Blue White | |
Competition | South Australian Football Association | |
Uniforms | ||
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The Bankers Football Club was an Australian rules football club that competed in the inaugural 1877 South Australian Football Association (SAFA) season. The club was formed on 28 March 1877 from a meeting of about 30 officers of the Banks of Adelaide.[2]
The club lost every one of its scheduled 15 matches, finishing eighth and collecting the inaugural SAFA wooden spoon, scoring just 4 goals and conceding 36. Six of these losses were following forfeits (Adelaide, Port Adelaide, South Adelaide, Kensington 1 each, and Woodville 2) , as the club struggled to field a full team particularly later in the season.[3]
History
[edit]Formation
[edit]A meeting of the members of Bankers was held on 13 April 1877. H. F. J. Bloudel was elected as secretary and treasurer, while A. Crooks, H. Edwards, R. P. Poole, W. Cornish, and S. Dyke were elected as committeemen.[4]
1877 season
[edit]The club's first official match was on Saturday, 12 May 1877 against Adelaide on the Adelaide Oval, with Colton as captain. Their only goal was kicked by Lindsay in a 1–4 defeat. The match was advertised for the week before on Saturday 5 May for a 2.30pm start but was postponed due to the weather. Bankers were to wear White jerseys.[5]
Tragedy struck the Club when one of its players C.B. (Charles) Poole died on 5 June after suffering an injury in the club's second game against South Park on 19 May. There was ensuring debate as a consequent about the rule of when a player was collared with the ball.[6]
The club's last recorded game was on Saturday, 28 July 1877 against South Park, with Crooks as captain in a 0-3 goals defeat.[7]
Disbandment
[edit]It was reported that the Bankers forfeited their game on 11 August 1877 vs Port Adelaide at Montefiore Hill. Port had a full team on the field when the Bankers captain Cotton informed them that his team would not be present.[8]
Bankers was seen by fans, the media and other teams as being equal to a social club at the elite level. At the end of the 1877 season, 'Marlborough', writing in The Advertiser, implicitly echoed these sentiments, and expressed the hope "that no efforts will be made to establish it next season". The writer got his wish, as the Bankers dropped out of the SAFA and disbanded never to be seen again.[9]
Social and charity matches
[edit]Despite the Bankers senior team folding in the SAFA in 1877, social and charity matches were arranged from time to time.
On 21 May 1879, a football match between Bankers and Civil Servants took place on the North Park Lands. The weather was fine, but the attendance at the beginning of the match was very meagre. It, however, increased as the afternoon went on. C. Hughes captained the Civil Servants, and A. Crooks the Bankers. The latter was distinguished by a white band around the arm. Civil Servants scored the only goal.[10]
On 11 August 1888, Bankers defeated Brokers 4 goals to 3 at Adelaide Oval. Both teams comprised several of the leading players in the colony, but the game was reportedly rather slow. Proceeds from the match went to the Children's Hospital.[11]
On 16 June 1890, the annual football match between the Bankers and Brokers was played on the Adelaide Oval on Thursday afternoon, but only a very small number of people were present. Bankers won 4.9 to 4.1.[12]
Notable Players
[edit]Alexander Crooks (originally from the Adelaide Club), who captained the Bankers in 1877, joined the Kensington Football Club in 1878 and became their captain.[13] He was also a bank manager of Commercial Bank of South Australia, cricketer (played for South Australia) and embezzler.
Crooks, a bank clerk, had come to the notice of the elite in 1874 in a moment of cricketing fame when, representing South Australia at Adelaide Oval, he took a spectacular boundary catch to dismiss the legendary W. G. Grace for six runs. Crooks became treasurer of the South Australian Cricket Association and, by 1885, he became its chairman but resigned shortly before the bank scandal broke. A large part of the bank’s cash deficiency turned out to be money misappropriated by Crooks as SACA treasurer. The bank shareholders’ meeting called for Crooks’ lynching. He avoided that but served eight years in Yatala prison.[14][15]
References
[edit]- ^ "Latest News". Evening Journal. 15 September 1877.
- ^ "Latest News". Evening Journal. 29 March 1877.
- ^ "03 Oct 1877 - Football. The Season Of 1877". nla.gov.au. 3 October 1877.
- ^ "Latest News". Evening Journal. 14 April 1877.
- ^ "Football". South Australian Register. 14 May 1877.
- ^ "The Late Football Accident". Adelaide Observer. 16 June 1877.
- ^ "Football". South Australian Advertiser. 31 July 1877.
- ^ "South Australian Register (Adelaide, SA : 1839 - 1900) - 14 Aug 1877 - p7".
- ^ "Bankers Football Club (SANFL), 1877".
- ^ "Football". Evening Journal. 22 May 1879.
- ^ "Football". South Australian Advertiser. 12 September 1888.
- ^ "Football". Advertiser. 27 June 1890.
- ^ "Kensington Football Club". Adelaide Observer. 8 June 1878.
- ^ "Alexander Crooks, who caught W.G. Grace at Adelaide Oval, caught in bank collapse in 1886".
- ^ "Alexander Crooks (1847–1943)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.