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Revision as of 04:29, 3 June 2005

File:Collingwood Football Club logo.gif
Collingwood Football Club logo

The Collingwood Football Club, nicknamed The Magpies after the black and white striped jerseys worn by the players, is an Australian rules football club, playing in the elite Australian Football League.

The Magpies are known for their passionate supporting base, and have traditionally been the team other fans "love to hate", due perhaps to their on-field successes combined with a "rough and ready" attitude in line with the club's working-class roots. The national league may have diluted this feeling somewhat, but rivalries with fellow Victorian clubs Carlton, Essendon and Richmond remain fierce. They club was traditionally known in Melbourne as the "Catholic" club, possibly due to support in the 1920s from the wealthy businessman John Wren, and also due to the support of Irish descendants living in the Collingwood slums in the early years of the 20th century. Collingwood was one of the last clubs to abandon its traditional stadium, the famous inner-city Victoria Park. Collingwood is now based at the MCG (Melbourne Cricket Ground). Collingwood is traditionally the greatest crowd drawer in the AFL. In 1970, 120,000 spectators watched Carlton defeat Collingwood in the grand final, and several times during the "home and away" phase of the season Collingwood games will feature crowds close the current MCG capacity of around 90,000. Collingwood's long era as the club with the highest member base has ended with the arrival of the national competition.

The Club was formed by local residents in 1889 as the Collingwood Football Club and in 1891 was admitted to the Victorian Football Association, then the leading Australian Football organisation (formed in 1877). The first match was attended by 16000 people, a high figure at that time. Collingwood won its first and only VFA premiership in 1896, defating South Melbourne. Collingwood was one of the leading group of wealthy, popular and powerful clubs that was moving away from the lower VFA clubs, so Collingwood was a founding member of the breakaway Victorian Football League, founded in 1897. Collngwood won the inaugral VFL title.


Collingwood is notable for holding the greatest run of successive premierships - four in a row from 1927-1930. But equally renowned has been their tendency to lose grand finals in recent times. Their 1958 victory was to be their last for 32 years. The 1958 victory was an underdog victory, with Collingwood motivated to prevent their opponent Melbourne winning its fourth successive Grand Final. In 1959 and 1960 Melbourne won again, so Collingwood's 1958 victory was essential to protect the club's greatest claim to fame. During this drought, fans remarkably had to endure no less than nine fruitless grand finals (1960, 1964, 1966, 1970, 1977 (draw, then loss), 1979, 1980, 1981), inspiring the term "Colliwobbles" to signify a choking phenomenon (as opposed to "collywobbles", an English word meaning an upset stomach). The 1990 team coached by Leigh Matthews brought relief in a one-way affair against Essendon. The 1990 Grand Final was the first Australian Football League Grand Final; before then the league was the Victorian Football League. Collingwood is therefore the inaugral premier in both the VFL and the AFL.

The team then fell into a state of decline, before being rejuvenated by its new president, Eddie McGuire, who led an on-field and off-field modernisation mission which helped the team to reach the grand final in 2002 and 2003. Ironically, it was Leigh Matthews who coached the Brisbane Lions to victory on both occasions. Brisbane won again in 2004, threatening to equal Collingwood's four-in-a-row record; Brisbane failed to win the fourth successive premiership. Collingwood failed to make the finals in 2004 and the 2005 season began badly.

AFL/VFL Premierships:

1902, 1903, 1910, 1917, 1919, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1935, 1936, 1953, 1958, 1990.

Collingwood has won the wooden spoon (finished last) in 1976, a year of enormous turmoil and a player strike. The true quality of the team was revealed in 1977 when Collingwood rebounded to play in the Grand Final, although the team lost.

The well known Australian playwright David Williamson wrote a play, "The Club", inspired by the internal politics of Collingwood. A film version is available, featuring some Collingwood players. In the play, Collingwood is disguised as the fictional "Carringbush Football Club".

Brownlow Medal winners:

Team of the Century

Collingwood announced its team of the century on June 14 1997, celebrating 100 years since the beginning of the VFL.

Backs: Harold Rumney Jack Regan Syd Coventry (captain)
Half Backs: Billy Picken Albert Collier Nathan Buckley
Centres: Thorold Merrett Bob Rose Darren Millane
Half Forwards: Des Fothergill Murray Weiderman Dick Lee
Forwards: Phonse Kyne Gordon Coventry Peter Daicos
Followers: Les Thompson Des Tuddenham Harry Collier (vice captain)
Interchange: Tony Shaw Wayne Richardson Marcus Whelan
Gavin Brown
Coach: Jock McHale

External link

Australian Football League clubs

Category: