Sydneys beginnings were boom & crash

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  • shearer
    Regular in the Side
    • Jan 2003
    • 673

    Sydneys beginnings were boom & crash

    A very good article on the old SFL from todays Age.

    I was only a kid but i remember those crowds for the grand finals.

    Sydney's beginnings were boom and crash
    September 16, 2005




    Sydney's football journey began long before the Swans. Steve Strevens remembers.

    SYDNEY in the 1970s was a wonderful city in which to live. I shared a house in Paddington, which in those days was home to gatherings of hippies, where kaftans, beads and illegal substances were the norm.

    It was a heady time ? the sun, the beaches, the pubs, the music.

    Then there was football.

    I played for South Sydney. Although nowhere near as successful as our rugby league counterparts, we were still the Rabbitohs, nonetheless.

    An eclectic bunch, we attracted players who had stopped off on the then traditional journey around Australia. A couple came from South Australia, a few from the West and some from Tasmania. Most were from Victoria.


    There was Peter Marks, who played for Fitzroy reserves and whose other claim to fame was to be beaten at the post by Jean Louis Ravelomanantsoa in the 1975 Stawell Gift.

    Wayne Bruce, who we named Batman, obviously, had played with South Melbourne reserves while Bob Hankinson, our coach, had been at Collingwood.

    As most games were played on Sundays, we would get together on Saturday afternoons and watch the live telecast of the VFL match of the day from Melbourne.

    The standard of Sydney footy was pretty good in those days. Each club had VFL reserves players or some from the VFA. Indeed, the NSW team that was made up predominantly of players from the Sydney league, beat the VFL seconds by 77 points in 1972.

    NSW was coached by former Richmond legend John "Swooper" Northey, who had been recruited by Western Suburbs, a club with the luxury of poker machines. Northey was a revelation, although a target for many unscrupulous opponents, who pounded him at every opportunity.

    Former Carlton star Mark Maclure was a youngster at the time, having moved to Sydney with his father who was in the navy. Maclure played at Eastern Suburbs, and remembers receiving a good grounding in the rugged football environment. "They reckon it was as tough as the old VFA," he said this week.

    There were many other identities. Sam Kekovich coached Newtown in his inimitable style, as did Alan Joyce before taking Hawthorn to a flag. Steve Rixon played for St George before saving his hands for wicketkeeping.

    Our games were played on grounds surrounded by proper fences; with gates and turnstiles and old brick grandstands. Not that we had a huge following, although grand finals were played in front of 12,000-strong crowds.

    Maclure was right. Some games were brutal, especially those against Balmain at Leichardt Oval. On one occasion, I was decked behind the play, whereupon Mick Lumsden came rushing towards the culprit, dived over my prostrate body and delivered his form of retribution.

    An all-in brawl ensued, which included our president, the one-legged Jack Armstrong, who hopped over the fence and charged as fast as he could towards the fight, waving his crutches to anyone within range.

    We reached the finals in 1974 and Inside Football called us the Foreign Legion. One of our less well-credentialled recruits, football wise, was Marty Rhone, who, after recording Denim and Lace, decided to top off his career by playing with us. Marty played only seconds, but he certainly attracted the women.

    Then in the next few years, things began to change. South Sydney folded, as did a few other clubs. The TV broadcasts moved to the middle of the night.

    The Swans came in 1982 and we thought that with them would come a renewal of the competition. Nothing much happened. Clubs still folded or amalgamated and many of the grounds were rationalised. Trumper Park, home to Easts, became inner-city parkland. West's ground, Picken Oval, had the fences and changing rooms demolished. And Paddington changed dramatically. too.

    The locals stayed but the rest of us moved back home to states where footy was appreciated more.

    But we never forgot those years; everyone's second team is the Swans. Each time they play, we remember what it was like before them. We still hope that Sydney will embrace football in general ? not only the Swans ? and that it gains rather than loses more local following.

    And in far-flung corners of the country tonight, no matter who we barrack for, we will be urging the Swans to victory and smiling at our memories.
  • floppinab
    Senior Player
    • Jan 2003
    • 1681

    #2
    Of course those that are even older remember how it was in the sixties.
    My father in-law continuous to regale us with stories of playing with North Shore in the 50's and 60's.
    Not to mention how close AR was to becoming the dominant code in Sydney at the turn of the century. What might have been.

    Comment

    • shearer
      Regular in the Side
      • Jan 2003
      • 673

      #3
      Interesting you say that Floppinab.

      I was at the league the other day and in the Big League was a review of a book that has just been brought out on how Rugby League got started in Sydney & it mentioned how Aussie Rules was the number 1 code in sydney up to the first World War.

      Comment

      • floppinab
        Senior Player
        • Jan 2003
        • 1681

        #4
        There've been a couple of stories on the Net recently about AR history in Sydney. I'll see if I can find them.
        An interesting anecdote while I'm here is RL's medal man Dally Messenger played AR for a signifcant period in Sydney.

        Comment

        • Coastal Boy
          Regular in the Side
          • Nov 2003
          • 516

          #5
          Interesting historical. To date, has the emergence of the Swans propelled AFL in Sydney or sent it in the other direction? Were the heady days of 10,000 at grandfinals long gone anyway. There arent many former VFL or AFL players (in line with years gone by) running around in Sydney these days.

          A serious question: Has the Swans sunk the Sydney AFL permanently?

          Comment

          • william wallace
            On the Rookie List
            • Aug 2005
            • 123

            #6
            Great article shearer. Alot of info that really surprised me.

            Comment

            • shearer
              Regular in the Side
              • Jan 2003
              • 673

              #7
              Coastal Boy, in answer to your question Yes i think they have.

              The standard of the SFL has gone backwards since the Swans have come in that is for sure. But there has been a steady decline in the quality of the competition over the last few years especially.

              I would hate to think what the Campbelltown teams of the late 80's & Parramatta of the early 90's would do to teams in this competition.

              While the top 6 players of each club hasnt dropped off its the bottom 10 that drops right away.

              The Sydney AFL & afl generally have got to stop beating there chests about how many kids are playing auskick they must throw money into helping clubs with facilities etc.

              If clubs didnt have to pay exorbitant affiliation fees and also pay the Umpires fees that would be money that could be redirected into the clubs themselves.

              There are a lot of people who are very anti Swans because of the approach they took when they first came to Sydney. Which has been disappointing because i believe they have worked pretty hard in recent years to spread the gospel.

              Comment

              • humphrey bear
                Buddy
                • Aug 2005
                • 291

                #8
                I agree entirely Shearer.

                Interestingly when I echoed similar sentiments a couple of months ago most of the repondants here put on their rose coloured glasses and suggested I was completely wrong.

                IMO the biggest problem currently is that the NSWAFL and many of the clubs wont admit that there is a problem and that the major competition in Sydney is heading the wrong direction quickly.

                Until certain people are able to agree that using ploys such as quoting Auskick numbers are nothing but a smoke screen, AFL in Sydney will not improve Swans premiership or not

                Comment

                • rabbitohmick
                  On the Rookie List
                  • Dec 2008
                  • 1

                  #9
                  Old Campaigner

                  I think that all in brawl may have been at the Jubilee Oval in Glebe, which was Balmain?s home ground at the time. As the goal umpire ran in to report the full back that knocked Strevo out I accidentally collected him on the way through and was reported then by the field umpire for striking both the assailant and the umpire. It got ugly at the tribunal but luckily for me the president of Balmain testified for me regarding accidental contact with the umpire and I think I only got four weeks. Our home ground was Erskineville Oval and I remember being the first player reported for a new rule in 1973 called ?deliberately wasting time? when I kicked the ball over the grandstand when a decision went against me! Childish behaviour. Good fun back then.

                  Comment

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