Subiaco Football Club

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Subiaco
Names
Full name Subiaco Football Club
Nickname(s) Lions
2012 season
Premiership 7th
Home-and-away season 7th
Leading goalkicker Blake Broadhurst (32 goals)
Best and fairest Aidan Parker
Club details
Founded 1896
Colours      Maroon
     Gold
Competition West Australian Football League
Chairman Neil Randall
Coach Chris Waterman
Captain(s) Aidan Parker
Premierships 11
Ground(s) Leederville Oval (capacity: 18,000)
Other information
Official website http://www.sfclions.com.au
Guernsey:

The Subiaco Football Club, nicknamed the Lions, is an Australian rules football club in the West Australian Football League (WAFL). It was founded in 1896, and admitted to the WAFL in 1901, along with North Fremantle. The club is currently based at Leederville Oval, having previously played at Subiaco Oval.

History

Subiaco was incorporated in 1896, establishing its base at a small playing arena within the environs of the Shenton Park Lake. During the Club's embryonic period it played in the "First Rate Juniors" competition from 1896 to 1900 and enjoyed premiership success. As a result, along with fellow First Rate Junior powerhouse North Fremantle the Subiaco Football Club joined the then West Australian Football Association competition (known today as the West Australian Football League – WAFL) in 1901. However, it struggled so much that there were long debates as to whether it should continue after it won only eleven games in its first seven seasons[1] but with the construction of Subiaco Oval on what was formerly called the “sand patch”, the club’s performances improved: very slowly at first, but very rapidly after the acquisition of two key forwards in Phil Matson and Herbert Limb for the 1912 season. That year Subiaco rose from second last to their first ever premiership despite a thrashing from East Fremantle in the final, and they again won premierships against Perth in 1913 and 1915 before loss of players to World War I gave them the rare ignominy of plummeting from premiers to the wooden spoon in 1916.

During the inter-war period Subiaco were mainly a middle-of-the-road outfit, though they did win a premiership from third in 1924 and played in three grand finals for the rest of the decade, only to lose each time to East Fremantle or East Perth. They were noted for a large number of outstanding players during this period, including ruckman Tom Outridge and rover Johnny Leonard, but as these players declined Subiaco began a period of struggle that would rival their experiences in the 1900s (and from 1975 to 1983).

They plummeted to their first wooden spoon since 1916 in 1937 and made an extremely ambitious recruiting coup by providing local employment for three Victorian champions in Haydn Bunton, Keith Shea and Les Hardiman. Although Bunton lived up to his Fitzroy reputation and at times did work far beyond that expected of a rover,[2] Shea and Hardiman did not, and Subiaco in the four seasons from 1938 to 1941 won only 23 and drew one of eighty games, finishing seventh twice and sixth twice in an eight-team competition.

After the WANFL operated on an under-age format for three seasons from 1942 to 1944, Subiaco rose to fifth in 1945 and third in 1946, but this proved a false honeymoon. Sorely lacking in high quality players, Subiaco between 1947 and 1956 won only thirty-eight of 198 games, and simply failed to recruit players of the quality that the two Fremantle sides, Perth and West Perth did.[3] It was engaged in a consistent battle with Swan Districts for the wooden spoon, and never finished higher than seventh in an eight-team competition.

Late in the 1950s, Subiaco finally emerged from the doldrums in spectacular fashion when in its first final for thirteen years it kicked a remarkable 16.8 (104) in the third quarter against Perth - easily a record quarter score for a senior Australian rules final. They then beat East Fremantle to reach their first grand final since 1935, but were beaten by East Perth and in the following years Subiaco again struggled, winning only 69 and drawing three of 168 home-and-away games between 1960 and 1967 and never seeming to have good direction in their management. 1968, however, saw the club achieve stability through the recruitment of Haydn Bunton junior as coach and a record season from Austin Robertson at full forward, who kicked 157 goals and in one match against East Fremantle fifteen of nineteen (along with eleven behinds!). The club finished fourth every year from 1968 to 1970, but declined somewhat in 1971 and 1972. However, under new captain-coach Ross Smith and with the emergence of star players like Mike Fitzpatrick, Subiaco emerged for the first time since the Matson era as firm favourites for the flag during 1973 and duly beat West Perth.

However, with the departure of Fitzpatrick and Peter Featherby to the VFL, Subiaco returned to the dark days of the late 1940s and early 1950s. In 1974 they reached the First Semi-Final only to lose to Swan Districts, but would not participate in the finals for a decade afterwards and finished absolutely last in 1976, 1979, 1980, 1982 and 1983. In the process they won just 44 of 189 games, and in 1982 looked like a winless season before beating East Fremantle in the seventeenth round. However, during this period every one of the other seven WAFL clubs won at least one premiership. Their only genuinely class player of this era, Gary Buckenara, defected to Hawthorn after three years with the Lions. Worse still, unlike that earlier bleak era, Subiaco were hit by severe financial problems and only community involvement during the early 1980s managed to save the club from extinction.

The return of Haydn Bunton junior as coach after a long stint with South Adelaide was viewed by most Subiaco fans as the return of a master, and it is remarkable how he rose a nearly defunct club to a major force in the WAFL.[4] Subiaco moved from four wins to nine in 1984 (along with a reserves premiership[5]) and rose to second behind East Fremantle in 1985. Although it was their first finals appearance since 1974, Subiaco did not disappoint but ultimately failed by five points. However, 1986 saw them even better, beating VFL club St. Kilda in the Foster‘s Cup and losing only four games all year - their second-best home-and-away return behind 1912 - before recovering from a thrashing from East Fremantle to demolish that team in the Grand Final by sixty-nine points.

Bunton junior’s aim of a Subiaco dynasty was ended by the formation of the West Coast Eagles that summer, which quickly drained the WAFL of all its best talent. Nonetheless, he coached the Lions to another premiership in 1988, and although they did decline to only six wins in 1989 and 1990, Subiaco maintained a respectable position in the weakened WAFL over the next decade, before becoming the most powerful club therein during the 2000s under the coaching of Peter German and Scott Watters with premierships in 2004, 2006, 2007 and 2008 - in the last of which they were amazingly unlucky not to be only the second undefeated team in open-age WAFL history suffering only a one point loss to Swan Districts.

Honours

Club Honours

WAFL Premierships: (10 total) 1912, 1913, 1915, 1924, 1973, 1986, 1988, 2004, 2006, 2007, 2008

Runners-Up: (12 total) 1925, 1926, 1931, 1933, 1935, 1959, 1985, 1987, 1991, 1995, 2003, 2009

Reserves Premierships: (16 total) 1928, 1929, 1931, 1958, 1959, 1969, 1972, 1984, 1995, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2007

Colts Premierships: (1 total) 1989

Rodriguez Shield: (8 total) 1970, 1973, 1986, 1995, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2008

Individual Honours

Sandover Medal Winners: (12 total) 1921: Tom Outridge, 1935: Lou Daily, 1938: Haydn Bunton, Sr, 1939: Haydn Bunton, Sr, 1941: Haydn Bunton, Sr, 1991: Ian Dargie, 1994: Ian Dargie, 2000: Richard Ambrose, 2004: Allistair Pickett, 2006: Matthew Priddis

Simpson Medalists: (8 total) 1973: Dennis Blair, 1985: Brian Taylor, 1986: Mark Zanotti, 1988: Mick Lee, 2004: Paul Vines, 2006: Marc Webb, 2007: Brad Smith, 2008: Chris Hall

Bernie Naylor Medalists: (21 total) 1913: H. Limb (40), 1915: H. Limb (46), 1920: Pat Rodriguez (36), 1957: Don Glass (83), 1962: Austin Robertson, Jr. (89), 1964: Austin Robertson, Jr. (96), 1968: Austin Robertson, Jr. (162), 1969: Austin Robertson, Jr. (114), 1970: Austin Robertson, Jr. (116), 1971: Austin Robertson, Jr. (111), 1972: Austin Robertson, Jr. (98), 1987: Todd Breman (111), 1988: Todd Breman (75), 1993: Jason Heatley (111), 1995: Jason Heatley (123), 1998: Todd Ridley (77), 2003: Brad Smith (84), 2004: Brad Smith (109), 2005: Lachlan Oakley (83), 2007: Brad Smith (126), 2008: Brad Smith (104), 2011: Blake Broadhurst (68)

Tassie Medal Winners: (1 total) 1969: Peter Eakins

All Australians: 1966: Brian Sarre, 1969: Peter Eakins, 1972: George Young, 1986: Laurie Keene, 1986: Andrew MacNish

Records

Record Home Attendance: 21 088 v. Claremont on 2 June 1986

Highest Score: 29.33 (207) v. Peel Thunder on 3 May 2008 and 33.9 (207) v South Fremantle on 28 August 2010

Lowest Score: 0.0 (0) v. South Fremantle on 4 August 1906

Lowest Scores since 1919: 1.2 (8) vs. East Perth on 7 August 1920 and 1.5 (11) v. East Fremantle on 24 July 1954

Longest Winning Streak: 19 games from Round 12, 2006 to Round 7, 2007 (including 2006 premiership; bye in Round 8 of 2007)

Longest Losing Streak: 24 games from Round 1, 1902 to Round 9, 1903

Current squad

As of 3 March 2011:

1 Jason Bristow
2 Rhett Kerr
3 Chad Cossom
4 Ben Keevers
5 Ben Randall
6 Robert Forrest
7 Kane Bloxsidge
8 Scott Worthington
9 Aidan Parker
10 Patrick Hassett
11 Kyal Horsley
12 Scott Douglas
13 Allistair Pickett
14 Adam Cockie
15 Chris Phelan
16 Shaun Hildebrandt
17 Martin Smith
18 Abe Davey
19 Brad Stevenson
20 Clancy Wheeler
21 Des Headland
22 Danny Hughes
23 Darren Rumble
24 Marcus Hottes
25 Stephen Martin
26 Reece Blechynden
 
27 Sonny Dann
28 Jordan Adamson-Holmes
29 Marc Re
30 Michael Rix
31 Alliston Pickett
32 Blake Broadhurst
33 Todd Richards
34 Andy Diamond
35 Tyson Keene
36 Luke Symonds
37 Nick Hay
38 James Lee
39 Rory Muller
41 Harry Williams
42 Josh Hunt
43 Ryan Sheehan
44 Rowen McDonnell
45 Josh Sells
46 Trent Murray
47 Curtis Hansen
48 Ryan Prott
49 Seva Martin
50 Chris Pocklington
51 Ryan Wade
52 Jarrad Pisano
53 Scott Ward
 
54 Brodie Green
55 Clay Murray
56 Morgan Prott
57 George Hampson
58 Matt Cullen
59 Kyle Cranley
60 Gavin Armstrong
61 Rhys Ironmonger
62 Brad Keast
63 Sean Lawrence
64 Robert Rout
65 Darcy Thompson
65 Rhonen Maher
 
AFL Listed Players
West Coast Eagles
Mark Nicoski
Matt Priddis
Fremantle Dockers
Jack Anthony
Greg Broughton
Ryan Crowley
Antoni Grover
David Mundy

Team of the Century

Team of the Century
B: Dwayne Lamb Brian Sarre Lou Daily
HB: Laurie Kettlewell Brighton Diggins Bill Faul
C: Snowy Hamilton Peter Featherby Dean Kemp
HF: George Young Phillip Matson Gary Buckenara
F: Allistair Pickett Austin Robertson Tom Outridge
Foll: Mike Fitzpatrick (c) Haydn Bunton Johnny Leonard
Int: Laurie Keene Fred Williams Drew Banfield
Brett Heady
Coach: Haydn Bunton, Jr.

Honourboard

This section lists Subiaco's honourboard from the 2003 season onwards:

Year Coach Captain Best & Fairest
(Tom Outridge Medal)
Leading goalkickers
2003 Peter German Richard Maloney Marc Webb Brad Smith (84)
2004 Peter German Richard Maloney Allistair Pickett Brad Smith (109)
2005 Peter German Marc Webb Matt Priddis Lachlan Oakley (80)
2006 Peter German Marc Webb Mark Haynes David Mapleston (57)
2007 Scott Watters Marc Webb Brad Smith Brad Smith (126)
2008 Scott Watters Marc Webb Greg Broughton Brad Smith (110)
2009 Scott Watters Brad Smith Shaun Hildebrandt Trent Dennis-Lane (66)
2010 Chris Waterman Aidan Parker Blake Broadhurst Blake Broadhurst (56)
2011 Chris Waterman Aidan Parker Kyal Horsley Blake Broadhurst (68)
2012 Chris Waterman Aidan Parker Aidan Parker Blake Broadhurst (32)

See also

  • Wikipedia listing of Subiaco Football Club players
  • Subiaco Lions 2007 Season

External links

References

  1. See Spillman, Ken; Diehards: The Story of the Subiaco Football Club 1896-1945; pp. 33-37 ISBN 0-646-35834-0
  2. See Spillman; Diehards Part I; pp. 151-160
  3. See Spillman, Ken; Diehards - the Story of the Subiaco Football Club 1946-2000; ISBN 0-9578185-0-5
  4. See Devaney, John; Full Points Footy’s WA Football Companion; p. 278. ISBN 978-0-9556897-1-0
  5. Devaney; Full Points Footy’s WA Football Companion; p. 277
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