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CLARENCE (Bellerive)
Affiliated: TFL 1947-2000; Southern Tasmanian Football League (SthFL) from 2001 Club Address: P.O. Box 94, Rosny 7018, Tasmania Home Ground: Bellerive Oval Formed: 1903 Colours: Red and white Emblem: Roos Premierships: TFL - 1970, 1979, 1981, 1984, 1993-94, 1996-97, 2000, 2009-10 (11 total); Southern Football League 2001-2, 2004, 2006 (4 total) William Leitch Medallists: H.Yaxley 1949; S.Spencer 1960; J.Richmond 1967; R.Lucas 1968; T.Sorrell 1976; S.Wade 1989; G.Williamson 1991; D.Noonan 1995 & 1996; M.Jones 1999 (9 Medallists/10 Medals) Horrie Gorringe Medallists: Nil Dolphin Medallists: Scott Wade 1989 (1 total) All Australians: Stuart Spencer 1958 (1 total) TFL Top Goalkickers: J.Cooper (42) 1951; J.Mills (49) 1968; T.Wayne (74) 1971; A.Vanderfeen (66) 1981; P.Dac (94) 1994; S.Allen (80) 2000 (6 total) SthFL Top Goalkickers: M.Williamson (63) 3007 (1 total) Clarence's Official 'Best Team 1947 to 2001': Click here Highest Score: 41.21 (267) vs. Brighton 5.4 (34) in round 5 2005 Most Games: 279 by Gavin Cooney Record Home Attendance: 5,075 on 13 June 1987: North Hobart 13.20 (98); Clarence 8.8 (56) Record Finals Attendance: 24,968 for 1979 grand final at North Hobart Oval: Clarence 12.11 (83); Glenorchy 11.14 (80)
High-flying action from the 2004 grand final which yielded the most recent of Clarence's 12 senior flags with the Roos downing New Norfolk by 33 points. Clarence's Andrew Triffett seems all set to mark. (Photograph courtesy of Dan Garlick of OzVox Media.) For long-suffering Clarence supporters the 1990s and the early years of the new century have brought unprecedentedly sustained success. Prior to 1990 finals appearances and premierships had been sporadic, but since then the 'Roos have made a habit of both. The district of Clarence, separated from Hobart by the Derwent River, has been a home of football for well over a hundred years. The first mention of the sport came in 1884 when a local side, Bellerive, played a challenge match against VFA side Carlton which, not surprisingly, the Victorians won comfortably. Over the next twenty years or so Bellerive continued to engage in frequent informal matches. mainly against local opposition, but it was not until 1903 that organised football came to the region with the formation of the Bellerive Football Association. The BFA lasted just one season, with Bellerive Football Club the first and only premiers. In 1904 the competition was replaced by the Derwent Football Association which comprised five clubs, including Bellerive. After winning one premiership (in 1907) of that competition Bellerive moved on to the three club Metropolitan Football Association in 1910 where it achieved regular success. After the Great War Bellerive re-formed but did not play in a formal competition until 1930 when it was a founder member, along with four other clubs, of the South Eastern Football Association. Bellerive won the first three flags in this competition and followed up with further premierships in 1937 and 1940. During World War Two a floating bridge was built connecting the eastern and western banks of the Derwent. The Clarence region was now a mere ten minute drive from the centre of Hobart, and it was not long before major new housing developments sprang up and the population escalated. Clarence could no longer be regarded as a country area and when the TFL began considering expanding its competition Bellerive, as one of the leading lights in the SEFA, were prime candidates for inclusion. In 1944 the Bellerive committee resolved to pursue admission to the TFL as a serious option and made the strategically astute decision to alter the club name to Clarence, thereby suggesting an association with the entire Clarence region, of which Bellerive was just a part. To suggest that the TFL were considering expansion is actually an over-simplification. Three of the TFL's established clubs - Lefroy, Cananore and New Town - were in difficulty and the league committee charged with preparing the ground for the resumption of full scale football after the war proposed that one way of alleviating these problems would be to introduce district football, whereby players represented the clubs in whose districts they resided rather than being free to join whichever club they wished . The implicit assumption here was that, with a district system operating, a more even playing field would tend to be created. Moreover, it was felt that there existed sufficient playing talent in and around Hobart to support six clubs of league standard, hence Clarence's optimism about being included.
Clarence's TFL career began with a convincing 16.15 (111) to 9.13 (67) defeat of old South Eastern Association rivals New Norfolk. This earned the Kangaroos top spot on the ladder, a situation in which they would not find themselves again for many years. Clarence finished the 1947 season in 5th place with 3 wins: finals participation was still some way off. In fact, it was not until 1952, with former Sandgroper great Les McClements at the helm, that the Kangaroos finally secured a finals berth after just squeezing into the four. Perhaps not surprisingly, however, the side appeared overawed by their achievement, and promptly lost the 1st semi final by 30 points to eventual premiers Sandy Bay.
The key word here is 'gradually': improvements in attitude and approach emerged long before the scoreboard started to display the benefits. Clarence finished last in both 1957 and 1958 before starting a slow ascent of the ladder the following year. By 1960 the side was performing with an aggressive vitality which left most opposition sides floundering. Unfortunately, after topping the ladder going into the finals, the team lost its way, and defeats in consecutive weeks by Hobart and North Hobart brought the season to an abrupt, inglorious end.
Former City-South, East Devonport and St Kilda player John Bingley took over from Spencer as senior coach for the 1967 season and remained until 1972. Under his guidance Clarence enjoyed their finest era to date, finally breaking through for a flag in 1970, after participating in the finals in each of the three preceding seasons for 3rd, 3rd and 2nd place finishes. The 1969 grand final pitted Clarence against a North Hobart side which had annihilated the Roos by 81 points a fortnight earlier in the 2nd semi final and which looked on course for a repeat when it led by 49 points midway through the 3rd quarter of the 'big one'. However, the Roos were quick learners and hit back strongly, dominating the remainder of the game to succumb in the end by just a couple of goals. Indeed, given that Clarence's last 5 kicks for goal all produced minor scores the result could quite easily have been different. The watershed year of 1970 began with some shrewd recruiting on the part of the Clarence committee. Four players in particular stood out: Adrian Bowden (ex Sandy Bay and Melbourne), Mike Nash (ex Collingwood reserves), Bob Lynch (ex City-South, Fitzroy and New Norfolk) and Bob Cheek (a 1969 Tasmanian state rep. from Penguin). Collectively, if somewhat inanely, termed 'the foreign legion', this quartet would go on to play a significant role in Clarence's rise to pre-eminence, but the real key to the achievement was the coaching of Bingley, who simply refused to accept second best.
Somewhat controversially, the Clarence committee chose Robin Norris, a local lad, as Bingley's replacement, but 4th place in both 1973 and 1974 was the best he could manage. Enter Trevor Sorrell from Port Adelaide, whose coaching achievements could not quite match his playing prowess. During Sorrell's two year stint the Roos got no further than the preliminary final. Under Sorrell's successor, Eric Pascoe, Clarence finished 6th in 1977 and 5th the following year. Noel Leary arrived from Sandy Bay for the 1979 season anticipating a stern challenge in his first coaching assignment, but to everyone's surprise his charges performed heroically, qualifying for the finals in 2nd position. Peter Hudson's Glenorchy were very much the team to beat, however, having finished the roster matches 16 points clear of the Roos, a superiority they were swift to re-assert in the 2nd semi final.
Best afield in the Roos' 3 point triumph was Greg French, but in truth every Clarence player played to the limit of his ability and it was only because of this that the supposedly indestructible Glenorchy bubble was burst. Clarence's next flag two seasons later was acquired with considerably more conviction. The side comfortably topped the ladder after the roster matches and stayed in the comfort zone in the 2nd semi final which yielded a 79 point annihilation of New Norfolk. Two weeks later in the grand final the Eagles resorted to rough house tactics in an attempt to square the ledger and at first this seemed to succeed as they went in at the long break 9 points to the good. However, the second half brought a restoration of normality as the Roos gradually got on top to carve out a 25 point victory, with John Moles best on ground.
Former South Melbourne/Sydney stalwart Stevie Wright (237 games between 1979 and 1991) was appointed playing coach in 1993 and he soon had the 'Roos playing a brand of football light years in advance of most opponents. Back to back premierships ensued, with North Launceston (9 points) and New Norfolk (38 points) the grand final victims. Wright left to join Central District in 1995 and there was a temporary hiatus under his successor, Grant Fagan (pictured left), as the Roos succumbed to North Launceston by 10 points in that season's grand final. It was back to business as usual the following year, however, as Clarence comfortably overcame grand final debutants Burnie by 27 points to make Fagan the first non-playing premiership coach in the club's TFL history.
As regards that fleeting episode in the history of Tasmanian football when statewide competition held sway, overall there can be little doubt - as the following table demonstrates - that Clarence was the TFL's most successful club:
The sudden demise of the TFL early in 2001 has left the above table looking less like a roll of honour and more like an epitaph. Clarence, along with fellow former TFL members Glenorchy, Hobart, New Norfolk and North Hobart, would compete in future in the Southern Football League, which had been formed in 1996.
After finishing second behind New Norfolk in 2005, the Roos reinforced their status the following year as, without doubt, the pre-eminent southern Tasmanian football power of recent times, when they withstood a stern first half challenge from Glenorchy before pulling a way to record a comfortable and highly meritorious 37 point win. Final scores were Clarence 17.13 (115) to Glenorchy 11.12 (78). In 2007 the same two sides again contested the grand final, but on this occasion the Roos were outclassed to the tune of 68 points. The 2009 season saw the establishment of a new statewide competition with Clarence among the inaugural members. It proved to be a memorable debut year for the 'Roos who ended up claiming the premiership with a hard fought 15.11 (101) to 14.11 (95) grand final defeat of Glenorchy. A year later Clarence again emerged triumphant on grand final day, comfortably disposing of the challenge of Devonport to the tune of 57 points. Gratifying as Clarence's recent achievements are, however, any satisfaction gleaned must inevitably have been tempered with both nostalgic regret and frustration verging on anger at the plight in which Tasmanian football, through little or no fault of its own, finds itself at the outset of what ought to have been a century of expansion, allure and exhilaration, but which instead could easily witness the demise of football as the island's premier sporting preoccupation.
Where now? or Footnotes1. Aged twenty-eight and at the height of his prowess as a player when he joined Clarence, McClements' most noteworthy achievement as a player had been his victory in the 1947 Eric Tassie Medal while representing Western Australia. Return to Main Text 2. Such a move was by no means unprecedented or unusual, although it is probably fair to suggest that, four decades on, most people would tend to view it as such. However, football in the 1950s was a much more egalitarian affair in which the competition in which a player participated was not necessarily regarded as the most crucial determinant of his quality. Return to Main Text 3. Hart went on to play 190 games and kick 363 goals with Richmond during a glittering eleven season VFL career. Return to Main Text 4. Hudson actually made a brief 3 game comeback two seasons later. Return to Main Text 5. This represented roughly an eighth of the local population. Return to Main Text 6. Formerly North Launceston. Return to Main Text 7. 'The Mercury', 13/9/04. Return to Main Text | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||