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A.J.A.X.

Current Affiliation: Victorian
Amateur Football Association (VAFA) since 1957
Home Ground: Oval
9, Gary Smorgon Oval
Formed: 1957
Colours: Red,
white and black
Senior VAFA
Premierships: B Section -
1979 (1 total); D Section - 1999 (1 total); E Section - 1966, 1975 (2 total)
Senior Competition Best
and Fairest Awards: G.T.
Moore Medal (B Section) - Michael Ritterman 1979 (1 total); L.S. Zachariah Medal
(C Section) - Michael Ritterman 1978 (1 total); L.S. Pepper Medal (D Section) -
Henry Jolson 1967; Michael Ritterman 1976 J. Fullerton Medal (E Section) -
Maurice Herzfeld 1971; Michael Ritterman 1975 (2 total)
For over half a century,
A.J.A.X. (Associated Judaean Athletic Clubs) has been a significant feature of
the VAFA landscape, both in terms of on-field achievement and in the broader,
less easily measurable sense of its general espousal and furthering of the Association's
aims and ideals.
The club emerged from the
semi formal annual matches begun in the 1930s between teams representing the
Jewish communities north and south of the river Yarra. A proposal to form
a club representative of the entire Melbourne Jewish community had been made as
early as 1955 by an avid football enthusiast called Daryl Cohen, but it was 1956
before the necessary concerted action began to be made. Eventually, with the promise
of financial backing from the Ajax roof organisation, a healthy-looking balance
sheet thanks to a series of successful fund-raising nights, and a home ground at
Peanut Farm Oval, Blessington Street, courtesy of the intervention of local
parliamentarian Baron Snider, all the major ingredients necessary to produce a
viable amateur football club had been procured. The club therefore applied
for admission to the VAFA's E Section for 1957, which was duly granted, and
within four months of the inaugural AGM the team was running out onto Peanut
Farm Oval for its first match.
Coached by Peter
Charlestone, and with Lionel Rosenberg as captain, A.J.A.X. won that opening
fixture against Insurance Social Club Association comfortably, and went on to
enjoy a fine season. After winning 13 and drawing 1 of its 18 home and
away fixtures to qualify for the finals in 2nd place, it scored a comfortable
win over Port Melbourne Amateurs in the 2nd semi final to not only qualify for
the grand final, but also secure promotion to D Section.
Port Melbourne, a club with
which A.J.A.X. would enjoy a vigorous, at times feisty, but overall good-natured
rivalry, turned the tables on grand final day, winning a hard fought game by 9
points. However, when the disappointment at losing faded, the club was
able to reflect with considerable pleasure on a season that had seen its initial
ambition of holding its own considerably exceeded.
Daryl Cohen, the man who, in
a sense, had started it all, would go on to play a number of key roles in the
club's development. Vice-captain of the team in its debut season, he went
on to play 93 senior games, and on his return to the club as coach in 1975 was
responsible for initiating arguably the greatest era in its history. As an
industrious and inspirational president in 1979 and 1980 he had the satisfaction
of overseeing both a B Grade flag and the club's first assault on A Grade.
Thoughts of
A Grade were still a long way off in 1958, however, as a horrendously
inconsistent season yielded just 8 wins from 16 matches for 6th place on the D
Section ladder. According to Keith Isaacs, president of the Ajax roof
organisation which continued to support the team, "the A.J.A.X. Football
Club was just a bunch of players who get together for weekly matches" (see
footnote 1). That the players were stung by such criticism was made
apparent both by their words and actions. First, they issued a joint
statement declaring that they felt they had done a good job in adjusting to the
more demanding standards of D Grade. Secondly, and arguably more
tellingly, they set about dominating D Section in 1959 to the extent that only
one match for the year was lost, and promotion for the second time in three
seasons was earned. Unfortunately, the single loss occurred when it was
least welcome, on grand final day - how the A.J.A.X. players must have wished
for a restoration of the challenge system of playing finals that the VAFA had
abandoned only two years previously!
Midway through the 1960
season the club lost the services of its coach, Peter Charleston, the man who
had masterminded its ascent through the grades, and in
hindsight this can be seen as a prelude to the difficult times that lay just
ahead. At first, however, the club still seemed to be on track to continue
its upward progress. After a season of consolidation in 1960 it could be
considered unfortunate to have missed the finals the following season only on
percentage. However, the loss of a large number of key players made it not
only impossible to build on this promise, it actually precipitated a decline
that was even more dramatic than its rise had been. By 1964 the side was
back in E Section, and just about the only good thing to be said about this was
that its eventual emergence two years later spawned the first premiership in the
club's history. Key players in the A.J.A.X. team that beat Old Ivanhoe
Grammarians in the 1966 E Grade grand final at Ross Gregory Oval, Albert Park
included eighteen year old centreman Stan Duzenman, centre half forward Henry
Jolson, key defenders Alan Synman and Ron Merkel, ruckman Hiram Janover, and
wingman Barrie Jurberg (another eighteen year old). Coached by former
skipper Lionel Rosenberg, and with Janover as captain, A.J.A.X. won the grand
final by the emphatic margin of 71 points, 19.14 (128) to 8.9 (57).
As intimated above, the late
1970s proved to be a halcyon period for the club. Between 1975 and 1979 it
went from E Grade - where it had been for five years at the start of the 1975
season - to A Grade, winning E Section (1975) and B Section (1979) premierships
on the way. Its overall success
rate from 1975 to 1979 was 77.2 %, and it contested the finals every year.
The greatest day in the
history of the A.J.A.X. Amateur Football Club was Sunday 16 September 1979 when
around 6,000 spectators witnessed the senior side's 13.14 (92) to 11.20 (86) B Section
grand final triumph over Marcellin Old Collegians.
It was the crowning achievement of a season that also brought a fourth
competition best and fairest award in five years for probably the greatest
player the club has produced, Michael Ritterman. The victorious side was
coached by Sid Myers, whose ruthless attitude to the game ruffled a few feathers
at first, but who proved his credentials in the best possible way, by instilling
a winning culture in the team. Best afield in the grand final win was
rover Mark Kalmus, playing his last game for the club, but victory was
attributable more to all round team solidity than individual excellence.
Nevertheless, it goes without saying that the A.J.A.X. side of the time boasted
many fine players, including dazzlingly skilful wingman Henry Bluzer, formidable
key position player Mark Schulberg, long kicking on-baller Phil Rozen, and
forward Robbie Kaye, who won the VAFA's B Section goal kicking award for the
1979 season with a tally of 51 goals, including a couple in the grand final.
It is now nearing thirty
years since that triumphant day in 1979, and although the club has not really
built on that success in on-field terms, it nevertheless remains a vibrantly
healthy and
valued member of the VAFA. Whilst accepting that all clubs bring with them
certain elements and attitudes that are unique, there really is no other club in
Victorian football quite like A.J.A.X., not merely by reason of its Jewish
roots, but also in terms of things like its renowned hospitality and
friendliness, which many a visiting interstate team has had reason to be
grateful for.
As far as
performances on the field of play are concerned, the last few seasons have
suggested that an imminent return to level of achievement enjoyed in the late
1970s might not be out of the question. In 2003, the side earned promotion
to C Grade after reaching the D Section grand final, albeit that this was lost
to Monash Blues. After spending a couple of
seasons finding its feet, the team then fought its way through to another grand
final, which club president Amir Perzuck, once he had overcome an understandable
sheepishness at the platitude, could not resist labelling "the one that got away" (see
footnote 2). If ever such a cliché is appropriate, however, it is
after your team has lost a match by 1 point in which no fewer than 42 goals have
been registered. Such was Perzuck's misfortune in watching A.J.A.X. amass
21.11 (137) to St Bede's Mentone Tigers 21.12 (138) in the 2006 C Section grand
final.
Although it would have been impossible for either players or
supporters to think logically in the immediate wake of such a defeat, the truth
of the matter is that both grand finalists would have started the 2007 season in
B Grade regardless of the result of the match. For a club like A.J.A.X.,
reaching B Section for only the third time in fifty years has to be regarded as
a major achievement, but unfortunately it was unable to maintain its status
after one of the most nail-biting relegation battles imaginable. When the
2007 season ended, the teams finishing in positions 5th to 8th had 7 wins, while
9th placed A.J.A.X. had 6. Just one more win would have secured the club's
B Section status because its percentage was comfortably superior to that of both
Old Melburnians and Beaumaris.
Where now?
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Footnotes
1. The
Road To A Grade: A History Of The A.J.A.X. Football Club by Barry Markoff,
page 21. Return to Main Text
2. President's
report 19/09/06, on the club's official website at http://www.ajaxfc.com.au/html/s01_home/home.asp?dsb=145.
Return to Main Text
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