COORPAROO
Affiliated:
QANFL 1941-4, 1946-63; QAFL 1964-93
Club Address:
P.O. Box 227, Coorparoo 4151, Queensland
Home Ground:
Giffin Park, Birubi Street, Coorparoo
Formed:
1935; disbanded 1945; reformed 1946; merged with Yeronga 1953-4
Colours:
Navy blue and white
Emblem: 'Roos
Premierships: 1960,
1963-64, 1968, 1984, 1986 (6 total)
Grogan
Medallists: Tom Calder 1948
& 1950; Bevis Howell 1952; John Golding 1959; Ken Grimley 1964;
Brendan
McMullen 1984 & 1986 (5 Medallists/7 Medals)
QAFL Top Goalkickers: D.Sanders
(92) 1954*; B.Modini (64) 1968; R.Fox (103) 1980; J.Dunstall
(73) 1984 (4 total)
Highest Score:
35.19 (229) versus Sherwood on 4 August 1985
Most Games: 279 by Des Hughes
* Sanders
played part of the 1954 season, and kicked some of his goals, for Yeronga
Formed in 1935, Coorparoo Football Club
was for many years an integral part of the Queensland football scene at the
highest level. During the 1960s and 1980s in particular it was also highly
successful.
| In the immediate post war years Coorparoo
boasted a number of excellent players, pre-eminent among whom was probably dual Grogan
Medallist Tom Calder. However, premierships, and indeed even finals
participation, proved elusive until the mid-1950s. In 1953 and 1954 the club was
even forced, through lack of players, to enter into a temporary merger
with Yeronga.
In 1956 the team finished third, its best
result to that date, and the following year played off in a grand final for the
first time, only to lose a thriller to Sandgate by 2 points. Disappointing
though this loss was the 'Roos as they were then known had nevertheless clearly
arrived as a force, a fact they emphasised by going on to contest the major
round every year until 1965. |

John
Griffin takes a screamer for Coorparoo against Morningside
at Carrara - click image to enlarge. |
The long awaited first premiership arrived
in 1960, and a small measure of extra satisfaction was derived from the fact
that it was achieved at the expense of Coorparoo's grand final nemesis of three years
earlier, Sandgate. The 'Roos' revenge was emphatic as they won by 50
points, although the fact that they amassed a total of 40 scoring shots to 15
suggests that even this margin scarcely reflected their dominance.
The QA(N)FL during the remainder of the
1960s was to be dominated by two clubs, Coorparoo and Mayne,
which between them would account for eight of the decade's ten flags (four apiece).
The two sides would confront one another on grand final day five times, with the
Tigers winning the first two, and the 'Roos the remainder.
| Losing grand finals
against Wilston Grange in 1969 and Sandgate the following year brought
Coorparoo's first genuinely auspicious era to an end. The 'Roos
would re-emerge as a force during the 1980s, a decade which yielded both a
dual premiership success and the club's second dual Grogan
Medallist in the shape of
regular interstate representative Brendan McMullen. It was also the
decade which saw the club bestow arguably its greatest ever gift on the
world of football in the person of Jason Dunstall. The top goal kicker in the QAFL minor round in 1984
with 73 goals Dunstall added another 14 during the finals, including 7 in
Coorparoo's 18.22 (130) to 5.14 (44) grand final annihilation of Morningside.
He later moved to Hawthorn, where he
carved out a career for himself as one of the greatest full forwards of
all time, not to mention arguably the greatest ever Queensland-born
footballer. |
Dunstall's departure corresponded with a
gradual demise in the fortunes of Coorparoo Football Club. The 'Roos are
no longer part of Queensland's elite football competition, but their
contribution to the sport over more than sixty years deserves to be not only
remembered, but lauded.
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