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DEVONPORT (Formby/Diggers)

Affiliated: Junior competitions 1881-1899 & 1901-10; NWFU 1911-28; Central Combine 1929; NWFU 1930; NWFA 1931-33; NWFU 1934-86; TFL Statewide 1987-2000; NTFL 2001-present

Home Ground: Devonport Oval

Formed: 1881 (as Formby Football Club)

Colours: Black and white

Emblem: Magpies

Premierships: 1894, 1897, 1908, 1914-15, 1921*, 1925, 1933-34, 1936, 1938, 1981, 1988 (13 total)   

Cheel Medallists: Bill Berryman 1925 (1 total)

Royal Medallists: Bill Berryman 1930 (1 total)

Wander Medallists: Cec Rheinberger 1974; Kerry Coates 1976; Jim Prentice 1978 (3 total)

William Leitch Medallists: David Code 1987; Fabian Carelli 1997; Wayne Weidemann 1998 (3 total)

Baldock Medallists:  Kurt Heazlewood 2007 (1 total)

All Australians: Ron Stubbs 1980 (1 total)

NWFU Top Goalkickers: G.Foley (28) 1914; P.Martyn (34) 1924; A.Cooke (77) 1936 (3 total)

TFL Top Goalkickers: K.Rainsford (94) 1998 (1 total)

NTFL Top Goalkickers: M.Langmaid (88) 2002 & (88) 2003; P.Crowden (111) 2007 (3 total)

Highest Score: 37.9 (231) vs. Launceston in 1996

Most Games: 242 by Ricky Brown

Record Finals Attendance: 16,934 for 1988 TFL grand final at North Hobart Oval: Devonport 15.7 (97); Glenorchy 8.6 (54)

* This premiership was actually won by Devonport's 2nd team, which was known as Diggers

MINI-BIOGRAPHIES: Neil Conlan   Peter Marquis   Peter McKenna   Roy Witzerman   Graham Wright

The origins of football in Tasmania's north west coastal region are uncertain.  It is possible that the game was played in mining settlements as long ago as the early 1870s, brought there either directly from the mainland, or by miners who travelled west from Launceston, where Tasmania's oldest known football club was formed in 1875.  By 1881, however, the game was definitely being played in both Latrobe, then the largest town in the area, and Devonport, and June of that year saw the formation of clubs in both settlements.

The Devonport-based club was known as Formby, and was the precursor of the Devonport Football Club of today.  On 6 March 1890 the club was formally re-constituted under the name Devonport, and with the exception of the 1900 season, when it went into temporary recess, has been a permanent fixture of the Tasmanian football scene ever since.

A major landmark in the development of football in the region came in 1910 with the establishment of the five club North West Football Union (see footnote 1) which Devonport was to join the following year.  The club reached its first premiership deciding match in 1914, downing Latrobe by 32 points, and it repeated this success the following year with a hard fought 2 point win over Ulverstone.

Football went into abeyance owing to the war from 1916 to 1918, and its resumption in 1919 was curtailed throughout Tasmania because of an influenza epidemic.  In 1920 and 1921 Devonport fielded a 2nd team, known as 'Diggers', which comprised returning servicemen.  This 2nd team won the 1921 NWFU premiership with a 7.11 (53) to 4.6 (30) grand final defeat of Latrobe.

Consolidating into a single entity again in 1922 Devonport initially found the going tough, but in 1924 the side once again played off for the flag, only to succumb by 14 points to Latrobe.  The following year finally brought success as Devonport comfortably overcame Ulverstone, 11.11 (77) to 6.13 (49).

New club Burnie proved Devonport's nemesis on each of its next two grand final appearances, in 1927 and 1928, and the following year the entire competition was thrown into disarray when the Forth Bridge, which linked Latrobe and Devonport to the other settlements in the area, washed away.  The 1929 season saw Devonport and Latrobe, together with Deloraine and Kentish, form a temporary competition, known as 'the Central Combine', which in 1930, after the link was re-established, became the Eastern Division of the NWFU.  Dissatisfied with this arrangement, Devonport withdrew from the NWFU the following year, and spent the next three seasons participating in the NWFA, winning a premiership in 1933.

In 1934 Devonport re-entered the NWFU, which now employed a single division format once again.  Far from undermining its prowess, its brief stint in an ostensibly inferior competition had obviously been of benefit to the club, which promptly reached the next five grand finals, winning in 1934, 1936 and 1938.

Neil Conlan, who captain-coached Devonport from 1959 to 1963.  Conlan also played for Glenorchy, and was a member of 4 Tasmanian carnival teams.

Because of the war, the NWFU suspended operations between 1940 and 1944, and on its resumption, and indeed for most of the time up to its admission to the TFL statewide competition in 1987, Devonport struggled, with its only grand final appearances coming in 1962 (lost to Burnie by 16 points) and 1981 (downed Penguin by 15 points).  Despite this, Devonport was home to many highly accomplished footballers, such as Alan Krushka, who won four successive club champion awards from 1959 to 1962, George Bligh, Peter Stuart, Neil Conlan (pictured above), David Jago, Cec Rheinberger,  Kerry Coates, Jim Prentice, 1980 All Australian Ron Stubbs, and Ricky Brown.  

The inception of statewide football saw the Blues, as they were known at this time, come into their own at last, after a tentative start.  The side failed to qualify for the finals on percentage in its debut season of 1987, but in 1988, coached by Roland Crosby, who had served his coaching apprenticeship in Victoria's Goulburn Valley competition, Devonport swept all before it.  After topping the ladder at the end of the roster matches the Blues comfortably accounted for Glenorchy in the 2nd semi final by 20 points, and were even more convincing against the same opponent a fortnight later, winning 15.7 (97) to 8.6 (54).  Crosby's coaching performance seems all the more meritorious when you consider that he was suffering from a heart ailment at the time, a state of affairs he solicitously refrained from mentioning to his players.

Three Devonport Stars of the 1990s

Shane Smith, dual club best and fairest winner Fabian Carelli, 1997 Leitch Medallist Wayne Weidemann, 1998 Leitch Medallist

Devonport slumped to 8th place (out of 10) the following year, precipitating a veritable roller coaster ride of achievement over the next twelve seasons.  In addition to intermittent finals appearances, the side slumped to wooden spoons in 1993 and 2000, with the latter year in particular proving ignoble in the extreme as not a single win was recorded.

The collapse of statewide football in 2001 saw Devonport revert to a regional competition, in this case the NTFL, but with only 9 wins from 20 matches for the year the club finished 8th (out of 12), a result it failed to improve on in 2002.   In 2003, however, the Magpies surged up the ladder to qualify for the finals, while the next year they went within one game - albeit a game in which they were conclusively vanquished by Burnie - of a flag.  The 2005 season brought another grand final appearance, and another loss to Burnie, albeit this time by the comparatively more respectable margin of just 17 points.  Then, in 2006, hopes that it might be third time lucky were conclusively dashed on grand final day by a much more talented and cohesive Launceston side, which ultimately won with ease by 57 points.  The 2007 season brought a marginal decline in fortunes as the Magpies, having topped the ladder prior to the finals, bowed out of flag contention in straight sets after defeats by eventual premiers Launceston in the 2nd semi final, and Ulverstone in the preliminary final.  Kurt Heazlewood's Baldock Medal victory as the competition's best and fairest player provided a small measure of consolation.

Nevertheless, with five years of finals experience under several of the players' belts now, there seems every reason to hope that further premiership success may be just around the corner for one of Tasmanian football's oldest clubs.

Where now?

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Footnotes

1.  These clubs were Latrobe, Mersey, Penguin, Ulverstone and Wesley Vale, although Wesley Vale ended up withdrawing from the competition prior to the commencement of the season.  Return to Main Text