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EAST
DEVONPORT

Affiliated: Various junior
competitions 1901-44; NWFU 1945-86; NTFL 1987-present
Home Ground: Girdlestone Park
Formed: 1901
Colours: White and red
Emblem: Swans
Premierships: 1946, 1948, 1968,
1988 (4 total)
Wander
Medallists: Max Berryman 1952; Darrel
Baldock 1957; Terry Pierce 1960; John Bingley 1963; Ricky Watt 1975; Lindsay
Bell 1980; Richard Lynch 1982; Neville Muir 1985; Peter Borlini 1986 (9 total)
Ovaltine
Medallists: Paul Spencer 1995
(1 total)
Pivot
Medallists: Craig Muir 1998 (1
total)
Baldock
Medallists: Adrian Partridge
2002 (1 total)
NWFU Top Goalkickers: R.Summers
(38) 1954; C.Reynolds (95) 1980 & (97) 1981 (3 total)
NTFL Top Goalkickers: M.Williams
(119) 1988 (1 total)
Highest Score: 36.13 (229) vs.
George Town 11.4 (70) in 1987
Most Games: 262 by Shane McCoy
Record Finals Attendance: 11,866
for the 1968 NWFU grand final at West Park, Burnie: East Devonport 15.16 (106); Ulverstone
10.18 (78)
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The
great Darrel
Baldock. |
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Perhaps best known as the
club which first unleashed the prodigious talents of Darrel
John Baldock on the football world, East Devonport deserves to be
extolled for much more. Formed in 1901, the club endured and
ultimately overcame a faltering first forty-five years to emerge during the second
half of the twentieth century as a mainstay of one of Tasmanian football's
three major senior competitions, the North West Football Union. On no
fewer than four occasions between 1901 and 1945 the club was forced into
recession, either for economic reasons or because of a lack of available players (or
a combination of both), but once given the impetus of regular high
standard senior competition it swiftly went from strength to strength.
When the NWFU resumed after World War Two
in 1945 East Devonport was admitted to the competition's four club Eastern Division
and went on to contest the grand final, losing by 31 points to APPM (known since
1956 as South Burnie). The following season it went one better, downing
Burnie 14.14 (98) to 8.9 (57) to annex its first senior premiership in any
competition since the club's formation.
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After missing the grand
final in 1947 East Devonport was back to the fore the following year when it
overcame the challenge of Wynyard by 15 points, 15.12
(102) to 12.17 (87).
When Darrel Baldock made his debut for the
club as a sixteen year old in 1955 East Devonport had fallen on harder times, but the
young genius was soon to inspire a rapid rise up the ladder. As far as
Baldock's individual playing prowess went, "he was an instant sensation,
being judged best afield in his first 3 games and gaining selection in the NWFU
intra-state team" (see footnote 1). He finished the
season by winning the club's best and fairest award, and in 1956 he made the
first of his 19 interstate appearances for Tasmania. A Wander
Medal (the first of three) followed in 1957, but the one achievement that eluded
Baldock during his four season, 71 game career with East Devonport was
participation in a premiership. The closest he came was in 1958, his last
season with the club, but East were comfortably defeated in the grand final by
Burnie, as indeed they were in 1959, the first of Baldock's seasons at close
rivals Latrobe.
| During the mid to late 1960s players like
John Bingley, Ron Tait, Frank Brown and Garry Davis helped re-establish a
combination capable of challenging for the flag after a number of fallow years. The
long awaited breakthrough finally came in 1968 when the side won its way through
to the grand final from the 1st semi and overran pre-match favourites Ulverstone
by 28 points, 15.16 (106) to 10.18 (78). Unfortunately, this proved to be
the Swans' last NWFU flag, with its only remaining grand final appearance coming
in 1971. On that occasion, the ignominy of a 61 point trouncing was, if
anything, intensified still further by the fact that the team inflicting the
damage was Latrobe - captain-coached by a certain Darrel Baldock.
When the NWFU and NTFA
joined forces in 1987 to form the NTFL East Devonport found the new style
competition, bereft as it was of TFL statewide-bound heavyweights like Devonport,
Burnie and North
Launceston, much more congenial than the old. A grand final
appearance in the NTFL's inaugural season brought a hard fought 13 point
loss to Ulverstone, but the following year the Swans finally reigned
supreme after a superb 20.7 (127) to 18.15 (123) defeat of Burnie in a rip
roaring classic of a match played in front of a record NTFL grand final
crowd of 8,750 at Devonport. For good measure, full forward Mark
Williams booted 119 goals for the year, setting a club record which still
stands.
The loss of a number of key players,
including Williams who joined Latrobe, saw East
Devonport plummet down the ladder to last position in 1989, since which
time the club's supporters have grown giddy after a veritable roller
coaster ride of inconsistency which has yielded the extremes of
consecutive (losing) grand final appearances in 1997 and 1998 and completely winless wooden spoons in
2000 and 2007. |
|

Brett
Collins takes front position to mark during the 1993 season. |
The return to regional competition in 2001 of
erstwhile statewide competitors North Launceston
and Burnie has effectively raised both the stakes and
the standard in the NTFL, and so far East Devonport has found the going
difficult. (Indeed, in both 2006 and 2007 the Swans finished an undignified last, with
just 1
win to show for two complete seasons of football.) However, those who have followed the club's fortunes for
several years have learned at least two important things about it that they
love: one is that, with East Devonport, the unexpected is almost always just
around the corner; the other is that, whatever the obstacles or challenges that
confront it, those associated with the club, whether as players or behind the
scenes, are unlikely ever to take a backward step. Consequently, if
success fails to re-emerge for the Swans in the near future, it will not be for
the want of trying.
Where now?
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Footnotes
1. A
Century of Tasmanian Football 1879-1979 by Ken Pinchin. Return
to Main Text
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