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| MAYNE
Affiliated: QFL 1925-6; QANFL 1927-36 and 1941-63; QAFL 1964-96; QSFL 1997-99; AFL Queensland 2002-present Club Address: P.O. Box 290, Virginia 4014, Queensland Home Ground: Mott Street, Everton Hills Formed: 1924 (as a junior club - acquired senior status in 1925) Colours: Black and yellow Emblem: Tigers Senior Premierships: 1927-28, 1930*-31, 1934-35, 1942, 1952, 1958, 1961-62, 1966-67, 1973, 1982 (15 total) Grogan Medallists: Peter Ives 1978; Greg Hollick 1981; Terry Simmonds 1987 (3 total) QAFL Top Goalkickers: B.Spring (80) 1966; D.Woodhall (81) 1979, (92) 1982 & (113) 1983; S.Byrne (70) 1993 (5 total) Highest Score: 30.18 (198) vs. Wilston Grange on 30 April 1975 * Some records show that the 1930 premiership was shared between Windsor and Mayne after Mayne refused to allow Windsor to use the right of challenge which they had earned as minor premiers.
Since its formation in 1924 the Mayne Football Club has taken its supporters on an emotional roller coaster ride which shows no signs of abating. Originally formed as a junior club, Mayne was accorded senior status in 1925 and enter a team in the QFL where, after spending a couple of seasons finding its feet, it broke through for an inaugural premiership in 1927. Mayne's opponents in the 1927 grand final were Windsor, against whom the fledgling club would develop a strenuous rivalry over the course of the next decade. The rivalry intensified in 1928 when the two clubs again confronted one another on grand final day, with Mayne once again emerging victorious.
Another flag followed in 1958, as Mayne overcame Kedron by 33 points, but it was to be the 1960s which would see the Tigers re-assert themselves as Queensland football's leading club. Between 1961 and 1968 Mayne contested every grand final, winning 4 of them, and although over the course of the entire decade they were strongly challenged by Coorparoo there can be no doubts overall as to their supremacy, as the following table makes clear:
Mayne's achievements since the 1960s have been comparatively meagre, although the side was competitive for most of the 1970s (one flag from three grand finals) and 1980s (another flag, this time from two grand final appearances). However, since the admission to the QAFL of Southport in 1983 and, to a slightly lesser extent, the arrival of the Brisbane Bears in 1987, Mayne's profile and achievements have declined significantly. After the 1999 season the club was actually excluded from the competition, whereupon it entered into a legal battle with the AFL which ended up in the Federal Court. Ultimately, Mayne was successful - a unique achievement for such a comparatively small club - and the 2002 season found it reinstated, with damages. Towards the end of the 2004 season it was announced that Queensland football was about to undergo yet another significant restructuring exercise, with Mayne being 'invited' to participate in the state league's second tier. In a disappointing debut season at that level, the club won just 6 out of 16 minor round matches to finish eighth in a twelve team competition, while the following year was even worse, producing just 3 wins and a draw for tenth place (again, out of twelve). If that was not bad enough, the Tigers then endured a nightmare 2007 campaign that produced just a solitary win from 18 games and, inevitably, the wooden spoon. For long-suffering Tigers supporters, it seems that the roller coaster ride is set to continue for some time yet. However, with a promising crop of juniors waiting in the wings, it might not be too long before Mayne is once again at the forefront of the local game in Brisbane. Where now? or Footnotes1. Taringa, which was formed in 1930, later changed its name to Western Districts. Return to Main Text | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||