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MILLICENT

Current Affiliation:  Western Border Football League (WBFL) since 1964

Club Address:  P.O. Box 63, Millicent, South Australia 5280

Home Ground:  McLaughlin Park

Formed:  1946

Colours:  Black, white and red (formerly black and white)

Emblem:  Saints

Senior Premierships:  Mid South East Football Association (MSEFA) - 1946 (1 total); South East And Border Football League (SEBFL) - 1955-6 (2 total); WBFL - 1984 (1 total)

Western Border Medallists:  M.Whitington 1976; A.Nitschke 1997, 2001 & 2003 (2 Medallists/4 Medals)

Unravelling the precise origins of today's Millicent Football Club is a somewhat tortuous task, but what can confidently be asserted is that football of a sort was being played either in the town or its environs as early as 1874.  The phrase "of a sort" should require little in the way of explanation as uniformity in rules was still some way from being established.  That said, given that the Melbourne style game is recorded as having first been played in Mount Gambier some time in the late 1860s it seems quite reasonable to suppose that the men of nearby Millicent felt constrained, if not quite obliged, to follow suit.

Playing football is one thing, but doing so on an organised, regular basis is quite another, and it was not until June 1894 that a formally constituted Millicent Football Club came into being.  Even then, arrangements appear to have been somewhat haphazard, with the club intermittently flitting in and out of existence for the better part of a decade.  However, by 1906 the game was sufficiently well entrenched in the locality for a grand challenge match to be arranged between a team representative of the whole Millicent District, and leading SAFA club Port Adelaide.  The visitors won the match with ease, but given that the following year saw the establishment of a Millicent Football Association it seems logical to infer that the result did nothing to undermine the locals' enthusiasm for the game.  The MFA initially comprised three teams, expanding to four in 1909.  Two of these teams were based in Millicent itself, and two in the outlying areas.  In 1912 the competition was reorganised under the banner of the Millicent District Football Association, with the two Millicent teams combining forces and being joined by two new clubs, Mount McIntyre and Tantanoola.  This was to be but a short-lived arrangement, however, thanks to the intervention of war.  When organised football in the region resumed in 1920 three Millicent-based teams plus Tantanoola collectively comprised a new competition, the Drainage Areas Football Association.

The early 1920s was a time of optimism and expansion for Australian football virtually everywhere it was played.  In south east South Australia this process was consolidated in 1927 with the establishment of a new, overarching competition, the South East Football Association, of which a unified Millicent club was one of four foundation members.  Millicent's involvement in this competition lasted until 1936, and saw it achieve premiership success three times.

The 1936 season saw another series of changes in the way football was organised in the south east.  As far as Millicent was concerned, chief among these was the formation of a new, more localised competition, the Mid South East Football Association, which was home to five clubs, Glencoe, Kalangadoo, Tantanoola, plus two Millicent-based teams, Central and Rovers.  By the time the competition went into recess because of World War Two, it boasted an unwieldy nine clubs, a situation that was rectified when the league resumed in 1946 by Central and Rovers merging to produce the club which continues to represent the town of Millicent to this day.

The teams fielded by Millicent during the decade and a half immediately following the end of the war were arguably its strongest ever.  Having gone top on debut in 1946 the club ambitiously sought, and was granted, a transfer to the rather stronger Mount Gambier and District Football Association which, in 1951, acknowledged its widening remit by altering its name to the South East and Border Football League.  Millicent reached the grand final that same season, only to suffer the agony of a 1 point loss to South Gambier.  Further grand final appearances followed in 1955, against North Gambier, and 1956, against Penola, both of which were won.  A losing grand final clash with North Gambier in 1960 rounded off the most successful phase in Millicent's history.

In 1964, the SEBFL combined with Victoria's Western District Football League to form the Western Border Football League, a name which palpably ignored the fact that half the clubs in the competition hailed from South Australia, where the border in question lay to the east.  In terms of catchment area, Millicent was - and remains - indisputably one of the WBFL's smallest clubs, but almost without exception it has acquitted itself creditably, although only once, in 1984, has it been successful in claiming a premiership.  Known as the Saints since 1965, and boasting the same colours as AFL club St Kilda, Millicent has also been a losing grand finalist twice, in 1983 and 1988.

In 2006 the Saints had a disappointing season saw them manage just 6 wins from 18 matches, only good enough for 7th place in what since 1995 has been a ten team competition.  A year later their decline continued as they dropped one rung on the premiership ladder after winning just 5 games for the season.

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