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| | SAINT
GEORGE

Affiliated: NSWANFL
1929-73; NSWAFL 1974-80; SFL 1981-86; NSWAFL State League 1987-89; SFL
1990-1998; SAFL 1999-present
Club Address: P.O.
Box 165, Hurtsville, New South Wales 2220
Home Ground: Olds
Park, Forest Road, Peakhurst
Colours: Navy
blue, red and gold
Emblem: Crows
Premierships:1937-38,
1943, 1964, 1993 (5 total)
Phelan
Medallists: George
Jenner 1931; Len Harris 1932; Noel Reading 1965; Dale Dalton 1977; David West
1991; Darren Oates 1992; Anthony Quinn 1993; Simon Wilson 1997 (8 total)
S(A)FL Top Goalkickers: S.Powditch
(80) 1935, (117) 1937 & (74) 1939; D.Donkin (80) 1946; D.McKenna (77) 1964;
E.Kerinaiva (93) 1969; M.Clift (93) 1993 & (95) 1994; P.Dugmore (61) 2003
& (71) 2007 (10
total)
Most Games: Colin
Harris 347 from 1946 to 1965
St George has only been intermittently
successful in terms of winning premierships but the club has been part of the
top echelon of football in Sydney for almost eighty years.
The club took its
bows in the New South Wales Australian National Football League (precursor of
today's Sydney AFL) in 1929, finishing last in a seven team competition.
The withdrawal of Western Suburbs (see footnote 1) the
following year left a six team competition but St George fared no better,
and indeed it suffered the ignominy of last place in each of its first five seasons
in the league. It finally came of age in 1934 when it reached the
preliminary final, and then went one better the following year when it made its first grand
final, going down by 52 points to South Sydney.
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ABOVE:
South Australian Ian
McKay, one of several prominent interstaters to help steer St George
to the 1943 flag. |
|
St George was now a fully
established senior club, and it proved this in 1937 with its first premiership.
Once again the grand final opposition was provided by South Sydney, but on this
occasion St George proved too strong, winning with more ease than the margin of
37 points suggested. It repeated the success the following year,
restricting opponents Newtown to 1.9 (15), the lowest grand final total in the
NSWANFL since Balmain's 1.8 (14) in 1916.
During World War Two,
while football in most of the rest of Australia was played on a restricted basis
(see footnote 2), in Sydney it was, paradoxically, at
its strongest for many years. The reason for this was the arrival in town
of large numbers of servicemen who also happened to be useful, and even in some
cases elite, southern states
footballers. St George benefited from the influx as much as anyone, and in
1943 it added a third flag, downing South Sydney 12.19 (91) to 9.10 (54) in a hard
fought grand final. |
St George reached another grand
final in 1946, losing to Newtown, but there then followed a prolonged period of
mediocrity, with just half a dozen finals appearances in the next nineteen seasons.
| The Saints or Dragons as
they were interchangeably known at the time rediscovered the winning habit
in 1964 when a 10 goal grand final pounding of Western Suburbs
suggested that a prolonged era of success was just around the corner.
As it was, although the side reached the next two grand finals it
was to be almost another three decades before they again tasted premiership success. During the interim
St George struggled for the most part, its
only grand final appearance coming in 1987, when it was annihilated by
Campbelltown by 87 points.
St George's 1993 combination,
however, restored club pride with a vengeance. After finishing the
home and away season in 2nd place with a 12-4 record the Dragons
overwhelmed minor premier Western Suburbs to the tune of 80 points in the
2nd semi final. A demoralised Wests side succumbed by almost the
same margin (79 points) against North Shore
in the following week's preliminary final, leaving most experts predicting
a close premiership decider between the Bears and the Dragons. For
three quarters of the match they were proved right as the lead continually
changed hands, with St George having the upper hand by just 2 points
at the final change. The last term, however, was a completely
different story, as the Dragons, with the wind at their backs, ran away to
win with ease by 35 points, 17.13 (115) to 9.26 (80). |

ABOVE:
One of St George's most auspicious 'exports', Mark Roberts, who had a
distinguished AFL career with 3 clubs. |
There have been no further flags since
1993, although the side did play off in the grand finals of 1997 and 2004, losing to Balmain
and North Shore respectively.
|

Crows
action - click to enlarge. |
Having forged an affiliation with AFL club
Adelaide, St George now plays under the Crows
emblem. Such relationships, it seems, are now the norm among members of
the SFL, and while some might argue that to compromise your identity in this way
is tantamount to football whoredom, the converse view maintains that almost
anything that ensures a club's survival is acceptable. St George
Australian Football
Club looks set to survive, under whatever guise, for some time yet. |
After missing the finals in 2005, the
Crows improved slightly in 2006, but their season was brought to an end at the
1st semi final stage by Pennant Hills.
They improved still further in 2007 to reach the grand final, only to lose to
North Shore by 21 points.
Over the years many noteworthy players
have turned out for the club, among them no fewer than five 300 gamers in Colin
Harris (347 games), Geoff Green (328), David Fletcher (308), Garry Watkins
(307), and Peter Taylor (301). Mark Roberts (pictured above,
right) was arguably the club's greatest recent product.
Where now?
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Footnotes
1. This
particular Western Suburbs club participated in the competition between
1926 and 1929. It should not be confused with the current Western Suburbs
organisation which is mentioned later in the text; this club made its NSWANFL
debut in 1948. Return to Main Text
2.
The Western Australian Football League, for example, was
conducted on an age-restricted basis between 1942 and 1944. In South
Australian the eight league clubs paired off temporarily to form a four team
competition, while in Tasmania League football was suspended altogether.
Even in the VFL wartime travel restrictions forced the withdrawal of Geelong
from the competition in 1943, while St Kilda
played a reduced programme of matches that same year. Return
to Main Text
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