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ULVERSTONE (Leven)
Affiliated: NWFA 1894-1908; NWFL 1909; NWFU 1910-86; NTFL 1987-present Home Ground: Ulverstone Recreation Ground Formed: 1888 Colours: Black and red Emblem: Robins Premierships: 1900, 1903, 1906, 1910, 1923, 1935, 1947, 1950-51, 1953, 1955-56-57, 1976, 1986-87, 1990, 1993-94-95-96-97, 2000, 2009 (24 total) Tasmanian State Premierships - 1955, 1976 (2 total) Cheel Medallists: Stan Trebilco 1923; Tas Langmaid 1929 (2 total) Wright Medallists: Jim Brown 1930 (1 total) Wander Medallists: Jack Rough 1951; Arthur Hodgson 1955; Jock O'Brien 1962; John Murphy 1981 (4 total) Ovaltine Medallists: Nathan Howard 1996 (1 total) Pivot Medallists: Nathan Howard 1997; Simon Walmsley 1999 (2 total) Baldock Medallists: Scott Blair 2001 (1 total) NWFU Top Goalkickers: J.Palliser (24) 1912; H.McDonald (47) 1925; M.Johnson (60) 1935; R.Stott (80) 1946; S.Walker (73) 1951; W.Pearce (65) 1964; K.Mahoney (79) 1969 (7 total) NTFL Top Goalkickers: J.Auton (95) 1997 (1 total) Highest Score: 44.28 (292) vs. Penguin 3.3 (21) in 1991 Most Games: 307 by Don Gleeson Record Finals Attendance: 11,866 for the 1968 NWFU grand final at West Park, Burnie: East Devonport 15.16 (106); Ulverstone 10.18 (78)
Currently one of the NTFL's strongest and most consistently successful clubs, Ulverstone has a proud and illustrious history dating back to 1888. Originally known as the Leven Football Club, it changed its name to Ulverstone in 1890. The early years of the club are not particularly well documented, but it is known that Ulverstone competed in a variety of different Leagues and Associations, notably the North West Football Association between 1894 and 1908 where it was successful in winning three premierships.
Afterwards, as the train carrying the Mersey players and supporters departed Ulverstone station it was pelted with stones by an angry mob. At the ensuing Association tribunal, four Ulverstone players ended up receiving bans ranging from two months to life, while a fifth player was fined ten shillings in court. However, the disqualified quartet were all able to return to the field in 1909 as Ulverstone, along with Penguin and Latrobe, broke away from the NWFA to form a new competition, the North West Football League (see footnote 1), which gave way a year later to the NWFU. Ulverstone was joined in the NWFU for its inaugural year by its two former NWFL compatriots, plus Mersey and Wesley Vale from the NWFA (see footnote 2). In the grand final that year it had the satisfaction of overcoming bitter rivals Mersey by 23 points, 8.13 (61) to 5.8 (38). Two further losing grand finals followed before football went into recess in 1916 because of World War One.
After the lucrative excitement of the 1950s the following decade proved to be a barren time for the Robins despite their playing off on grand final day no fewer than five times. The 1970s were similarly unprofitable with the exception of a stellar 1976 season which saw the club win both the NWFU and state premierships. In the local grand final, steadiness in front of goal helped procure a 32 point victory over Penguin, while in the state grand final the Robins proved too strong for Launceston at York Park having earlier thrashed TFL premier Sandy Bay in the preliminary final by almost 12 goals. Sadly for Ulverstone, victory in the state premiership was no longer a passport to national exposure via the Australian club championships in Adelaide as, in 1976, that competition had been superseded by the NFL-Wills Cup, featuring teams from Victoria, South Australia and Western Australia only. In a small way, Tasmania's ostracism from what, until now, had been a more or less guaranteed position of centrality and importance in the Australian football universe had begun.
Ulverstone won its twelfth NWFU premiership in 1986 with a 9.10 (64) to 7.7 (49) grand final defeat of Smithton. This proved to be the last ever NWFU grand final, as the following season saw the establishment of a new competition, the Northern Tasmanian Football League. Formed in the wake of the defection to the newly created TFL statewide competition of NWFU sides Burnie and Devonport in 1987, following North Launceston's and South Launceston's departure from the NTFA the previous year (see footnote 4), the NTFL comprised the remaining former NTFA and NWFU clubs. As far as Ulverstone was concerned, however, it was business as usual, with a 13.19 (97) to 12.12 (84) grand final victory over East Devonport procuring the club's second successive flag.
Max Brown, who coached Ulverstone to an unbeaten premiership in 1993. Since then, the Robins have gone on to become by some measure the league's most successful club, winning a further premiership in 1990 followed by a spectacular five in a row between 1993 and 1997 and then, for good measure, an eighth NTFL flag in 2000. The arrival in the competition in 2001 of former statewide heavyweights in the shape of Burnie Dockers and North Launceston has made life harder for Ulverstone, but the side continues to perform creditably, and in 2007 got as far as the grand final, where it lost narrowly to Launceston. Ulverstone's next grand final appearance in 2009 came in a competition that had been truncated by the departure of several of the stronger club's to the newly formed statewide league. The Robins took full advantage of this situation by earning their twenty-fourth senior grade flag with an 88 point thrashing of Smithton. Irrespective of what the future brings therefore, the club boasts a history and a tradition of which to be proud, a fact exemplified by the its refusal to follow the lead of so many other clubs in supposedly 'inferior' leagues throughout Australia and subordinate its own identity to that of one of the AFL 'superpowers'. Its players may take to the field in playing uniforms similar to those of Essendon, but they are categorically not Bombers, they are Robins, proud of the unique tradition they perpetuate, and honoured to be representing one of Tasmanian football's truly great clubs. Where now? or Footnotes1. Records of the NWFL's sole season are scant and it is not known which of the three competing club's was successful in procuring the premiership. Return to Main Text 2. The NWFA continues to operate to this day. Return to Main Text 3. The NWFU premier had only been permitted to compete for the state premiership for the first time in 1950. Return to Main Text 4. In 1986, North Launceston actually fielded sides in both the NTFA and the statewide League. Return to Main Text
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