Geelong Football Club,
nicknamed The Cats, are a professional Australian rules football club
named after and based in the city of Greater Geelong
.
Playing in the
Australian
Football League (AFL), it has been
VFL/AFL premiers eight times and
won a record nine
McClelland
Trophies.
Formed in 1859, Geelong is the
second oldest club in the AFL after
Melbourne and one of the
oldest football clubs in the world.
Along with its AFL team, the club also fields a stand-alone team in
the
Victoria Football
league (VFL).
The club participated in the first football competition in
Australia, winning the second season in 1863, was a foundation VFA
(Victorian Football Association) and the
Victorian Football League (VFL) in
1897.
An early VFL powerhouse with six premiership up to 1963, Geelong
developed a reputation as an under-achieving club. Despite playing
in five
Grand Finals its fans waited
44 years until it won another premiership- an AFL-record 119-point
victory in the
2007 AFL Grand
Final. Despite recording the most successful home and away
season in the game's history, the club went one win short of
back-to-back premierships in losing the
2008 AFL Grand Final, but won the
2009 Grand Final against St
Kilda.
Geelong holds a number of league records including the longest
winning streak in AFL/VFL history (23 games); the highest score
recorded in a single game (37.17.239 against Brisbane in 1992); the
highest-ever aggregate season total for points scored (3,334 points
in 1992); the record for restricting an opponent to the lowest ever
score in a game (St.Kilda 0.1.1 in 1899); the most consecutive
100-point victories (3 games in a row, in 1989); and the longest
winning streak in interstate games (12 games). It is the only team
to have had nine players selected in a single
All-Australian team (2007). In 2009, Geelong
became the only club to win more than 18 games in three successive
seasons (2007-08-09). They are also the only club in the league to
have never finished lower than 12th position (which has only been
possible since the league's expansion in 1987).
One of the club's greatest players,
Gary Ablett, Sr., is the only player to
have been awarded the
Coleman Medal
over three consecutive years (1993-95). Ablett also holds the
record for the most goals kicked in a VFL/AFL Grand Final (9 goals
in 1989).
The club's
home is the 28,000 capacity football stadium Kardinia
Park
, now known by its sponsored name "Skilled
Stadium", however it also plays home matches at the
Melbourne
Cricket Ground
and Docklands Stadium
. The club's traditional
guernsey colours are white guernseys
with navy blue hoops, navy shorts and navy and white hooped socks
and team song is "We Are Geelong". The club's nickname, the 'Cats',
was first used in 1923 after a run of losses prompted a local
cartoonist to suggest that the club needed a black cat to bring it
good luck.
History
Origins
A boys football team from Geelong, c.
The seeds
of the Geelong Football Club are believed by some to have been sown
by Tom Wills on his return from the
rugby
school
in England
. Mr
C. Mullen and Graeme Atkinson wrote in support of several football
clubs being established in Geelong by Tom Wills as early as in
1856. Atkinson considers it likely that Geelong's rules were drawn
up prior to the first rules of the Melbourne Football Club which
were drafted on 17 May 1859 and claims that an interclub match
occurred between Melbourne Cricketers and Geelong in 1858 under
compromise rules.
The Geelong Football Club was formally established at a meeting
held in the Victoria Hotel on 18 July 1859. It is the third oldest
Australian Rules football club (after the
Melbourne Football Club and the
Castlemaine Football
Club). The club is one of the
oldest football clubs in the world,
however many of its official records before 1920 have
disappeared.
Geelong travelled to Melbourne to become the second winner of the
Caledonian Challenge Cup in
1863, played under compromise rules. The club contested the final
in 1867 and 1869.
Geelong played most of its early home games at the Argyle Square,
situated between Aberdeen Street and Pakington Street. However, in
1878 the club was evicted from the ground by the private owner who
ploughed up the paddock because the club had neglected to pay its
rent.
VFA Powerhouse

Sketches of Geelong (in the hooped
guernsey) playing Melbourne from the Pictorial Weekly in 1880
Geelong moved to
Corio Oval for the 1878
season - the year the club won its first VFA premiership in only
the second VFA season.
The Geelong Football Club was among the most powerful in the VFA
(
Victorian Football
Association), winning seven VFA premierships up to the birth of
the VFL (
Victorian Football
League) in 1897. Geelong was the only non-Melbourne based team
at a time when a trip from Geelong to Melbourne involved quite an
arduous journey. Notable was Geelong's success in "The Match of the
Century" in 1886. This first Grand Final in the VFA between two
previously undefeated teams, Geelong and South Melbourne,
stimulated unprecedented public interest. It was alleged that
saboteurs attempted to destroy one of the special trains carrying
Geelong supporters to the match in South Melbourne. The victorious
Geelong team were treated to an impromptu public parade in the
enemy territory of South Melbourne.
[1590]
VFL Foundation Member
Geelong helped form the new VFL with other foundation clubs,
Carlton, Collingwood, Essendon, Fitzroy, Melbourne, South Melbourne
and St Kilda.
For many years the Geelong Football Club were known as the
Pivotonians, after the city's nickname 'The
Pivot'.
Seagulls was also an earlier nickname.
The dark
blue and white hooped uniform still worn today represents the blue
water of Corio
Bay
and the white seagulls so numerous in the
Bay. Geelong was nicknamed the 'Cats' in 1923 after a run of
losses prompted a local cartoonist to suggest that the club needed
a black cat to bring it good luck. Soon after, during a match a
black cat ventured on to the ground. Geelong won that match,
breaking the losing streak. It was decided that cats were indeed
good luck . Geelong has ever since been known as the Cats.
Despite dominating in the VFA, Geelong found the premiership harder
to win in the VFL. In 1897, the inaugural season of the VFL, no
grand final was played, but instead a round-robin finals system.
Essendon won all three of its games, while Geelong lost to Essendon
during this series. As a result, Geelong finished second in the
inaugural season, a good start to the new league.
1920s: Geelong prospers
Geelong finally won its first VFL premiership in 1925, being the
first club outside of Melbourne to achieve this.
The VFL/AFL's award for the fairest and best player in a season is
named after
Charles Brownlow, a
Geelong and VFL administrator who died in early 1924. Fittingly, in
1924, the first player to win the award was Geelong's champion,
Edward Greeves. Greeves attained a
second and third place in votes for the award in later seasons,
emphasizing his skill and sportsmanship. In 1925 the
Ford Motor Company signed on as a
corporate sponsor of the Geelong Football Club. This relationship
has persisted to the present day. It is claimed that this
sponsorship is the longest of its type in the world.
[1591]
1930s: Succeeding during tough times
Geelong followed up on its 1925 premiership with wins in 1931 and
1937. The 1937 Grand Final is widely regarded as a game of the
highest quality, remembered for its long and accurate kicking and
high marking. During this Era the
Coulter
Law discouraged club administrators from poaching players from
each others' clubs. For many footballers who were seldom more than
semi-professional sportsmen, match payments supplemented
Great Depression-hit wages.
1940s: Geelong becomes a war casualty
In 1941,
the club moved from Corio Oval to the
more centrally located Kardinia Park
in South Geelong. Geelong experienced a lean
period in the 1940s.
World War II
wartime restrictions on prohibited travel in 1942 and 1943 even for
the purposes of playing football. Geelong had always been
particularly subject to what
Geoffrey
Blainey a notable Australian historian, author of
A Game of
Our Own, and Geelong supporter, termed the "
tyranny of distance". Despite these
handicaps, at war's end the club recruited many players who
represented the club during its most successful era in the early
1950s.
1950s: Geelong's most successful era to date
In the 1950s, Geelong flourished. Led by Geelong's greatest coach
(officially named at Geelong's team of the century 2000)
Reg Hickey, Geelong won the premiership flags of
1951 and 1952.
Geelong won the 1951 premiership under memorable circumstances.
Essendon was favoured to win the third of a hat-trick of
premierships. However, in the final round of the home and away
season Essendon's champion full forward,
John Coleman retaliated
against Carlton full back,
Harry Caspar
and was reported and later suspended for four weeks. He therefore
was unable to play in the grand final.
[1592] Bob Davis
acknowledges the possibility that had Coleman played, Essendon may
well have won, given that Geelong had no true match for him, as
Coleman was simply too skilled. Therefore it could be argued that
Geelong was handed the 51 flag and were not in fact worthy
winners.
To celebrate its good fortune, Geelong buried a toy bomber in the
Kardinia Park turf. This comical ceremony was inspired by the
rumour that Geelong's premiership players of 1937 had buried a
magpie in the middle of the ground after their premiership win over
Collingwood that year. Players of note in this golden era include
Bob Davis,
Leo Turner (father of future
star,
Michael
Turner),
Peter Pianto,
Fred Flanagan, and
Bernie Smith.Bernie Smith's quality was
recognised with his win in the 1951
Brownlow Medal. In 1952, Geelong easily
defeated
Lou Richards' Collingwood
team. To celebrate the win, the next day the players buried another
dead magpie in the middle of Kardinia Park. In 1953, Collingwood
defeated Geelong in the Grand Final.
In 1956, Geelong recruited
Billy
Goggin, Geelong's greatest rover, who also coached Geelong in
the 1980s.
At the end of 1959,
Reg Hickey decided to
retire as coach, making way for
Bob Davis, a star in
the 51-52 premierships.
1960s: A licence to entertain
Geelong's most notable recruitment coup ever was the transfer of
perhaps the greatest ruckman of all time,
Graham "Polly" Farmer from East Perth. At
Geelong's first practice match, a crowd of 20,000 attended just to
witness his legendary skills.
In 1962, another of Geelong's star players,
Alistair Lord won the Brownlow Medal playing
in the centre. His twin,
Stewart Lord
also played with the club and has been credited as the main reason
his brother won the award given their similarities in appearance,
both played significant roles in the club's premiership win. High
expectations of success were somewhat disappointed in 1962.
Graham Farmer injured his knee three
times during the season, causing him to miss crucial games.
However, as Farmer's and Goggin's partnership developed from 1963
onwards, their teamwork at ruck duels inspired admiration and envy.
These two players spearheaded the club's next premiership in
1963.
In 1963, Geelong played Hawthorn 4 times. Early in the season the
clubs played a draw. However, in the final round of the season, the
semi finals and the grand final (the only instance of two teams
playing three matches in a row against each other), Geelong
defeated John Kennedy's Hawthorn (the Hawks). Captained by
Fred Wooller, Geelong clearly distinguished
itself as the team of 1963 with an easy 49 point win. A dead hawk
joined two magpies and a toy bomber under the Kardinia Park
turf.
Frustratingly for supporters of the Club, 1963 was the last time
that Geelong enjoyed premiership success until 2007.
At the
beginning of 1964, Geelong recruited John
"Sammy" Newman as a ruckman from Geelong Grammar
School
. In an interview with Lou Richards on
Channel 7's
World of Sport, Bob Davis
predicted that Newman would enjoy a stellar career.
Sam Newman played 300 games for Geelong and went
on to become a prominent, if controversial, media
personality.
Geelong played in finals in every year between 1962 and 1969.
Graham Farmer succeeded Fred Wooller as captain in 1965, leading
the club until the end of 1967. In 1966, the Geelong Board decided
to declare the coaching position open. Applications were sought but
Bob Davis declined to reapply. The Board chose Peter Pianto as
Davis' replacement. Pianto coached Geelong to the 1967 Grand Final.
Geelong narrowly lost this match by nine points to Richmond. Graham
Farmer played his 101st and final match for Geelong on this
day.
1970s: Out-classed amateurs
During the 1970s Geelong Football Club achieved mediocre results.
The club fell behind the progressive clubs of the 1970s, notably
Carlton, Richmond, Hawthorn and North Melbourne. Unlike these clubs
Geelong recruited poorly and/or could not afford to recruit quality
footballers. During the 1970s footballers increasingly came to view
the game as a profession rather than a pastime. Richer and more
entrepreneurial clubs outbidded clubs like Geelong for talented and
dedicated players
[1593]. Coaches Graham Farmer and
Rodney Olsson failed to develop successful
teams. Geelong finished fourth in the 1976 season. The club won its
only final of the 1970s by defeating fifth-placed Footscray.
Geelong lost to North Melbourne in the second week of the finals.
In 1978 Geelong finished fifth, only to lose to Carlton in the
first week of the finals. One of the few noteworthy players was
Larry Donohue, who in 1976 kicked over
100 goals to lead the VFL goal kicking. 1978 yielded him 95
goals.
1980s: Adjusting to new realities
During the 1980s Geelong recruited well but underperformed on the
field.
In 1980, coached by
Billy Goggin,
Geelong finished on top of the ladder at the home and away season.
Geelong defeated Richmond once during the season but could not do
it again in the first week of the finals. Geelong played
Collingwood in the Preliminary Final for the right to play Richmond
in the Grand Final and lost the match.
In 1981 Geelong's finals campaign inflicted more heartbreak.
Geelong beat Collingwood in the Qualifying Final but lost to
Carlton in the Second Semi-Final. Geelong were beaten by
Collingwood by the narrow margin of seven points when they clashed
again in the Preliminary Final.
In 1982 the club collapsed on-field, missing the finals. The board
sacked Billy Goggin. Richmond premiership coach
Tom Hafey took over in 1983. However, the club did
not improve under Hafey. Geelong failed to play in the finals
during Hafey's tenure. One bright moment during the Hafey years was
the recruitment of former Hawthorn player
Gary Ablett from Myrtleford for the 1984
season. In his first season, Ablett won his only best and fairest
for the club, an early indication of Ablett's football
genius.
The most notable incident for the club in 1985 was when Hawthorn
legend
Leigh Matthews swung his arm
at ruck-rover
Neville Bruns' jaw and
broke it. The incident received huge media coverage. Matthews was
charged by police. Although the law courts did not punish Matthews,
the VFL suspended his playing permit for one month.
The club also recruited future champion midfielder and dual
Brownlow Medallist,
Greg Williams and
another future Brownlow Medallist and three-time club champion,
Paul Couch. Due to a lack of on-field
improvement during his tenure as coach, Tom Hafey was sacked at the
end of the 1985 season. Hafey was soon afterwards appointed coach
of the
Sydney Swans. Three players
followed him to Sydney:
David Bolton,
Bernard Toohey, and
Greg Williams.
Williams' decision was to prove a wise one, netting him two
Brownlow medals, a Premiership medallion and a Norm Smith
Medal.
In 1986
John
Devine, a member of the 1963 premiership team was appointed as
coach. Under Devine, the club recruited
Barry Stoneham,
Garry Hocking,
Mark
Bairstow and
Billy Brownless.
Geelong's recruiters demonstrated that they had adapted to the new
system of the player salary cap introduced in 1985 and the
AFL draft introduced in 1986
[1594]. However, the club missed the finals
during Devine's tenure. In 1986, as a sign of things to come,
Paul Couch won the first of his three
club best-and-fairest awards. In 1987 Geelong missed the
finals.
In the pre-season of 1988, in a foretaste of approaching
frustrations, Geelong contested with Hawthorn for the pre-season
cup, the
National-Panasonic
Cup. Geelong lost by two points despite being in control for
much of the match. Geelong underperformed in the main competition,
finishing tenth. The Board sacked John Devine as coach.
In 1989 Geelong signed North Melbourne champion
Malcolm Blight to coach the club. Blight's
new approach had mixed results. Geelong once again contested the
National-Panasonic pre-season Grand Final, this time against
Melbourne. Once again the Cats lost.
Adapting quickly to Blight's coaching philosophy, Geelong kicked
mammoth scores, and during the 1989 season it became the only club
to win by 100 points for three weeks in a row, defeating lowly
clubs Richmond, St Kilda and the
Brisbane
Bears.
Gavin Exell had a productive
season, kicking 61 goals during the home-and-away season, narrowly
pipping team-mate
Gary Ablett, who
kicked 60.
Ablett's notable goalkicking feats of the year included a bag of 14
goals against Richmond, 10 against Brisbane and 7 against
Collingwood (where he amassed 38 possessions on the wing in the
wet). In this match against Collingwood, Gary Ablett also kicked
the goal of the year.
However, the
Gary Ablett show had
not even started yet. Geelong finished third at the completion of
the home-and-away season and met Essendon in the Qualifying Final
in the first week. Geelong's lack of finals experience was telling
as Essendon ended a 3-year losing streak to Geelong, thrashing them
by 76 points.
Gary Ablett and
Shane Hamilton each kicked 3 goals in
this match.
Geelong then met Melbourne in the semifinals. The previous week,
Essendon had assigned "taggers" to Geelong's star midfielders,
Paul Couch and
Mark Bairstow. This move worked to great
effect, nullifying both. Melbourne coach
John Northey predictably did the same. However,
his move was so predictable that
Malcolm
Blight benched both Couch and Bairstow for the first quarter,
completely throwing Melbourne's plans into disarray. The result saw
Geelong easily beat Melbourne by over 10 goals.
Gary Ablett kicked 7 goals in an awesome
display, as well as taking one of the marks of the year over
Melbourne's
Steven Febey.
The
Preliminary Final saw a rematch between Geelong and Essendon at
VFL
Park
. Early on, it appeared that Essendon would
repeat their win of two weeks prior. However, Geelong soon got back
on track and began to kick goals at will.
Gary Ablett continued his awesome form,
kicking 8 goals and constructing many more. The result saw Geelong
cause a 170 point turnaround from a fortnight ago, to
comprehensively defeat Essendon by a mammoth 94 points, to march
into the club's first Grand Final since 1967.
The
Grand Final proved to be an epic
battle. At the opening bounce,
Mark Yeates,
retaliating to an incident caused by
Dermott Brereton in Round 6, bumped
Brereton to try and take the match winner out of the game, breaking
Brereton's ribs. During this period, Ablett had managed to mark and
kick the opening goal of the match. Brereton was ordered off the
ground, but refused and instead rested in the pocket. Brereton took
a mark shortly after and goaled, leading Hawthorn to a 40 point
quarter-time break. Hawthorn coach Alan Jeans commented at the time
that Breretons courage was "inspirational."
Geelong won the second quarter by two points and the third quarter
by one point. The final quarter proved frantic, as Geelong managed
to get within 6 points of the tiring and wounded Hawks, before the
siren sounded.
Gary Ablett was
awarded the
Norm Smith Medal for a
best on ground performance in kicking 9 goals 1 behind to equal
Collingwood's
Gordon Coventry’s
goalkicking record in a grand final. His 2nd quarter goal and 3rd
quarter marks were two of his notable highlights of his day.
To cap a remarkable season,
Paul Couch
won the
Brownlow Medal by 2 votes
from Hawthorn's
John Platten.
1990s: Not quite good enough
The decade of the 1990s was another era of disappointed expections.
By the end of the 1990s Geelong Football Club was in crisis, deep
in debt and with a depleted player list.
Geelong failed in 1990 to reproduce the exciting brand of attacking
football of 1989.Season 1991 started ominously. On the eve of the
season,
Gary Ablett retired for odd
reasons. Nevertheless, Geelong won some games. Ablett returned
mid-season to the club. The club finished third at the end of the
home and away. The final against 4th placed St Kilda was a
memorable one.
Tony Lockett kicked his
nine goals for St Kilda by three-quarter time.
Billy Brownless, kicked eight goals. The
Cats managed to win by seven points. Ablett was suspended for
elbowing St Kilda's
Nathan Burke, and
missed the rest of the season due to suspension.
Over the next two weeks, Geelong met Hawthorn and the
West Coast Eagles, both losses for the
club. Consistent with the close finish of 1989, Hawthorn won the
match by two points. The loss against the Eagles was by fifteen
points.
In 1992 Geelong returned to the spectacular form of three seasons
previous.
Against the Brisbane Bears at Carrara
the club
kicked a VFL/AFL record
score of 37 goals 17 behinds (239 points). This record score
still stands. Gary Ablett snr. and
Billy
Brownless both kicked more than 70 goals for the season to form
a potent forward-line combination. Geelong finished the regular
season on top of the ladder, eclipsing their previous record for
total points scored in a home-and-away season (2916 in 1989) and
increased it to 3057 points.
After beating
Footscray Bulldogs in
the qualifying final by 61 points, the 2nd semi Geelong lost to
West Coast Eagles by 38 points.
Beating
Footscray Bulldogs again in
the preliminary final by 64 points the
Cats again
squared off against the power of the
West Coast Eagles. In the Grand Final the
Cats got off to a wonderful start, at one stage during the second
quarter leading by five goals. However, in the second half West
Coast's
Peter Matera ran riot, booting
five goals and earning himself the
Norm
Smith Medal as best on ground. The Perth based West Coast won
by 28 points to take the first premiership won by a non-Victorian
club.
In 1993 the Geelong once again underachieved as Malcolm Blight
experimented with more defensive tactics. For most of the season
on-field performances were lacklustre as the players struggled to
adapt. It was not until late in the season when Geelong reverted to
its all-out attacking style of play. Several experienced players
urged Blight to revert to Geelong's customary geisha style of play.
Blight agreed and Geelong began to play like champions again.
Frustratingly, Geelong narrowly missed the finals on
percentage.
In 1993 Blight decided to play Gary Ablett at Full Forward
permanently. The move paid handsome dividends, as Ablett reached
the second fastest century in VFL/AFL history.
Ablett's most notable
performances of this year included 11 goals against Melbourne
, 14 against Essendon and 10 against the Adelaide
Crows - all in losing sides. Tallies of 10 goal against
North Melbourne, and 12 against his favourite victim, Richmond, in
winning sides.
1994 proved to be a hard year for the club. The club had a good
home-and-away season to finish fourth.
Gary Ablett topped the goalkicking for the
year easily, kicking 129 goals (including the finals) and winning
his second consecutive
John Coleman
Medal.The club met fifth placed Footscray in the first week of
the finals. The match proved a nailbiter, with an after-the-siren
kick and goal by
Billy Brownless
giving the club a five-point win.A week later Geelong had no hope
of beating
Carlton, who had
finished 2nd after the home and away season, given that their three
best midfielders;
Garry Hocking,
Paul Couch and
Mark Bairstow were not playing through injury.
However, with several young players and second-tier midfielders,
along with six goals from
Gary
Ablett, Geelong defeated Carlton by 33 points.Geelong met North
Melbourne in the Preliminary Final in a match which proved even
more nailbiting than their match with Footscray 2 weeks prior.
North Melbourne started well, but Geelong dominated the second and
third quarters to lead by six goals in the third quarter. A fine
feat given that Geelong's target all season,
Gary Ablett was being beaten by North
Melbourne's full back,
Michael
Martyn. However, North Melbourne came back strongly in the last
quarter and took the lead late in the match. However, Geelong
scored a behind to level the scores. With 25 seconds left and a
boundary throw-in, the ball came to ground and
Michael Martyn cleared, only for the ball to
be marked by
Leigh Colbert. Colbert
then kicked long, where ruckman
John Barnes
dropped the mark, allowing
Leigh Tudor,
a former North Melbourne player to swoop, and kick the ball over
Martyn's head to land in the hand of
Gary Ablett. As Ablett walked back to take
his kick, the siren went, and Ablett kicked the winning goal,
propelling Geelong to its third Grand Final in seven years.Geelong
once again played West Coast for the premiership. Unlike two
seasons ago, Geelong proved no match against an Eagles outfit
superior to its 1992 premiership team, losing by 80 points.
Billy Brownless stood out with a
fantastic mark in the second quarter, as well as four
goals.
Malcolm Blight, dispirited by
three Grand Final losses under his tenure, announced his
resignation. His assistant
Gary Ayres
took over the job. Ayres immediately took action, sacking both
Steven Hocking (on 199 games) and
former captain
Mark Bairstow. 1994 saw
another best-and-fairest win to Garry Hocking, who also won 20
votes in the Brownlow Medal to finish third to eventual winner
Greg Williams
on 30 votes and
Peter Matera on 28
votes.
1995 saw the club improve. The club was highly consistent, its
biggest losing margin being less than 20 points, and never losing
two matches in a row - the only club to do so for the year. The
club finished second on the ladder to Carlton. Gary Ablett once
again won the
Coleman Medal and kick
over 100 goals for the third year in a row.
In the finals the club met 7th placed Footscray and won by 82
points.The club earned a week's break and returned for the third
weeks clash against Richmond, and won by 78 points and so for the
second consecutive season and for the fourth time in seven years,
Geelong played for the premiership this time against against
Carlton, who had only lost two games for the year.The match was
hard to tip, as many saw Geelong a definite chance given that the
two sides met once during the year, which saw Carlton win by two
points. Geelong was thrashed by 61 points, playing its worst game
for the entire season. Gary Ablett played his worst game for years,
blanketed by Carlton's
Stephen
Silvagni. To add insult to injury, former Geelong player
Greg Williams,
now a superstar at Carlton, was named best on ground with his five
goals.A notable rookie of this year would be
Brenton Sanderson, who would play over 200
games by the end of career, retiring at the end of 2005, and be
recognised with selection into the Geelong Hall of Fame. The best
and fairest was won by
Paul Couch, who
narrowly missed out on winning his second
Brownlow Medal.
In 1996 the club would experience an unsuccessful year, finishing
seventh at the end of the Home and Away Season.
Gary Ablett would be suspended for four
weeks after round 2, which resulted in a rapid decline in his
quality. He would kick his 1000th career goal against Fremantle.The
cats would meet eventual premier, North Melbourne in the first week
of the finals, which saw North win by over 10 goals.
Garry Hocking would once again win the best
and fairest award, and miss out on the Brownlow Medal by a vote in
the process. A notable recruit would be
Steven King, standing at over two
metres tall.
In 1997 Geelong faced a season with no dependence on ageing
superstars,
Paul Couch and
Gary Ablett. By mid season, Couch would
retire on 259 games.
Gary Ablett
would not play a senior game ever again for the club after injuring
his knee in the reserves. The club would start the season well,
challenging Carlton to the 1997 pre-season premiership, the Ansett
Australia Cup. However, identically to 1995, Geelong capitulated,
allowing Carlton another piece of silverware.The club finished
second on the ladder. The club met North Melbourne in a "home"
final at the MCG at Night. North Melbourne, on its actual home
ground beat Geelong by 18 points. Geelong then travelled to
Adelaide and lost the game by eight points after the umpire failed
to pay a courageous Leigh Colbert mark late in the game with
Geelong narrowly hanging on to a lead, exiting by losing both
finals.
1998 was a season best forgotten. The club finished 12th, its
lowest finish for over 40 years. A notable recruit for Geelong came
in the form of
Matthew Scarlett,
son of former player, John. Geelong took full advantage of the
Father-Son Rule. This concession
allowed sons of ex-players to nominate for their fathers' clubs,
thus exempting them from being chosen by any other club in the
national draft.
In 1999 the club won five games straight to open. However, the club
then lost its next 9 to finish the season with 10 wins and tenth
position.The roller-coaster season saw coach
Gary Ayres quit to take the job at Adelaide,
which ironically was available after
Malcolm Blight quit, almost identical to when
Ayres took over Geelong in 1995.
Mark Thompson was appointed
coach. At the end of this season, Geelong traded
Leigh Colbert for North Melbourne premiership
player,
Cameron Mooney.
2000s: Geelong's most successful era
2000: Promising signs
Season 2000 started well, with Geelong winning its first three
matches. By the end of the home and away season Geelong finished
fifth and met eighth placed Hawthorn in the first finals match ever
played at Docklands Stadium, the AFL's state-of-the-art facility.
Hawthorn won by nine points.
Barry
Stoneham announced his retirement after this game, ending a
magnificent career spanning over 240 games.
2001 – 2003: Recruitment of the stars
2001-2003 saw a lean period for the club where finals were not
realised for three years - finishing twelfth, ninth and twelfth
respectively. However, during this time the club recruited well.
Current stars such as
Paul
Chapman,
Gary Ablett, Jr.,
Jimmy Bartel,
James Kelly and
Joel Corey were notable recruits. Veteran
Brenton Sanderson won the Best and
fairest in 2001,
Steven
King in 2002 (who was in that year appointed club captain) and
Matthew Scarlett in 2003.
2004
In 2004 Geelong challenged for the pre-season premiership (known as
the
Wizard Home Loans Cup),
where they met St Kilda, Geelong led for much of the match, but St
Kilda finished strongly to win by 20 points.The season proved
fruitful as the club finished fourth at the end of the Home and
Away season.
The club met eventual premier, Port Adelaide
at AAMI
Stadium
/Football
Park
in Adelaide
, historically Geelong's worst ground in terms of
wins. Port reaffirmed their superiority at the venue to win
by 55 points. This game did not start a new rivalry between these
two clubs, but some rivalry between the clubs was started three
seasons later.
Geelong soldiered on however and met
Essendon at the MCG
, winning by
ten points despite leading by over six goals at three quarter
time.Geelong then met Brisbane
, the premiers of 2001-2003. The Cats
dominated the first half but it was clear the club lacked a target
up forward. In the second half, Brisbane took control and steadied
enough to win by a small margin of nine points. Post season,
Geelong finally managed to entice shy Modewarre player and son of
the club's greatest player,
Nathan
Ablett to play AFL football for Geelong. Another major signing
was disgruntled Richmond big-man
Brad
Ottens, recruited to counter Geelong's lack of forward line
height.
Cameron Ling capped off a fine
season by winning his first best and fairest after finishing runner
up in the previous two counts.
2004 was the start of Geelong's recent success in the afl and this
season was considered the launching pad off the success of the club
that is seen today.
2005: Finals heartbreak
The club started very well, before hitting a slump mid-season as
injuries took their toll. This necessitated the debut of
Nathan Ablett, who played his first game in a
narrow loss to Melbourne. His two goals for the club that day
excited fans and provided hope that he would be good enough. Nathan
showed late in the season against West Coast that indeed he could
play, with 4 goals in a thrashing of the then top placed Eagles.By
the end of the season, Geelong finished fifth and played eighth
placed Melbourne. Geelong thrashed Melbourne by 55 points in a
match remembered for
Steven
King's attempted kick of the ball in mid air, accidentally
making contact with Melbourne ruckman
Jeff
White, smashing his face, which required surgery.
The next week the
club met Sydney at the Sydney Cricket Ground
(SCG) where the Cats led for the majority of the
match. A four goal lead at three quarter time in a low
scoring match saw Geelong in a strong position. A stunning final
term performance by Sydney's
Nick Davis that saw him kick four
goals including the winning snap three seconds before the siren
denied Geelong victory. Sydney later went on to become the 2005
Premiers. This was
Brenton
Sanderson's final game.
Joel Corey
won his first best and fairest.
2006: Pre-season success, but season failure
Season 2006 began promisingly, but ended with criticism by club
members of the performance of the club. Geelong beat Adelaide to
claim the pre-season
National Australia Bank Cup. Big
wins at home against the
Brisbane
Lions and
Kangaroos in the first two
rounds fuelled optimism. However, Geelong began to underperform,
losing some close encounters and suffering some humiliating
defeats. In the final game of the year, the Cats were soundly
beaten by
Hawthorn for the
second time. Geelong finished tenth on the ladder with ten wins and
a draw. Responding to member anger, the Board ordered a
comprehensive review of all aspects of the administration of the
club and of the club's personnel. Coach Mark Thompson was widely
perceived to be at risk. However, the review accepted that Thompson
should continue as coach. The Board opted for stability over the
uncertainty of radical personnel change. Thompson was publicly
outraged by the ordeal which he considered poorly handled.
2007–present: "The greatest team of all"
Geelong appeared destined to repeat the disappointing outcome of
the previous season after five rounds of the 2007 season, whre
Geelong was positioned tenth on the ladder with two wins and three
losses, with the latest loss being against the Kangaroos at Skilled
Stadium. Following this unexpected loss at their home ground,
player
Paul Chapman
publicly criticised the club's culture, expressing frustration at
the lack of team mentality present with many of the players, and
urging the club as a whole to change this underachieving culture
for the better. Chapman's criticisms, which followed a similar
assessment from coach Mark Thompson, led to a group discussion
involving all of the club's playing and coaching staff, and
produced honest assessments of both individuals and the club in
general. This session proved to be a catalyst for the club,
transforming the club's culture into a more team-oriented
direction, and resulted in a 157-point "thrashing" of Richmond,
with Geelong's score of 222 points the club's second-highest
overall. This was the beginning of a winning-streak where the club
won 15 games in succession before losing to the second-placed Port
Adelaide in round 21. This loss only came after a goal was scored
in the final seconds of the match, handing Port Adelaide the lead,
and ultimately the victory. Geelong then succeeded in winning their
remaining match of the regular season, where they finished three
games clear of Port Adelaide in first postion on the ladder,
earning the club their first
McLelland
Trophy since 1992, and qualification for the
season's finals series.
Geelong proceeded to defeat the Kangaroos and Collingwood in their
qualifying and
preliminary finals respectively, the latter being a close game
with Collingwood threatening victory late in the match. Geelong
ultimately won the match by five points, this compares to their
qualifying final victory where they defeated the Kangaroos by 106
points, which was their second greatest winning margin against the
Kangaroos, and their third greatest winning margin in a finals
match.
These two victories ensured Geelong a place in the
2007 AFL Grand Final against Port
Adelaide, which Geelong won by a record margin of 119 points.
Geelong scored 24 goals and 19 points for a total of 163 points,
compared to the six goals and eight points scored by Port Adelaide
for a total of 44 points.
Steve
Johnson was awarded the
Norm Smith
Medal after being judged the best player in the match,
providing Geelong with just their second
Norm Smith Medallist.
Cameron Mooney scored the highest number of
goals with five, and a total of 11 Geelong players scored at least
one goal, with five of those players scoring two goals or more. The
win was Geelong's first premeriship since 1963, and broke the
club's 43-season "premiership drought".
Geelong's dominance continued in 2008, with the club forging an
impressive regular season record of 21 wins and one loss to become
the best-performing team in the home-and-away season since Essendon
in 2000. The club's sole loss occurred in round nine with an 86
point deficit against Collingwood. Geelong finished the regular
season in first position on the ladder, earning the club a
second-consecutive McClelland Trophy, and its ninth overall.
Geelong then proceeded to win its
qualifying and
preliminary finals in succession, earning a place in the
2008 AFL Grand Final against
Hawthorn, and the chance for a second-consecutive premiership.
However, Geelong failed to capitalise on its outstanding
performance during the season, losing the Grand Final by a margin
of 26 points.
Geelong's season began strongly in 2009, with the club winning the
2009 NAB Cup, and managing a successive
run of victories for the opening 13 rounds of the season. The
winning streak was broken when Geelong was defeated by St Kilda in
round 14 by six points. Geelong managed to defeat the reigning
premiers Hawthorn in the two clubs' second meeting of the season in
round 17. The match was notable with Geelong successfully
completing a comeback from a 28-point deficit at three-quarter time
to record a victory after an
after-the-siren
kick by
Jimmy Bartel resulted in a
point to win. Despite not placing first on the ladder at any point
during the regular season, Geelong managed a regular-season record
of 18 wins and four losses, which was the first time a team had won
18 or more matches in the VFL/AFL's regular season for three
consecutive seasons. After qualifying for the
2009 AFL finals series, Geelong
proceeded to win its
qualifying and
preliminary finals in succession, earning a place in the
2009 AFL Grand Final against St
Kilda. Geelong were victorious, defeating St Kilda by 12 points.
This victory marked the first time a Grand Final had been won by a
team who had been losing at all the quarter breaks. The Norm Smith
Medal was awarded to Paul Chapman, the player who had been so
instrumental in beginning the club's successful era, after
garnering 26 possessions and scoring three goals, including the
goal which effectively won the match for Geelong.
In addition to the two premierships and Norm Smith Medallists, this
era of success for the Geelong Football Club has seen two Brownlow
Medallists (Bartel and
Gary Ablett,
Jr. in 2007 and 2009 respectively), as well as 13 individual
selections in All-Australian teams over the three seasons,
including a record nine selections in the
2007 team. Other individual
successes include Ablett winning the
Leigh Matthews Trophy as the
AFL Players Association (AFLPA}
Most Valuable Player on a
record three occasions, and for a record consecutive seasons from
2007 to 2009.
Identity
Guernsey and colours
This is the current 2009 jumper design. From 2007 a clash jumper
was introduced.
The Geelong Football Club has worn its blue and white hoops since
its first game, although the thickness of the hoops has changed
over the years.
Club song
"We Are Geelong" is the song sung after a game won by the Geelong
Football Club. It is sung to the tune of "
Toreador" from
Carmen. The lyrics were written by former
premiership player
John Watts. Only
the first verse is used when played at matches, and when sung by
the team after a victory.
- Lyrics
- We are Geelong, the greatest team of all
- We are Geelong; we’re always on the ball
- We play the game as it should be played
- At home or far away
- Our banners fly high, from dawn to dark
- Down at Kardinia Park
- So! Stand up and fight, remember our tradition
- Stand up and fight, it’s always our ambition
- Throughout the game to fight with all our might
- Because we’re the mighty blue and white
- And when the ball is bounced, to the final bell
- Stand up and fight like hell
Honours
Team awards
- VFL/AFL: 8 (1925, 1931, 1937, 1951, 1952, 1963, 2007, 2009)
- Reserves: 13 (1923, 1924, 1930, 1937, 1938,
1948, 1960, 1963, 1964, 1975, 1980, 1981, 1982)
- Under 19s: 1 (1962)
- VFA/VFL: 9 (1878, 1879, 1880, 1882, 1883,
1884, 1886, 2002, 2007)
- Night Series: 1 (1961)
- Pre-Season: 2 (2006, 2009)‘
Individual awards
Players
Current playing list
Playing list for 2009 season:
Notable players
- Gary Ablett, Sr. (member of the
AFL team of the century,
Australian Football
Hall of Fame inductee)
- Billy Brownless (current media
personality)
- Charles 'Chas' Brownlow (player
and VFL president for which the Brownlow
medal is named, Australian Football Hall of Fame inductee)
- Damian Drum (player, and current
politician)
- Graham "Polly" Farmer (player,
captain and coach, member of the AFL team of the century, official
Legend of
Australian rules football)
- Ben Graham (player,
captain and current NFL footballer)
- Edward Greeves (inaugural
Brownlow Medalist)
- Garry Hocking (player, captian,
Australian Football Hall of Fame inductee)
- Reg Hickey (player, captain and
coach, Australian Football Hall of Fame inductee)
- Sam Newman (player, captain and
current media personality, Australian Football Hall of Fame
inductee)
- Bernie Smith (member of the
AFL team of the century,
Australian Football Hall of Fame inductee)
- Neil Trezise (former player, coach
and politician)
- Doug Wade (member of the top 5 all
time VFL/AFL goalkickers, Australian Football Hall of Fame
inductee)
Membership base
| Season |
Members |
Change from previous season |
Finishing position |
Average home match crowds |
| 1984 |
7709 |
— |
6th |
20,577 |
| 1985 |
7718 |
9 (+0.12%) |
6th |
19,463 |
| 1986 |
6985 |
733 (-9.50%) |
9th |
15,319 |
| 1987 |
6981 |
4 (-0.06%) |
6th |
20,462 |
| 1988 |
9667 |
2686 (+38.48%) |
9th |
20,790 |
| 1989 |
7760 |
1907 (-19.73%) |
2nd |
29,296 |
| 1990 |
15,087 |
7327 (+94.42%) |
10th |
24,711 |
| 1991 |
11,356 |
3731 (-24.73%) |
3rd |
23,525 |
| 1992 |
13,535 |
2179 (+19.19%) |
2nd |
27,698 |
| 1993 |
15,500 |
1965 (+14.52%) |
7th |
26,920 |
| 1994 |
14,312 |
1188 (-7.66%) |
4th |
26,461 |
| 1995 |
15,922 |
1610 (+11.25%) |
2nd |
25,317 |
| 1996 |
17,346 |
1424 (+8.94%) |
7th |
25,161 |
| 1997 |
18,858 |
1512 (+8.72%) |
2nd |
28,324 |
| 1998 |
19,971 |
1113 (+5.90%) |
12th |
28,371 |
| 1999 |
21,032 |
1061 (+5.31%) |
11th |
24,840 |
| 2000 |
25,595 |
4563 (+21.70%) |
5th |
27,729 |
| 2001 |
25,420 |
175 (-0.68%) |
12th |
27,093 |
| 2002 |
23,756 |
1664 (-6.55%) |
9th |
27,040 |
| 2003 |
24,017 |
261 (+1.10%) |
12th |
25,971 |
| 2004 |
25,021 |
1004 (+4.18%) |
4th |
25,747 |
| 2005 |
30,821 |
5800 (+23.18%) |
5th |
27,783 |
| 2006 |
32,290 |
1469 (+4.77%) |
10th |
27,428 |
| 2007 |
30,169 |
2121 (-6.57%) |
1st |
31,547 |
| 2008 |
36,850 |
6681 (+22.15%) |
2nd |
29,474 |
| 2009 |
37,129 |
279 |
1st |
32,132 |
| Averages+ |
18,547 |
1,214 (+6.94%) |
1<>sup> |
23,274 |
- * Ongoing figures (as of 29 June 2009), 2009
membership purchases close on 30 June 2009.
- + Averages use 1984 – 2008 figures
Administrative positions
- President: Frank Costa (1999 –
present)
- CEO: Brian
Cook (1999 – present)
- Chief operating officer: Stuart Fox
- Board members:
- Vice-president: Gareth
Andrews
- Director: Nicholas Carr
- Director: Colin Carter (1987 – 1993; July 2008 – present)
- Director: Bob Gartland
- Director: Alistair Hamblin (December 2004 – present) (also
Chair of the Finance & Audit Committee)
- Director: Campbell Neal
- Director: Doug Wade
See also
References
External links