Caulfield Grammarians Football Club

Caulfield Grammarians Football Club
Names
Nickname(s) The Fields
Club details
Founded 1920
Colours      Navy Blue      White
President Warwick Watson
Captain(s) Ben Price
Ground(s) Glenhuntly Oval, Caulfield East
Other information
Official website http://www.cgfc.com.au

Caulfield Grammarians Football Club, also known, from time to time, as Old Caulfield Grammarians, is the (equal) second oldest consecutively competing team in the Victorian Amateur Football Association (or VAFA).

The team entered the competition in 1920, and has competed continuously since that time (competition was suspended from 1940 to 1945 during World War II).

Their home ground is the Glenhuntly Oval, at the corner of Neerim Road and Booran Road, Caulfield East.

Caulfield Grammar "Old Boys"

From time to time various teams of “Old Boys” were selected to play against the school's team. The first of these matches took place on 15 August 1889, and matches such as these took place on a regular basis from 1907 to 1914 (when the matches ceased due to World War I).

Caulfield Grammarians Football Club

The Caulfield Grammarians Football Club was founded in early 1920. Caulfield Grammar School's headmaster, Walter Murray Buntine, was elected as its inaugural president. Buntine gave the team access to all of the schools sporting facilities for its training, and he allowed the team to use the school's oval as its home ground.

Metropolitan Amateur Football Association

On Monday, 22 March 1920, a meeting of the (then) Metropolitan Amateur Football Association decided to resume the inter-club competition that it had suspended for the duration of World War I at the end of the 1915 season.[1] The MAFA announced that the re-formed competition would be between four of the "pre-war" clubs, Collegians Football Club, South Yarra Amateur Football Club, Elsternwick Football Club, and Melbourne University Football Club (later University Blacks), and four "new clubs": Old Melburnians, Old Caulfield Grammarians, Melbourne Swimming Club Football Club and the Teachers’ College Football Club.[2]

In their first competition match, on Saturday 15 May 1920, Old Caulfield Grammarians were narrowly beaten 7.11 (53) to 6.16 (50) by Collegians.[3]

Their second competition match was against Teachers’ College on Saturday, 22 May 1920, at the Caulfield Grammar School Oval. Old Caulfield Grammarians won convincingly, 12.17 (89) to 3.7 (25).[4]

A 1921 press report of the team's Metropolitan Amateur Football Association match against Hampton refers to the team as Old Caulfield Collegians;[5] it is unclear whether this was an inadvertent typographical error — such as the South Australian newspaper references to Hans Ebeling (C.G.S. 1919-1922), as "the old Caulfield Collegian"[6] — or a case of the reporter confusing the Old Caulfield Grammarians Football Club with an earlier team known as "Caulfield Collegians" that seems to have, from time to time, contained a large percentage of Caulfield Grammar "Old Boys".[7]

In 1904, the Victorian press reported that Caulfield Collegians Football Club, centred on Caulfield Grammar School, that played its matches on the school grounds, was competing in a competition conducted by The Colleges' Football Association:[8]

Great things are expected of … this association … formed at the beginning of the [1904] season … [and] composed of teams from various well-known schools, and one from the University … as it fills a long-felt want in providing games on Saturdays for those who, although they have left school, do not wish to surrender its healthy amusements.[9]

In the competition's first season (1904), Caulfield Collegians Football Club was the premier team;[10] and, in the second season (1905), Sherwood Collegians were premiers.[11] There is no trace of any further competition conducted by the Colleges' Football Association.

VAFA Premierships

1925

On Saturday, 12 September 1925, coached by former VFL senior umpire, Brighton coach, and Brunswick, Prahran, Brighton, and St Kilda footballer, Fred Turnbull, Old Caulfield Grammarians beat Teachers' College by 37 points, 13.14 (92) to 8.7 (55) to win the B Section premiership; the team's full forward, Eric Dakin, kicked four goals in the Grand Final to bring his season's total to 125 goals.[12]

Under the rules prevailing at the time (see here), because Old Caulfield Grammarians were the "minor premiers" at the end of the home-and-away season (they had only lost two matches in the entire season), the team's defeat of Teachers' College in this match meant that there was no need for a "Grand Final" to decide the premiership.[13]

1949

On Saturday, 3 September 1949, coached by Wally Crabtree, Caulfield Grammarians beat Murrumbeena Football Club by 29 points, 9.10 (64) to 5.5 (35) to win the D Section Grand Final.[14]

1953

On Saturday, 5 September 1953, coached by I. Hibbins, Caulfield Grammarians beat Powerhouse Football Club by two points, 10.9 (69) to 9.13 (67) to win the C Section Grand Final.[15]

1961

On Saturday, 9 September 1961, coached by John Wilson, Caulfield Grammarians beat West Brunswick Football Club by 15 points, 10.7 (67) to 8.4 (52) to win the D Section Grand Final.[16]

1970

After having lost the 1967 and 1986 A Grade Grand Finals to Old Paradians by 18 points and 75 points respectively, on Saturday, 12 September 1970, coached by John Wilson (it was his 200th match as coach), Caulfield Grammarians held off a strongly finishing Coburg Amateurs Football Club team to win the 1970 A Section Premiership by two points, 14.18 (102) to 15.10 (100).[17] Coburg had been the strong favourite going in to the match, and the victory was the result of an exceptional team effort, made all the more worthwhile in the context of the Fields' inaccurate kicking.

1983

On Saturday, 3 September 1983, coached by A.C.Poore and G. Stone, Caulfield Grammarians beat Parkside Football Club by 66 points, 20.16 (136) to 8.22 (70) to win the C Section Grand Final, with full-forward Dave Matthews kicking 10 goals in the Grand Final, for a total of 114 in the entire premiership season (viz., including the finals).[18]

1998

Caulfield Grammarians, coached by Geoff Reilly, beat Old Camberwell Grammarians by 32 points, 11.14 (80) to 7.6 (48) to win the 2000 E Blue Section Grand Final.

2000

Caulfield Grammarians, coached by Dean Anderson, beat Old Essendon Grammarians by 125 points, 26.13 (169) to 6.8 (44) to win the 2000 D Section Grand Final. Stephen Amiet was voted best on ground.

2011

On Saturday, 17 September 2011, coached by Steve Lawrence, Caulfield Grammarians defeated St Bernards Old Collegians 17.12 (114) to 12.9 (81) to win the 2011 B Section Premiership by 33 points.[19][20] Mark Liddell was voted best on ground.

VAFA awards

Best and fairest in Section

A number of footballers from Caulfield Grammarians have been voted the best and fairest player in their Section.

Leading goalkicker in Section

A number of footballers from Caulfield Grammarians have been the leading goalkicker in their Section.

Team of the century

CGFC Team of the Century
B:    Geoff Fox       Campbell Cooney       John Griffiths   
HB:    Nigel Brohier       Kel Davidson       John Long   
C:    Alan Chaffey       Tony Lester       David Clark   
HF:    Barry Morphett       David Williams       Ron Ashbolt   
F:    John Butcher       David Matthews       Trevor Royals   
Foll:    Greg Tootell       Robin Harrison       John Kanis   
Int:    Dick Fish       Tony Pyman       Larry McNicol   
   Bill O'Halloran       Warwick Watson       Andrew Will   
Coach: John Wilson; Assistant coach: Wally Crabtree

Notable events

See also

Footnotes

  1. In late 1915, the Metropolitan Amateur Football Association announced that it had suspended its competition, and would not resume the competition until the war had ended: Old Boy, "District Football: The League's Preparations", The Argus, (Wednesday, 8 December 1915), p.13.
  2. Football: Metropolitan Amateur Association, The Argus, (Friday, 26 March 1920), p.11.
  3. Metropolitan Amateur Association, The Argus, Monday 17 May 1920), p.5.
  4. Football: Metropolitan Junior Association, The Age, (Monday, 24 May 1920), p.10.
  5. Metropolitan Association, The Argus, (Monday 30 May 1921), p.3.
  6. For example, Colts in Melbourne: Victoria's Substantial Lead, The (Adelaide) Register, Friday, 8 February 1924), p.11.
  7. There are various reports relating to the "Caulfield Collegians" over an extended period; e.g., 1894, playing from Elsternwick (Football: Today's Matches, The Caulfield and Elsternwick Leader, (Saturday, 5 May 1894), p.5); 1895, playing against Brighton Park (Football: Park vs. Collegians, Oakleigh Leader, (Saturday, 18 May 1895, p.2); 1896, playing against Diamond Creek (Football, Evelyn Observer, and South and East Bourke Record, (Friday, 29 May 1896), p.5); 1903, playing against Frankston (Sporting Notes: Football, Mornington Standard, (Saturday, 11 July 1903), p.4).
  8. Colleges' Association, The Age" (Wednesday, 28 September 1904), p.11.
  9. Old Boy, The Australasian, (Saturday, 25 June 1904), p.20.
  10. Old Boy, "College Sports: Weekly Jottings", The Australasian, (Saturday, 12 November 1904), p.23.
  11. Football, The Age, (Tuesday, 19 September 1905), p.8.
  12. Metropolitan Amateurs: Old Caulfield win B Section, The Argus, (Monday 14 September 1925), p.17.
  13. Metropolitan Amateurs: Old Caulfield B Section Premiers, The Age, (Monday 14 September 1925), p.15. (Note with this link (the newspaper has been scanned sideways) you must move to "page 23" and then scroll down until you reach column F of page 15 of the 14 September 1925 issue.)
  14. Blacks Outlast Old Scotch, The Argus, (Monday, 5 September 1949), p.14.
  15. Weekend Sport Details: Amateur Football, The Argus, (Monday, 7 September 1953), p.13.
  16. Collegians Too Good for Blacks,The Age, (Monday, 11 September 1961), p.18.
  17. Caulfield by Two Points, The Age, (Monday, 14 September 1970), p.17.
  18. Blues Coast to Amateur Final, The Age, (Monday, 5 September 1983), p.25.
  19. Pellizzeri, T., "VAFA: Snowdogs down in grand final", Moonee Valley Weekly, Tuesday, 20 September 2011.
  20. Beitzel, B., "Grammarians Grab Flag", Herald Sun Local Footy, 18 September 2011.
  21. Amateur Association: Complaints of Bad Behaviour, The Argus, (Tuesday, 11 August 1925), p.12.
  22. Club Expelled: Amateur Body's decision: Players Considered Blameless, The Argus, (Tuesday, 18 August 1925), p.6.
  23. K.S.P. stands for "Kappa Sigma Phi". It seems that the Dandenong K.S.P. Football Club was centred on Scot's Presbyterian Church, Dandenong. (There was also a Box Hill Kappa Sigma Phi Cricket Club, centred on the Box Hill Church of Christ c.1922.)
  24. Football: Amateur Association, The Argus, (Tuesday, 6 March 1934), p.12.
  25. Amateur Games: Players Disqualified, (Friday, 22 June 1934), The Argus, p.9.
  26. Rundle, N., "250 Up to Caulfield Veteran", The Amateur Footballer, (Saturday, 30 July 1977), p.9.

External links

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