Southern District Oilers

Southern District Oilers
Full name Southern District Oilers Gridiron Club
Nickname Oilers
Sport Gridiron American Football
Founded 1985
League South Australian Gridiron Association
Home ground Training at Port Noarlunga Oval, Port Noarlunga South
Colours Blue, White, Navy
President Rob West-Mcinnes
Head coach Rob West-Mcinnes
Website oilersgridiron.com.au

Southern District Oilers are a Gridiron (also known as American Football) team from Adelaide in the State of South Australia in Australia. They play in the South Australian Gridiron Association league.

History

The game of American Football was first played competitively in South Australia in 1985, at Norwood Oval. The Southern District Oilers, then known as the Longhorns, were one of the four founding clubs in 1985, along with the East Side Razorbacks, Port Adelaide Spartans and the Brighton Breakers. The Oilers faced off against the Spartans in the first ever game of the South Australian Gridiron Association. After 4 years, the league expanded by three teams - The Hectorville Eagles, South City Chiefs and the North Side Lions. In 1989, the Longhorns (then wearing orange, black and white) changed nicknames to the "Southern District Oilers Gridiron Club" (now wearing white and navy).

The first season as the new Oilers, consisting of a core of hardened Longhorn veterans, recruited well, matured quickly and went on to be a very competitive club. Making back-to-back final appearances in the first two seasons, the Oilers lost out by few points each year on the ultimate goal. In the 2002/2003 season, the Oilers finished Minor Premiers, not taking the Grand Final, but setting the bench mark as the team to beat. However, in 2004/2005, the Oilers were successful in taking the prestigious award of South Australian Champions. With its lowest numbers (15 players), the Oilers took on a strong Razorback team on a two-year unbeaten streak. Down by two scores at halftime, the "Ironman" Oiler squad came out strong. Motivated by key veterans Ken Gaudette, George Williams and Brett Hegarty, rising players Ben Stevens, Rob West-Mcinnes and Jared Anderson and the muscle of Michael "Fabs" Snell, Dan Reeves and James Sprules, the Oilers made two strong drives and used a turnover to help complete their goal and snapped a league record winning streak. The Oilers won the Grand Final by two points (20-18).

Over the years the Oilers have been very successful in the All-Star Awards, averaging 10 nominations each season. Oilers also have good representation in the State Championships, where 2010 saw its biggest contribution of 10+ players making the trip to Melbourne. The Oilers have also had players selected for the Australian side. Jared Anderson and Shawn Garner played against New Zealand in 2003 and Rob West-Mcinnes and Brad Bennett travelled to the UK to play against Great Britain and Sweden (Brad selected as Captain).

Today, the Oilers train at the Port Noarlunga Oval where they share a facility with the Port Noarlunga Football Club and play their games at City Mazda Stadium. The current head coach is Rob West-McInnes, with additional coaching staff that includes Steve Rudd, Matthew Whaites, Ken Getsinger, Kevin Farrigua and Paul Snelling. The Club President is Rob West-Mcinnes. Current Player Representative is Kyle Smith.

Uniform

When originally formed as the "Longhorns", the oiler colours were orange, black and white. When the club changed over to the "Oilers" in 1989, so did the colours. Using the new colors of white, navy and blue, new uniforms were created.

The navy and white uniforms of the oilers.The Current Uniform of the Southern District Oilers

The current uniforms have been used since 2010 and may include a logo patch of a charitable local business that is the current season sponsor.

Current Roster

Player Name and Positions

Club Honours

2010 state reps

Australian representatives

The following Oiler players have represented the Australian National team;

Life members

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, October 25, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.