Southport Australian Football Club
Southport Australian Football Club (nicknamed The Sharks) is a Gold Coast based club competing in the NEAFL Australian rules football competition.
Southport | ||
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Names | ||
Full name | Southport Australian Rules Football Club | |
Club details | ||
Founded | 1961 | |
Competition | NEAFL | |
President | Alan Mackenzie | |
Coach | Stephen Daniel | |
Captain(s) | Andrew Boston and Seb Tape | |
Ground(s) | Fankhauser Reserve (capacity: 8,000) | |
Uniforms | ||
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Other information | ||
Official website | southportsharks.com.au |
Southport has claim to be the most successful ever Queensland based AFL club with a total of 13 premierships in only 26 years.
The club has been involved in Australian Football League licence bids since 1996. To date none of these bids have been granted, however the AFL began taking interest in 2006 with pushes to merge Southport with a Melbourne-based AFL club.
Southport Sharks joined the NEAFL competition in 2011. As of 2016, the current competition consists of the following sides: Southport Sharks, Aspley Hornets, Redland Bombers, NT Thunder, Sydney University Students, Canberra Demons, Gold Coast Suns, Brisbane Lions, Sydney Swans, Greater Western Sydney Giants.
History
Formation and early GCAFL years (1961–1982)
On 22 May 1961, the Southport Australian Football Club was formed and six days later the first training session was held at Labrador Sports Oval. It was revealed on 7 June 1961 that the club would be known on as the Southport Magpies and would wear a black and white vertical striped jumper similar to the Collingwood Football Club. In front of 1,000 spectators, Southport played their first ever game against Centrals Football Club on 25 June 1961. Southport came out victorious in their first outing 8.10.58 to Central's 6.11.47. They would then go on to win the first ever Gold Coast Australian Football League premiership with a 13-point victory over Ipswich on 25 September 1961.
With the expansion of the Gold Coast Australian Football League starting in 1962, Southport moved their home ground to Owen Park. Southport won back-to-back premierships in the first two years of the Gold Coast Australian Football League, defeating Currumbin by 53 points to win their second premiership. Following a series of local premierships, the club applied for entry into the Queensland Australian Football League in July 1981. Twelve months later, the Queensland Australian Football League officially accepted Southport's entry application for the 1983 season. In their last game as part of the Gold Coast Football League, the Southport Magpies fell in the Grand Final to Coolangatta by 28 points. The disappointment of the Grand Final loss was short lived as the rebranding from the Southport Magpies to the Southport Sharks began. The strip was changed to a black V on a white background to avoid an identity conflict with the Sherwood Magpies, who later became the Western Magpies. The decision as to which club would retain the "Magpies" moniker was made by the toss of a coin.
Queensland Australian Football League (1983–1999)
Upon entrance into the Queensland Australian Football League (QAFL), the newly formed Southport Sharks were given little chance of success against the predominantly Brisbane based competition. In their first game of the 1983 season, the Sharks walked away winners with a victory over the Western Districts. They would compile a 12-6 win-loss record during the home and away season. The Sharks going undefeated through the 1983 finals series and would win the Grand Final by 13 points over Morningside. The Sharks would continue to prove themselves through the 80s with another three premierships added to their trophy cabinet as well as two runners-up. Early in 1989, the Sharks moved their headquarters to their current ground Fankhauser Reserve.
The club continued their dominance with an unbeaten season in 1990 but the club's financial woes were a big issue following a Grand Final loss in 1991. The club almost abandoned the QAFL late in 1991 to re-enter the Gold Coast Australian Football League, but Queensland's introduction of poker machines would secure the financial future of the Sharks. By 1995 the Sharks had reached 20,000 members began to lead the charge for a second Queensland team entering the Australian Football League. In 1996, the Sharks made their first bid to the AFL for inclusion in the national league, which was rejected by the AFL in favour of the Port Adelaide Football Club's elevation from the SANFL. After which, the club continued to lobby for a licence.
Following the AFL's rejection of the Sharks into the national league, the Sharks would set out to prove just how good they really were. The team would win three premierships in a row in 1997, 1998 and 1999 to finish off the millennium with success. In 1999 the Sharks were able to poach future St Kilda Saints star Nick Riewoldt from their cross-town rivals Broadbeach Cats, although Riewoldt would not compete for the Sharks senior side until 2000.
New Millennium and Dominance (2000–2010)
The Sharks would enter the 2000 season as the raging favourites to take out a fourth consecutive premiership. Soon to be number 1 AFL draft pick Nick Riewoldt would play a huge role in their Grand Final victory over the Northern Eagles. Riewoldt would be kept virtually touchless in the first half when matching up against future Brisbane Lions player Jamie Charman. Riewoldt was moved to ruck and would go on to kick two goals in the Sharks Grand Final victory. The four consecutive premierships would be Southport's last taste of success for five years as the club entered a rebuilding phase. Former AFL player Paul Dimattina pulled on the Sharks guernsey in 2005 and would lead the team to their first premiership in five years. The Sharks would continue their success with another three Grand Finals between 2006-2008 in which the Sharks would come away with two more premierships. In November 2010 it was announced the Sharks would be joining the newly formed North East Australian Football League which included four AFL reserves sides and local teams spread throughout Canberra, New South Wales, Northern Territory and Queensland.
North East Australian Football League (2011–2020)
The Sharks put together a 9–9 win-loss record in the 2011 NEAFL season but missed the finals series by percentage, their first non-finals season ever. The Sharks finished the 2012 NEAFL season with a 14–4 win-loss record and were placed third on the ladder. In the qualifying final, the Sharks fell to the Brisbane Lions reserves team but recorded their first NEAFL finals victory over Redland the following week. The Sharks faced the Northern Territory Thunder in the preliminary finals but lost by 37 points.
The club won its first and only NEAFL premiership in controversial circumstances in 2018, defeating Sydney reserves in the Grand Final. Southport dominated the game, and led 12.4 (76) to 2.4 (16) at three-quarter time, but then accidentally sent nineteen men onto the field to start the final quarter. Sydney called for a head count after twenty seconds and the extra man was discovered, which would traditionally have resulted in Southport's score being re-set to zero for the final quarter; however, officials determined that since the breach had an immaterial effect on the game, Southport would retain its score and the only penalty would be a free kick and fifty metre penalty, resulting in one Sydney goal. Southport went on to win 14.6 (90) to 5.5. (35).[1]
East Coast Second Tier League (2021–)
Southport were granted entry into the new combined league of the Victorian Football League and NEAFL at the conclusion of the 2020 season.[2]
Rivalries
Broadbeach
One of the most intense rivalries in local Queensland football exists between the neighbouring clubs in the form of the Sharks and the Broadbeach Cats and stretches back to their first meeting in 1971. Matches between the two teams generally result in a larger audience and a heated contest on the field. As of the completion of the 2013 NEAFL season, the win-loss record between the two clubs stands at 70-10 in favour of the Sharks. The Cats were removed from the North East Australian Football League at the conclusion of the 2013 season which has resulted in the rivalry not continuing at the senior level.
Premierships (22)
No. | Year | Competition | Opponent | Score | Venue |
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1 | 1961 | GCAFL | Ipswich | 9.12 (66) - 7.11 (53) | Labrador Sports Ground |
2 | 1962 | GCAFL | Currumbin Lions | 9.18 (72) - 2.7 (19) | Labrador Sports Ground |
3 | 1966 | GCAFL | Surfers Paradise Demons | 14.24 (108) - 7.16 (58) | Salk Oval |
4 | 1975 | GCAFL | Coolangatta Blues | 26.16 (172) - 17.16 (118) | Salk Oval |
5 | 1976 | GCAFL | Broadbeach Cats | 14.11 (95) - 9.14 (68) | Salk Oval |
6 | 1977 | GCAFL | Coolangatta Blues | 22.18 (150) - 13.9 (87) | Salk Oval |
7 | 1979 | GCAFL | Coolangatta Blues | 17.16 (118) - 16.19 (115) | Salk Oval |
8 | 1980 | GCAFL | Palm Beach Currumbin Lions | 17.18 (120) - 15.8 (98) | Salk Oval |
9 | 1983 | QAFL | Morningside Panthers | 13.12 (90) - 12.5 (77) | Windsor Park |
10 | 1985 | QAFL | Mayne Tigers | 11.8 (74) - 10.11 (71) | Windsor Park |
11 | 1987 | QAFL | Windsor-Zillmere Eagles | 13.17 (75) - 11.6 (72) | Windsor Park |
12 | 1989 | QAFL | Windsor-Zillmere Eagles | 16.17 (113) - 12.5 (77) | Brisbane Cricket Ground |
13 | 1990 | QAFL | Morningside Panthers | 22.14 (146) - 12.15 (87) | Brisbane Cricket Ground |
14 | 1992 | QAFL | Morningside Panthers | 14.19 (94) - 12.9 (80) | Brisbane Cricket Ground |
15 | 1997 | QSFL | Mount Gravatt Vultures | 26.13 (169) - 11.9 (75) | Windsor Park |
16 | 1998 | QSFL | Morningside Panthers | 12.15 (87) - 11.10 (76) | Giffin Park |
17 | 1999 | QSFL | North Brisbane Eagles | 15.14 (104) - 9.7 (61) | Giffin Park |
18 | 2000 | QAFL | North Brisbane Eagles | 10.8 (68) - 8.11 (59) | Giffin Park |
19 | 2005 | QAFL | Morningside Panthers | 16.15 (111) - 6.14 (50) | Brisbane Cricket Ground |
20 | 2006 | QAFL | Zillmere Eagles | 17.14 (116) - 16.8 (104) | Carrara Stadium |
21 | 2008 | QAFL | Morningside Panthers | 18.7 (115) - 15.17 (107) | Carrara Stadium |
22 | 2018 | NEAFL | Sydney Swans Reserves | 14.6 (90) - 5.5 (35) | Fankhauser Reserve |
Club song
The Southport Sharks club song was sung to the tune of Goodbye Dolly Gray.
Grogan Medallists
- Peter Guy – 1983
- Zane Taylor – 1985
- Jason Cotter – 1990 / 1993
- David Crutchfield – 1992
- Chris O'Sullivan – 1992
- David Bain – 1995 / 1999
- Jeff Brennan – 1997
- David Round – 2002
- Danny Wise - 2010
- Matthew Payne - 2011
- Fraser Pope - 2012
- Haydn Kiel - 2013
QAFL Top Goalkickers
- R. McKay (85) – 1998
- R. McKay (66) – 1999
- R. McKay (79) – 2000
- B. McEntee (119) – 2004
- B. McEntee (84) – 2005
- B. McEntee (100) – 2007
- B. McEntee (66) – 2008
Drafted players in the AFL/VFL
AFL/VFL players
There are list of past and present Southport players who have played at AFL/VFL:
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References
- Ben Collins (17 September 2018). "Player count drama in SANFL, NEAFL finals". Australian Football League. Retrieved 17 September 2018.
- Russell Gould (29 October 2020). "A new 22-team second-tier competition for the eastern seaboard will replace the VFL in 2021". news.com.au. Retrieved 21 November 2020.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Southport Australian Football Club. |