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Encyclopedia > Footscray Football Club

The Western Bulldogs, formerly known as the Footscray Football Club or The Bulldogs is an Australian Football League (AFL) club based at the Whitten Oval in western suburban Melbourne, Australia, drawing its supporter base from this traditionally poor, industrial, and less leafy part of Melbourne. Virtually since its founding, it has been one of the league's less successful clubs, both in terms of on-field success and off-field resources.


It has won only one premiership, in 1954.


This success was in no small part due to two champions of the club- Charlie Sutton the wiley and tough Captain/Coach and the clubs and one of Australian Rules' best ever players, Ted Whitten. Charlie claims to have invented the modern play on style of football- run, handball, run, kick. While Teddy Whitten has been the source of more arguments on who is the greatest player than any other to grace the fields of Australian Rules Football.


Both before and after 1954 the club struggled to make the final '4' however it almost always managed to hold itself a few games above the 'cellar dwellers' on the ladder.

Enlarge
Photo of Western Bulldogs warmup 2004

It had players of both quality and character such as Charlie and Ted, later Gary Dempsey the heroic ruckman who was badly burnt in bushfires in 1967 but managed to take out the games top individual award the 'Brownlow' in 1975. Or Dougie Hawkins the rogish lad as much at home with a beer as taking on the likes of 'Dipper' on the outer wing of the Western (Whitten) Oval. Even Simon 'the Pieman' Beasley a deadly accurate Full Forward and stockbroker who broke the image of blue collar players at the club. (He's now a bookmaker- not so different from a stockbroker!)


In the dim distant past (1900 to 1925) the club won a string of premierships in the VFA, but after the mightiest clubs had broken away and formed the VFL, the forerunner of the AFL.


Under tightly focussed management by club president David Smorgon, driven coaching by Terry Wallace, and the on-field leadership of Chris Grant and Tony Liberatore, the club had a relatively successful period through the mid- to late 1990s. However, without a premiership win, the club's future as ever looks on a knife's edge.


Brownlow Medal Winners

  • Allan Hopkins (1930)
  • Norman Ware (1941)
  • Peter Box (1956)
  • John Schultz (1960)
  • Gary Dempsey (1975)
  • Kelvin Templeton (1980)
  • Brad Hardie (1985)
  • Tony Liberatore (1990)
  • Scott Wynd (1992)

Team of the Century

In May 2002, the club announced a team of the greatest players from the last century.

Backs: Charlie Sutton Herb Henderson John Schultz
Half Backs: Wally Donald Ted Whitten Senior (captian) John Jillard
Centres: Harry Hickey Allan Hopkins Doug Hawkins (vice-captian)
Half Forwards: Alby Morrison Kelvin Templeton Chris Grant
Forwards: Jack Collins Simon Beasley George Bisset
Followers: Gary Dempsey Scott West Brian Royal
Interchange: Jim Gallagher Arthur Olliver Brad Johnson
Norm Ware Tony Liberatore Scott Wynd
Coach: Charlie Sutton

External link

  • Official Website of the Western Bulldogs Football Club (http://westernbulldogs.com.au/)
Clubs in the Australian Football League
Adelaide Crows | Brisbane Lions | Carlton | Collingwood | Essendon | Fremantle | Geelong | Hawthorn
Kangaroos | Melbourne | Port Adelaide | Richmond | St Kilda | Sydney Swans | West Coast Eagles | Western Bulldogs
Defunct clubs: | Brisbane Bears | Fitzroy | University

  Results from FactBites:
 
West. Bulldogs (3) (1649 words)
Sadly, however, Hawthorn steadied, Footscray players made a series of unforced errors at critical times, and the final result was the one that most pundits had predicted, a win to the Hawks, albeit by a significantly narrower margin (10 points) than in the previous meeting between the sides a fortnight earlier.
When, miraculously, it appeared that Footscray was on course to meet its $1.5 million target, the VFL promptly upped the ante by declaring that the club needed to raise a further $3.5 million by January 1990 in order to meet its anticipated running costs for the forthcoming season.
Football in the modern era can be fickle, however: within 18 months Wheeler was on the coaching scrap heap, replaced by former East Fremantle and Hawthorn supremo Allan Joyce, under whose aegis the side would contest the finals in consecutive years (1994-95) for the first time since the Charlie Sutton era.
Castlemaine Football Club - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (173 words)
The Castlemaine Football Club is an Australian rules football club based in Castlemaine, Victoria, Australia.
Formed in 1859, it is the second-oldest football club in Australia one of the oldest football clubs in the world.
The club was a foundation club of the Victorian Football Association after it was reformed in 1871.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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