Australian Football

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KEY FACTS

Official name
De La Salle Old Collegians Football Club

Known as
De La Salle

Formed
1955

Colours
Blue and gold

Emblem
De La

Affiliation (Current)
Victorian Amateur Football Association (VAFA) 1955–2024

Senior Premierships
VAFA A Section - 1977, 1979-80, 1983-4, 1991 (6 total); B Section - 1975, 1989, 2003 (3 total); C Section - 1958 (1 total); E Section - 1955 (1 total)

Championships and Trophies
JN Woodrow Medal - Brian D. Bourke 1979; Michael G. Deveson 1983; David Lowe 2009; Matthew Fieldsend 2009; Aaron Shields 2010; Jacob Williams 2013 & 2016 (6 medallists/7 medals); GT Moore Medal - Peter E. Giles 1964; Robert Bonnici 2000 (2 total)

Website
delasalleocfc.com.au

De La Salle

De La Salle had had highly successful schools football teams for a good two decades prior to the formation of an Old Collegians club in February 1955. The club was the brainchild of Jim Hawkins, an Old Collegians Association committee member who had tried out as a footballer with Carlton and Richmond and had spent the 1954 season playing in C Section of the VAFA for St. Kevin’s Old Boys.

The expression ‘brainchild’ might be felt to suggest that a great deal of aforethought and planning was involved, but according to Michael Ashford, author of Pride And Premierships, a highly engrossing history of the club’s first quarter of a century, this was probably not the case - or, at any rate, not initially. In the beginning, the formation of an Old Collegians football club simply “seemed like a good idea”. However, in much the same way that a small snowball rolled down a slope can, if the consistency of the snow happens to be just right, rapidly balloon in size, so Hawkins’ ‘good idea’ was so abundantly fuelled by favourable circumstances that the end result was not merely a football club but - and one ventures the term guardedly - a genuinely special one.

Among those favourable circumstances was the fact that the VAFA ‘just happened’ to be seeking to expand, and was therefore more amenable than usual to applications from prospective new clubs. Furthermore, Hawkins’ idea, far from falling on deaf ears, ‘just happened’ to engage the imagination and energies of a group of men and women of real enthusiasm, talent and drive. The Old Collegians Association manifested its support in real terms, too, by donating £150 towards the fledgling club’s running costs, and when St Kevin’s generously made Heyington No. 2 Oval available for training and home fixtures all the major pieces of the jig-saw were in place. The club’s application to enter a team in the VAFA’s E Section was swiftly accepted, and barely two months after the club’s official Inaugural Meeting that team entered the fray for the first time against ANZ Bank at Yarra Bend, emerging with a comfortable 40 point win.

It was the beginning of a six season roller coaster ride for De La Salle which only stalled when the team reached A Section. The side’s remarkable achievements over the those years are worth summarising:

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Seismic rises of this nature are all too often followed by equally dramatic falls from grace, but such was not to be De La Salle’s fate, although the club’s initial involvement in A Grade was only to be brief. The 1963 season found the side back in B Grade, where it would spend the ensuing seven, predominantly lack lustre years, before clambering back to A Section on Ivanhoe’s coat-tails after to a 19 point loss to that side in the B Section grand final.

Once again, however, De La Salle was not quite ready for an all-out assault on amateur football’s Holy Grail, and by 1973 the club was back in B Grade, where it endured arguably the most tortuous season in its brief history, only averting the drop to C Grade by a hairsbreadth thanks to wins in the final two fixtures of the year.

After a 1974 season that was only marginally better, the once buoyant club seemed in real danger of sinking into anonymity, and yet by the end of the decade it would have established itself as, beyond any question, the pre-eminent force in Victorian amateur football. The prime catalyst for this astonishing transformation was Bernie Sheehy, formerly of North Old Boys, who combined a passion for the game that was almost tangible with very definite ideas on how it should be played. Those ideas were both forward thinking and adventurous, involving copious amounts of constructive handball as well as what might be called nascent set plays. To most of the players, the Sheehy style was little short of revolutionary. Indeed, the very concept of a ‘style of play’ was revolutionary in itself, but in a surprisingly short space of time, reinforced by what might be called ‘The Sheehy Attitude’, this new approach to the game was having the desired effect.

At its simplest, ‘The Sheehy Attitude’ was built on the twin foundations of hunger to succeed and hatred of losing, neither of which sound all that innovatory in themselves, but in the context of an amateur game in which the primary focus had always been on enjoyment, that is precisely what they were. As with the club’s blistering passage through the grades in the 1950s, the five seasons of De La Salle’s Sheehy Era warrant delineating:

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Sheehy left at the end of the 1979 season to take up a post as reserves coach at Essendon, but his impact on De La Salle was both indelible and enduring. Under Sheehy’s replacement as senior coach, Gavan White, the side made it three A Section flags in four years in 1980 thanks to an 11.14 (80) to 7.18 (72) triumph over University Blues. With further premierships following in 1981, 1983 and 1984 De La put together the most sustained sequence of VAFA A Grade success since University Blacks on either side of world war two.

Since 1984 the club has contested another four A Section grand finals, but only once, in 1991, has success been achieved. It was an especially noteworthy success, however, in that it was shared with the De La reserves and under nineteen combinations, who won their respective premierships as well.

The club has also had to endure a small amount of time in B Section, but even this has had the pleasing side effect of generating further grand final appearances in 1989 (defeated Therry Corpus Christi Old Boys), 2001 (lost to Old Ivanhoe), 2003 (beat Whitefriars Old Collegians) and 2005 (lost to Old Ivanhoe once more).

Among the De La Salle Old Collegians players to progress to V/AFL ranks have been Peter Murnane (Hawthorn), Trent Croad (Hawthorn and Fremantle), Justin Murphy (Richmond, Carlton, Geelong), Rupert Betheras (Collingwood) and Jason Cripps (St Kilda).

The 2007 season saw the De La Salle senior side performing competitively (8-9-1, sixth) in A Section under the coaching of the club’s former under 19 Blues mentor, Dave Madigan, and if 2008 brought a marginal decline (6-12, eighth) this was nevertheless comfortably good enough for the club to retain its elite grade status. Indeed, De La might almost be said to be a fixture in the VAFA's top section - a rare achievement these days.

In 2012 De La qualified for the Premier Section finals, beating Old Scotch in a semi final, but lowering their colours to Old Xaverians in the preliminary final. Their most recent finals appearance came in 2017 when they fell at the first hurdle at the hands of Collegians. A year later they dropped down the list to sixth. This was followed by a highly disappointing 2019 campaign which saw the side tumble down the list to ninth, thereby succumbing to relegation to Premier B.

It is a cliché, but an undeniable one, that the club has come a long way since its rather ad hoc origins just over half a century ago. In addition to a senior team, De La now fields two under nineteen sides. Over the years its senior and under nineteen teams have won close to thirty premierships, and even if such achievements are not the sole or even the most important indicators of a club’s health and viability, they are nevertheless extraordinarily impressive for an organisation that began life more or less in response to one man’s casual whim.

Source

John Devaney - Full Points Publications

 

Footnotes

* Behinds calculated from the 1965 season on.
+ Score at the end of extra time.