collingwood st kilda – Collingwood Forever https://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au The complete history of Australia's greatest sporting club Tue, 30 Jan 2024 23:13:09 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.0.21 Taylor’s ton https://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/when-taylor-topped-the-ton/ Wed, 17 Aug 2016 02:06:09 +0000 http://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/?p=10649 By: Glenn McFarlane of the Herald Sun It looked like being the simplest of tasks for a player in white-hot form. Brian Taylor needed two goals in the final game of the home-and-away season (round 22) to become the fourth Collingwood player to reach a century of goals in a season, a mark reached by Magpie full forwards just nine times in the previous 89 seasons. Given that the 24-year-old powerful full forward, in only his second season in Black and White, had kicked 10 goals against his old side Richmond the previous week; it seemed as if it was a fait accompli. What could possibly go wrong? What seemed less assured was whether Collingwood’s 1986 season would be extended into the finals? That equation wasn’t just predicated on the Magpies beating St Kilda at VFL Park on the last day of the regular season; it also had to rely on second-placed Sydney beating fifth-placed Fitzroy at the Magpies’ home base of Victoria Park on the same afternoon. That result would elevate Collingwood into the finals on percentage in what was Leigh Matthews‘ first year as senior coach, having taken over after Bob Rose‘s resignation following losses in the first three rounds. So the Collingwood fans who traipsed out to Waverley that August afternoon were almost certain Taylor would join the likes of Gordon Coventry, Ron Todd and Peter McKenna as Magpie centurions, but somewhat less convinced that the team would be required to play the following week. A crowd of 30,442 turned up for the match that saw the Magpies take on the bottom placed Saints, who had won only two games for the entire season. Collingwood was in the midst of reshaping its playing list, but there was still a core group of senior players in the team. It was David Cloke‘s 249th game, and the likes of Tony Shaw (170th game), Ricky Barham (151st), Peter Daicos (132nd) and, Mark Williams (135th) brought considerable experience to a team that had nine players yet to reach the 50-game mark. A few of those relatively young players would go on to become decorated Magpies, including Darren Millane, playing his 45th game. Others would have relatively shorter careers in the Black and White. One of them, 22-year-old Peter Adams, was playing his second game for the club. It would be a day that he would never forget, kicking four goals. As far as the Saints go, Trevor Barker was playing his 197th game. Geoff Cunningham and Greg Burns had been around for a long time, and plenty of the focus was on a burly full-forward in his 71st game, a 20-year-old called Tony Lockett, who had already kicked 235 goals. 160817_taylor600b ‘BT’ on the lead, out in front of his former club, Richmond, during the 1980s. As highly regarded as Lockett was, few would have believed this kid with the strong hands, powerful frame and a prodigious punt still had more than 1000 goals left in him. Or that he would, in 13 years, overtake Coventry as the most prolific goalkicker in VFL-AFL history. A 23-year-old called Ricky Nixon was playing his 14th game. His future in the game would be off the field more than on it. And a 22-year-old from Bungaree, Danny Frawley, was developing a reputation as one of the toughest full-backs to beat in the competition. A date with Taylor awaited ‘Spud’ Frawley. Taylor, himself, had been in rare form. He craved the history that stood before him – becoming a 100-goal kicker – but speaking in the lead-up to the game said that the chance to play finals was more important to him. “Goals don’t mean anything to me,” Taylor said. “If we don’t play in the finals it will be a disappointing year. We have to win on Saturday if we have any chance of making the five.” But he knew he had his work cut out on Frawley: “Danny is a very, very good player, and he has always played well against me and given me a hard time. I am expecting a tough contest.” Three decades on, Taylor and Frawley are firm friends, and a part of Triple M’s football team, but there wasn’t a lot of love lost between them back then. Taylor recalled years later in the Herald Sun: “I was playing against a 22-year-old potato farmer named Danny Frawley. We had taken an instant dislike to each other a couple of years earlier (1984) when I kicked seven on Danny. He reminded me of Rick Kennedy and Danny Hughes, never leaving you alone.” In that same article, Frawley said of his 1984 encounter: “He had three (goals) by half-time and a teammate of mine, Stephen Pirrie, who had played with Brian at Richmond, said to give him a whack because Brian was a big sook. So naive old Danny from Bungaree whacks him behind the ear after he marked early in the third quarter. He kicked the goal then came back and drove me into the ground, throttling me until I was blue.” So the pair was wary of each other as they locked horns in the round 22, 1986 clash. Taylor needed two goals to reach the ton, Collingwood need four premiership points and some luck elsewhere, and Frawley simply wanted to annoy the hell out of the most productive full-forward of the season – without turning blue again. However, Taylor’s afternoon did not go to plan. In an early passage of play, he suffered a groin injury, and there were fears he might be done for the day, left stranded on 98 goals. He tried to hide his injury. And fortunately, 21 minutes into the opening quarter, he managed to shove Frawley out of the way and take a mark in the goal square. The goal was his 99th … only one major to go. However, coach Leigh Matthews knew the extent of the injury, and wanted him off. He told Taylor so at quarter-time. There was still a game to be won – and potentially a finals series to be a part of – and if the club’s main spearhead could not run, that was a serious problem. Taylor recalled: “Leigh Matthews said, ‘You are off’. I insisted I was OK and pleaded for five minutes.” The coach reluctantly agreed. The burly forward was relieved when he marked a few minutes into the second term. Fans began to leap over the fence, preparing to run out, and the bluecoat security staff realised there was nothing they could do. But it was a false alarm, as Taylor explained in an ABC TV interview after the game. “It was a shocking kick actually. I think I was in two minds … first of all, what to do with the ball and secondly, was my injury going to affect my approach. I wasn’t concentrating on the correct things,” he said. His kick sailed to the right, and didn’t even score. It was out of bounds on the full. Taylor feared he might not get another chance. Collingwood’s runner was soon out on the field, trying to get him off. Matthews knew he was lame and couldn’t run. However, Taylor was having none of it, and limped the other way when the runner came out. Frawley was gaining in confidence that he could deny Taylor. He recalled: “I could tell ‘BT’ was struggling with injury early and thought, ‘Hang on, I’ve got him here’. I started to think I would go down in folklore.” Enter umpire Peter Cameron. Taylor somehow threw everything into this passage of play late in the second term. He led Frawley to the ball – but only just – when the whistle sounded. It was a free kick to Taylor within kicking distance … right in front. 160817_taylor600a Carlton great Stephen Silvagni and Brian Taylor square off during the late 1980s. “I thought I deserved it, I thought I was a chance 20 yards out and dead in front,” Taylor said after the game. Years later, he told a different story, when he said to the Herald Sun: “Peter Cameron, who was a good bloke, gave me a dubious free kick. The players didn’t know whether it was downfield or what and Danny, who was five metres away, couldn’t believe it. This time I was only 25m out. It was about as far as I could kick.” Cameron, perhaps putting a little mayonnaise on the events, said in 2008: “We knew that Brian was injured and I could tell it was fairly serious, so the whole thing was pretty well set up.” “In those days there wasn’t the same scrutiny there is today and you could get away with something like that. I think I paid the free kick for hands in the back. “Was the free there? I don’t think so, but Brian needed only one goal for his century, so what was I going to do – let him limp off on 99? That was a time when the circumstances were such that we looked after each other.” This time Taylor could not miss. His kick sailed through the middle for his 100th goal of the season – the first time in 14 years since a Collingwood player had reached that milestone. And on cue hundreds of the Magpie faithful rushed out on the ground as Taylor’s teammates, led by Mark Williams and David Cloke, circled around him for protection. Huge numbers of kids with banners and streamers, teenagers eager to be a part of it, and older supporters simply living in the moment crowded around the Magpie players to celebrate Taylor’s feat. The game was held up for more than five minutes. When the crowd reluctantly began to leave the ground, so too did Taylor. The message had come from Matthews that it was time for him to come off. The game was still to be won, and given Taylor could barely run, the coach wanted him on the bench. Other than a short, brief run in the third term, his day was done. “I was really of no benefit to the team, I wasn’t able to run properly,” he said. “I was able to jog a bit, but not run how the coach wanted me to.” Taylor had achieved what he wanted – 100 goals – and the Magpies would end up doing what they needed to do – win the game by 52 points, off the back of a seven-goal to one third term. But, on the other side of town, the Lions upset the party. They proved a little too strong for the Swans, winning by 10 points, as disheartened Magpie supporters listened forlornly on the radio to the progress scores. Collingwood’s finals were sadly over before they started. The only consolation for those Magpie fans headed home from Waverley that night was the fact they had seen Brian Taylor reach the magical three figures.

MAGPIES WHO TOPPED THE TON

1929Gordon Coventry (124) 1930 Gordon Coventry (118) 1933 Gordon Coventry (108) 1934 Gordon Coventry (105) 1938 Ron Todd (120) 1939Ron Todd (121) 1970Peter McKenna (143) 1971Peter McKenna (134) 1972Peter McKenna (130) 1986 Brian Taylor (100) ]]>
Collingwood Cult Figures: Ian Cooper https://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/collingwood-cult-figures-ian-cooper/ Wed, 06 Apr 2016 07:52:20 +0000 http://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/?p=10364 By Michael Roberts, Collingwood Historian Most footballers have to go through serious levels of pain and discomfort if they’re to carve out a decent career. But it’s highly likely that no Collingwood player has ever had to endure the frustrations and hurdles that burly defender Ian Cooper had to overcome. ‘Strop’, as he was widely and affectionately known, missed the best part of five years of football through a succession of injuries, mostly due to chronically arthritic ankles. But he persevered and persevered and eventually managed to take his tally close to 100 games spread across 12 years. In that time – and especially in the largely uninterrupted span from 1974-77 – he built a reputation as one of the meanest backmen in the game. Collingwood fans have always loved their tough, battling, no-nonsense defenders, and in Cooper they had a beauty. He actually came to Victoria Park as a forward from East Reservoir. He kicked 13 goals from seven games in the under-19s in 1971, and seven from 10 games in the reserves the same year. By 1972 he was a reserves regular (indeed he finished second in the reserves best and fairest), albeit mostly as a defender, and in round 21 – still only 18 – made it to the bench for what proved to be an unremarkable senior debut against South Melbourne. A few weeks later, the senior team was hit by a raft of injuries for the first semi-final against St Kilda. Lee Adamson, Ted Potter and Peter McKenna were among those missing, while Ron Wearmouth was suspended. Graeme Dunstan was brought in for his first game to fill McKenna’s shoes, while Cooper was named in defence for his first full game in what was described as a selection ‘bombshell’. Certainly not many had him on their radar as a likely replacement for any of the missing backmen. The Pies were awful against the Saints and were knocked out of the finals. But Cooper and fellow new boy Dunstan both did well. The club presented Ian with a special trophy a few weeks later for ‘services in the final match’, while the Age named him among the club’s best players, saying he was “never outdone” and “kept battling on”. They were qualities Cooper would display often in the years ahead. After such a promising debut, hopes were high for Cooper in 1973. But when the final lists came out he was mysteriously nowhere to be seen. He had contracted a type of rheumatic fever that caused swelling in his ankles and was diagnosed as arthritis. Doctors advised him to stand out of football for 12 months. By the time he returned to football in 1974, Cooper had filled out physically and felt increasingly at home in defence. His critics said he was too short for a key defensive post, but he had no problems playing at full-back or in the back pocket. He made everyone sit up and take notice when he kept an admittedly ailing Peter Hudson goalless in round two, and went from strength to strength thereafter, playing 18 games for the year before ankle problems prematurely ended his season. Something else had changed by 1974 too. The Paul Hogan Show had become one of the most popular programs on TV, and it featured Hoges’ dim-witted housemate ‘Strop’ (played by Hogan’s friend John Cornell, a successful businessman who later played a key role in the formation of World Series Cricket). ‘Strop’, it has to be said, bore an uncanny resemblance to Ian Cooper. So, armed with a new nickname and an ostensibly fit body, Collingwood’s ‘Strop’ set about the golden years of his career. From 1974 to 1977 he was a regular in the Magpie defence. Tough, strong, uncompromising and fearless, he was a nightmare for opposing forwards. He could take a good mark and was surprisingly speedy once he had a head of steam up, his surging bursts from defence becoming something of a trademark. But his main strength lay in being able to nullify high-scoring forwards. He wasn’t afraid to get physical when he needed to, and alongside similarly rugged colleagues such as Phil Manassa and later Stan Magro and Kevin Worthington, he made the Collingwood back line a scary place to be. Fitness was never his strong suit (he finished last in the 1976 pre-season cross-country run), but he was an assiduous trainer and won a television from Canberra TV in 1974 for “dedication to training”. The next year he was named the club’s most consistent player and awarded the J.F. McHale Trophy. Late in Collingwood’s barnstorming 1977 season, Cooper went down with ankle problems that forced him out of the finals series. He initially thought it a recurrence of the 1973 injury, but it turned out to be a chipped bone and ankle spurs. That was bad enough, but recurring arthritic problems with his ankles, back and even a dislocated shoulder saw him miss all of 1978, play only one game in 1979 and miss all of 1980. He became a kind of ghost figure at Collingwood – often mentioned but rarely seen. But Cooper never gave up. One game in three years and he never gave up. It was hailed as one of the great comebacks when he eventually returned to the team for a few games midway through 1981. He spent much of the year captaining the reserves and was set to retire at the end of the season, but when the senior team was hit by injuries to Peter Moore, Stan Magro and Andrew Smith, the Pies pulled a major surprise by naming him in their Preliminary Final side. At that point it had been 14 weeks since his last senior appearance. Cooper responded by playing one of the best games of his career. Many critics chose him as best on ground, and credited him with piloting the Pies to another Grand Final. “Cooper did a marvellous job of refuting the generally accepted view that he was an ageing backman with suspect ankles,” wrote Trevor Grant in The Age. “He jumped, danced and dodged his way out of strife so many times and made the Geelong forwards who had destroyed the Magpies in the Qualifying Final look remarkably inadequate.” “His courage and spirit typifies everything that is Collingwood,” wrote the Sunday Press. The fairytale ending, of course, would have seen the Pies win the ’81 flag and Cooper retire with his Preliminary Final performance a fresh reminder of the qualities he brought to his football. But Collingwood lost, and Cooper decided to extend his career. He managed only eight games in 1982, then in the 1983 pre-season was suspended for four weeks for whacking a Footscray opponent during a charity match to raise money for the victims of the Ash Wednesday bushfires. He never regained a senior berth, and eventually left for Port Melbourne in the VFA. Ian ‘Strop’ Cooper was one of those players that fans love. His whole-hearted, full-on (and sometimes aggressive) approach to footy endeared him to the Magpie faithful from day one. But his long and determined struggle to return to senior football after suffering such debilitating injuries made him even more popular. He was an underrated footballer but one of the finest Magpie defenders of his era. That 1981 preliminary final was just about the perfect footnote to his career.]]> Tuddy’s super seven https://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/tuddys-super-seven/ Wed, 06 Apr 2016 04:21:26 +0000 http://forever.collingwoodfc.com.au/?p=10357 By: Glenn McFarlane, Herald Sun journalist and Collingwood historian. It’s one of the greatest individual finals performances in Collingwood’s history, but for too long it has been overshadowed by what happened in a match a fortnight later. Half a century on, it’s well worth a re-visit. Des Tuddenham‘s seven goals, including three late in the final term, helped to sink St Kilda in the 1966 Second Semi-Final. It was a virtuoso performance that in so many ways personified what he meant to Collingwood. His extraordinary game on the half-forward flank elevated Collingwood into another Grand Final. Some wondered if they had seen a better leaders’ game. The Saints knew one man had cost them the game. If Collingwood had won that Grand Final a fortnight later, Tuddenham’s solo effort would have remained the stuff of legends. But heartbreak often clouds the memory, and cruelly Tuddenham’s magical Semi-Final match has been seen as a footnote to what happened next – another heartbreaking Grand Final loss, this time by the barest of margins against a team that hadn’t won a flag beforehand, and haven’t won another one since. Let’s put aside that 1966 Grand Final for a moment, and concentrate on the Second Semi-Final, a moment that deserves its time in the sun again. On the Monday night before the semi-final Tuddenham finished his training session and wandered over to the reserves group at the other end of the ground. Always seeking to improve, he had a chat with reserves coach Neil Mann, a former Magpie great, who offered some advice that would prove invaluable the following Saturday. Mann told ‘Tuddy’ to practice some goal kicking on the run, breaking away from opponents, as he had been missing a few shots of late. One of those in attendance that night as the floodlights at Victoria Park barely penetrated the darkness explained later: “Tuddenham spent half an hour popping the ball through from all angles.” Tuddenham, 23, had every reason to think 1966 would be the year the Magpies won their 14th flag. Collingwood had finished on top of the ladder, a game clear of St Kilda, Geelong and Essendon, having won 15 of its 18 games. Only Essendon (twice) and Carlton had beaten them that season. St Kilda on Second Semi-Final day stood between the Magpies and the Grand Final, and Tuddenham felt as if the goal kicking practice that Mann had forecast would stand him in good stead when it counted. Starting the game well was a focus, and it couldn’t have worked out any better. Collingwood kicked five goals to nil in the first quarter, and half an hour into the game, the game seemed to have the game at its mercy. 160406_tuddenham600b Des Tuddenham at his swashbuckling best. Photo: AFL Media. The Herald’s senior football writer Alf Brown praised Tuddenham for his early work, with the Magpies skipper kicking a goal in the first term, along with two from Ian Graham and singles to Barry Price and Wayne Richardson. But Brown was critical of one passage when the Collingwood skipper crashed through a pack and knocked over a Saints’ player, bringing about a free kick. He said it was “foolish play by a captain.” The 31-point lead at quarter-time was exactly what coach Bob Rose wanted. It was the platform from which the Magpies could hopefully bring about an easy kill, and the week off the following week. But St Kilda fought back determinedly with multiple goals to Travis Payze and Kevin ‘Cowboy’ Neale, as well as a single goal to Ian Cooper in the second term. Tuddenham managed Collingwood’s only goal for the term, with Brown recording he had been “given far too much freedom by (his opponent) Daryl Griffiths” when he ran in to kick his second major. St Kilda’s six goals for the term had seen Allan Jeans’ team claw their way to a two-point lead at the main change. The game was in the balance and no one in the rooms was as animated as Tuddenham at half time. The Saints maintained a slight edge in the third term, with each team booting four goals (Tuddenham kicked two more), but the four-point margin at the last change meant the game could easily go either way. Tuddenham recalled: “We got away to a good start early which we have not done in recent matches, and our first quarter was a good team effort.” “We relaxed in the second and third quarters, and this allowed St Kilda to hit the front.” The messages were simple amongst the Collingwood group – clear out the attacking zone and give the forwards the chance to have a bit more room. Tuddenham had kicked 4.0 to this stage. He hadn’t had a blemish until the 10-minute-mark of the final term. He “wrung his hands in disappointment” and the Pies’ fans groaned, wondering if it might come back to haunt Collingwood. Few could have predicted what came next, as well as the crucial role that Tuddenham would play in it. The inspirational skipper would kick three goals in the latter half of the final term, turning the game off his own boot. One of them gave Collingwood the lead 23 minutes into what was a tense and tight final term, and he proved just too elusive and just too strong for his opponent, Griffiths. St Kilda star Ian Stewart didn’t blame Griffiths, telling The Herald: “Captain Des Tuddenham was the match winner … but if you’re looking for a match loser, don’t pick on Daryl Griffiths.” “With 15 minutes to go, Tuddenham’s determination to kick goals took him across to the flank on the opposite to the one he had been on all day. I’m glad I wasn’t in Daryl’s position. I don’t want to take anything away from Tuddenham – he won it for Collingwood. But keep in mind, he had eight shots and he kicked seven goals. It was radar-like accuracy. “An opponent can do a good job in holding him, (but) then he breaks away for a few goals and all the good work is forgotten.” It wasn’t a few goals. It was seven, and his performance was enough to lift Collingwood onto a 10-point win over St Kilda. After the game, Tuddenham admitted: “I’ve never kicked that many goals in a football match in my life.” 160406_tuddenham600c Des Tuddenham played 182 games for Collingwood, including two Grand Finals. Photo: AFL Media. The Sun News-Pictorial front page on Monday showed a contrast. There was a picture of Griffiths in tears in the rooms after the game being consoled by the suspended Carl Ditterich, as well as an inset of a victorious ‘Tuddy’. In the same edition, Lou Richards suggested it was the perfect performance from a Collingwood captain, and should be shown to all those who aspired to the role into the future. Richards wrote: “Collingwood’s captain courageous grabbed what looked like a winning opportunity when he slammed through a left-footer for the lead with about 10 minutes to go.” “When Brian Mynott snatched the lead back for the Saints, things looked bleak for the Magpies. But then ‘Tuddy’ did it again – twice – and Collingwood had won the semi-final that must rank with the best of all time. “Those last three goals put the seal on Tuddenham’s best on ground performance. The club should get a newsreel copy of his effort and file it away under the headline ‘How to Play a Collingwood Captain’s Game’ for showing to future skippers.” Bob Davis called Tuddenham a “sledgehammer … no one ever played a better captain’s game than Tuddenham pulled out of the hat for Collingwood. And I doubt anyone will put in one equal to that. “A half-forward flanker who can bulldoze seven goals in a finals match is a coach’s dream. In Tuddy’s book, it is a case of Collingwood first and sticking plaster last, where angels fear to tread, he’s the first in the queue.” Tuddenham was writing a guest column for the Sun News-Pictorial at the time, and he admitted after the game that relief as much as anything was the emotion. He was exhausted and needed the week off, saying: “I’ll be honest the Second Semi-Final took a heavy physical toll of every player – including me – and I don’t think St Kilda can recover sufficiently to hold off the confident, fresh Bombers (in the Preliminary Final).” He was wrong on that count. St Kilda won easily, and Jeans and his match committee worked on a plan to stop Tuddenham in the Grand Final. This time it wasn’t Griffiths, it was eighth-game player John Bingley. For his part, Tuddenham didn’t care about how many goals he might kick in a Grand Final, so long as the Magpies kicked more than the Saints. He said: “I have forgotten about those seven goals. I don’t care if I don’t kick a goal. As long as Collingwood wins, I’ll be happy. I would be just as happy if seven teammates kicked a goal as I would with another seven goals myself.” He would kick three of Collingwood’s 10 goals for the game. He had pleaded with Bob Rose to let him play in the Grand Final. But the coach wanted him forward again. So for the first three quarters of the Grand Final, Tuddenham was at half-forward before being shifted onto the ball when the game was in the balance. With the Saints one point ahead in the dying seconds, Tuddenham was the last Collingwood player to have possession of the ball. With timing running out, he ran along the wing and instead of taking a bounce, he opted to shoot the ball long into attack, looking for a forward. But it was intercepted by St Kilda’s Bob Murray and his clearing kick hadn’t even landed when the final siren sounded. St Kilda was premiers, finally, and in that moment, Tuddenham’s Semi-Final heroics became a distant memory. 160406_tuddenham600d Des Tuddenham leads his Collingwood teammates out onto the MCG. Photo: AFL Media.]]>