Shane Heard
Brownlow Medallist
- Mar 11, 2018
- 10,887
- 17,965
- AFL Club
- Essendon
You’re quite a few fries short of a happy meal in the head aren’t cha?
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Who cares about Essendon 150 years
GWS have made 10 years and more relevant
#2004 #2000 #outdatedThat’s nice dear.
Well here you go petal. We have a 53% winning average over the 150 years playing 132 finals matches.
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Far out - EFC has feasted on WCE.
Essendon as part of its strategic plan are currently building a master plan for Windy Hill. It has been in dialogue with the MV Council about how to bring the site alive and how to invest in it to ensure it becomes an active and used venue. EFC sees its future along similar lines to Vic Park. Investing in its infrastructure to ensure it’s opened up to the public for use, whilst becoming a league standard venue for its AFLW and VFzl teams. The club has earmarked significant joint investment to redevelop facilities to allow this, lighting, change rooms, media facilities etc. the Social Club and Fitness Centres to be part of the plan. Windy Hill is central to Essendon’s future plans.
Hopefully they don't get rid of the old stands. I live a few minutes drive from Windy Hill and took my kids for a walk around there a while back and they were amazed at the "facilities". From memory we coukd walk into the old coaches/media boxes too.
You went to both spots today? Explorer alert.
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Hmmmm. It would be just like bloody local councils to unnecessarily remove pieces of the heritage of the area like this, probably in favour of something cheap and dispensible. This is from Dec 2020 on Google Maps.
1930s tooalways admired EFC for their consistency, seemed to jag a flag in most decades. 70s was the only dry spell before the recent one?
EFC was the quintessential 1990s club for me, with Sheeds, high profile players, and success, absolutely dominated the media. It seemed to me if they weren't talking about Carey, they were talking about the Bombers in those days.
This a decade after they left East Melbourne Football Ground which had been their home for nearly forty years.1930s too
Yeah as a Tiger fan mentioned before, it’s a god damn tragedy that RFC want to demolish the Jack Dyer Stand at Punt Rd.
It’s a work of historic art and a beautiful reminder of old time football in Melbourne.
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No current season stats available
Huh what ?Stop using hashtags you #dropkick.
Good effort but my recollections from about 69 onwards have Gerlach in 17 and the Payne brothers, Ian and big Charlie in 3 and 7 respectively.Ok when your a kid you remember jumper numbers - especially your team - youd still remember the lot of them - 50-60 years later . But you also remember some - or maybe quite a few opposition team jumper numbers as well
So the Dons - 62 and 65 they won the flag - so here is my best guess re Ess numbers around that time period
I will get the certainties the easy ones out of the way 1st - Barry Davis 32 Ken Fraser 23 Ted Fordham 20 Don McKenzie 24 ( as a said earlier i admired McKenzie - he did have a bit of dirt in him - but he had a go every week - a bit like Cam Mooney ) Robin Close 19
Now the semi guesses - and i will give them in order of confidence - Charlie Payne - big Charlie Payne - i reckon he was no 1- the sole reason - i saw some Ess kid/supporter at KP - and he had one of those dufflecoats on - and he had no 1 on his back - with CP name - so i reckon im right with that one . CP also had a brother playing at Ess - but i dont know what number he was
Jack Clarke who was a top notch centreman/rover onballer - i also thought he wore no 1 - but no 1 is gone - i know Clarke had a low number so i will go no 2
John Birt - top rover - im going to have 2 guesses here ( could be totally wrong ) - and they are 5 and 11 - i can picture him in 11 - but no 5 comes into my head as well
I will give two more . Daryl Gerlach - who was a very reliable back pocket player - might have even played for Victoria - so he was a pretty good player . Something is telling me he wore no 10 - but that was Colemans number - surely they wouldnt give that to a back pocket player - hah - but im going to go with no 10 for DG
No 3 - is a famous number at Ess - and the only reason i know that - is when Paul Chapman went to Ess - Tim Watson was doing the commentary in a game - and he said wow - they have given Chapman ( no 3 ) a famous number thats Dick Reynolds number . Now this is a wild guess because i cant picture this bloke in that number - but you wouldnt reckon theyd give that number to a spud - so my stab at no 3 - is Hughie Mitchell who would have played 250 games for Ess - top FF/ and ruck rover
Ok when your a kid you remember jumper numbers - especially your team - youd still remember the lot of them - 50-60 years later . But you also remember some - or maybe quite a few opposition team jumper numbers as well
So the Dons - 62 and 65 they won the flag - so here is my best guess re Ess numbers around that time period
I will get the certainties the easy ones out of the way 1st - Barry Davis 32 Ken Fraser 23 Ted Fordham 20 Don McKenzie 24 ( as a said earlier i admired McKenzie - he did have a bit of dirt in him - but he had a go every week - a bit like Cam Mooney ) Robin Close 19
Now the semi guesses - and i will give them in order of confidence - Charlie Payne - big Charlie Payne - i reckon he was no 1- the sole reason - i saw some Ess kid/supporter at KP - and he had one of those dufflecoats on - and he had no 1 on his back - with CP name - so i reckon im right with that one . CP also had a brother playing at Ess - but i dont know what number he was
Jack Clarke who was a top notch centreman/rover onballer - i also thought he wore no 1 - but no 1 is gone - i know Clarke had a low number so i will go no 2
John Birt - top rover - im going to have 2 guesses here ( could be totally wrong ) - and they are 5 and 11 - i can picture him in 11 - but no 5 comes into my head as well
I will give two more . Daryl Gerlach - who was a very reliable back pocket player - might have even played for Victoria - so he was a pretty good player . Something is telling me he wore no 10 - but that was Colemans number - surely they wouldnt give that to a back pocket player - hah - but im going to go with no 10 for DG
No 3 - is a famous number at Ess - and the only reason i know that - is when Paul Chapman went to Ess - Tim Watson was doing the commentary in a game - and he said wow - they have given Chapman ( no 3 ) a famous number thats Dick Reynolds number . Now this is a wild guess because i cant picture this bloke in that number - but you wouldnt reckon theyd give that number to a spud - so my stab at no 3 - is Hughie Mitchell who would have played 250 games for Ess - top FF/ and ruck rover
It opened in 1914 ffs. They can't be serious. Surely there's another way to get what they need.
Ok when your a kid you remember jumper numbers - especially your team - youd still remember the lot of them - 50-60 years later . But you also remember some - or maybe quite a few opposition team jumper numbers as well
So the Dons - 62 and 65 they won the flag - so here is my best guess re Ess numbers around that time period
I will get the certainties the easy ones out of the way 1st - Barry Davis 32 Ken Fraser 23 Ted Fordham 20 Don McKenzie 24 ( as a said earlier i admired McKenzie - he did have a bit of dirt in him - but he had a go every week - a bit like Cam Mooney ) Robin Close 19
Now the semi guesses - and i will give them in order of confidence - Charlie Payne - big Charlie Payne - i reckon he was no 1- the sole reason - i saw some Ess kid/supporter at KP - and he had one of those dufflecoats on - and he had no 1 on his back - with CP name - so i reckon im right with that one . CP also had a brother playing at Ess - but i dont know what number he was
Jack Clarke who was a top notch centreman/rover onballer - i also thought he wore no 1 - but no 1 is gone - i know Clarke had a low number so i will go no 2
John Birt - top rover - im going to have 2 guesses here ( could be totally wrong ) - and they are 5 and 11 - i can picture him in 11 - but no 5 comes into my head as well
I will give two more . Daryl Gerlach - who was a very reliable back pocket player - might have even played for Victoria - so he was a pretty good player . Something is telling me he wore no 10 - but that was Colemans number - surely they wouldnt give that to a back pocket player - hah - but im going to go with no 10 for DG
No 3 - is a famous number at Ess - and the only reason i know that - is when Paul Chapman went to Ess - Tim Watson was doing the commentary in a game - and he said wow - they have given Chapman ( no 3 ) a famous number thats Dick Reynolds number . Now this is a wild guess because i cant picture this bloke in that number - but you wouldnt reckon theyd give that number to a spud - so my stab at no 3 - is Hughie Mitchell who would have played 250 games for Ess - top FF/ and ruck rover