why aren't Fitzroy's premierships considered part of Brisbane Lions history?

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It would depend on the new identity of the proposed merged club.

The late Ian Ridley said one of his biggest mistakes in negotiating the Melbourne-Hawks merger in 1996 is that Melbourne ignored a key price of research advice in that members and supporters see as the enduring symbols of their club, their colours, the tradition [things like history, club song etc.] and the club emblem and will reject a merger if there wasn't enough of that retained in the new entity.

If the majority of those can be retained in the identity of the new club, then the supporters of both original clubs will feel there is enough of their original club's identiy to warrant their continued support.
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A Melbourne-Fitzroy merger to form the 'Melbourne Lions" was very close in 1986 and a lesser extent in 1994 and probably would have worked. It was called off both times by Melbourne on the verge of a public announcement - especially in 1986 where it was 24 hours from being put to the members of both clubs. In 1994 according to Dyson Hore-Lacy, Fitzroy had an in principle agreement with Melbourne to merge in August 1994, which was taken to the AFL, leaked to the press (most likely by Hawthorn) and scuttled soon after.

In 1986, Melbourne pulled out when Fitzroy chairman Leon Wiegard asked for slightly more time to raise more money for Fitzroy in a planned gala event at Festival Hall. Melbourne also realised that many of Fitzroy's top players were due to come out of contract at the end of the year and may not have been playing for the new Melbourne Lions club.

The official name was going to be the "Melbourne-Fitzroy Football Club" (trading as the 'Melbourne Lions') with 6 Fitzroy directors and 6 Melbourne directors on the new 12 man board. Joint chairpersons - one from Melbourne and one from Fitzroy. The guernsey was going to be the Melbourne jumper with the Fitzroy lion logo added to the front. Very like the current Brisbane Lions jumper.


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Maybe the 'Footscray Lions' playing out of the Western Oval could have worked too, instead of the failed proposal of the 'Fitzroy Bulldogs' playing out of Princes Park, which the overwhelming majority of Footscray supporters vehemently rejected.

The 'Footscray Lions' jumper might have been Fitzroy's red and blue jumper with a white Fitzroy FFC logo and possibly white horizontal stripes to evoke Fooscray's jumper but still primarily in the Fitzroy design. A gold Fitzroy Lion would have been added on the breast of the jumper. In any case it would have been a bit more equal than the proposed "Fitzroy Bulldogs" playing out of Princes Park and hence may have been accepted by a larger percentage of Footscray supporters.

I personally would have liked and supported the "Melbourne Lions" because of the similarity of the colours and the proposed jumper being close to Fitzroy's. Came close to happening. Could have got behind the "Footscray Lions" perhaps, depending on the final identity.




That is true, but their supporters only get to see them play between four and six times a year, excluding possibe finals.


True. But the supporter base gets to see them play at home and also can get more involved in the club (social functions, training etc.) given that its base is still in Melbourne.

It's very difficult to ensure a balance of two identities when negotiating a merger

The only Melbourne based merger that might work in terms of identity would be the North Melbourne and the Western Bulldogs mainly on the basis of the similarity of colours. A name something like "North West Melbourne Bulldogs" might be accepted by both supporter bases. The name of North Melbourne would be retained. Reference to the western suburbs and Footscray's mascot would also be in the name. Western Bulldogs's colours of red, white and blue retained with North Melbourne vertical stripe guernsey design, or maybe a red yoke and royal blue and white vertical stripes. Would share the MCG, but football HQ and training base might be at the Western Oval and administrative HQ might be at Arden Street. VFL side could be the Footscray Kangaroos playing out of the Western Oval and wearing a Footscray jumper, with a white North Melbourne Kangaroo replacing the Bulldog logo.




11 home games, plus 4-6 games against other Melbourne based clubs could see up to 15-17 opportunities to see their team play live. Not to mention the opportunity to attend AFLW games if desired.
Interesting thoughts, and I appreciate it. I think your view is that of a fan that is heavily involved with things such as attending training sessions, which is not the position of a majority of fans, even passionate ones, (naturally) as it is self-evident that things like training attendances by fans is minute.

In my view, in which I would claim that I am a highly passionate Dogs supporter, and a social club member that has gone to functions (without being to the same passionate extent of you) would much prefer to only be able to watch the Bulldogs only four to six times a year without any being home games but that club still unquestionably being the one and the same club as the one that was historically so, than support a team such as North West Melbourne Bulldogs. Even if I could accept that such a merged club would still be half (if not more in terms of branding) a Dogs club and there would be enough colours songs, traditions etc. in that new merged club, I still would not feel that it really represents the old Dogs club simply because it could not as it would have to be equally as responsible in representing a different club, too.

I also think the ease and the extent that Bears cum Lions could represent Fitzroy's heritage in the VFL/AFL was made so because there was no real need, or significant desire, to equally represent Bears heritage, as a franchise that was only a decade old, had minimal supporters and had only been based in the city of Brisbane instead of Cararra for a few years. It's somewhat ironic that even though I agree completely that it was a rebrand and not a merger, in some ways the Brisbane team could better represent Lions heritage because of the fact there was no significant desire to maintain Bears branding or Bears history in the club. I see all the arguments you've presented in that a Lions team could keep Fitzroy heritage in a merged entity, but I'm scepitcal in the long-term ease and persistance that that could be maintained in the same way that Brisbane could, given that there would always be a battle between the hertiages of the two former teams in a way that just doesn't exist with Bears heritage. I can't speak for you obviously, but I do find it a bit peculiar that you assume it's a fait accompli that any merged entity such as the Melbourne Lions would have still significantly presented Lions branding well in perpetuity, just because they said so at the time.
 
Interesting thoughts, and I appreciate it. I think your view is that of a fan that is heavily involved with things such as attending training sessions, which is not the position of a majority of fans, even passionate ones, (naturally) as it is self-evident that things like training attendances by fans is minute.

It's more than just attending training sessions. It's also about social events and attending the games themselves.
In my view, in which I would claim that I am a highly passionate Dogs supporter, and a social club member that has gone to functions (without being to the same passionate extent of you) would much prefer to only be able to watch the Bulldogs only four to six times a year without any being home games but that club still unquestionably being the one and the same club as the one that was historically so, than support a team such as North West Melbourne Bulldogs.

Everyone certainly views it differently. A merger is all about preserving identity of the original clubs and the chances of it succeeding is very dependent on the compatibiity of the branding of both original clubs.
Even if I could accept that such a merged club would still be half (if not more in terms of branding) a Dogs club and there would be enough colours songs, traditions etc. in that new merged club, I still would not feel that it really represents the old Dogs club simply because it could not as it would have to be equally as responsible in representing a different club, too.

That's correct. However a club relocating interstate immediately represents the interests of not just its original location but also its' new location. Even if Fitzroy had relocated in its own right to Qld in 1986, their primary focus would have been on their Qld supporter base because that's where their future lies. The Melbourne supporter base (of which I would have been a part) becomes secondary.


It's somewhat ironic that even though I agree completely that it was a rebrand and not a merger, in some ways the Brisbane team could better represent Lions heritage because of the fact there was no significant desire to maintain Bears branding or Bears history in the club.

But the Fitzroy branding is diluted anyway. No Fitzroy name, no FFC logo in use on the jumper. I wouldn't have seen either with the Melbourne Lions identity as well. What I would have seen is my team play live far more often than the 4-5 opportunities I currently get per year. I would have seen the Fitzroy lion and the colours still go round on the field.
I see all the arguments you've presented in that a Lions team could keep Fitzroy heritage in a merged entity, but I'm scepitcal in the long-term ease and persistance that that could be maintained in the same way that Brisbane could, given that there would always be a battle between the hertiages of the two former teams in a way that just doesn't exist with Bears heritage.

I'd say that supporters from both sides of the merger would get used to celebrating the heritages of both clubs. Premierships, Brownlows etc. What the Brisbane Lions currently do, would have been largely replicated by the Melbourne Lions.
I can't speak for you obviously, but I do find it a bit peculiar that you assume it's a fait accompli that any merged entity such as the Melbourne Lions would have still significantly presented Lions branding well in perpetuity, just because they said so at the time.

Why wouldn't they? A Melbourne jumper with the gold Fitzroy lion would have become iconic / traditional and well loved by supporters from both sides. And of course by the next generation. Had Melbourne and Fitzroy merged in 1986, we'd be coming up 39 years with a whole new generation of supporters who wouldn't have known anything different
 
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I'd say that supporters from both sides of the merger would get used to celebrating the heritages of both clubs. Premierships, Brownlows etc. What the Brisbane Lions currently do, would have been largely replicated by the Melbourne Lions.
I disagree with this. The Brisbane Lions is effectively able to discard its Bears heritage because there never really was one to develop in the first place, so what the Brisbane Lions currently do wouldn't be able to be replicated in a merged club that fairly gives historical recognition to both contributing clubs.

This is also my personal view as I doubt it is something I could ever get used to celebrating. For instance, the Dogs/North example you give, celebrating the North success of the late 90's is weird to me as it came directly opposite to the Dogs' heartbreak and almost but failing to reach success in that same time, and part of that is my understanding and reason for being a Dogs supporter. Claiming that supporters would get used to it, in my view, is not right for me and can't be generalised away.
 
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I disagree with this. The Brisbane Lions is effectively able to discard its Bears heritage because there never really was one to develop in the first place,

They certainly rebranded to look considerably like Fitzroy, but they do celebrate and commemmorate their Bears heritage. The Brisbane Lions and the Brisbane Bears are the same club after all.
so what the Brisbane Lions currently do wouldn't be able to be replicated in a merged club that fairly gives historical recognition to both contributing clubs.

They'd have double to commemorate and celebrate.
This is also my personal view as I doubt it is something I could ever get used to celebrating.

It would take some time certainly. But the second generation of supporters would be far more amenable. It would be all that they know.
For instance, the Dogs/North example you give, celebrating the North success of the late 90's is weird to me as it came directly opposite to the Dogs' heartbreak and almost but failing to reach success in that same time, and part of that is my understanding and reason for being a Dogs supporter.

Initially yes, but in the medium to long term, many would become used to it and of course supporters that grow up with the North Western Melbourne Bulldogs. There would always be those who would never accept any merger. We've seen that with Brisbane and Fitzroy
Claiming that supporters would get used to it, in my view, is not right for me and can't be generalised away.

If your club merged you'd have the following options
  • Accept the new club's identity and support it. (That's far easier if a fair bit of the identity of the original club is present in the new club). Where one of the merging clubs has a much stronger identity in the new club than the other, the supporters of the club with the marginalised identity would reject the merger. We saw that with Bulldogs supporters in 1989 and Hawthorn supporters in 1996.
  • Reject the merger and support another AFL club
  • Walk away from the AFL
Having had to make a choice between the above three options in 1996 I can understand the reasoning behind all three. None are wrong.
 
If the Fitzroy premierships counted towards their total then the Brisbane Lions (officially the BBFFC) would be competing for their 12th VFL/AFL premiership next weekend. Four behind the all-time premiership record.

The Swans will be competing for their 6th VFL/AFL premiership next weekend, which includes South Melbourne VFL flags in 1909, 1918 & 1933 as well as Sydney AFL premierships in 2005 & 2012. The Lions will be competing for their fourth AFL premiership after Brisbane flags in 2001, 2002 & 2003 and Fitzroy's VFL flags in 1898, 1899, 1904, 1905, 1913, 1916, 1922 & 1944 don't count. Go figure.
 
If the Fitzroy premierships counted towards their total then the Brisbane Lions (officially the BBFFC) would be competing for their 12th VFL/AFL premiership next weekend. Four behind the all-time premiership record.

The Swans will be competing for their 6th VFL/AFL premiership next weekend, which includes South Melbourne VFL flags in 1909, 1918 & 1933 as well as Sydney AFL premierships in 2005 & 2012. The Lions will be competing for their fourth AFL premiership after Brisbane flags in 2001, 2002 & 2003 and Fitzroy's VFL flags in 1898, 1899, 1904, 1905, 1913, 1916, 1922 & 1944 don't count. Go figure.

Three clubs

Period spent in the league:

Brisbane 1987 - present

Sydney 1897 - present

Fitzroy 1897 - 1996

Not complex at all. Very straightforward and all in line with that.
 
Three clubs

Period spent in the league:

Brisbane 1987 - present

Sydney 1897 - present

Fitzroy 1897 - 1996

Not complex at all. Very straightforward and all in line with that.
So when the Sydney Swans Football Club was registered in 1983 they were allowed to assume the South Melbourne Football Club's historical achievements. When the Brisbane Bears and Fitzroy Football Clubs combined to register the Brisbane Bears Fitzroy Football Club (BBFFC) they weren't allowed to assume either Fitzroy or the Bears historical achievements (the Bears won the 1991 AFL reserves premiership that isn't counted either).

What's the deal? Seems like one club can change their name and keep everything and the other changes their name and loses everything.
 
So when the Sydney Swans Football Club was registered in 1983 they were allowed to assume the South Melbourne Football Club's historical achievements. When the Brisbane Bears and Fitzroy Football Clubs combined to register the Brisbane Bears Fitzroy Football Club (BBFFC) they weren't allowed to assume either Fitzroy or the Bears historical achievements (the Bears won the 1991 AFL reserves premiership that isn't counted either).

What's the deal? Seems like one club can change their name and keep everything and the other changes their name and loses everything.
It's the same as the AFL is just VFL renamed so premierships count argument. (But they should be called AFL/VFL premierships if you are including the older ones).

Sydney IS South Melbourne FFC - they just relocated and renamed.

Brisbane is NOT Fitzroy - they are the Brisbane Bears that adopted (aka merged) the lions branding.

Fitzroy FC still exists in the VFL.

The 2 situations are different.

I see no issue with premierships being grouped together as "Brisbane/Fitzroy" AFL/VFL
 
When the Brisbane Bears and Fitzroy Football Clubs combined to register the Brisbane Bears Fitzroy Football Club (BBFFC)

That didn't happen. And I say that as a shareholder of the Fitzroy Football Club (both in 1996 and now).

they weren't allowed to assume either Fitzroy or the Bears historical achievements (the Bears won the 1991 AFL reserves premiership that isn't counted either).

The Brisbane Bears and the Brisbane Lions are the same club.
What's the deal? Seems like one club can change their name and keep everything and the other changes their name and loses everything.

Relocation in one case and rebranding in another case.
 
So when the Sydney Swans Football Club was registered in 1983 they were allowed to assume the South Melbourne Football Club's historical achievements. When the Brisbane Bears and Fitzroy Football Clubs combined to register the Brisbane Bears Fitzroy Football Club (BBFFC) they weren't allowed to assume either Fitzroy or the Bears historical achievements (the Bears won the 1991 AFL reserves premiership that isn't counted either).

What's the deal? Seems like one club can change their name and keep everything and the other changes their name and loses everything.

South Melbourne changed its name to Sydney. One club.

Brisbane Bears changed its name to Brisbane Bears-Fitzroy Football Club (trading as Brisbane Lions). One club.

Fitzroy is Fitzroy.
 
It's the same as the AFL is just VFL renamed so premierships count argument. (But they should be called AFL/VFL premierships if you are including the older ones).

Sydney IS South Melbourne FFC - they just relocated and renamed.

Brisbane is NOT Fitzroy - they are the Brisbane Bears that adopted (aka merged) the lions branding.

Fitzroy FC still exists in the VFL.
You mean the VAFA?

Were Fitzroy not in administration in 1996 and 1997 when the Brisbane Lions (Brisbane Bears Fitzroy Football Club) were starting out? Does that mean the BBFFC briefly assumed Fitzroy's history at the start and then when Fitzroy came out of administration in 1998 they took their records back?

That didn't happen. And I say that as a shareholder of the Fitzroy Football Club (both in 1996 and now).
So what did happen? My understanding is Fitzroy went into administration in 1996, which I think means the shareholders lose control of the club, and the administrators were obligated to take the best financial offer on the table to pay back Nauru and the Bears put forward the best offer. I think once the deal was done Brisbane then combined the two assets that they had control of to register the Brisbane Lions (BBFFC). Then in 1998 Fitzroy managed to get out of administration but it was obviously too late at that point.

The Brisbane Bears and the Brisbane Lions are the same club.
South Melbourne changed its name to Sydney. One club.

Brisbane Bears changed its name to Brisbane Bears-Fitzroy Football Club (trading as Brisbane Lions). One club.

Fitzroy is Fitzroy.
If that's the case then why isn't the Bears' 1991 AFL reserves premiership recognised?
 
If that's the case then why isn't the Bears' 1991 AFL reserves premiership recognised?

I’m not sure what you mean by that. The VFL/AFL Reserves competition (under a few different names) ran from 1919 to 1999. Brisbane absolutely won one of those premierships - 1991. I don’t know who doesn’t recognise that.
 
You mean the VAFA?

Were Fitzroy not in administration in 1996 and 1997 when the Brisbane Lions (Brisbane Bears Fitzroy Football Club) were starting out?
Yes.
Does that mean the BBFFC briefly assumed Fitzroy's history at the start and then when Fitzroy came out of administration in 1998 they took their records back?

No. The Brisbane Bears and the Brisbane Lions are the same club. However, given Fitzroy are no longer in the AFL competition, the Brisbane Lions who have rebranded with much of the Fitzroy branding are the custodians of Fitzroy's history in the VFL-AFL competition.

So what did happen? My understanding is Fitzroy went into administration in 1996, which I think means the shareholders lose control of the club,

The shareholders don't lose control of the club. They are still shareholders. The directors of Fitzroy who are elected by the shareholders to run the club, lost control to run the club.
and the administrators were obligated to take the best financial offer on the table to pay back Nauru and the Bears put forward the best offer. I think once the deal was done Brisbane then combined the two assets that they had control of to register the Brisbane Lions (BBFFC). Then in 1998 Fitzroy managed to get out of administration but it was obviously too late at that point.

Fitzroy were $2.7 million in debt in 1996. $1.25 million of that was owed to one secured creditor, (Nauru Insurance Company) which was being serviced and wasn't due to be paid back until 2001.

  • 5.3A 436A of the Corporations Act states that a Company may appoint an administrator if the board of that company thinks it is or will become insolvent.
  • Part 5.3A 436B states that a Liquidator may appoint an administrator.
  • Part 5.3A 436C states that a secured party may appoint an administrator.

Note the bold of the last section, because this is what happened to Fitzroy.

"A person who is entitled to enforce a security interest in the whole, or substantially the whole, of a company's property may by writing appoint an administrator of the company if the security interest has become, and is still, enforceable."

Fitzroy owed $1.25 million to Nauru, secured with a ‘floating charge’ (meaning that the loan was not secured against anything specific but rather against any and all assets to the value of the loan).

Fitzroy's debt to Nauru wasn't due in 1996. It was due in 2001 and Fitzroy was meeting the repayments.

So why did Nauru appoint an administrator under Part 5.3A 436C?

When Fitzroy resolved to seek a merger with North Melbourne, the Kangaroos (at the instigation of the AFL) refused to release any more than $550,000 of the $1.25 million owed to Nauru from the merger monies of the $6 million that the AFL had promised in the event of two clubs merging into a new club. The AFL were telling North Melbourne that if they held out, they wouldn't have to pay Fitzroy creditors at all and would receive all of the financial package ($6 million) for completion of this deal themselves.

So when Nauru was informed of this, they appointed an administrator to recover their $1.25 million debt when the AFL subsequently threatened to withdraw the $6 million merger incentive to North and Fitzroy, from which the secured debt to Nauru was to be repaid in the event of a merger. Nauru could have ended up with nothing.

As a result of the appointment of the administrator, the creditors of the company (Fitzroy Football Club) resolved on 25 July 1996, that Fitzroy should enter a Deed of Company Arrangement (instead of the creditor's other two choices permissable by the Corporations Act 2001 which was liquidation or ending the administration).

This appointment took the power to merge from North Melbourne and Fitzroy and placed it in the hands of the administrator of Fitzroy, Michael Brennan, who under heavy AFL pressure, was persuaded to consider a deal with the Brisbane Bears under AFL auspices.

On 4 August 1996 a deed was executed by Fitzroy (controlled by Michael Brennan as administrator) and the Brisbane Bears Football Club Ltd. and the AFL. In consideration of Brisbane Bears Football Club Ltd. agreeing to pay or procure the payment of various amounts mentioned in the deed (such as paying Nauru's loan), and to provide certain indemnities, the administrator agreed to transfer all Fitzroy's operations and activities as an AFL club (including its football operations) to the Brisbane Bears with effect from 1 November 1996.

In effect the Brisbane Bears purchased Fitzroy's AFL assets as pertaining to its Club Operations and the AFL added on some other bonuses such as priority (pre draft) access to eight players from Fitzroy's 1996 list, some AFL money (an AFL grant to aid its purchasing of Fitzroy's assets.)

As part of the deal, the administrator relinquished (voluntarily surrendered) Fitzroy Football Club's licence to compete in the AFL competition, effectively expelling the club from the AFL.

The AFL gave permission for all its AFL owned trademarks (pertaining to Fitzroy) to be used by the Brisbane Bears Football Club from Season 1997 onwards and this was ratified by 14 of the 16 clubs on July 4th 1996 to come into effect on November 1st 1996. The other clubs rejected the Fitzroy-North Merger 14-1 and accepted Brisbane's re-branding, as the AFL preferred "for strategic reasons". The Brisbane Bears subseqently re-branded their club identity and continued in the AFL as the "Brisbane Lions". Fitzroy Football Club left the VFL-AFL competition after 100 years of participation.

No new licence was issued to the Brisbane Bears, nor was Fitzroy's licence transferred to anyone.

So Fitzroy had no "Club Operations" after their licence to compete in the AFL was surrendered by the Administrator. Everything that was transferred to the Brisbane Bears, was acquired / purchased by the Bears with the connivance of the Adminstrator. AFL owned intellectual property pertaining to Fitzroy, such as the lion logo, was allocated to the Brisbane Bears by the AFL.

Even the Brisbane Lions argued the same in their court case against Fitzroy Football Club in 2010.

In 2010 in the Supreme Court of Victoria , the Brisbane Lions argued that the attempt by Fitzroy to try to hold the Brisbane Lions to the Deed of Arrangement in regards to the continuing use of the Fitzroy lion, "was the case of an "historical entity with a shrinking supporter base" (that is THE Fitzroy Football Club formed 1883) "seeking to control the activities of an ongoing enterprise in a way that was going to cause it great loss and get in the way of a progressive marketing exercise commensurate with a strong and competitive football team.”

The Brisbane Lions went on to say that the Fitzroy Football Club was engaging in “officious meddling” in the affairs of another Club (i.e. Brisbane Bears-Fitzroy Football Club Ltd).

Fitzroy Football Club Ltd (ACN 005 881 201. ABN 20 005 881 201. Registered: 09/07/1981)
vs. Brisbane Bears-Fitzroy Football Club Ltd (ACN: 054 263 473, ABN: 43 054 263 473 Registered: 16/12/1991. originally the Brisbane Bears Football Club Ltd.)
Supreme Court of Victoria - 3rd May 2010.

The Brisbane Bears members in 1996 voted to change the name of the Bears entity from Brisbane Bears Football Club Ltd. to the current "Brisbane Bears-Fitzroy Football Club Ltd." and trade as the "Brisbane Lions". There was no merger of the legal entities.

On December 22 1997, the Administrator resigned and returned control of the Fitzroy Football Club to its directors. On his resignation as administrator Michael Brennan stated: "The corporate entity called Fitzroy Football Club continues in existence." That was true.

Fitzroy emerged from what was effectively an 18 month coma. The shareholders voted to continue the club after that happened.

Dyson Hore-Lacy said at the time the club was returned to the control of the directors: "Fitzroy Football Club has no assets and no liabilities. It is a debt-free football club - possibly the only one in Australia ... We will be proceeding as normal, the only difference being that we have not got a football team."

AFL spokesman Tony Peek also said in February 1998 that the AFL's lawyers had told Fitzroy's directors to stop using the name "Fitzroy", even though they had no legal power to do, having not trademarked the name 'Fitzroy'.

Peek claimed that the AFL's licence agreement required a club to give up its name if it stopped playing in the AFL competition. The AFL has never pursued this claim in court, knowing that they would probably lose. The AFL cannot legally prevent the Fitzroy Football Club from entering any football competition and using the name "Fitzroy",(apart from the AFL competition), on the basis that the AFL own the 'Fitzroy brand' or the 'Fitzroy' name.

What Fitzroy did have when it came out of administration in December 1997, was over 700 shareholders (of which I was - and remain - one of those) and a cashflow. Fitzroy was the beneficiary of a trust, run by corporate trustee Bondborough (controlled by Hore-Lacy and Fitzroy director Elaine Findlay). Bondborough owned the leasehold of the West Brunswick Hotel, which after Fitzroy's removal from the AFL, generated income for Fitzroy of between $200,000 and $300,000 a year. Fitzroy Football Club also own the Fitzroy 'FFC' logo that they used on their VFl-AFL jumpers. The logo has been trademarked by the Club from 10th June 1998 until at least 10 Jun 2028.

Once the FFC logo was trademarked by the Fitzroy Football Club, they sold Fitzroy jumpers and other Fitzroy merchandise and memorabilia from a bricks and mortar shop called "The Fitzroy Shop" (which still exists) and increasingly online.

Fitzroy began taking ordinary memberships once again from December 1997, once they came out of administration.

Fitzroy briefly sponsored the Coburg Lions for naming rights in the VFL in 1999-2000 with Coburg changing their name to the Coburg-Fitzroy Lions for those two seasons.


If that's the case then why isn't the Bears' 1991 AFL reserves premiership recognised?
As far as I know it is recognised.
 
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In effect the Brisbane Bears purchased Fitzroy's AFL assets as pertaining to its Club Operations and the AFL added on some other bonuses such as priority (pre draft) access to eight players from Fitzroy's 1996 list, some AFL money (an AFL grant to aid its purchasing of Fitzroy's assets.)

...

So Fitzroy had no "Club Operations" after their licence to compete in the AFL was surrendered by the Administrator. Everything that was transferred to the Brisbane Bears, was acquired / purchased by the Bears with the connivance of the Adminstrator. AFL owned intellectual property pertaining to Fitzroy, such as the lion logo, was allocated to the Brisbane Bears by the AFL.

...

Peek claimed that the AFL's licence agreement required a club to give up its name if it stopped playing in the AFL competition. The AFL has never pursued this claim in court, knowing that they would probably lose. The AFL cannot legally prevent the Fitzroy Football Club from entering any football competition and using the name "Fitzroy",(apart from the AFL competition), on the basis that the AFL own the 'Fitzroy brand' or the 'Fitzroy' name.
There's a lot to that response but I'll just quote a few key points. So the Bears purchased Fitzroy's VFL/AFL IP + assets in 1996 such as the name, logo, branding etc but that's not considered a purchase of club history (even though the assets themselves have historical context). Right? It seems you can own the identity of a club in the VFL/AFL, but you don't necessarily own their history.

No club operations in late 1996, 1997 and most of 1998 for Fitzroy, but still existed as a legal entity. I'm guessing that's because Fitzroy were not officially wound up by the administrator/s at the time and if they were then there's a fair chance that it would just be assumed that the BBFFC holds all their historical records.

So the AFL owns all IP related to Fitzroy in the VFL/AFL competition. Right? If that's the case then I don't really see how the current Fitzroy (Reds) Football Club has any more claim to that VFL/AFL history than the Brisbane Bears Fitzroy Football Club who purchased the IP + assets in 1996. It sounds like the AFL has complete control over all things relating to Fitzroy in regards to the VFL/AFL competition so there's nothing really stopping the AFL from attributing the historical records to the Brisbane Lions. Maybe the only thing preventing this is a bit of sympathy from the AFL.

View attachment 2118057

Off the AFL's own official social pages. I found this interesting in the context of this thread's discussion.
This is the confusing part. It seems some parts of Fitzroy's history counts towards the Brisbane Lions (by the AFL's own admission on their social page!) and other parts of Fitzroy's history such as the amount of VFL premierships they've won doesn't count. So if that graphic is accurate then these all count towards the Brisbane Lions' Brownlow tally:

1931 - Haydn Bunton Sr (Fitz), 1932 - Haydn Bunton Sr (Fitz), 1935 - Haydn Bunton Sr (Fitz), 1936 - Dennis Ryan (Fitz), 1950 - Allan Ruthven (Fitz), 1969 - Kevin Murray (Fitz), 1981 - Bernie Quinlan (Fitz), 1996 - Michael Voss (BB), 2001 - Jason Akermanis (BL), 2002 - Simon Black (BL), 2020 - Lachie Neale (BL), 2023 - Lachie Neale (BL)

But these flags don't count towards the Brisbane Lions' Premiership tally:

1898, 1899, 1904, 1905, 1913, 1916, 1922, 1944

So Bunton and Ryan can win the Brownlow in the 1930s and it counts, but winning the VFL flag in 1944 doesn't. Try to figure that one out.
 
It sounds like the AFL has complete control over all things relating to Fitzroy in regards to the VFL/AFL competition so there's nothing really stopping the AFL from attributing the historical records to the Brisbane Lions.
Even if you would accept this premise (which I don't think we can), it can be rejected both in a legal sense and in a common sense, sense. The AFL could attribute all manner of records to whatever team it wants, it would just be rejected by the public as lacking common sense.
 
There's a lot to that response but I'll just quote a few key points. So the Bears purchased Fitzroy's VFL/AFL IP + assets in 1996 such as the name, logo, branding etc but that's not considered a purchase of club history (even though the assets themselves have historical context). Right? It seems you can own the identity of a club in the VFL/AFL, but you don't necessarily own their history.

No club operations in late 1996, 1997 and most of 1998 for Fitzroy, but still existed as a legal entity. I'm guessing that's because Fitzroy were not officially wound up by the administrator/s at the time and if they were then there's a fair chance that it would just be assumed that the BBFFC holds all their historical records.

So the AFL owns all IP related to Fitzroy in the VFL/AFL competition. Right? If that's the case then I don't really see how the current Fitzroy (Reds) Football Club has any more claim to that VFL/AFL history than the Brisbane Bears Fitzroy Football Club who purchased the IP + assets in 1996. It sounds like the AFL has complete control over all things relating to Fitzroy in regards to the VFL/AFL competition so there's nothing really stopping the AFL from attributing the historical records to the Brisbane Lions. Maybe the only thing preventing this is a bit of sympathy from the AFL.


This is the confusing part. It seems some parts of Fitzroy's history counts towards the Brisbane Lions (by the AFL's own admission on their social page!) and other parts of Fitzroy's history such as the amount of VFL premierships they've won doesn't count. So if that graphic is accurate then these all count towards the Brisbane Lions' Brownlow tally:

1931 - Haydn Bunton Sr (Fitz), 1932 - Haydn Bunton Sr (Fitz), 1935 - Haydn Bunton Sr (Fitz), 1936 - Dennis Ryan (Fitz), 1950 - Allan Ruthven (Fitz), 1969 - Kevin Murray (Fitz), 1981 - Bernie Quinlan (Fitz), 1996 - Michael Voss (BB), 2001 - Jason Akermanis (BL), 2002 - Simon Black (BL), 2020 - Lachie Neale (BL), 2023 - Lachie Neale (BL)

But these flags don't count towards the Brisbane Lions' Premiership tally:

1898, 1899, 1904, 1905, 1913, 1916, 1922, 1944

So Bunton and Ryan can win the Brownlow in the 1930s and it counts, but winning the VFL flag in 1944 doesn't. Try to figure that one out.

Don’t bother, he’ll just cut and paste you into oblivion and keep pretending his club didn’t merge with Brisbane nearly 30 years ago.
 
You can't have a club with two histories at the same time. Brisbane bears was a club with a history. You can't wipe it and replace it with Fitzroys.
Even if you totally disregard Fitzroy's history between 1987-1996 while the Bears existed, the Brisbane Lions would still be assuming all of the same important records (like premierships and Brownlows) from Fitzroy between 1897-1986. They'd just have a few less wooden spoons that Fitzroy picked up in the 90s.

By the way, you CAN do this. Other sports have done it. Football Australia (Soccer) ruled around 10 years ago that the Brisbane Roar assume all of the Queensland Lions historical titles while that club continues to operate in the state league.
 
If the Fitzroy premierships counted towards their total then the Brisbane Lions (officially the BBFFC) would be competing for their 12th VFL/AFL premiership next weekend. Four behind the all-time premiership record.

The Swans will be competing for their 6th VFL/AFL premiership next weekend, which includes South Melbourne VFL flags in 1909, 1918 & 1933 as well as Sydney AFL premierships in 2005 & 2012. The Lions will be competing for their fourth AFL premiership after Brisbane flags in 2001, 2002 & 2003 and Fitzroy's VFL flags in 1898, 1899, 1904, 1905, 1913, 1916, 1922 & 1944 don't count. Go figure.

For the period of 1987 to 1996 the two clubs were opponents. The Bears' second highest score of 187 was kicked against Fitzroy. How does that figure in merged records?

Things are easier to argue from a 'vibe' point of view because (A) it was a relatively short period of time in the scope of the league and (B) neither club ran into each other in a grand final or even on the way to one in the finals. Imagine if Hawthorn and Essendon merged? Do their supporters both claim a 1983-1985 threepeat?
 
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Football Australia (Soccer) ruled around 10 years ago that the Brisbane Roar assume all of the Queensland Lions historical titles while that club continues to operate in the state league.
And the Supreme Court made rulings in 2010 that for legal purposes supersede any AFL declaration, that's why Roylion bolds those elements in his reposts.
 
There's a lot to that response but I'll just quote a few key points. So the Bears purchased Fitzroy's VFL/AFL IP + assets in 1996 such as the name, logo, branding etc but that's not considered a purchase of club history

It wasn't Fitzroy's VFL/AFL IP. It was the AFL's IP. And the AFL allowed the Brisbane Bears to use their AFL owned IP as it pertained to Fitzroy. For example the Fitzroy lion logo is owned by the AFL. Even Fitzroy Football Club can't use that without the AFL's permission.


It seems you can own the identity of a club in the VFL/AFL, but you don't necessarily own their history.

Who can own history?

What Brisbane do, is to preserve the Fitzroy VFL-AFL identity and history at an AFL level and its great that there is some sort of Fitzroy identity in the AFL. They've done a reasonably good job with that, except for the occasional lapse such as the hideous paddlepop lion jumper between 2010 and 2014 which also landed Fitzroy Football Club and the Brisbane Lions in court against one another.

Fitzroy Football Club formed in 1883 also celebrate and commemorate their VFA, VFL-AFL and VAFA history.

These days both clubs work together towards that end.

No club operations in late 1996, 1997 and most of 1998 for Fitzroy, but still existed as a legal entity.

Yep.
I'm guessing that's because Fitzroy were not officially wound up by the administrator/s at the time

Nope. They weren't.
and if they were then there's a fair chance that it would just be assumed that the BBFFC holds all their historical records.

Quite possibly. But that's not the situation.
So the AFL owns all IP related to Fitzroy in the VFL/AFL competition. Right?

Only what it trademarked. It doesn't apply to the 'FFC logo', which is owned by the Fitzroy Football Club. Fitzroy can merchandise any product it likes with the FFC logo on it and there's nothing the AFL can do about it.
If that's the case then I don't really see how the current Fitzroy (Reds) Football Club has any more claim to that VFL/AFL history

Because the Fitzroy Football Club is the same entity as the Fitzroy Football Club that once held a licence to compete in the AFL competition. Now it does not have a licence to do so. That was relinquished by the AFL administrator.

In December 2008, at the instigation of the then Fitzroy (University) Reds president Craig Little, the University Reds Football Club (known as the 'Fitzroy' Reds from 1997) transferred all its assets to the Fitzroy Football Club (formed 1883).

The University (Fitzroy) Reds terminated its membership of the VAFA and was wound up as a incorporated company and football club.

By special dispensation from the VAFA, the Fitzroy Football Club (formed 1883) then replaced the Fitzroy [University] Reds in D-Grade [Premier D] VAFA for the 2009 season.

Dyson Hore-Lacy, chairman of Fitzroy in the AFL in 1996, automatically became chairman of the Club in the VAFA.

than the Brisbane Bears Fitzroy Football Club who purchased the IP + assets in 1996.

The AFL allowed the Brisbane Bears to use their AFL owned IP. It didn't purchase them. The Brisbane Bears bought some assets from Fitzroy in order to help discharge the deb.
It sounds like the AFL has complete control over all things relating to Fitzroy in regards to the VFL/AFL competition

They control their competition and its history.

so there's nothing really stopping the AFL from attributing the historical records to the Brisbane Lions.

The AFL will market the events of 1996 as a merger. However there was no merger.
Maybe the only thing preventing this is a bit of sympathy from the AFL.


This is the confusing part. It seems some parts of Fitzroy's history counts towards the Brisbane Lions (by the AFL's own admission on their social page!)

Marketing. The AFL markets the events of 1996 as a merger

In reality the Brisbane Bears / Lions (formed 1986) and the Fitzroy Football Club (formed 1883) are two different clubs.
and other parts of Fitzroy's history such as the amount of VFL premierships they've won doesn't count. So if that graphic is accurate then these all count towards the Brisbane Lions' Brownlow tally:

1931 - Haydn Bunton Sr (Fitz), 1932 - Haydn Bunton Sr (Fitz), 1935 - Haydn Bunton Sr (Fitz), 1936 - Dennis Ryan (Fitz), 1950 - Allan Ruthven (Fitz), 1969 - Kevin Murray (Fitz), 1981 - Bernie Quinlan (Fitz), 1996 - Michael Voss (BB), 2001 - Jason Akermanis (BL), 2002 - Simon Black (BL), 2020 - Lachie Neale (BL), 2023 - Lachie Neale (BL)

But these flags don't count towards the Brisbane Lions' Premiership tally:

1898, 1899, 1904, 1905, 1913, 1916, 1922, 1944

So Bunton and Ryan can win the Brownlow in the 1930s and it counts, but winning the VFL flag in 1944 doesn't. Try to figure that one out.

You'd better ask the AFL.

Fitzroy Football Club regard all their VFA, VFL, AFL and VAFA records as their club records.
 
Don’t bother, he’ll just cut and paste you into oblivion

:rolleyes: Yeah. It's a bit tiresome of cutting and pasting my own material in response to the same comments made by others over and over again. But in the interests of truth, I'll keep doing it.
and keep pretending his club didn’t merge with Brisbane nearly 30 years ago.

There's no pretending about it. You haven't provided anything to the contrary. And if you ever do (which I doubt) please move beyond the AFL marketing agenda.
 
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why aren't Fitzroy's premierships considered part of Brisbane Lions history?

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