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Collingwood Football Club

The Collingwood Football Club, nicknamed the Magpies or colloquially the Pies, is a professional Australian rules football club based in Melbourne that competes in the Australian Football League (AFL), the sport's elite competition. The club was formed in 1892 in the suburb of Collingwood and played in the Victorian Football Association (VFA) before joining seven other teams in 1896 to found the breakaway Victorian Football League, today known as the AFL. Originally based at Victoria Park, Collingwood now plays home games at the Melbourne Cricket Ground and has its training and administrative headquarters at Olympic Park Oval and the AIA Centre.

Collingwood Football Club
Names
Full nameCollingwood Football Club Limited[1]
Nickname(s)Magpies, Pies, Woods, Woodsmen[2]
MottoFloreat Pica[3][a]
(May The Magpie Flourish)
2022 season
After finals3rd
Home-and-away season4th
Leading goalkickerBrody Mihocek (41 goals)
Club details
Founded1892; 131 years ago (1892)
ColoursBlack, white
   
CompetitionAFL: Senior men
AFLW: Senior women
VFL: Reserves men
VFLW: Reserves women
PresidentJeff Browne
CEOMark Anderson
CoachAFL: Craig McRae
AFLW: Stephen Symonds
VFL: Craig Black
VFLW: Chloe McMillan
Captain(s)AFL: TBD
AFLW: Steph Chiocci & Brianna Davey
VFL: Lachlan Tardrew & Campbell Hustwaite
VFLW: Caitlin Bunker
PremiershipsVFL/AFL (15)Reserves/VFL (7)VFA (1)
  • 1896
VFLW (1)
  • 2019
Ground(s)AFL: Melbourne Cricket Ground (100,024)
AFLW/VFLW: Victoria Park (15,000)
VFL: Victoria Park & Olympic Park (3,000)
Former ground(s)Victoria Park (1892–1999)
Training ground(s)AIA Centre (indoor)
 Olympic Park Oval (outdoor)
Uniforms
Home
Away
Clash
Other information
Official websitecollingwoodfc.com.au
Current season

Collingwood has played in a record 44 VFL/AFL Grand Finals (including rematches), winning 15, drawing two and losing 27 (also a record). Regarded as one of Australia's most popular sports clubs, Collingwood has attracted the second-highest attendance figures and television ratings of any professional football team in the nation.[5]

The club's song, "Good Old Collingwood Forever", dates back to 1906, making it the oldest song currently used in the AFL. Its home guernsey consists of black and white stripes, matching the colours of the Australian magpie. Historically, the club's biggest rivals have been cross-town clubs Carlton, Melbourne and Richmond. Collingwood has also enjoyed a healthy Anzac Day rivalry with Essendon since 1995 and smaller rivalries with West Coast and Brisbane since the turn of the millennium.

Collingwood fields a reserves team in the Victorian Football League (formerly the VFA) and women's teams in the AFL Women's and VFL Women's competitions. It also owns and operates a netball team in the National Netball League.

History

Formation and early years

 
The Collingwood team that won the VFA premiership in 1896.

The Collingwood Football Club was established on 12 February 1892.[6][7][8]

Collingwood played its first game in the Victorian Football Association (VFA) against Carlton on 7 May 1892.[9] The club won the VFA Premiership in 1896.

In 1897, Collingwood, along with fellow VFA clubs Fitzroy, Melbourne, St Kilda, Carlton, Essendon, South Melbourne and Geelong split from the VFA and formed the Victorian Football League (VFL). Collingwood won its first premiership in 1902, defeating Essendon by 33 points in the 1902 VFL Grand Final.

1920s and 1930s: Four consecutive premierships

 
Jock McHale coached the club to four consecutive Grand Final victories.

Collingwood was the most successful Victorian[10] club of the 1920s and 1930s, appearing in 13 out of a possible 20 Grand Finals during the period. Collingwood were premiers six times during this time, including four consecutive premierships between 1927 and 1930, a VFL record, and two consecutive premierships in 1935 and 1936. The club's coach during this period was Jock McHale, who served as coach from 1912 to 1949. Collingwood also had three Brownlow Medallists during the period, with Syd Coventry winning in 1927, Albert Collier in 1929 and Harry Collier in 1930. The club's ruthlessly successful period later earned the club the nickname "The Machine". American journalist and author Sam Walker included the Machine team in his book The Captain Class, which listed some the author's greatest teams in the history of world sport.[11]

The Collingwood team of 1927–30 not only achieved four straight premierships, but did so with a winning percentage of around 86% across the four seasons, and an average winning margin of about five goals. In 1929 they also became the only team in history to go through a home-and-away season undefeated.[11] Collingwood remains the only club in the history of the VFL/AFL to have been declared premiers on four successive occasions.

1950s: Melbourne rivalry

In the 1950s, rival club Melbourne enjoyed an era of unprecedented success, winning five premierships in six years (the last coming in 1960, and having been runner up in 1954). Collingwood lost two Grand Finals to Melbourne in this decade, but bounced back to win premierships in 1953 and 1958. Collingwood's 1958 premiership is much cherished by the club as it prevented Melbourne from equalling Collingwood's record four premierships in a row.

The 1958 premiership was however to be Collingwood's last for 32 years, as the club was to suffer a string of Grand Final defeats in coming decades. Collingwood and Melbourne play their rival match every year within the Queens Birthday Weekend.

1959–89: "Colliwobbles"

A string of eight Grand Final losses, often by narrow margins, between 1960 and 1981 gave rise to a perception that the club was prone to "choking", a phenomenon wittily dubbed "Colliwobbles".[12][13][14] Whether this perception is accurate remains a subject of debate;[15] having only won one and drawn one of its last six Grand Finals. Lou Richards ceremoniously buried the Colliwobbles at Victoria Park after the club's 1990 premiership.[16][17]

1990–99: Long-awaited premiership and struggles

 
Nathan Buckley captained Collingwood between 1999 and 2007, and served as the club's senior coach from 2012 to 2021.

The 1990 premiership team, coached by Leigh Matthews and captained by Tony Shaw, had a one-sided grand final win against Essendon, the Magpies recording a 48-point victory and ending a 32-year premiership drought which included eight grand final losses and one draw. The sight of club great Darren Millane, who died in a car-crash one year later, holding the ball aloft in triumph at the final siren is one of the indelible images of the match.[18]

After the drought-breaking premiership, the club lapsed into a state of decline for the remainder of the decade, culminating with the club's second wooden spoon in 1999. The Magpies returned to finals, though were quickly eliminated, in the 1992 season against St Kilda and in the 1994 AFL season against West Coast. Matthews left as head coach at the end of the 1995 season and was replaced at the start of the following year by 1990 premiership captain Tony Shaw, who had only retired from football 18 months earlier. Mid-table finishes under Shaw were achieved for the next two seasons, before poor results in 1998 and 1999 saw Shaw announce his resignation.

2000–11: The Malthouse era

Media personality, sports journalist and administrator Eddie McGuire was elected President in October 1998. He oversaw the installation of new head coach Michael Malthouse in October 1999, whose appointment proved to be a masterstroke in reviving the club on-field. Under Malthouse, the acquisition and emergence of players such as Paul Licuria, Alan Didak, Anthony Rocca and Nathan Buckley resulted in Collingwood quickly moving up the ladder in the 2000 AFL season and in the 2001 AFL season, only narrowly missing the finals in the latter year. Collingwood met reigning premiers Brisbane in the 2002 Grand Final and were regarded as massive underdogs, eventually falling just 9 points short of an improbable premiership. Buckley, the captain, became just the third player to win the Norm Smith Medal as best afield in the Grand Final despite being a member of the losing side. Despite a very successful home-and-away next season, they were again defeated by the Lions in the 2003 Grand Final, this time in thoroughly convincingly fashion.

Following those Grand Final losses, Collingwood struggled for the next two years, finishing 13th in 2004 and second-last in 2005; the latter meant Collingwood was eligible for a priority pick which the club used to recruit Dale Thomas. Collingwood made a return to the finals in 2006, finishing fifth, but were defeated by the Western Bulldogs by 41 points in its elimination final. A loss to Essendon late in the season was to cost them the double chance.[19][20] The 2007 season saw them finish sixth on the ladder at season's conclusion, and in the finals they knocked out the grand finalists of the past two years, Sydney, in the elimination final and then West Coast in overtime at Subiaco Oval in the semi-final. Having earned a preliminary final against Geelong, Collingwood lost to the eventual premiers, by five points in one of the most memorable preliminary finals in over a decade. Nathan Buckley would announce his retirement at season's end after playing just five games in 2007 due to injury.

Collingwood finished eighth in the 2008 AFL season and were assigned an away final against Adelaide at AAMI Stadium. After at one point trailing in the match, Collingwood went on to end Adelaide's season and earn a semi-final meeting against St Kilda. Having defeated the Saints in both their regular season meetings, Collingwood lost convincingly, ending their 2008 season. The 2009 season saw Collingwood finish inside the top-four for the first time since 2003, but in the qualifying final were beaten by minor premiers St Kilda convincingly. Having won a second chance, Collingwood struggled against Adelaide for the second year in a row before John Anthony kicked the match-winning goal with a minute left to send them into another preliminary final meeting with Geelong. But the season ended abruptly for the Magpies, with a 73-point loss to Geelong.

In 2010, Collingwood finished as minor premiers, and after wins in the qualifying and preliminary finals, reached the first Grand Final against St Kilda. The match finished as a draw, forcing the first grand final replay in 33 years. Collingwood won the replay by 56 points. Key defensive player Nick Maxwell captained the club to victory and midfielder Scott Pendlebury (who had already won his first of eventually three Anzac medals earlier in the year) was awarded the Norm Smith Medal. The club won a second consecutive minor premiership in 2011, and qualified for the Grand Final after a three-point victory against Hawthorn in the preliminary final. However, Collingwood was then beaten by Geelong by 38 points in the decider, after trailing by seven points at three-quarter time. Following the Grand Final loss, which also marked the end of the club's 2011 AFL season, Malthouse left Collingwood after deciding not to stay on as "director of coaching".[21] Star midfielder Dane Swan won the 2011 Brownlow Medal with a then-record 34 votes. Malthouse would leave having coached the club to eight finals series and four grand finals in 12 years.

2012–2021: Coach Nathan Buckley

Nathan Buckley, regarded as one of Collingwood's greatest players, was appointed assistant coach under Malthouse for the 2010 and 2011 seasons, before assuming the head coaching position at the start of the 2012 season.[22] Malthouse, who had been contracted to take on a "head of coaching" role, elected to leave the club rather than put Buckley in what he regarded as an awkward position.[23] Under Buckley, Collingwood continued to be successful in the short term, qualifying inside the top-four in the 2012 season, before falling 26 points short in a preliminary final to eventual premiers the Sydney Swans at ANZ Stadium. The club qualified for finals once more in 2013, though were surprisingly eliminated in the first week by underdogs Port Adelaide at home. The result prompted the Magpies coaching staff to begin making radical changes to the club's playing list, which saw premiership players Heath Shaw, Sharrod Wellingham, Heritier Lumumba among others leave for other clubs or retire. Over the next four years, younger talent was drafted but the club's win–loss recorded continued to deteriorate. Collingwood failed to make finals from 2014 through to the end of the 2017 season, progressively sliding down the ladder each year. Buckley came under intense media pressure to resign or be sacked from his position, though club administrators elected to grant him a two-year extension to his contract in October 2017 after a broad-ranging internal review.[24]

The emergence of new-generation players such as Taylor Adams, Adam Treloar and Jordan De Goey, alongside key talls Brodie Grundy and Mason Cox mixed well with veterans Pendlebury and Steele Sidebottom. Collingwood jumped from 13th in 2017 to 3rd in 2018, sensationally knocking out reigning premiers Richmond in the preliminary final before falling five points short after leading for most of the match against West Coast in the 2018 Grand Final, the senior team's 27th defeat in a Grand Final. Buckley's growth as a coach was partially credited for the rapid improvement.[24] In 2019, Collingwood had another strong season, finishing fourth on the ladder, but they were unable to return to the Grand Final after a shattering four-point defeat to Greater Western Sydney in the first preliminary final.[25] In 2020, Collingwood finished 8th at the end of the home-and-away season.

The club made significant on-field and administrative changes in the late 2010s. It was a foundation member of the inaugural AFL Women's competition in 2017 and in the same year established the Collingwood Magpies Netball team, a division of the club competing in the professional National Netball League. Collingwood unveiled a new permanent logo at the end of the 2017 season, which was the club's 125th anniversary year.[26]

"Do Better" report

In 2020, the club commissioned an independent review into claims of racism at the club. In February 2021, the report was leaked to journalists and revealed that "while claims of racism have been made across the AFL, there is something distinct and egregious about Collingwood’s history" and that "what is clear is that racism at the club has resulted in profound and enduring harm to First Nations and African players. The racism affected them, their communities, and set dangerous norms for the public."[27] Collingwood President Eddie McGuire suggested that the report signalled "A historic and proud day" for the media and club which was working towards addressing racism and that it "was not a racist club".[28] Many criticised McGuire's response, including AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan, Héritier Lumumba, former Indigenous Collingwood player Tony Armstrong and a Victorian Senator, among others.[29][30][31][32] McGuire later apologised for the remarks.[33] On 4 February, 150 Collingwood players from the men's and women's teams penned an open letter apologising "to anyone who, through their association with our club, has been marginalised, hurt or discriminated against due to their race."[34] First-grade footballer Darcy Moore said that the players were "humiliated and shocked" by the report's findings.[34] McGuire stood down as President of the Collingwood Football Club on 9 February 2021, although he had initially wanted to see the year through for a seamless transition until being compelled to step down.[35][36]

Buckley stepped down after Round 13 of the 2021 AFL season, and assistant coach Robert Harvey took over as the caretaker coach until the end of the season.[37] Harvey focused on developing youth and letting them play, with Collingwood winning 2 out of their 9 remaining games.[38]

2022–: Coach Craig McRae

In September 2021, Craig McRae was appointed as head coach of the club for the 2022 season and onwards. In his first season as Senior Coach, McRae has led the club from 17th place in 2021 to 4th place on the ladder at the conclusion of the regular season, which included an 11 game winning streak. They were then knocked out by 1 point against Sydney in the Preliminary Final. [39]

Club symbols and identity

Guernsey

Throughout the club's history, Collingwood has worn a guernsey of black and white vertical stripes. The all white jumper, with the three black vertical stripes is the iconic strip that the club is most associated with. The current incarnation of the guernsey is mostly black, with white stripes on the front and lower half of the back, and white numbers. The main clash guernsey is the reverse of this: mostly white, with black stripes and black numbers, worn in away matches against clubs with a predominantly dark guernsey such as Fremantle and Port Adelaide. A secondary clash guernsey was introduced in 2011 and is used only in matches against North Melbourne due to similarity between the two uniforms. The alternate uniform is black with only two white stripes on each side instead of three.

Traditionally, Collingwood has worn a white guernsey with black stripes. The club switched to the black guernsey with white stripes in 2001.[40]

Nike is the current manufacturer of the Magpies' apparel.[41]

Collingwoods cultural reach and impact is far reaching as evidence by memberships, crowds, broadcast ratings and more recently, the emergence of influential digital media, such as the Pie Hard podcast.

Song

 
Collingwood player Tom Nelson wrote the lyrics to "Good Old Collingwood Forever" in 1906.

"Good Old Collingwood Forever" is the team song of the Collingwood Football Club. The lyrics were written by player Tom Nelson during Collingwood's 1906 tour of Tasmania, making it the oldest of the team songs currently used in the AFL. It is sung to the tune of "Goodbye, Dolly Gray", originally a song written in connection with the Spanish–American War, then a popular Boer War and First World War anthem. It is the only AFL team song to reference the barracker, an Australian rules football term for fan.[42]

The current version of the song played at the ground during game day was recorded in 1972 by the Fable Singers.[43] The lyrics are as follows:

Good old Collingwood forever,
They know how to play the game.
Side by side, they stick together,
To uphold the Magpies name.
See, the barrackers are shouting,
As all barrackers should.
Oh, the premiership's a cakewalk,
For the good old Collingwood.

Rivalries

Carlton

Carlton is considered to be the club's most bitter arch-rival (for full details see Carlton–Collingwood AFL rivalry), with Richmond, Essendon and more recently Brisbane close behind.[44] Collingwood's two opponents in the themed Rivalry Rounds staged to date have been Carlton (2005–2006, 2009) and Richmond (2007–2008).

Melbourne

The rivalry between Collingwood and Melbourne was at its peak between 1955 and 1964, when the two played off in the grand final on five occasions. This included the 1958 Grand Final where Collingwood's victory prevented Melbourne from equalling Collingwood's record of four premierships in succession (1927–1930). The old rivalry with Melbourne has faded in recent decades due to Melbourne not enjoying the same level of on-field success, however, it remains strong and is an annual scheduled fixture on the Queens Birthday public holiday.

Essendon

Collingwood's rivalry with Essendon has become more significant since 1995, when the first Anzac Day clash took place. After the 2021 match, Collingwood have won this contest 15 times and Essendon 11 times, with the first match being drawn.

Geelong

Games between Collingwood and Geelong have become highly anticipated since 2007. In Round 15 Geelong beat Collingwood by 16 points in a high-quality match. In the Preliminary final Collingwood surprised many when they came within 5 points of the eventual premiers. In 2008 Collingwood thrashed Geelong by 86 points—20.14 (134)- 7.6 (48) causing Geelong's only loss of the 2008 home-and-away season. In 2009, the sides again met in the preliminary final, but despite high hopes the Cats, who would again win the premiership, won by 73 points in front of another massive crowd of 87,258.[45] In 2010, the two sides emerged as the favourites for the flag and twice met in front of blockbuster crowds at the MCG when they were placed 1st and 2nd on the ladder—with the results evenly split. They again met in a Preliminary final, this time a resounding win to Collingwood by 41 points. In 2011, both teams were undefeated going into their round eight 'blockbuster' at the 'G. Geelong won by three points, after a controversial advantage was not paid to Magpie Scott Pendlebury in the dying minutes. Pendlebury kicked a goal and would have put the Pies in front, but the free kick was contentiously called back and Geelong managed to whisk the ball away. In the round 24 match, Geelong thumped the Magpies by a record margin of 96 points, which was also Collingwood's biggest ever loss at the MCG. The 2011 Grand Final against the Cats concluded with a 38-point loss for the Pies.

Headquarters, training and administration base

Collingwood Football Club had its original training and administration base at Victoria Park from 1892 until 2004.[46] In 2004, Collingwood Football Club moved its primary administrative and training base to the purpose-built Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre at the Olympic Park Complex.[46] The Collingwood Football Club also used Olympic Park Stadium being adjacent to Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre as its outdoor training ground from 2004 until 2012, when it was demolished.[47] After this occurred, Collingwood Football Club moved its outdoor training ground to the newly developed Olympic Park Oval that replaced the space of the stadium after demolition.

Home Grounds

The club's original primary home ground, where they played their AFL home games was at Victoria Park from 1892 until 1999.[48][49] Since 2000, The club's primary home ground has been the Melbourne Cricket Ground, even though the club had already experimented playing home games at the venue since 1993, where in the period between 1994 and 1999, the club would play seven of its home games at the MCG, while retaining three at Victoria Park.[50][51]

Supporters

 
Collingwood Magpies mascot

Collingwood is a working-class suburb and the Collingwood Football Club supporter base traditionally came from the working class (though its supporter base today goes far beyond). Many of the club's supporters who regularly attend games still come from the working class or from lower socio-economic groups, leading to jokes from supporters of other clubs which typically stereotype their Collingwood counterparts as poor, crude and ignorant.[52]

Collingwood is traditionally reviled by non-Collingwood supporters ("You either love 'em or you hate 'em"). The dislike of the club by outsiders is said to have originated during the 1920s and 1930s, a period of great success for the club which drew the envy and resentment of other clubs. In this period, Collingwood was also perceived as a Catholic and Irish club, at a time when these groups were looked down upon by the rest of Australian society and subjected to a considerable degree of social exclusion.[53][54]

According to a 2001 study, Collingwood's old home ground of Victoria Park had a reputation as one of the worst venues for racial vilification, though it has also been said that the problem was similar at all grounds.[55] Collingwood has however been involved in several high-profile incidents of this type, such as those involving indigenous players Nicky Winmar in 1993 and Adam Goodes in 2013.[56] Michael Long's accusation of racial vilification against Collingwood ruckman Damian Monkhorst in 1995 also led directly to the establishment of the AFL's racial vilification regulations.[57] In support of more inclusive sporting cultures, in 2010 the Australian fashion designer Shanaaz Copeland developed a Collingwood-inspired hijab for Muslim women.[58] (See also: The "Do Better" Report)

Collingwood’s cultural reach on the Australian sporting landscape is far-reaching, as evident by attendance figures, memberships, TV ratings, and, more recently, the emergence of digital media such as the Pie Hard podcast.

Corporate

Membership

Collingwood Membership 1984–present[59]
Year Members Position %
1984 16,313 3rd
1985 16,857 7th   3.28%
1986 13,971 6th   20.65%
1987 9,500 12th   47.06%
1988 11,985 4th   20.73%
1989 13,620 5th   12.00%
1990 14,808 1st   8.02%
1991 18,469 7th   19.82%
1992 18,921 5th   2.38%
1993 21,882 8th   13.53%
1994 20,843 8th   4.98%
1995 22,543 10th   7.54%
1996 20,752 11th   8.63%
1997 22,761 10th   8.82%
1998 27,099 14th   16.00%
1999 32,358 16th   16.25%
2000 28,932 15th   11.84%
2001 31,455 9th   8.02%
2002 32,549 4th   3.36%
2003 40,445 2nd   19.54%
2004 41,128 13th   1.66%
2005 38,612 15th   6.51%
2006 38,038 7th   1.50%
2007 38,587 4th   1.42%
2008 26,320 6th   46.60%
2009 45,972 4th   42.74%
2010 57,617 1st   20.21
2011 71,271[60] 1st   19.15%
2012 72,688[61] 4th   1.94%
2013 80,000[62] 6th   9.14%
2014 80,793[63] 11th   0.98%
2015 76,497[64] 12th   5.61%
2016 74,643[65] 12th   2.48%
2017 75,879[66] 13th   1.62%
2018 75,507[67] 3rd   0.49%
2019 85,226[68] 4th   12.87%
2020 76,862[69] 8th   9.8%
2021 82,527[70] 8th   7.37%

In 2011, Collingwood reached 70,000 members for the first time, creating a new AFL record, beating their own previous record of 58,249 set in 2010.[71][72]

The club's extensive membership base tends to be a large crowd-pulling power, which has caused the AFL to be accused of favouring Collingwood when scheduling to maximise the league's attendance figures.[73][74][75] However, the AFL states that this is due to other clubs requesting home games at the MCG against Collingwood.

Off-field

Collingwood was one of the last clubs to abandon its traditional stadium, the famous inner-city Victoria Park. Collingwood now plays home games at the MCG. It now also has its headquarters situated in the former Glasshouse Entertainment Centre. Due to a sponsorship deal, this facility is known as 'The AIA Centre', and has been previously known by other names such as 'The Lexus Centre', 'The Westpac Centre' and 'The Holden Centre', all due to sponsorship agreements.

Collingwood continues to be financially viable through the loyal support of its huge following and numerous sponsors. After finishing 2nd in 2002 and 2003 the team fell to 13th and 15th (out of 16) in 2004 and 2005 respectively. This trend has plagued the club since the glory days of pre-World War II VFL football. Since 1958, the club has won only two VFL/AFL Premiership (the inaugural AFL Premiership in 1990, and in 2010). Despite this, the club still has won more individual games, more finals and made more grand final appearances than any other club.

On 9 March 2007, former Collingwood and Fitzroy defender Gary Pert was appointed the Magpies' CEO, seven weeks after Greg Swann departed for Carlton. In accepting the key Magpie post, Pert quit as a club director and as managing director of Channel 9 in Melbourne. In a press conference, it was stated that Collingwood has budgeted to turn over about $50 million this year. McGuire hopes the new administration will soon double that figure. "A finance administration review has come up with how we are going to turn Collingwood in to its next phase of its life", McGuire said. "What do we do to make ourselves go from a $45 million a year turnover business to a $100 million turnover business? "They sound like big figures but in 1999 we turned over $13 million, so that is where we are heading as a football club."

The club made an operating profit of $5.23 million for the 2013 season, revenue increased from $2.6 million to more than $75 million.[76]

On 24 July 2017, Pert resigned from his position as CEO of the club, with Peter Murphy replacing him as an interim CEO.[77]

Sponsorship

The Collingwood guernsey is the most valuable sports sponsorship in Australia.[78] Collingwood has different guernsey sponsors for home and away matches, generating an estimated $6.3 million worth of media exposure for the primary sponsor and $5.7 million for the secondary sponsor. These sponsorships are ranked first and second in Australia.[78] High-profile sponsors have included Emirates,[79] Holden,[80] CGU Insurance,[81] and Westpac.[82]

Year Kit Manufacturer Major Sponsor Shorts Sponsor Bottom Back Sponsor Top Back Sponsor
1977–85 - Hard Yakka -
1986–88 MiniSkips
1989–92 Spicers Paper[83]
1993 Spicers
1994 Delta Spicers[83]
1995–97 Thrifty[83]
1998 Adidas[84] Primus[85] (Home)

Spicers Paper[85] (Away)

Spicers Paper[85] (Home)

Primus[85] (Away)

Spicers[85] (Home)

Primus[85] (Away)

1999–2001 Emirates[79] (Home)

Primus[85] (Away)

Primus[85] (Home)

Emirates[79] (Away)

Primus (Home)

Emirates[79] (Away)

2002–05 Emirates[79] (Home)

Wipe Off 5 TAC[86] (Away)

Wipe Off 5 TAC[86] (Home)

Emirates[79] (Away)

Wipe Off 5 TAC[86] (Home)

Emirates[79] (Away)

2006–08 Emirates[79] (Home)

Wizard Homes Loans[87] (Away)

Wizard Homes Loans[87] (Home)

Emirates[79] (Away)

Wizard Homes Loans[87] (Home)

Emirates[79] (Away)

2009–10 Emirates[79] (Home)

Aussie[88] (Away)

Aussie[88] (Home)

Emirates[79] (Away)

Aussie[88] (Home)

Emirates[79] (Away)

2011–12 Emirates[79] (Home)

CGU Insurance[81] (Away)

CGU Insurance[81] (Home)

Emirates[79] (Away)

CGU Insurance[81] (Home)

Emirates[79] (Away)

2013–16 Star Athletic[89]
2017–19 ISC[90]
2020 Emirates (Home)

CGU Insurance (Away)

2021 Nike
2022– Emirates[79] (Home)

KFC[91] (Away)

KFC[91] (Home)

Emirates[79] (Away)

KFC[91] (Home)

Emirates[79] (Away)

Emirates[79] (Home)

KFC[91] (Away)

Honours

Honour board

Premierships
Competition Level Wins Years Won
Australian Football League Seniors 15 1902, 1903, 1910, 1917, 1919, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1935, 1936, 1953, 1958, 1990, 2010
Reserves (1919–1999) 7 1919, 1920, 1922, 1925, 1940, 1965, 1976
Under 19s (1946–1991) 4 1960, 1965, 1974, 1986
Victorian Football Association Seniors (1892–1896) 1 1896
VFL Women's Reserves 1 2019
Other titles and honours
AFL pre-season competition Seniors 1 2011
AFC Night Series Seniors 1 1979
McClelland Trophy Seniors 8 1959, 1960, 1964, 1965, 1966, 1970, 2010, 2011
Lightning Premiership Seniors 2 1941, 1951
Championship of Australia Seniors 1 1896
Finishing positions
Australian Football League Minor premiership 19 1902, 1903, 1905, 1915, 1917, 1919, 1922, 1926, 1927, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1966, 1969, 1970, 1973, 1977, 2010, 2011
Grand Finalist 27 1901, 1905, 1911, 1915, 1918, 1920, 1922, 1925, 1926, 1937, 1938, 1939, 1952, 1955, 1956, 1960, 1964, 1966, 1970, 1977, 1979, 1980, 1981, 2002, 2003, 2011, 2018
Wooden spoons 2 1976, 1999
AFL Women's Wooden spoons 1 2019
VFL Women's Minor premiership 3 2018, 2019, 2021

Head-to-head results

Played: 2,636 Won 1,579 Drawn: 28 Lost: 1010 (Last updated – End of the 2022 AFL Season)

R GP W D L GF-BF For GA-BA Agn % Win% 100+F 100+A
1 Adelaide 47 31 1 15 557.494 3836 493.505 3463 110.77 60.98 16 7
2 Brisbane Bears 16 13 2 251.232 1738 170.187 1207 143.99 86.67 12 2
3 Brisbane Lions 36 16 20 363.366 2544 406.368 2804 90.73 48.48 10 11
4 Carlton 262 130 4 128 2914.3086 20570 2869.2969 20183 101.92 50.00 70 64
5 Essendon 244 134 4 106 2747.2884 19366 2631.2803 18591 104.17 54.47 63 60
6 Fitzroy 209 131 3 75 2338.2683 16711 2058.2374 14722 113.51 63.40 66 31
7 Fremantle 34 22 12 407.344 2786 362.299 2471 112.75 60.71 14 7
8 Geelong 239 134 1 104 2643.2889 18747 2468.2723 17531 106.94 57.14 60 42
9 Gold Coast 14 11 3 114.100 784 70.70 490 160.00 71.43 5
10 Greater Western Sydney 13 7 6 104.74 698 66.63 459 152.07 53.33 4 1
11 Hawthorn 167 99 70 2207.2341 15584 2025.1977 14127 110.31 59.88 67 56
12 Melbourne 241 153 5 84 2793.3077 19735 2465.2704 17494 112.81 62.82 73 48
13 North Melbourne 163 110 2 51 2233.2343 15741 1788.1939 12667 124.27 67.09 71 38
14 Port Adelaide 35 17 18 386.342 2658 354.351 2475 107.39 50.00 11 5
15 Richmond 214 120 2 92 2472.2694 17526 2314.2509 16393 106.91 56.80 52 45
16 St Kilda 222 161 2 59 2830.3060 20040 2176.2375 15431 129.87 72.35 89 36
17 Sydney 231 143 1 87 2720.2983 19303 2277.2699 16361 117.98 62.67 66 43
18 University 14 13 1 132.199 991 72.110 542 182.84 96.43 2 0
19 West Coast 61 28 2 31 634.550 4354 640.609 4449 97.86 48.98 15 18
20 Western Bulldogs 160 110 1 50 2101.2021 14627 1712.1855 12127 120.62 68.83 59 29

Team of the Century

Collingwood announced its team of the century on 14 June 1997, celebrating 100 years since the beginning of the VFL. Gavin Brown was added as the fourth interchange player in 2002, as, when the team was named in 1997, only three interchange players were permitted on a team.[92]

Captains

This list comprises every captain of the club. This list does not include deputy captains filling in due to an injury to the named captain, but does include captains named after a player retires or steps down during the season.

Presidents

There have been twelve presidents of the Collingwood Football Club. The first and founding president of Collingwood was former Collingwood Mayor and Victorian MP William Beazley. Beazley was president of Collingwood from the founding of the club in 1892 until 1911. The second president of Collingwood was Alfred Cross. However, Cross was only president for a brief period of time. Third was former Fitzroy and Collingwood player Jim Sharp. Sharp was president for ten years (1913–1923). The fourth president of Collingwood was another former player, Harry Curtis. Curtis currently is the longest serving president of Collingwood. Curtis served as president for twenty-six years. Another former player of Collingwood, Syd Coventry was the fifth president for Collingwood, serving twelve years between 1950 and 1962.

Tom Sherrin was the sixth president of Collingwood, serving from 1963 to 1974. Ern Clarke, president for one year, was the seventh president. John Hickey, Ranald Macdonald and Allan MacAlister all served as president during 1977 through to 1995. Eleventh president and former player, Kevin Rose, was the second most recent president of Collingwood. The twelfth, and second-longest serving president of Collingwood, is radio and television presenter, commentator and journalist Eddie McGuire. McGuire was president of Collingwood between 1998 and 2021. Club board members Mark Korda and Peter Murphy were interim co-presidents, following McGuire's tenure.[93] In April 2021, Korda was appointed the thirteenth president of Collingwood.[94]


List of Collingwood presidents[b][95]
No. Name Took office Left office Time in office Occupation / Notes Premierships Ref(s).
1 William Beazley 1892 1912 20 years, 123 days Politician; involved with precursor club, Britannia Football Club. 3 (1902, 1903, 1910) [96][97]
2 Alfred Cross 1913 1 year[c] Tailor; former Collingwood vice-president. [98][99]
3 Jim Sharp 1914 1924 10 years, 209 days Former VFL player; former Collingwood vice-president. 2 (1917, 1919) [100][101][102]
4 Harry Curtis 1925 1950 25 years, 112 days Accountant; former VFL player. 6 (1927, 1928, 1929, 1930, 1935, 1936) [103][104]
Gordon Carlyon 24 May – 28 June 1950[d] 35 days [105]
5 Sydney Coventry Sr. 1950 1963 12 years, 246 days Former VFL player; former Collingwood vice-president. 2 (1953, 1958) [106][107]
6 Tom Sherrin 1963 1974 11 years, 214 days Manufacturer; former Collingwood vice-president. [108][109]
7 Ern Clarke 1974 1976 1 year, 213 days Businessman [110]
8 John Hickey 1976 1982 6 years, 153 days RAAF pilot; former Collingwood vice-president. [111]
9 Ranald Macdonald 1982 1986 3 years, 208 days Journalist; lecturer [112]
10 Allan McAlister 1986 1995 9 years, 157 days Businessman; former Collingwood treasurer 1 (1990) [113]
11 Kevin Rose 1995 1998 2 years, 253 days Businessman; former VFL player, coach [114][115]
12 Eddie McGuire 1998 2021 22 years, 103 days Commentator; journalist; businessman. 1 (2010) [116][117]
Peter Murphy
Mark Korda
10 February – 21 April 2021[e] 70 days Collingwood vice-president(s). [118][119]
13 Mark Korda 21 April – 16 December 2021 239 days Businessman; former Collingwood vice-president.[f] [120][121][122]
14 Jeff Browne 2021 1 year, 29 days Lawyer [123]

Notes

  1. ^ "May The Magpie Prosper" or "May The Magpie Flourish" is the club motto, suggested by former Collingwood player, Bob Rush.[4]
  2. ^ Unless displayed, the list does not include possible period(s) of time in which the role of president was vacant, administered by a committee or had a de facto acting President.
  3. ^ Specific dates are unknown, however, Cross is alleged to have resigned during the 1913 season.
  4. ^ Following the resignation of the Collingwood Football Social Club Committee, Mr. Carlyon, as secretary, was acting secretary-manager until the conclusion of the elections of the president, vice-president, treasurer, and committee members.
  5. ^ Following McGuire's decision to stand down, Peter Murphy and Mark Korda, Co-Vice presidents, were appointed Co-Presidents until a successor could be decided.
  6. ^ Mark Korda also holds the role of director.


Current playing squad

Senior list Rookie list Coaching staff
  •  9 John Noble
  • 12 Tom Wilson (B)
  • 27 Cooper Murley
  • 39 Aiden Begg
  • 40 Ash Johnson
  • 43 Charlie Dean
  • 45 Josh Carmichael

Head coach

Assistant coaches


Legend:
  • (c) Captain(s)
  • (vc) Vice captain(s)
  •   Long-term injury list
  •   Upgraded rookie
  • (B) Category B rookie

Updated: 1 January 2023
Source(s): Playing list, Coaching staff


Reserves team

The Collingwood Reserves are the reserves team of the club. The latest iteration of the Collingwood Reserves was created in 2008, and are yet to win a Victorian Football League (VFL) premiership.

History

The VFL/AFL operated a reserves competition from 1919 to 1991, and a de facto AFL reserves competition was run by the Victorian State Football League from 1992 to 1999. Collingwood fielded a reserves team in both of these competitions, allowing players who were not selected for the senior team to play for Collingwood in the lower grade. The team won seven reserves premierships during this period, including four in the first seven years between 1919 and 1925, but only three thereafter. After the AFL reserves competition was disbanded at the end of 1999, the club fielded its reserves team in the Victorian Football League during the 2000 season.[124]

In 2001, Collingwood reserves team was dissolved and the club entered into an affiliation with the VFL's Williamstown Football Club, such that Williamstown served as a feeder team and reserves players for Collingwood played senior football for Williamstown. Williamstown won one VFL premiership during this time, in 2003.

Collingwood ended its affiliation with Williamstown after the 2007 season. The reserves team was re-established, and has competed in the VFL since 2008.[125][124] Collingwood's standalone reserves team's best VFL result to date was a preliminary final appearance in the 2016 VFL season, in which it lost to eventual premiers Footscray by 119 points.[126]

The reserves team currently splits home games between Olympic Park Oval and Victoria Park, although they do occasionally play at the MCG as a curtain raiser to Collingwood home matches, and uses the AFL team's clash guernsey as its primary guernsey. The Collingwood VFL team is composed of both reserves players from the club's primary and rookie AFL lists, and a separately maintained list of players eligible only for VFL matches.

Honours

Season summaries

Sources: Collingwood Football Club VFL Honour Roll, Collingwood Reserves Honour Roll 1919–2022, VFL Stats

Women's teams

AFL Women's team

 
The Collingwood team huddles prior to the inaugural AFL Women's match in February 2017.

In April 2016, the club launched a bid to enter a team in the inaugural AFL Women's season in 2017. Meg Hutchins was appointed Women's Football Operations Manager some weeks prior, and given the responsibility of crafting the bid.[127]

The club was granted a license in June 2016, becoming one of eight teams to compete in the league's first season.[128]

In addition to her role off-field, Hutchins would become one of the club's first players, along with marquees Moana Hope and Emma King.[129] Collingwood selected a further 19 players in October's inaugural draft as well as three non-drafted players and two first time footballing rookies.[127] Dandenong Stingrays assistant and Victorian Metro Youth Girls head coach Wayne Siekman was appointed the team's inaugural head coach in July 2016.

The AFL Women's team is based at the club's training and administration at Olympic Park, though often shares matches between the venue and the club's spiritual home Victoria Park.[127]

AFL Women's squad

Senior list Rookie list Coaching staff

Head coach

Assistant coaches

  • Sam Shaw (backline)
  • Jordan Roughead (midfield)
  • Jason Brown (forward line)
  • Chloe McMillian (VFLW coach)
  • Chris Gamble (head of development)
  • Michael Hartley (backline development)
  • Martha Cantwell (midfield development)

Legend:
  • (c) Captain(s)
  • (vc) Vice captain(s)
  • (B) Category B rookie

Updated: 1 January 2023
Source(s): Playing list, Coaching staff


AFL Women's season summaries

Collingwood AFLW honour roll
Season Ladder W–L–D Finals Best & Fairest Leading goalkicker Captain(s) Coach
2017 5th 3–4–0 DNQ Nicola Stevens Moana Hope (7) Steph Chiocci Wayne Siekman
2018 6th 3–4–0 DNQ Chloe Molloy Christina Bernardi (9) Steph Chiocci Wayne Siekman
2019 10th ^ 1–6–0 DNQ Jaimee Lambert Sarah D'Arcy (4) Steph Chiocci Wayne Siekman
2020 5th ^ 4–2–0 Semi-final Jaimee Lambert Jordan Membrey (7) Steph Chiocci Stephen Symonds
2021 3rd 7–2–0 Preliminary final Brianna Davey Chloe Molloy (16) Steph Chiocci & Brianna Davey Stephen Symonds
2022 (A) 6th 6–4–0 Qualifying final Jaimee Lambert Chloe Molloy (8) Steph Chiocci & Brianna Davey Stephen Symonds
2022 (B) TBC 0–0–0 TBC TBC TBC Steph Chiocci & Brianna Davey Stephen Symonds

^ Denotes the ladder was split into two conferences. Figure refers to the club's overall finishing in the home-and-away season.

VFL Women's team

The club began fielding its own team in the revamped VFL Women's league from the start of the 2018 season.[130] Many of the club's AFLW athletes play for the VFLW team, though the majority of the team is made up of players who haven't been drafted to an AFLW club.[131] The VFL Women's competition runs from May to September (after the AFL Women's season has concluded) and Collingwood achieved success quickly in the league, claiming their first VFLW premiership in 2019.[132]

VFLW team list

51. Matilda Zander 52. Nicole Hales 53. Danica Pederson 54. Tricia Cowan 55. Caitlin Bunker 56. Marla Neal 58. Kara Colborne-Veel 60. Grace Matser 61. Nyakoat Dojiok 62. Monique Dematteo 63. Georgia Ricardo 64. Shanel Camilleri 65. Elisabeth Jackson 67. Rhiannon Busch 71. Hannah Bowey 72. Katie Lee 73. Olivia Storer 74. Ebony Wroe 75. Amy Kane 76. Nicola Weston 88. Neve O'Connor 90. Cahlia Haslam 91. Demi Hallett 92. Sarah King 99. Mollie Emond Coach: Chloe McMillan

VFL Women's season summaries

Collingwood VFLW honour roll
Season W–L–D Ladder Finals result Best & Fairest Leading goalkicker Captain(s) Coach
2018 12–1–1 1st Preliminary final Jaimee Lambert Sophie Alexander (14) Unknown Penny Cula-Reid
2019 12–2–0 1st Premiers Jaimee Lambert Jaimee Lambert (29) Ruby Schleicher & Grace Buchan Penny Cula-Reid
2020 Season cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic
2021 14–0–0 1st N/A[a] Imogen Barnett Imogen Barnett (21) Caitlin Bunker Chloe McMillan
2022 7–7–0 6th Elimination final Matilda Zander Nyakoat Dojiok & Matilda Zander (9) Caitlin Bunker Chloe McMillan

Sources: Club historical data 4 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine and VFLW Stats 2021-present

Individual awards

Best and Fairest

Brownlow Medal winners

Leigh Matthews Trophy winners

Coleman Medal winners

 
Gordon Coventry led the VFL in goalkicking six times.

Instituted in 1981, retrospective awards were dated back to 1955; prior to that, the League awarded the Leading Goalkicker Medal

Leading Goalkicker Medal winners

Norm Smith Medal winners

 
Scott Pendlebury, winner of the 2010 Norm Smith Medal

E. J. Whitten Medalists

Mark of the Year winners

Goal of the Year winners

Anzac Day Medal winners

^ Awarded retrospectively in 2011

Neale Daniher Trophy winners

Bob Rose-Charlie Sutton Medal winners

Richard Pratt Medal winners

Jason McCartney Medal winners

Not awarded since 2013

All Australian Team

International rules representatives

Michael Tuck Medal winners

Jim Stynes Medal winners

Match records

  • Highest score: R17, 1980 – Collingwood 32.19 (211) v St Kilda 16.11 (107) – Waverley Park
  • Lowest score: R6, 1897 (VP) – Collingwood 0.8 (8) v South Melbourne 2.15 (27) – Victoria Park (VP)
  • Lowest score since 1919: Grand Final, 1960 – 2.2 (14) v Melbourne 8.14 (62) – Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG)
  • Highest losing score: R16, 1937 – Collingwood 21.16 (142) v Melbourne 22.21 (153) – VP
  • Lowest winning score: R9, 1899 (VP) – Collingwood 3.3 (21) v Melbourne 1.7 (13) – VP
  • Lowest winning score since 1919: Grand Final, 1927 – 2.13 (25) v Richmond 1.7 (13) – MCG
  • Biggest winning margin: 178 points; R4, 1979 – Collingwood 31.21 (207) v St Kilda 3.11 (29) – VP
  • Biggest losing margin: 138 points; R3, 1942 – Collingwood 5.7 (37) v Richmond 25.25 (175) – Punt Road Oval
  • Record attendance (home and away game): R10, 1958 – 99,346 v Melbourne – MCG
  • Record attendance (finals match): Grand Final, 1970 – 121,696 v Carlton – MCG

Records set by players

  • Most matches: Scott Pendlebury – 326 (2006–)
  • Most consecutive matches: Jock McHale – 191 (1906–1917) – VFL record until 1943
  • Most goals kicked in a match: Gordon Coventry – 17 goals 4 behinds (R12, 1930, VP) – VFL record until 1947
  • Most Best & Fairests: Nathan Buckley – 6 (1994, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2003)
  • Most matches as coach: Jock McHale – 714 (1912–1949) – VFL/AFL record until 2015 (Remains a record for the most matches as coach at one club.)
  • Most matches as captain/acting captain: Scott Pendlebury – 162 (2014–)
  • Most goals in a season: Peter McKenna – 143 (1970)
  • Most career goals: Gordon Coventry – 1299 (1920–1937) – VFL/AFL record until 1999 (Remains a record for the most career goals at one club.)

Cultural influence

See also

Footnotes

Notes
  1. ^ Collingwood qualified for the 2021 VFL Women's Grand Final against Geelong, though the match was cancelled and no premiership was awarded due to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic in Victoria.
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Bibliography
  • Lovett, Michael (Chief editor) (2010). AFL Record Season Guide. Geoff Slattery Media Group. ISBN 978-0-9806274-5-9. {{cite book}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  • Victorian Government Hansard of November 1990, pp.2208–2218: Victorian Legislative Assembly's debate on the Collingwood (Victoria Park) Land Bill on 21 November 1990: features an informative interchange between Murray Weideman's older brother, Graeme Weideman, and former South Melbourne footballer, Bill McGrath, both of whom were MLAs at the time.

External links

  • Official website  

collingwood, football, club, collingwood, magpies, redirects, here, club, netball, team, same, name, collingwood, magpies, netball, nicknamed, magpies, colloquially, pies, professional, australian, rules, football, club, based, melbourne, that, competes, austr. Collingwood Magpies redirects here For the club s netball team of the same name see Collingwood Magpies netball The Collingwood Football Club nicknamed the Magpies or colloquially the Pies is a professional Australian rules football club based in Melbourne that competes in the Australian Football League AFL the sport s elite competition The club was formed in 1892 in the suburb of Collingwood and played in the Victorian Football Association VFA before joining seven other teams in 1896 to found the breakaway Victorian Football League today known as the AFL Originally based at Victoria Park Collingwood now plays home games at the Melbourne Cricket Ground and has its training and administrative headquarters at Olympic Park Oval and the AIA Centre Collingwood Football ClubNamesFull nameCollingwood Football Club Limited 1 Nickname s Magpies Pies Woods Woodsmen 2 MottoFloreat Pica 3 a May The Magpie Flourish 2022 seasonAfter finals3rdHome and away season4thLeading goalkickerBrody Mihocek 41 goals Club detailsFounded1892 131 years ago 1892 ColoursBlack white CompetitionAFL Senior menAFLW Senior womenVFL Reserves menVFLW Reserves womenPresidentJeff BrowneCEOMark AndersonCoachAFL Craig McRae AFLW Stephen SymondsVFL Craig BlackVFLW Chloe McMillanCaptain s AFL TBD AFLW Steph Chiocci amp Brianna DaveyVFL Lachlan Tardrew amp Campbell HustwaiteVFLW Caitlin BunkerPremiershipsVFL AFL 15 190219031910191719191927192819291930193519361953195819902010Reserves VFL 7 1919192019221925194019651976VFA 1 1896VFLW 1 2019Ground s AFL Melbourne Cricket Ground 100 024 AFLW VFLW Victoria Park 15 000 VFL Victoria Park amp Olympic Park 3 000 Former ground s Victoria Park 1892 1999 Training ground s AIA Centre indoor Olympic Park Oval outdoor UniformsHomeAwayClashOther informationOfficial websitecollingwoodfc com auCurrent seasonCollingwood has played in a record 44 VFL AFL Grand Finals including rematches winning 15 drawing two and losing 27 also a record Regarded as one of Australia s most popular sports clubs Collingwood has attracted the second highest attendance figures and television ratings of any professional football team in the nation 5 The club s song Good Old Collingwood Forever dates back to 1906 making it the oldest song currently used in the AFL Its home guernsey consists of black and white stripes matching the colours of the Australian magpie Historically the club s biggest rivals have been cross town clubs Carlton Melbourne and Richmond Collingwood has also enjoyed a healthy Anzac Day rivalry with Essendon since 1995 and smaller rivalries with West Coast and Brisbane since the turn of the millennium Collingwood fields a reserves team in the Victorian Football League formerly the VFA and women s teams in the AFL Women s and VFL Women s competitions It also owns and operates a netball team in the National Netball League Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation and early years 1 2 1920s and 1930s Four consecutive premierships 1 3 1950s Melbourne rivalry 1 4 1959 89 Colliwobbles 1 5 1990 99 Long awaited premiership and struggles 1 6 2000 11 The Malthouse era 1 7 2012 2021 Coach Nathan Buckley 1 7 1 Do Better report 1 8 2022 Coach Craig McRae 2 Club symbols and identity 2 1 Guernsey 2 2 Song 2 3 Rivalries 2 3 1 Carlton 2 3 2 Melbourne 2 3 3 Essendon 2 3 4 Geelong 2 4 Headquarters training and administration base 2 5 Home Grounds 2 6 Supporters 3 Corporate 3 1 Membership 3 2 Off field 3 3 Sponsorship 4 Honours 4 1 Honour board 4 2 Head to head results 4 3 Team of the Century 4 4 Captains 4 5 Presidents 5 Notes 6 Current playing squad 7 Reserves team 7 1 History 7 2 Coaches 7 3 Captains 7 4 Honours 7 5 Season summaries 8 Women s teams 8 1 AFL Women s team 8 1 1 AFL Women s squad 8 1 2 AFL Women s season summaries 8 2 VFL Women s team 8 3 VFLW team list 8 3 1 VFL Women s season summaries 9 Individual awards 9 1 Best and Fairest 9 2 Brownlow Medal winners 9 3 Leigh Matthews Trophy winners 9 4 Coleman Medal winners 9 5 Norm Smith Medal winners 9 6 E J Whitten Medalists 9 7 Mark of the Year winners 9 8 Goal of the Year winners 9 9 Anzac Day Medal winners 9 10 Neale Daniher Trophy winners 9 11 Bob Rose Charlie Sutton Medal winners 9 12 Richard Pratt Medal winners 9 13 Jason McCartney Medal winners 9 14 All Australian Team 9 15 International rules representatives 9 16 Michael Tuck Medal winners 9 17 Jim Stynes Medal winners 10 Match records 10 1 Records set by players 11 Cultural influence 12 See also 13 Footnotes 14 External linksHistory EditThis article or section appears to be slanted towards recent events Please try to keep recent events in historical perspective and add more content related to non recent events August 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article History of the Collingwood Football Club Formation and early years Edit The Collingwood team that won the VFA premiership in 1896 The Collingwood Football Club was established on 12 February 1892 6 7 8 Collingwood played its first game in the Victorian Football Association VFA against Carlton on 7 May 1892 9 The club won the VFA Premiership in 1896 In 1897 Collingwood along with fellow VFA clubs Fitzroy Melbourne St Kilda Carlton Essendon South Melbourne and Geelong split from the VFA and formed the Victorian Football League VFL Collingwood won its first premiership in 1902 defeating Essendon by 33 points in the 1902 VFL Grand Final 1920s and 1930s Four consecutive premierships Edit Jock McHale coached the club to four consecutive Grand Final victories Collingwood was the most successful Victorian 10 club of the 1920s and 1930s appearing in 13 out of a possible 20 Grand Finals during the period Collingwood were premiers six times during this time including four consecutive premierships between 1927 and 1930 a VFL record and two consecutive premierships in 1935 and 1936 The club s coach during this period was Jock McHale who served as coach from 1912 to 1949 Collingwood also had three Brownlow Medallists during the period with Syd Coventry winning in 1927 Albert Collier in 1929 and Harry Collier in 1930 The club s ruthlessly successful period later earned the club the nickname The Machine American journalist and author Sam Walker included the Machine team in his book The Captain Class which listed some the author s greatest teams in the history of world sport 11 The Collingwood team of 1927 30 not only achieved four straight premierships but did so with a winning percentage of around 86 across the four seasons and an average winning margin of about five goals In 1929 they also became the only team in history to go through a home and away season undefeated 11 Collingwood remains the only club in the history of the VFL AFL to have been declared premiers on four successive occasions 1950s Melbourne rivalry Edit In the 1950s rival club Melbourne enjoyed an era of unprecedented success winning five premierships in six years the last coming in 1960 and having been runner up in 1954 Collingwood lost two Grand Finals to Melbourne in this decade but bounced back to win premierships in 1953 and 1958 Collingwood s 1958 premiership is much cherished by the club as it prevented Melbourne from equalling Collingwood s record four premierships in a row The 1958 premiership was however to be Collingwood s last for 32 years as the club was to suffer a string of Grand Final defeats in coming decades Collingwood and Melbourne play their rival match every year within the Queens Birthday Weekend 1959 89 Colliwobbles Edit Main article Colliwobbles A string of eight Grand Final losses often by narrow margins between 1960 and 1981 gave rise to a perception that the club was prone to choking a phenomenon wittily dubbed Colliwobbles 12 13 14 Whether this perception is accurate remains a subject of debate 15 having only won one and drawn one of its last six Grand Finals Lou Richards ceremoniously buried the Colliwobbles at Victoria Park after the club s 1990 premiership 16 17 1990 99 Long awaited premiership and struggles Edit See also 1990 AFL Grand Final Nathan Buckley captained Collingwood between 1999 and 2007 and served as the club s senior coach from 2012 to 2021 The 1990 premiership team coached by Leigh Matthews and captained by Tony Shaw had a one sided grand final win against Essendon the Magpies recording a 48 point victory and ending a 32 year premiership drought which included eight grand final losses and one draw The sight of club great Darren Millane who died in a car crash one year later holding the ball aloft in triumph at the final siren is one of the indelible images of the match 18 After the drought breaking premiership the club lapsed into a state of decline for the remainder of the decade culminating with the club s second wooden spoon in 1999 The Magpies returned to finals though were quickly eliminated in the 1992 season against St Kilda and in the 1994 AFL season against West Coast Matthews left as head coach at the end of the 1995 season and was replaced at the start of the following year by 1990 premiership captain Tony Shaw who had only retired from football 18 months earlier Mid table finishes under Shaw were achieved for the next two seasons before poor results in 1998 and 1999 saw Shaw announce his resignation 2000 11 The Malthouse era Edit Media personality sports journalist and administrator Eddie McGuire was elected President in October 1998 He oversaw the installation of new head coach Michael Malthouse in October 1999 whose appointment proved to be a masterstroke in reviving the club on field Under Malthouse the acquisition and emergence of players such as Paul Licuria Alan Didak Anthony Rocca and Nathan Buckley resulted in Collingwood quickly moving up the ladder in the 2000 AFL season and in the 2001 AFL season only narrowly missing the finals in the latter year Collingwood met reigning premiers Brisbane in the 2002 Grand Final and were regarded as massive underdogs eventually falling just 9 points short of an improbable premiership Buckley the captain became just the third player to win the Norm Smith Medal as best afield in the Grand Final despite being a member of the losing side Despite a very successful home and away next season they were again defeated by the Lions in the 2003 Grand Final this time in thoroughly convincingly fashion Following those Grand Final losses Collingwood struggled for the next two years finishing 13th in 2004 and second last in 2005 the latter meant Collingwood was eligible for a priority pick which the club used to recruit Dale Thomas Collingwood made a return to the finals in 2006 finishing fifth but were defeated by the Western Bulldogs by 41 points in its elimination final A loss to Essendon late in the season was to cost them the double chance 19 20 The 2007 season saw them finish sixth on the ladder at season s conclusion and in the finals they knocked out the grand finalists of the past two years Sydney in the elimination final and then West Coast in overtime at Subiaco Oval in the semi final Having earned a preliminary final against Geelong Collingwood lost to the eventual premiers by five points in one of the most memorable preliminary finals in over a decade Nathan Buckley would announce his retirement at season s end after playing just five games in 2007 due to injury Collingwood finished eighth in the 2008 AFL season and were assigned an away final against Adelaide at AAMI Stadium After at one point trailing in the match Collingwood went on to end Adelaide s season and earn a semi final meeting against St Kilda Having defeated the Saints in both their regular season meetings Collingwood lost convincingly ending their 2008 season The 2009 season saw Collingwood finish inside the top four for the first time since 2003 but in the qualifying final were beaten by minor premiers St Kilda convincingly Having won a second chance Collingwood struggled against Adelaide for the second year in a row before John Anthony kicked the match winning goal with a minute left to send them into another preliminary final meeting with Geelong But the season ended abruptly for the Magpies with a 73 point loss to Geelong In 2010 Collingwood finished as minor premiers and after wins in the qualifying and preliminary finals reached the first Grand Final against St Kilda The match finished as a draw forcing the first grand final replay in 33 years Collingwood won the replay by 56 points Key defensive player Nick Maxwell captained the club to victory and midfielder Scott Pendlebury who had already won his first of eventually three Anzac medals earlier in the year was awarded the Norm Smith Medal The club won a second consecutive minor premiership in 2011 and qualified for the Grand Final after a three point victory against Hawthorn in the preliminary final However Collingwood was then beaten by Geelong by 38 points in the decider after trailing by seven points at three quarter time Following the Grand Final loss which also marked the end of the club s 2011 AFL season Malthouse left Collingwood after deciding not to stay on as director of coaching 21 Star midfielder Dane Swan won the 2011 Brownlow Medal with a then record 34 votes Malthouse would leave having coached the club to eight finals series and four grand finals in 12 years 2012 2021 Coach Nathan Buckley Edit Nathan Buckley regarded as one of Collingwood s greatest players was appointed assistant coach under Malthouse for the 2010 and 2011 seasons before assuming the head coaching position at the start of the 2012 season 22 Malthouse who had been contracted to take on a head of coaching role elected to leave the club rather than put Buckley in what he regarded as an awkward position 23 Under Buckley Collingwood continued to be successful in the short term qualifying inside the top four in the 2012 season before falling 26 points short in a preliminary final to eventual premiers the Sydney Swans at ANZ Stadium The club qualified for finals once more in 2013 though were surprisingly eliminated in the first week by underdogs Port Adelaide at home The result prompted the Magpies coaching staff to begin making radical changes to the club s playing list which saw premiership players Heath Shaw Sharrod Wellingham Heritier Lumumba among others leave for other clubs or retire Over the next four years younger talent was drafted but the club s win loss recorded continued to deteriorate Collingwood failed to make finals from 2014 through to the end of the 2017 season progressively sliding down the ladder each year Buckley came under intense media pressure to resign or be sacked from his position though club administrators elected to grant him a two year extension to his contract in October 2017 after a broad ranging internal review 24 The emergence of new generation players such as Taylor Adams Adam Treloar and Jordan De Goey alongside key talls Brodie Grundy and Mason Cox mixed well with veterans Pendlebury and Steele Sidebottom Collingwood jumped from 13th in 2017 to 3rd in 2018 sensationally knocking out reigning premiers Richmond in the preliminary final before falling five points short after leading for most of the match against West Coast in the 2018 Grand Final the senior team s 27th defeat in a Grand Final Buckley s growth as a coach was partially credited for the rapid improvement 24 In 2019 Collingwood had another strong season finishing fourth on the ladder but they were unable to return to the Grand Final after a shattering four point defeat to Greater Western Sydney in the first preliminary final 25 In 2020 Collingwood finished 8th at the end of the home and away season The club made significant on field and administrative changes in the late 2010s It was a foundation member of the inaugural AFL Women s competition in 2017 and in the same year established the Collingwood Magpies Netball team a division of the club competing in the professional National Netball League Collingwood unveiled a new permanent logo at the end of the 2017 season which was the club s 125th anniversary year 26 Do Better report Edit In 2020 the club commissioned an independent review into claims of racism at the club In February 2021 the report was leaked to journalists and revealed that while claims of racism have been made across the AFL there is something distinct and egregious about Collingwood s history and that what is clear is that racism at the club has resulted in profound and enduring harm to First Nations and African players The racism affected them their communities and set dangerous norms for the public 27 Collingwood President Eddie McGuire suggested that the report signalled A historic and proud day for the media and club which was working towards addressing racism and that it was not a racist club 28 Many criticised McGuire s response including AFL CEO Gillon McLachlan Heritier Lumumba former Indigenous Collingwood player Tony Armstrong and a Victorian Senator among others 29 30 31 32 McGuire later apologised for the remarks 33 On 4 February 150 Collingwood players from the men s and women s teams penned an open letter apologising to anyone who through their association with our club has been marginalised hurt or discriminated against due to their race 34 First grade footballer Darcy Moore said that the players were humiliated and shocked by the report s findings 34 McGuire stood down as President of the Collingwood Football Club on 9 February 2021 although he had initially wanted to see the year through for a seamless transition until being compelled to step down 35 36 Buckley stepped down after Round 13 of the 2021 AFL season and assistant coach Robert Harvey took over as the caretaker coach until the end of the season 37 Harvey focused on developing youth and letting them play with Collingwood winning 2 out of their 9 remaining games 38 2022 Coach Craig McRae Edit In September 2021 Craig McRae was appointed as head coach of the club for the 2022 season and onwards In his first season as Senior Coach McRae has led the club from 17th place in 2021 to 4th place on the ladder at the conclusion of the regular season which included an 11 game winning streak They were then knocked out by 1 point against Sydney in the Preliminary Final 39 Club symbols and identity EditGuernsey Edit Throughout the club s history Collingwood has worn a guernsey of black and white vertical stripes The all white jumper with the three black vertical stripes is the iconic strip that the club is most associated with The current incarnation of the guernsey is mostly black with white stripes on the front and lower half of the back and white numbers The main clash guernsey is the reverse of this mostly white with black stripes and black numbers worn in away matches against clubs with a predominantly dark guernsey such as Fremantle and Port Adelaide A secondary clash guernsey was introduced in 2011 and is used only in matches against North Melbourne due to similarity between the two uniforms The alternate uniform is black with only two white stripes on each side instead of three Traditionally Collingwood has worn a white guernsey with black stripes The club switched to the black guernsey with white stripes in 2001 40 Nike is the current manufacturer of the Magpies apparel 41 Collingwoods cultural reach and impact is far reaching as evidence by memberships crowds broadcast ratings and more recently the emergence of influential digital media such as the Pie Hard podcast Song Edit Collingwood player Tom Nelson wrote the lyrics to Good Old Collingwood Forever in 1906 Good Old Collingwood Forever is the team song of the Collingwood Football Club The lyrics were written by player Tom Nelson during Collingwood s 1906 tour of Tasmania making it the oldest of the team songs currently used in the AFL It is sung to the tune of Goodbye Dolly Gray originally a song written in connection with the Spanish American War then a popular Boer War and First World War anthem It is the only AFL team song to reference the barracker an Australian rules football term for fan 42 The current version of the song played at the ground during game day was recorded in 1972 by the Fable Singers 43 The lyrics are as follows Good old Collingwood forever They know how to play the game Side by side they stick together To uphold the Magpies name See the barrackers are shouting As all barrackers should Oh the premiership s a cakewalk For the good old Collingwood Rivalries Edit Carlton Edit Carlton is considered to be the club s most bitter arch rival for full details see Carlton Collingwood AFL rivalry with Richmond Essendon and more recently Brisbane close behind 44 Collingwood s two opponents in the themed Rivalry Rounds staged to date have been Carlton 2005 2006 2009 and Richmond 2007 2008 Melbourne Edit The rivalry between Collingwood and Melbourne was at its peak between 1955 and 1964 when the two played off in the grand final on five occasions This included the 1958 Grand Final where Collingwood s victory prevented Melbourne from equalling Collingwood s record of four premierships in succession 1927 1930 The old rivalry with Melbourne has faded in recent decades due to Melbourne not enjoying the same level of on field success however it remains strong and is an annual scheduled fixture on the Queens Birthday public holiday Essendon Edit Collingwood s rivalry with Essendon has become more significant since 1995 when the first Anzac Day clash took place After the 2021 match Collingwood have won this contest 15 times and Essendon 11 times with the first match being drawn Geelong Edit Games between Collingwood and Geelong have become highly anticipated since 2007 In Round 15 Geelong beat Collingwood by 16 points in a high quality match In the Preliminary final Collingwood surprised many when they came within 5 points of the eventual premiers In 2008 Collingwood thrashed Geelong by 86 points 20 14 134 7 6 48 causing Geelong s only loss of the 2008 home and away season In 2009 the sides again met in the preliminary final but despite high hopes the Cats who would again win the premiership won by 73 points in front of another massive crowd of 87 258 45 In 2010 the two sides emerged as the favourites for the flag and twice met in front of blockbuster crowds at the MCG when they were placed 1st and 2nd on the ladder with the results evenly split They again met in a Preliminary final this time a resounding win to Collingwood by 41 points In 2011 both teams were undefeated going into their round eight blockbuster at the G Geelong won by three points after a controversial advantage was not paid to Magpie Scott Pendlebury in the dying minutes Pendlebury kicked a goal and would have put the Pies in front but the free kick was contentiously called back and Geelong managed to whisk the ball away In the round 24 match Geelong thumped the Magpies by a record margin of 96 points which was also Collingwood s biggest ever loss at the MCG The 2011 Grand Final against the Cats concluded with a 38 point loss for the Pies Headquarters training and administration base Edit Collingwood Football Club had its original training and administration base at Victoria Park from 1892 until 2004 46 In 2004 Collingwood Football Club moved its primary administrative and training base to the purpose built Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre at the Olympic Park Complex 46 The Collingwood Football Club also used Olympic Park Stadium being adjacent to Melbourne Sports and Entertainment Centre as its outdoor training ground from 2004 until 2012 when it was demolished 47 After this occurred Collingwood Football Club moved its outdoor training ground to the newly developed Olympic Park Oval that replaced the space of the stadium after demolition Home Grounds Edit The club s original primary home ground where they played their AFL home games was at Victoria Park from 1892 until 1999 48 49 Since 2000 The club s primary home ground has been the Melbourne Cricket Ground even though the club had already experimented playing home games at the venue since 1993 where in the period between 1994 and 1999 the club would play seven of its home games at the MCG while retaining three at Victoria Park 50 51 Supporters Edit Collingwood Magpies mascot Collingwood is a working class suburb and the Collingwood Football Club supporter base traditionally came from the working class though its supporter base today goes far beyond Many of the club s supporters who regularly attend games still come from the working class or from lower socio economic groups leading to jokes from supporters of other clubs which typically stereotype their Collingwood counterparts as poor crude and ignorant 52 Collingwood is traditionally reviled by non Collingwood supporters You either love em or you hate em The dislike of the club by outsiders is said to have originated during the 1920s and 1930s a period of great success for the club which drew the envy and resentment of other clubs In this period Collingwood was also perceived as a Catholic and Irish club at a time when these groups were looked down upon by the rest of Australian society and subjected to a considerable degree of social exclusion 53 54 According to a 2001 study Collingwood s old home ground of Victoria Park had a reputation as one of the worst venues for racial vilification though it has also been said that the problem was similar at all grounds 55 Collingwood has however been involved in several high profile incidents of this type such as those involving indigenous players Nicky Winmar in 1993 and Adam Goodes in 2013 56 Michael Long s accusation of racial vilification against Collingwood ruckman Damian Monkhorst in 1995 also led directly to the establishment of the AFL s racial vilification regulations 57 In support of more inclusive sporting cultures in 2010 the Australian fashion designer Shanaaz Copeland developed a Collingwood inspired hijab for Muslim women 58 See also The Do Better Report Collingwood s cultural reach on the Australian sporting landscape is far reaching as evident by attendance figures memberships TV ratings and more recently the emergence of digital media such as the Pie Hard podcast Corporate EditMembership Edit Collingwood Membership 1984 present 59 Year Members Position 1984 16 313 3rd 1985 16 857 7th 3 28 1986 13 971 6th 20 65 1987 9 500 12th 47 06 1988 11 985 4th 20 73 1989 13 620 5th 12 00 1990 14 808 1st 8 02 1991 18 469 7th 19 82 1992 18 921 5th 2 38 1993 21 882 8th 13 53 1994 20 843 8th 4 98 1995 22 543 10th 7 54 1996 20 752 11th 8 63 1997 22 761 10th 8 82 1998 27 099 14th 16 00 1999 32 358 16th 16 25 2000 28 932 15th 11 84 2001 31 455 9th 8 02 2002 32 549 4th 3 36 2003 40 445 2nd 19 54 2004 41 128 13th 1 66 2005 38 612 15th 6 51 2006 38 038 7th 1 50 2007 38 587 4th 1 42 2008 26 320 6th 46 60 2009 45 972 4th 42 74 2010 57 617 1st 20 212011 71 271 60 1st 19 15 2012 72 688 61 4th 1 94 2013 80 000 62 6th 9 14 2014 80 793 63 11th 0 98 2015 76 497 64 12th 5 61 2016 74 643 65 12th 2 48 2017 75 879 66 13th 1 62 2018 75 507 67 3rd 0 49 2019 85 226 68 4th 12 87 2020 76 862 69 8th 9 8 2021 82 527 70 8th 7 37 In 2011 Collingwood reached 70 000 members for the first time creating a new AFL record beating their own previous record of 58 249 set in 2010 71 72 The club s extensive membership base tends to be a large crowd pulling power which has caused the AFL to be accused of favouring Collingwood when scheduling to maximise the league s attendance figures 73 74 75 However the AFL states that this is due to other clubs requesting home games at the MCG against Collingwood Off field Edit Collingwood was one of the last clubs to abandon its traditional stadium the famous inner city Victoria Park Collingwood now plays home games at the MCG It now also has its headquarters situated in the former Glasshouse Entertainment Centre Due to a sponsorship deal this facility is known as The AIA Centre and has been previously known by other names such as The Lexus Centre The Westpac Centre and The Holden Centre all due to sponsorship agreements Collingwood continues to be financially viable through the loyal support of its huge following and numerous sponsors After finishing 2nd in 2002 and 2003 the team fell to 13th and 15th out of 16 in 2004 and 2005 respectively This trend has plagued the club since the glory days of pre World War II VFL football Since 1958 the club has won only two VFL AFL Premiership the inaugural AFL Premiership in 1990 and in 2010 Despite this the club still has won more individual games more finals and made more grand final appearances than any other club On 9 March 2007 former Collingwood and Fitzroy defender Gary Pert was appointed the Magpies CEO seven weeks after Greg Swann departed for Carlton In accepting the key Magpie post Pert quit as a club director and as managing director of Channel 9 in Melbourne In a press conference it was stated that Collingwood has budgeted to turn over about 50 million this year McGuire hopes the new administration will soon double that figure A finance administration review has come up with how we are going to turn Collingwood in to its next phase of its life McGuire said What do we do to make ourselves go from a 45 million a year turnover business to a 100 million turnover business They sound like big figures but in 1999 we turned over 13 million so that is where we are heading as a football club The club made an operating profit of 5 23 million for the 2013 season revenue increased from 2 6 million to more than 75 million 76 On 24 July 2017 Pert resigned from his position as CEO of the club with Peter Murphy replacing him as an interim CEO 77 Sponsorship Edit The Collingwood guernsey is the most valuable sports sponsorship in Australia 78 Collingwood has different guernsey sponsors for home and away matches generating an estimated 6 3 million worth of media exposure for the primary sponsor and 5 7 million for the secondary sponsor These sponsorships are ranked first and second in Australia 78 High profile sponsors have included Emirates 79 Holden 80 CGU Insurance 81 and Westpac 82 Year Kit Manufacturer Major Sponsor Shorts Sponsor Bottom Back Sponsor Top Back Sponsor1977 85 Hard Yakka 1986 88 MiniSkips1989 92 Spicers Paper 83 1993 Spicers1994 Delta Spicers 83 1995 97 Thrifty 83 1998 Adidas 84 Primus 85 Home Spicers Paper 85 Away Spicers Paper 85 Home Primus 85 Away Spicers 85 Home Primus 85 Away 1999 2001 Emirates 79 Home Primus 85 Away Primus 85 Home Emirates 79 Away Primus Home Emirates 79 Away 2002 05 Emirates 79 Home Wipe Off 5 TAC 86 Away Wipe Off 5 TAC 86 Home Emirates 79 Away Wipe Off 5 TAC 86 Home Emirates 79 Away 2006 08 Emirates 79 Home Wizard Homes Loans 87 Away Wizard Homes Loans 87 Home Emirates 79 Away Wizard Homes Loans 87 Home Emirates 79 Away 2009 10 Emirates 79 Home Aussie 88 Away Aussie 88 Home Emirates 79 Away Aussie 88 Home Emirates 79 Away 2011 12 Emirates 79 Home CGU Insurance 81 Away CGU Insurance 81 Home Emirates 79 Away CGU Insurance 81 Home Emirates 79 Away 2013 16 Star Athletic 89 2017 19 ISC 90 2020 Emirates Home CGU Insurance Away 2021 Nike2022 Emirates 79 Home KFC 91 Away KFC 91 Home Emirates 79 Away KFC 91 Home Emirates 79 Away Emirates 79 Home KFC 91 Away Honours EditHonour board Edit PremiershipsCompetition Level Wins Years WonAustralian Football League Seniors 15 1902 1903 1910 1917 1919 1927 1928 1929 1930 1935 1936 1953 1958 1990 2010Reserves 1919 1999 7 1919 1920 1922 1925 1940 1965 1976Under 19s 1946 1991 4 1960 1965 1974 1986Victorian Football Association Seniors 1892 1896 1 1896VFL Women s Reserves 1 2019Other titles and honoursAFL pre season competition Seniors 1 2011AFC Night Series Seniors 1 1979McClelland Trophy Seniors 8 1959 1960 1964 1965 1966 1970 2010 2011Lightning Premiership Seniors 2 1941 1951Championship of Australia Seniors 1 1896Finishing positionsAustralian Football League Minor premiership 19 1902 1903 1905 1915 1917 1919 1922 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1966 1969 1970 1973 1977 2010 2011Grand Finalist 27 1901 1905 1911 1915 1918 1920 1922 1925 1926 1937 1938 1939 1952 1955 1956 1960 1964 1966 1970 1977 1979 1980 1981 2002 2003 2011 2018Wooden spoons 2 1976 1999AFL Women s Wooden spoons 1 2019VFL Women s Minor premiership 3 2018 2019 2021Head to head results Edit Played 2 636 Won 1 579 Drawn 28 Lost 1010 Last updated End of the 2022 AFL Season R GP W D L GF BF For GA BA Agn Win 100 F 100 A1 Adelaide 47 31 1 15 557 494 3836 493 505 3463 110 77 60 98 16 72 Brisbane Bears 16 13 2 251 232 1738 170 187 1207 143 99 86 67 12 23 Brisbane Lions 36 16 20 363 366 2544 406 368 2804 90 73 48 48 10 114 Carlton 262 130 4 128 2914 3086 20570 2869 2969 20183 101 92 50 00 70 645 Essendon 244 134 4 106 2747 2884 19366 2631 2803 18591 104 17 54 47 63 606 Fitzroy 209 131 3 75 2338 2683 16711 2058 2374 14722 113 51 63 40 66 317 Fremantle 34 22 12 407 344 2786 362 299 2471 112 75 60 71 14 78 Geelong 239 134 1 104 2643 2889 18747 2468 2723 17531 106 94 57 14 60 429 Gold Coast 14 11 3 114 100 784 70 70 490 160 00 71 43 510 Greater Western Sydney 13 7 6 104 74 698 66 63 459 152 07 53 33 4 111 Hawthorn 167 99 70 2207 2341 15584 2025 1977 14127 110 31 59 88 67 5612 Melbourne 241 153 5 84 2793 3077 19735 2465 2704 17494 112 81 62 82 73 4813 North Melbourne 163 110 2 51 2233 2343 15741 1788 1939 12667 124 27 67 09 71 3814 Port Adelaide 35 17 18 386 342 2658 354 351 2475 107 39 50 00 11 515 Richmond 214 120 2 92 2472 2694 17526 2314 2509 16393 106 91 56 80 52 4516 St Kilda 222 161 2 59 2830 3060 20040 2176 2375 15431 129 87 72 35 89 3617 Sydney 231 143 1 87 2720 2983 19303 2277 2699 16361 117 98 62 67 66 4318 University 14 13 1 132 199 991 72 110 542 182 84 96 43 2 019 West Coast 61 28 2 31 634 550 4354 640 609 4449 97 86 48 98 15 1820 Western Bulldogs 160 110 1 50 2101 2021 14627 1712 1855 12127 120 62 68 83 59 29Team of the Century Edit Collingwood announced its team of the century on 14 June 1997 celebrating 100 years since the beginning of the VFL Gavin Brown was added as the fourth interchange player in 2002 as when the team was named in 1997 only three interchange players were permitted on a team 92 Collingwood Team of the Century B Harold Rumney Jack Regan Syd Coventry Captain HB Billy Picken Albert Collier Nathan BuckleyC Thorold Merrett Bob Rose Darren MillaneHF Des Fothergill Murray Weideman Dick LeeF Phonse Kyne Gordon Coventry Peter DaicosFoll Len Thompson Des Tuddenham Harry CollierInt Tony Shaw Wayne Richardson Marcus WhelanGavin BrownCoach James Jock McHaleCaptains Edit This list comprises every captain of the club This list does not include deputy captains filling in due to an injury to the named captain but does include captains named after a player retires or steps down during the season Bill Strickland 1897 Bill Proudfoot 1898 99 1901 Dick Condon 1899 1900 Lardie Tulloch 1902 04 Charlie Pannam 1905 Alf Dummett 1906 Arthur Leach 1906 08 Eddie Drohan 1908 Robert Nash 1908 09 George Angus 1910 11 Jock McHale 1912 13 Dan Minogue 1914 16 Percy Wilson 1917 18 Con McCarthy 1919 Dick Lee 1920 21 Tom Drummond 1922 Harry Curtis 1923 Charlie Tyson 1924 26 Syd Coventry 1927 34 Harry Collier 1935 39 Jack Regan 1940 41 1943 Phonse Kyne 1942 1946 49 Pat Fricker 1944 Alby Pannam 1945 Gordon Hocking 1950 51 Lou Richards 1952 55 Neil Mann 1955 56 Bill Twomey Jr 1957 Frank Tuck 1958 59 Murray Weideman 1960 63 Ray Gabelich 1964 65 John Henderson 1965 Des Tuddenham 1966 69 1976 Terry Waters 1970 71 Wayne Richardson 1971 75 Max Richardson 1977 Len Thompson 1978 Ray Shaw 1979 80 Peter Moore 1981 82 Mark Williams 1983 86 Tony Shaw 1987 93 Gavin Brown 1994 98 Nathan Buckley 1999 2007 Scott Burns 2008 Nick Maxwell 2009 2013 Scott Pendlebury 2014 Presidents Edit Main articles List of VFL AFL commissioners and club presidents Collingwood and List of Collingwood Football Club presidents There have been twelve presidents of the Collingwood Football Club The first and founding president of Collingwood was former Collingwood Mayor and Victorian MP William Beazley Beazley was president of Collingwood from the founding of the club in 1892 until 1911 The second president of Collingwood was Alfred Cross However Cross was only president for a brief period of time Third was former Fitzroy and Collingwood player Jim Sharp Sharp was president for ten years 1913 1923 The fourth president of Collingwood was another former player Harry Curtis Curtis currently is the longest serving president of Collingwood Curtis served as president for twenty six years Another former player of Collingwood Syd Coventry was the fifth president for Collingwood serving twelve years between 1950 and 1962 Tom Sherrin was the sixth president of Collingwood serving from 1963 to 1974 Ern Clarke president for one year was the seventh president John Hickey Ranald Macdonald and Allan MacAlister all served as president during 1977 through to 1995 Eleventh president and former player Kevin Rose was the second most recent president of Collingwood The twelfth and second longest serving president of Collingwood is radio and television presenter commentator and journalist Eddie McGuire McGuire was president of Collingwood between 1998 and 2021 Club board members Mark Korda and Peter Murphy were interim co presidents following McGuire s tenure 93 In April 2021 Korda was appointed the thirteenth president of Collingwood 94 List of Collingwood presidents b 95 No Name Took office Left office Time in office Occupation Notes Premierships Ref s 1 William Beazley 1892 1912 20 years 123 days Politician involved with precursor club Britannia Football Club 3 1902 1903 1910 96 97 2 Alfred Cross 1913 1 year c Tailor former Collingwood vice president 98 99 3 Jim Sharp 1914 1924 10 years 209 days Former VFL player former Collingwood vice president 2 1917 1919 100 101 102 4 Harry Curtis 1925 1950 25 years 112 days Accountant former VFL player 6 1927 1928 1929 1930 1935 1936 103 104 Gordon Carlyon 24 May 28 June 1950 d 35 days 105 5 Sydney Coventry Sr 1950 1963 12 years 246 days Former VFL player former Collingwood vice president 2 1953 1958 106 107 6 Tom Sherrin 1963 1974 11 years 214 days Manufacturer former Collingwood vice president 108 109 7 Ern Clarke 1974 1976 1 year 213 days Businessman 110 8 John Hickey 1976 1982 6 years 153 days RAAF pilot former Collingwood vice president 111 9 Ranald Macdonald 1982 1986 3 years 208 days Journalist lecturer 112 10 Allan McAlister 1986 1995 9 years 157 days Businessman former Collingwood treasurer 1 1990 113 11 Kevin Rose 1995 1998 2 years 253 days Businessman former VFL player coach 114 115 12 Eddie McGuire 1998 2021 22 years 103 days Commentator journalist businessman 1 2010 116 117 Peter MurphyMark Korda 10 February 21 April 2021 e 70 days Collingwood vice president s 118 119 13 Mark Korda 21 April 16 December 2021 239 days Businessman former Collingwood vice president f 120 121 122 14 Jeff Browne 2021 1 year 29 days Lawyer 123 Notes Edit May The Magpie Prosper or May The Magpie Flourish is the club motto suggested by former Collingwood player Bob Rush 4 Unless displayed the list does not include possible period s of time in which the role of president was vacant administered by a committee or had a de facto acting President Specific dates are unknown however Cross is alleged to have resigned during the 1913 season Following the resignation of the Collingwood Football Social Club Committee Mr Carlyon as secretary was acting secretary manager until the conclusion of the elections of the president vice president treasurer and committee members Following McGuire s decision to stand down Peter Murphy and Mark Korda Co Vice presidents were appointed Co Presidents until a successor could be decided Mark Korda also holds the role of director Current playing squad EditCollingwood Football Clubviewtalkedit Senior list Rookie list Coaching staff 1 Patrick Lipinski 2 Jordan De Goey 3 Isaac Quaynor 4 Brayden Maynard 5 Jamie Elliott 6 Tom Mitchell 7 Josh Daicos 8 Trent Bianco 10 Scott Pendlebury 11 Daniel McStay 13 Taylor Adams 14 Darcy Cameron 15 Nathan Kreuger 16 Ed Allan 17 Billy Frampton 18 Finlay Macrae 19 Arlo Draper 20 Will Kelly 21 Trey Ruscoe 22 Steele Sidebottom 23 Bobby Hill 24 Jakob Ryan 25 Jack Crisp 26 Reef McInnes 28 Nathan Murphy 29 Joe Richards 30 Darcy Moore 31 Beau McCreery 32 Will Hoskin Elliott 33 Jack Ginnivan 35 Nick Daicos 36 Harvey Harrison 38 Jeremy Howe 41 Brody Mihocek 46 Mason Cox 9 John Noble 12 Tom Wilson B 27 Cooper Murley 39 Aiden Begg 40 Ash Johnson 43 Charlie Dean 45 Josh Carmichael Head coach Craig McRaeAssistant coaches Brendon Bolton director of coaching and backline Hayden Skipworth midfield Scott Selwood midfield Justin Leppitsch head of strategy and forward line Mark Jamar ruck Andy Otten backline development Neville Jetta forward line development Josh Fraser head of academy Nick Maxwell leadership and culture manager Legend c Captain s vc Vice captain s Long term injury list Upgraded rookie B Category B rookieUpdated 1 January 2023Source s Playing list Coaching staffReserves team EditSee also Australian Football League reserves affiliations The Collingwood Reserves are the reserves team of the club The latest iteration of the Collingwood Reserves was created in 2008 and are yet to win a Victorian Football League VFL premiership History Edit The VFL AFL operated a reserves competition from 1919 to 1991 and a de facto AFL reserves competition was run by the Victorian State Football League from 1992 to 1999 Collingwood fielded a reserves team in both of these competitions allowing players who were not selected for the senior team to play for Collingwood in the lower grade The team won seven reserves premierships during this period including four in the first seven years between 1919 and 1925 but only three thereafter After the AFL reserves competition was disbanded at the end of 1999 the club fielded its reserves team in the Victorian Football League during the 2000 season 124 In 2001 Collingwood reserves team was dissolved and the club entered into an affiliation with the VFL s Williamstown Football Club such that Williamstown served as a feeder team and reserves players for Collingwood played senior football for Williamstown Williamstown won one VFL premiership during this time in 2003 Collingwood ended its affiliation with Williamstown after the 2007 season The reserves team was re established and has competed in the VFL since 2008 125 124 Collingwood s standalone reserves team s best VFL result to date was a preliminary final appearance in the 2016 VFL season in which it lost to eventual premiers Footscray by 119 points 126 The reserves team currently splits home games between Olympic Park Oval and Victoria Park although they do occasionally play at the MCG as a curtain raiser to Collingwood home matches and uses the AFL team s clash guernsey as its primary guernsey The Collingwood VFL team is composed of both reserves players from the club s primary and rookie AFL lists and a separately maintained list of players eligible only for VFL matches Coaches Edit No Name Years1 Brad Gotch Dean Laidley 20002 Gavin Brown 2008 103 Tarkyn Lockyer 2011 124 Dale Tapping 2013 165 Jared Rivers 2017 196 Craig Black 2021 presentNote Garry Hocking was appointed coach for the 2020 season which was abandoned due to the COVID 19 pandemic Captains Edit No Name Years1 Nigel Carmody 20082 Damien Peverill 20093 Kris Pendlebury 2010 124 Jack Hellier Nick Riddle 20135 Jack Hellier 2014 186 Jack Hellier Alex Woodward 20197 Lachlan Tardrew Campbell Hustwaite 2021 present Honours Edit Premierships 7 Year Competition Opponent Score Venue1919 VFL Reserves University 6 11 47 4 8 32 MCG1920 VFL Reserves University 7 14 56 7 2 44 MCG1922 VFL Reserves Essendon 8 10 58 1 9 15 MCG1925 VFL Reserves Fitzroy 13 16 94 11 4 70 MCG1940 VFL Reserves Carlton 6 16 52 3 12 30 MCG1965 VFL Reserves Geelong 16 9 105 10 20 80 MCG1976 VFL Reserves North Melbourne 23 17 155 19 15 129 MCG Runners up 8 Year Competition Opponent Score Venue1921 VFL Reserves Essendon 8 13 61 10 9 69 MCG1937 VFL Reserves Geelong 9 11 65 12 12 84 MCG1944 VFL Reserves Fitzroy 9 9 63 11 12 78 Victoria Park1952 VFL Reserves Essendon 4 5 29 7 14 56 MCG1958 VFL Reserves Essendon 6 13 49 7 11 53 MCG1966 VFL Reserves Richmond 13 12 90 14 11 95 MCG1979 VFL Reserves North Melbourne 9 13 67 13 14 92 VFL Park1983 VFL Reserves Essendon 15 9 99 19 14 128 MCG Season summaries Edit Season Win loss Ladder position Finals result Best amp Fairest Leading goalkicker2000 9 10 11th DNQ Shane Watson Brad Obourne 20 2008 5 11 12th DNQ Justin Crow amp Brent Macaffer Brent Macaffer 38 2009 10 8 7th Preliminary Final Ryan Cook Chris Bryan 34 2010 10 8 7th Elimination Final Tom Young Scott Reed 38 2011 4 14 12th DNQ Tom Sundberg Brett Eddy 21 2012 4 14 12th DNQ Kris Pendlebury Caolan Mooney amp Jackson Paine 17 2013 10 8 6th Elimination Final Kyle Martin Jackson Paine 45 2014 12 6 5th Elimination Final Kyle Martin Patrick Karnezis 31 2015 12 6 6th semi final Ben Moloney Patrick Karnezis 30 2016 14 4 2nd Preliminary Final Brent Macaffer Travis Cloke amp Jordan Collopy 18 2017 8 10 8th Elimination Final Marty Hore Kayle Kirby 42 2018 12 6 5th Elimination Final Marty Hore Unknown2019 7 11 11th DNQ Alex Woodward Andrew Gallucci 18 2021 6 3 7th Cancelled Lachlan Tardrew TBC2022 11 7 6th Elimination Final Finlay Macrae Sam Fowler 25 Sources Collingwood Football Club VFL Honour Roll Collingwood Reserves Honour Roll 1919 2022 VFL StatsWomen s teams EditAFL Women s team Edit The Collingwood team huddles prior to the inaugural AFL Women s match in February 2017 In April 2016 the club launched a bid to enter a team in the inaugural AFL Women s season in 2017 Meg Hutchins was appointed Women s Football Operations Manager some weeks prior and given the responsibility of crafting the bid 127 The club was granted a license in June 2016 becoming one of eight teams to compete in the league s first season 128 In addition to her role off field Hutchins would become one of the club s first players along with marquees Moana Hope and Emma King 129 Collingwood selected a further 19 players in October s inaugural draft as well as three non drafted players and two first time footballing rookies 127 Dandenong Stingrays assistant and Victorian Metro Youth Girls head coach Wayne Siekman was appointed the team s inaugural head coach in July 2016 The AFL Women s team is based at the club s training and administration at Olympic Park though often shares matches between the venue and the club s spiritual home Victoria Park 127 AFL Women s squad Edit Collingwood Football Club AFL Women s viewtalkedit Senior list Rookie list Coaching staff 1 Sabrina Frederick 2 Chloe Molloy 3 Brianna Davey c 4 Imogen Barnett 5 Imogen Evans 6 Jordyn Allen 7 Sarah Rowe 8 Brittany Bonnici 9 Alana Porter 10 Ashleigh Brazill 11 Charlotte Taylor 12 Stacey Livingstone 13 Jaimee Lambert 15 Erica Fowler 16 Sarah Sansonetti 17 Steph Chiocci c 18 Ruby Schleicher 19 Olivia Barber 20 Eliza James 21 Jordan Membrey 22 Sophie Casey 23 Lauren Butler 24 Lauren Brazzale 25 Mikala Cann 26 Tarni Brown 28 Charlotte Blair 30 Alison Downie 32 Eloise Chaston 35 Joanna Lin 40 Abbi Moloney 14 Aishling Sheridan 33 Emily Smith Head coach Stephen SymondsAssistant coaches Sam Shaw backline Jordan Roughead midfield Jason Brown forward line Chloe McMillian VFLW coach Chris Gamble head of development Michael Hartley backline development Martha Cantwell midfield development Legend c Captain s vc Vice captain s B Category B rookieUpdated 1 January 2023Source s Playing list Coaching staff AFL Women s season summaries Edit Collingwood AFLW honour rollSeason Ladder W L D Finals Best amp Fairest Leading goalkicker Captain s Coach2017 5th 3 4 0 DNQ Nicola Stevens Moana Hope 7 Steph Chiocci Wayne Siekman2018 6th 3 4 0 DNQ Chloe Molloy Christina Bernardi 9 Steph Chiocci Wayne Siekman2019 10th 1 6 0 DNQ Jaimee Lambert Sarah D Arcy 4 Steph Chiocci Wayne Siekman2020 5th 4 2 0 Semi final Jaimee Lambert Jordan Membrey 7 Steph Chiocci Stephen Symonds2021 3rd 7 2 0 Preliminary final Brianna Davey Chloe Molloy 16 Steph Chiocci amp Brianna Davey Stephen Symonds2022 A 6th 6 4 0 Qualifying final Jaimee Lambert Chloe Molloy 8 Steph Chiocci amp Brianna Davey Stephen Symonds2022 B TBC 0 0 0 TBC TBC TBC Steph Chiocci amp Brianna Davey Stephen Symonds Denotes the ladder was split into two conferences Figure refers to the club s overall finishing in the home and away season VFL Women s team Edit The club began fielding its own team in the revamped VFL Women s league from the start of the 2018 season 130 Many of the club s AFLW athletes play for the VFLW team though the majority of the team is made up of players who haven t been drafted to an AFLW club 131 The VFL Women s competition runs from May to September after the AFL Women s season has concluded and Collingwood achieved success quickly in the league claiming their first VFLW premiership in 2019 132 VFLW team list Edit 51 Matilda Zander 52 Nicole Hales 53 Danica Pederson 54 Tricia Cowan 55 Caitlin Bunker 56 Marla Neal 58 Kara Colborne Veel 60 Grace Matser 61 Nyakoat Dojiok 62 Monique Dematteo 63 Georgia Ricardo 64 Shanel Camilleri 65 Elisabeth Jackson 67 Rhiannon Busch 71 Hannah Bowey 72 Katie Lee 73 Olivia Storer 74 Ebony Wroe 75 Amy Kane 76 Nicola Weston 88 Neve O Connor 90 Cahlia Haslam 91 Demi Hallett 92 Sarah King 99 Mollie Emond Coach Chloe McMillan VFL Women s season summaries Edit Collingwood VFLW honour rollSeason W L D Ladder Finals result Best amp Fairest Leading goalkicker Captain s Coach2018 12 1 1 1st Preliminary final Jaimee Lambert Sophie Alexander 14 Unknown Penny Cula Reid2019 12 2 0 1st Premiers Jaimee Lambert Jaimee Lambert 29 Ruby Schleicher amp Grace Buchan Penny Cula Reid2020 Season cancelled due to the COVID 19 pandemic2021 14 0 0 1st N A a Imogen Barnett Imogen Barnett 21 Caitlin Bunker Chloe McMillan2022 7 7 0 6th Elimination final Matilda Zander Nyakoat Dojiok amp Matilda Zander 9 Caitlin Bunker Chloe McMillanSources Club historical data Archived 4 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine and VFLW Stats 2021 presentIndividual awards EditBest and Fairest Edit Further information Copeland Trophy Brownlow Medal winners Edit Syd Coventry 1927 Albert Collier 1929 Harry Collier 1930 tied Marcus Whelan 1939 Des Fothergill 1940 tied Len Thompson 1972 Peter Moore 1979 Nathan Buckley 2003 tied Dane Swan 2011 Leigh Matthews Trophy winners Edit Darren Millane 1990 Dane Swan 2010 Coleman Medal winners Edit Gordon Coventry led the VFL in goalkicking six times Instituted in 1981 retrospective awards were dated back to 1955 prior to that the League awarded the Leading Goalkicker Medal Ian Brewer 1958 Peter McKenna 1972 1973 Brian Taylor 1986 Leading Goalkicker Medal winners Archie Smith 1898 Teddy Lockwood 1900 tied 1903 Charlie Pannam 1905 Dick Lee 1907 1908 1909 1914 1916 1917 1919 Gordon Coventry 1926 1927 1928 1929 1930 1933 Ron Todd 1938 1939 Des Fothergill 1946Norm Smith Medal winners Edit Scott Pendlebury winner of the 2010 Norm Smith Medal Tony Shaw 1990 Nathan Buckley 2002 Scott Pendlebury 2010 E J Whitten Medalists Edit Gavin Brown 1989 1997 Mark of the Year winners Edit Alan Atkinson 1973 Billy Picken 1974 Billy Picken 1976 Peter Daicos 1980 Denis Banks 1984 Chris Tarrant 2003 Andrew Krakouer 2011 Jamie Elliott 2013 Goal of the Year winners Edit Phil Manassa 1977 Peter Daicos 1991 Mick McGuane 1994 Leon Davis 2008 Josh Daicos 2020 Anzac Day Medal winners Edit Saverio Rocca 1995 1998 Scott Russell 1996 Damien Monkhorst 1997 Chris Tarrant 2001 Mark McGough 2002 Ben Johnson 2006 Heath Shaw 2007 Paul Medhurst 2008 Scott Pendlebury 2010 2011 2019 Dane Swan 2012 2014 Paul Seedsman 2015 Steele Sidebottom 2016 Adam Treloar 2018 Jack Ginnivan 2022 Awarded retrospectively in 2011 Neale Daniher Trophy winners Edit Travis Cloke 2015 Mason Cox 2018 Adam Treloar 2019 Bob Rose Charlie Sutton Medal winners Edit Ben Johnson 2008 Dane Swan 2009 Scott Pendlebury 2010 2012 2017 Heath Shaw 2011 2013 Tom Phillips 2018 Richard Pratt Medal winners Edit Dane Swan 2013 Tom Langdon 2014 Scott Pendlebury 2015 Steele Sidebottom 2018 Jason McCartney Medal winners Edit Anthony Rocca 2003 Ben Johnson 2004 Chris Tarrant 2006 James Clement 2007 Tarkyn Lockyer 2009 Scott Pendlebury 2013 Not awarded since 2013 All Australian Team Edit Des Healey 1953 Bob Rose 1953 Terry Waters 1969 Ricky Watt 1969 Peter McKenna 1972 Len Thompson 1972 Peter Moore 1979 Michael Richardson 1983 Geoff Raines 1985 Tony Francis 1991 Gavin Brown 1991 1994 Mick McGuane 1992 Nathan Buckley 1996 1997 1998 1999 2001 2003 Chris Tarrant 2003 James Clement 2004 2005 Alan Didak 2006 2010 Paul Medhurst 2008 Dane Swan 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Nick Maxwell 2009 Leon Davis 2009 2011 Scott Pendlebury 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2019 Harry O Brien 2010 Dale Thomas 2011 Ben Reid 2011 Travis Cloke 2011 2013 Dayne Beams 2012 Brodie Grundy 2018 2019 Steele Sidebottom 2018 Adam Treloar 2019 Darcy Moore 2020 Taylor Adams 2020 Brayden Maynard 2022 International rules representatives Edit Gavin Brown 1990 Nathan Buckley 1998 1999 captain James Clement 2002 Alan Didak 2004 Scott Pendlebury 2008 2017 Dale Thomas 2008 Dane Swan 2010 Tyson Goldsack 2010 Michael Tuck Medal winners Edit Heath Shaw 2011 Jim Stynes Medal winners Edit Dane Swan 2010 Match records EditHighest score R17 1980 Collingwood 32 19 211 v St Kilda 16 11 107 Waverley Park Lowest score R6 1897 VP Collingwood 0 8 8 v South Melbourne 2 15 27 Victoria Park VP Lowest score since 1919 Grand Final 1960 2 2 14 v Melbourne 8 14 62 Melbourne Cricket Ground MCG Highest losing score R16 1937 Collingwood 21 16 142 v Melbourne 22 21 153 VP Lowest winning score R9 1899 VP Collingwood 3 3 21 v Melbourne 1 7 13 VP Lowest winning score since 1919 Grand Final 1927 2 13 25 v Richmond 1 7 13 MCG Biggest winning margin 178 points R4 1979 Collingwood 31 21 207 v St Kilda 3 11 29 VP Biggest losing margin 138 points R3 1942 Collingwood 5 7 37 v Richmond 25 25 175 Punt Road Oval Record attendance home and away game R10 1958 99 346 v Melbourne MCG Record attendance finals match Grand Final 1970 121 696 v Carlton MCGRecords set by players Edit Most matches Scott Pendlebury 326 2006 Most consecutive matches Jock McHale 191 1906 1917 VFL record until 1943 Most goals kicked in a match Gordon Coventry 17 goals 4 behinds R12 1930 VP VFL record until 1947 Most Best amp Fairests Nathan Buckley 6 1994 1996 1998 1999 2000 2003 Most matches as coach Jock McHale 714 1912 1949 VFL AFL record until 2015 Remains a record for the most matches as coach at one club Most matches as captain acting captain Scott Pendlebury 162 2014 Most goals in a season Peter McKenna 143 1970 Most career goals Gordon Coventry 1299 1920 1937 VFL AFL record until 1999 Remains a record for the most career goals at one club Cultural influence EditDavid Williamson s 1977 stage play The Club was inspired by the backroom dealings and antics of the Collingwood Football Club although Collingwood is never mentioned by name The 1980 film version of the play directed by Bruce Beresford and starring John Howard Jack Thompson Graham Kennedy and Frank Wilson 133 is set at Collingwood and featured Collingwood players in speaking and non speaking roles The film was almost entirely shot on location at Victoria Park both inside and on the actual oval 134 Judd Apatow s 2009 film Funny People starring Adam Sandler and Seth Rogen featured a scene with Australian actor Eric Bana trying to explain the rules of Australian rules football 135 During this scene Bana s character a St Kilda supporter voices his dislike for Collingwood while watching a televised game Adam Elliot s 2009 clay animated film Mary and Max features a scene with a school yard bully named Bernie Clifford who wears a 1970s VFL style Collingwood guernsey A Collingwood garden gnome can also be seen in the film 136 In the 2010 independent Australian film Joffa The Movie Joffa Corfe and Shane McRae star as a couple of knockabout handymen with a passion for the Collingwood Football Club John Brack s 1953 painting Three of the Players depicts three Collingwood players The players are thought by some to be Lou Richards Jack Regan and Phonse Kyne 137 The Melbourne based architectural firm Edmond and Corrigan included Collingwood s black and white stripes in the designs of many of their buildings including the VCA Theatre and Niagara Galleries 138 See also Edit Sports portal Australia portalHistory of the Collingwood Football Club List of Collingwood players List of Collingwood Football Club coaches Sport in Australia Sport in VictoriaFootnotes EditNotes Collingwood qualified for the 2021 VFL Women s Grand Final against Geelong though the match was cancelled and no premiership was awarded due to the impact of the COVID 19 pandemic in Victoria References Current details for ABN 89 006 211 196 ABN Lookup Australian Business Register November 2014 Retrieved 4 August 2020 Woodsman to retire Collingwoodfc com au Retrieved 3 August 2022 R T Rush Trophy the runner up collingwoodfc com au Archived from the original on 9 January 2014 Retrieved 9 January 2014 Floreat Pica forever collingwoodfc com au Retrieved 18 April 2021 Matt Windley 15 May 2014 Collingwood Brisbane Broncos top rankings as Australia s most popular football clubs Herald Sun Retrieved 13 June 2014 afl com au dead link The club s first secretary honoured Official AFL Website of the Collingwood Football Club Archived from the original on 7 October 2009 Retrieved 29 June 2012 A Century of the Best Michael Roberts p viii pub 1991 A Century of the Best Michael Roberts p x pub 1991 Premiership Teams East Perth FC East Perth Football Club Retrieved 20 September 2020 a b Machine named among world s best ever sporting teams forever collingwoodfc com au Let s banish memories of Colliwobbles forever The Herald Sun 24 September 2010 Putting a price on Colliwobbles The Melbourne Age 12 August 2010 It s still neck and neck after 44 years The Melbourne Age 25 September 2010 Colliwobbles fact or fantasy Footy Almanac Hunt a Churchie goer at best The Age Melbourne Pies ashes now in Tigerland The Age Melbourne Re live the triumph 1990 Premiership exhibition Collingwood Football Club 29 July 2015 Mason Luke 30 August 2012 Beyond 2000 Essendon Collingwood FC Archived from the original on 24 May 2018 Retrieved 10 June 2017 Bombers shock Magpies ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation 11 August 2006 Retrieved 10 June 2017 Malthouse parts ways with Pies ABC News Australian Associated Press Retrieved 22 September 2018 Pies double act Archived 16 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine Afl com au 28 July 2009 Retrieved on 7 September 2012 Malthouse parts ways with Pies ABC News 1 October 2011 a b An Imperfect Perfection The Transformation of Nathan Buckley The Mongrel Punt 1 June 2019 permanent dead link McGowan Marc Gargantuan Depleted Giants shock Pies to reach first Grand Final AFL com au Archived from the original on 15 September 2019 Retrieved 21 September 2019 A new logo a new chapter Collingwood FC 4 October 2017 Gleeson Michael 31 January 2021 Report finds systemic racism at Collingwood The Age Retrieved 1 February 2021 Not a racist club McGuire fights back after leaked report www afl com au Retrieved 1 February 2021 Cherny Michael Gleeson Daniel 1 February 2021 Indigenous ex Pie slams Collingwood s response McGuire refuses to quit The Age Retrieved 1 February 2021 Lumumba has no faith in Collingwood changing under the current regime www abc net au 2 February 2021 Retrieved 4 February 2021 It was more sobering and confronting Gill queries proud McGuire www afl com au Retrieved 4 February 2021 Cassidy Barrie 2 February 2021 Eddie still doesn t get it Pies can t rebuild from a position of denial WAtoday Retrieved 4 February 2021 I got it wrong McGuire says he shouldn t have said he was proud after Collingwood report revealed www abc net au 2 February 2021 Retrieved 4 February 2021 a b Niall Jake 4 February 2021 Pies who penned open letter humiliated and shocked by racism report The Age Retrieved 4 February 2021 A lightning rod for vitriol McGuire resigns effective immediately AFL com au 9 February 2021 The contenders to replace Eddie McGuire who will stand down as Collingwood president at end of 2021 season Buckley to step down after 478 games as player and coach Collingwood Telstra 9 June 2021 Retrieved 29 June 2021 Morris Tom Cotton Ben 1 September 2021 Harvey s big challenge for Pies star as he reveals shockwaves from Buckley exit Fox Sports Craig McRae confirmed as Collingwood coach as Harvey departs AFL club The Guardian 1 September 2021 Eastman David Collingwood Home Jumpers Archived from the original on 16 July 2013 Retrieved 12 November 2011 Collingwood expands partnership with Nike Collingwood Football Club 8 January 2021 Retrieved 9 January 2021 McFarlane Glenn 15 August 2014 Glenn s 18 Special Edition we give you the definitive ranking of the AFL club songs Archived 23 September 2019 at the Wayback Machine Herald Sun Retrieved 27 September 2018 AFL Tunes to Remember The Age 23 July 2010 Niall Jake 29 August 2012 Ramp up the rivalry The Sydney Morning Herald Lovett 2010 p 92 a b Victory Park 10 February 2012 Retrieved 7 April 2022 Olympic Park Stadium Retrieved 7 April 2022 Victoria Park Timeline Retrieved 28 November 2022 Timeline of Victoria Park 21 July 2009 Retrieved 28 November 2022 AFL Teams amp Stadiums Retrieved 28 November 2022 Victoria Park Timeline Retrieved 28 November 2022 Humphrys Elizabeth Beyond a joke Bogan loathing bring us all to shame The Drum ABC Archived from the original on 3 October 2013 Retrieved 8 October 2013 Cordy Neil AFL AFL DEPARTMENT OF TRADE NAB CUP SHOWS VIDEO GWS Giants supporters are about to learn why footy fans love to hate Collingwood writes Neil Cordy Sapienza Joseph 21 September 2010 Everybody hates Collingwood but why The Age Retrieved 8 December 2014 McNamara Lawrence On the Field and Off the Field Sport and Racial Hatred HREOC Australian Human Rights Commission Archived from the original on 31 December 2014 Retrieved 31 December 2014 Klugman Matthew A game whose time has come Winmar Goodes and race in the AFL The Conversation Retrieved 14 December 2014 Klugman Matthew 16 April 2013 AFL the ugly game of enlightened racism The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 31 December 2014 Copeland Shanaaz Collingwood Football Club Design Hijab Museum Victoria Archived from the original on 10 December 2019 Retrieved 10 December 2019 Lovett 2010 p 732 Collingwood Membership Website 2011 2011 Membership Home Membership collingwoodfc com au Retrieved 22 September 2011 Club memberships hit 700 000 afl com au Archived from the original on 19 October 2012 Retrieved 2 October 2012 Rielly Stephen 16 August 2013 Magpies hit 80 000 members Collingwoodfc com au BigPond Archived from the original on 18 August 2013 Retrieved 8 November 2013 Muling Elizabeth 3 September 2014 Pies surpass membership record collingwoodfc com au BigPond Archived from the original on 6 September 2014 Retrieved 3 September 2014 2019 Membership Collingwood Football Club Bowen Nick 25 August 2016 The membership ladder Hawks overtake Pies Dons slide AFL com au Bigpond Ralph Jon 15 August 2017 Collingwood back on top of the AFL membership ladder Herald Sun Waterworth Ben 2 August 2018 AFL club membership numbers 2018 Over 1 million members Richmond surpasses six figures Fox Sports Australia Retrieved 29 September 2018 Cipriano Jaylen 6 August 2019 AFL announce membership numbers 2019 Retrieved 7 September 2019 Waterworth Ben 9 September 2020 Tigers dethroned as Victorian giants plummet 2020 AFL membership ladder Fox Sports Australia Retrieved 17 October 2020 Statement AFL club membership breaks all time record afl com au Australian Football League 4 August 2021 Retrieved 9 March 2022 Collingwood membership tally hits 70 000 Heraldsun com au 13 May 2011 Retrieved 22 September 2011 Eddie s Letter to Members Collingwood FC 13 May 2011 Archived from the original on 16 May 2011 Retrieved 22 September 2011 Brown Matt 8 October 2003 AFL denies draw favours Pies ABC News Australian Broadcasting Corporation Australia ABC Retrieved 13 August 2010 Pies Blues big winners in AFL draw Watoday com au 24 October 2008 Archived from the original on 28 October 2008 Retrieved 13 August 2010 Wilson Caroline 13 May 2009 Pies a drag on crowd numbers RFNews The Age Melbourne Retrieved 13 August 2010 Collingwood AFL club builds build TV studio for digital marketing expansion 8 January 2014 Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 17 April 2014 Pierik Jon 24 July 2017 Collingwood chief executive Gary Pert resigns The Age a b Magpies guernsey most valuable The Age Australia 9 March 2011 Retrieved 22 September 2011 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Emirates renews Collingwood deal as Australian sponsorship tops 100m Arabian Business 4 June 2019 Retrieved 4 February 2020 Stensholt John 18 August 2015 Holden to sign 3m sponsorship deal with AFL club Collingwood Magpies The Sydney Morning Herald a b c d Martin Mina 15 March 2017 CGU extends football partnership Insurance Business Retrieved 4 February 2020 Long Michael 23 March 2010 Collingwood FC sign lucrative sponsorship deal with Westpac SportsPro Retrieved 4 February 2020 a b c Shoebridge Neil 23 June 1997 Collingwood s goal is to get back in the black The Australian Financial Review Retrieved 4 February 2020 Collingwood generates an estimated 5 million a year from sponsors Spicers Paper is its main sponsor Spicers managing director Peter Hammond joined the Collingwood board earlier this year second tier sponsors are Coca Cola South Pacific Carlton amp United Breweries Puma Australia and Thrifty Car Rental Houston Cameron 6 May 2012 Pies put their shirts on move into rag trade The Age Retrieved 4 January 2020 a b c d e f g h McFarlane Glenn The Presidents Kevin Rose Collingwood Forever Telstra Media Retrieved 4 February 2020 An embarrassing situation arose in late 1997 when Collingwood s chief executive John May struck a deal with telecommunications company Viatel that had been promoted as the most lucrative in football It later emerged that the company was unable to meet its financial obligations Rose promptly arranged Primus and Spicers Paper as replacement sponsors but the damage was done from a publicity point of view a b c Collier Karen Warner Michael 9 January 2008 Collingwood loses its TAC sponsorship after new drink drive charge Herald Sun Retrieved 4 February 2020 a b c Magpies get magic touch from Wizard The Sydney Morning Herald 14 July 2005 Retrieved 4 February 2020 a b c Canning Simon 30 July 2010 Collingwood dumped as Aussie deserts elite sport sponsorship The Australian Retrieved 18 August 2011 Long Michael 4 September 2012 Collingwood signs unique kit deal with Star Athletic SportsPro Retrieved 4 February 2020 Nelson Adam 15 November 2016 Collingwood sign ISC kit deal SportsPro Retrieved 4 February 2020 a b c d Collingwood and KFC a classic combo collingwoodfc com au Retrieved 8 March 2022 Team of the Century Collingwood FC Archived from the original on 21 September 2011 Retrieved 22 September 2011 Peter Ryan and Jake Niall 11 February 2021 Rescue mission for Collingwood co presidents Korda Murphy The Age Niall Jake 21 April 2021 Mark Korda appointed Pies president The Age Gastin Sam 4 August 2015 Our twelve Presidents Collingwood Football Club Retrieved 27 March 2019 The Presidents William Beazley forever collingwoodfc com au Collingwood Football Club Retrieved 23 April 2021 Football The Collingwood Club The Sportsman 1 March 1892 p 6 Roberts Michael The Presidents Alfred Cross forever collingwoodfc com au Collingwood Football Club Retrieved 23 April 2021 Collingwood A Swarm of Recruits The Herald 18 April 1913 p 3 Roberts Michael The Presidents Jim Sharp forever collingwoodfc com au Collingwood Football Club Retrieved 23 April 2021 Football Meetings The Argus 28 February 1914 p 21 Magpie President Mr J Sharp s Retirement Sporting Globe 10 September 1924 p 13 Roberts Michael The Presidents Harry Curtis forever collingwoodfc com au Collingwood Football Club Retrieved 23 April 2021 Collingwood Club The Argus 31 January 1925 p 23 Beames Percy 24 May 1950 Collingwood Dispute Committee Resigns Election on June 28 The Age p 24 Roberts Michael The Presidents Syd Coventry forever collingwoodfc com au Retrieved 23 April 2021 No Surprise in Magpie Election The Age 29 June 1950 p 14 The Presidents Tom Sherrin forever collingwoodfc com au Collingwood Football Club Retrieved 23 April 2021 The Floreat Club Trouble Among the Mighty Magpies The Bulletin 9 March 1963 p 14 The Presidents Ern Clarke forever collingwoodfc com au Collingwood Football Club Retrieved 23 April 2021 The Presidents John Hickey forever collingwoodfc com au Collingwood Football Club Retrieved 23 April 2021 McFarlane Glenn The Presidents Ranald Macdonald forever collingwoodfc com au Collingwood Football Club Retrieved 23 April 2021 McFarlane Glenn The Presidents Allan McAlister forever collingwoodfc com au Collingwood Football Club Retrieved 23 April 2021 McFarlane Glenn The Presidents Kevin Rose forever collingwoodfc com au Collingwood Football Club Retrieved 23 April 2021 Rose New President The Canberra Times 14 December 1995 p 18 The Presidents Eddie McGuire forever collingwoodfc com au Collingwood Football Club Retrieved 23 April 2021 Eddie McGuire stands down as Collingwood president in wake of racism report ABC News 9 February 2021 Retrieved 23 April 2021 Collingwood Board confirms interim co presidents collingwoodfc com au Collingwood Football Club Retrieved 23 April 2021 Thomas Wilson Simeon 12 February 2021 AFL 2021 Mark Korda or Peter Murphy to replace Eddie McGuire at Collingwood The Australian Retrieved 23 April 2021 Korda appointed Collingwood s 13th president collingwoodfc com au Collingwood Football Club Retrieved 23 April 2021 Niall Jake 21 April 2021 Mark Korda appointed Pies president greeted with fan unrest The Age Retrieved 23 April 2021 Mark Korda departs as Collingwood president Jeff Browne to step in ABC News 7 October 2021 Jeff Browne elected 14th president Collingwood Telstra 17 December 2021 a b History of the Collingwood Football Club in the VFL collingwoodfc com au 1 January 2017 Archived from the original on 16 February 2015 Retrieved 16 February 2015 VFL Season 2008 collingwoodfc com au Archived from the original on 16 February 2015 Retrieved 16 February 2015 VFL Saturday recap Finals Week 3 VFL SportsTG Retrieved 1 October 2020 a b c Allen Sarah 29 April 2016 Collingwood launches bid for historic women s AFL team Collingwood Media Bigpond Archived from the original on 18 October 2016 Retrieved 16 October 2016 Allen Sarah 15 June 2016 History made Collingwood women s team announced Collingwood Media Bigpond Archived from the original on 18 June 2016 Retrieved 16 October 2016 Matthews Bruce 27 July 2016 Sixteen of the best women s marquees named AFL com au Bigpond Retrieved 16 October 2016 Five AFL clubs granted VFLW licences for 2018 the starting blocks for a revamped competition Fox Sports 11 October 2017 Moving forward with Collingwood s VFLW program Collingwood FC 15 August 2019 Collingwood win first women s premiership in VFLW grand final triumph The Age 22 September 2019 The Club 1980 IMDb McFarlane G amp Roberts M The Illustrated Collingwood Encyclopedia 2004 Brown G Collingwood Forever 1997 Eric Bana teaches AFL to Seth Rogan News ninemsn com au Archived from the original on 13 July 2012 Retrieved 22 September 2011 Mary Max and the Magpies Brisbane Times 7 April 2010 Retrieved 22 September 2011 Boland Michaela 24 August 2010 Collingwood opts to pass up on painting The Australian News Limited Retrieved 26 May 2016 Phaidon Atlas of Contemporary World Architecture Phaidon p 53 BibliographyLovett Michael Chief editor 2010 AFL Record Season Guide Geoff Slattery Media Group ISBN 978 0 9806274 5 9 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first has generic name help Victorian Government Hansard of November 1990 pp 2208 2218 Victorian Legislative Assembly s debate on the Collingwood Victoria Park Land Bill on 21 November 1990 features an informative interchange between Murray Weideman s older brother Graeme Weideman and former South Melbourne footballer Bill McGrath both of whom were MLAs at the time External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Collingwood Football Club Official website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Collingwood Football Club amp oldid 1130794840, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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