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Melbourne Football Club

The Melbourne Football Club, nicknamed the Demons, is a professional Australian rules football club that competes in the Australian Football League (AFL), the sport's elite competition. It is based in Melbourne, Victoria, and plays its home games at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG).

Melbourne Football Club
Names
Full nameMelbourne Football Club Limited[1]
Nickname(s)Demons, Dees, Narrm
Former nickname(s)Redlegs, Fuchsias (prior to 1933)
2022 season
After finals5th
Home-and-away season2nd
Leading goalkickerBayley Fritsch (55 goals)
Club details
Founded1858; 165 years ago (1858)[2][3][4][5]
Colours  Red   Navy Blue
CompetitionAFL: Men
AFLW: Women
VFL: Men
VFLW: Women
PresidentKate Roffey
CEOGary Pert
CoachAFL: Simon Goodwin
AFLW: Mick Stinear
VFL: Mark Corrigan
VFLW: Peter Mercoulia
Captain(s)AFL: Max Gawn
AFLW: Daisy Pearce
VFL: Mitchell White
VFLW: Samantha Johnston
PremiershipsVFL/AFL (13) AFLW (1)
S7 (2022)
Reserves (12) Victorian (3)
Ground(s)AFL: Melbourne Cricket Ground (100,024)
AFLW/VFL/VFLW: Casey Fields (12,000)
Training ground(s)AFL/AFLW: Melbourne Rectangular Stadium, Gosch's Paddock
VFL/VFLW: Casey Fields
Uniforms
Home
Away
Clash
Other information
Official websitemelbournefc.com.au

Melbourne is the world's oldest professional club of any football code. Its origins can be traced to an 1858 letter in which Tom Wills, captain of the Victoria cricket team, calls for the formation of a "foot-ball club" with its own "code of laws". An informal Melbourne team played that winter and officially formed in May 1859, when Wills and three other members codified "The Rules of the Melbourne Football Club"—the basis of Australian rules football. The club was a dominant force in the early years of the game and a foundation member of the Victorian Football Association (VFA) in 1877 and the Victorian Football League (VFL) in 1896, now the national AFL. Melbourne has won 13 VFL/AFL premierships, the latest in 2021. The club was a foundation team of the AFL Women's league (AFLW), and won its first AFLW premiership in 2022 (Season 7).

The football club has been a sporting section of the Melbourne Cricket Club (MCC) since 2009, having previously been associated with the MCC between 1889 and 1980.[6]

History

1858: Foundations

 
After promoting the formation of, and captaining an 1858 incarnation of the club, Tom Wills co-wrote Melbourne's first laws.
 
Wills' cousin H. C. A. Harrison captained Melbourne from 1861 to 1872, and later served as club president.

In the winter and spring of 1858, a loosely organised football team known as 'Melbourne' played in a series of scratch matches in the parklands outside the Melbourne Cricket Ground. This team was captained by Tom Wills, a prominent athlete and captain of the Victoria cricket team, who, on 10 July that year, had a letter of his published by the Melbourne-based Bell's Life in Victoria and Sporting Chronicle, in which he calls for the formation of a "foot-ball club" with a "code of laws" to keep cricketers fit during winter. Other figures associated with this embryonic Melbourne side included Melbourne Cricket Club members Jerry Bryant, William Hammersley and J. B. Thompson, and teacher Thomas H. Smith.

It is possible that the first game played involving the Melbourne team took place on or adjacent to the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 14 August following Bryant's call for 'all good kicks' to take part with a subsequent match held among the Melbourne Cricket Club members on 30 August.[7] On 25 September, Melbourne was challenged to a match by the South Yarra Football Club featuring 26 players a side, with Melbourne winning the game.[8] Although the club had not yet been established as a formal entity, the year 1858 has long been recognised as being the foundation year of the Melbourne Football Club and for Australian rules football.

1859–1876: Establishment and early years

With the cricket season finished The Argus reported in early May 1859 that the membership of the "Melbourne Football Club" was growing 'owing, probably, to its being no longer confined to members of the Melbourne Cricket Club'.[9] On 14 May the club held its first match of the year in the Richmond Paddock with two sides captained by Smith and Bryant, with Bryant's side kicking two goals for victory.[10][11] A subsequent meeting was held to elect a Secretary, Treasurer and committee of five to administer the affairs of the club and to draft its rules, whilst an application to the MCC was made for use of the MCG on Wednesdays and Saturdays.[11] Although most Melbourne players and officials were associated with the MCC, the football club was not initially allowed to use its ground, so matches were played on the fields at Yarra Park.

 
Former Parade Hotel near the MCG, where in 1859 the "Rules of the Melbourne Football Club" were drafted

On 17 and 21 May 1859, Wills, Hammersley, Thompson and Smith met near the MCG at the Parade Hotel, owned by Bryant, to draft "The Rules of the Melbourne Football Club".[12] The resulting ten codified rules are the laws from which Australian rules football evolved.

In the early years of the club, football matches were conducted on a casual basis with no set fixture and teams often having to cancel engagements due to a lack of players. The first mention of an interclub match played under the new code was between Melbourne and South Yarra in July 1859, with Hammersley as Melbourne's inaugural captain.[13] In 1860 Melbourne played its first match against the Geelong Football Club in Geelong with the match resulting in a draw.

In 1861, Melbourne participated in the Caledonian Society Challenge Cup, but lost the trophy to the Melbourne University Football Club. The club pushed for its rules to be the accepted rules, however many of the early suburban matches were played under compromised rules decided between the captains of the competing teams.

 
Melbourne playing in Yarra Park at the start of the 1874 season

By 1866 several other clubs had also adopted an updated version of Melbourne's rules, drafted at a meeting chaired by Wills' cousin, H. C. A. Harrison. Harrison was a key figure in the early years of the club; he often served as captain and, in later years, as president. Due to his popular reputation and administrative efforts, he was officially named "Father of Australian Football" in 1908, the year of the sport's golden jubilee.

During the 1870s, Melbourne fielded teams in the Seven Twenties and South Yarra Cup competitions.

1877–1896: Victorian Football Association

 
Melbourne side of 1879

In 1877, Melbourne became a founding member of the Victorian Football Association (VFA). During the same year the club took part in the first interstate football match involving a South Australian side, Victorian, defeating the home side 1–0.[14] Melbourne never won a VFA premiership, although they were consistently one of the stronger teams in the competition, finishing as runners-up four times, to Carlton in 1877, Geelong in 1878 and twice to Essendon in 1893 and 1894.

In 1884 Melbourne's stand at the MCG which catered for 3,000 spectators burned down precipitating a series of financial constraints for the club. With mounting debts, club officials running up unauthorised accounts, poor on-field form and players leaving to join other clubs, Melbourne's future was in serious jeopardy by 1888. It was proposed that the MCC intervene to provide assistance given the closeness of the two clubs and the fact that football matches generated significant gate revenue for the MCC.

At the end of the 1889 season, the MFC and MCC committees met and agreed to amalgamation of the two. The football club would become a section of the cricket club with the MCC handling the MFC's immediate and ongoing financial concerns. Melbourne's on-field prospects soon lifted finishing fourth on the ladder in 1892 and vying the Premiership in 1893. This was to be the beginning of a long and fruitful partnership that produced 12 VFL Premierships between 1900 and 1964.[15]

1897–1932: Early years in the Victorian Football League

 
Melbourne team that won its first VFL premiership in 1900

In 1897, Melbourne joined other VFA powerhouse clubs Essendon, Collingwood, Fitzroy, Geelong, and South Melbourne to form the breakaway Victorian Football League with Carlton and St Kilda also joining. In the first season of the new competition, Jack Leith was the League's leading goalscorer whilst Fred McGinis emerged as a champion player and league identity being judged Champion of the Colony for the season.[15] In 1900, McGinis helped take Melbourne to its first VFL Premiership, defeating Fitzroy in a Grand Final upset at the East Melbourne Cricket Ground and in 1904 Vin Coutie kicked 39 goals to be the League's leading goal scorer. But despite this success, including playing in the finals again in 1902, Melbourne's first decade of the 20th century was poor on-field, with the club taking out the Wooden Spoon in 1905 and 1906.

In the 1910s the team had adopted the nickname 'Fuschias' alongside the pre-existing Redlegs name and in 1912 the club adopted a club song to the tune of 'You're A Grand Old Flag". Harry Brereton was the VFL leading goalscorer in the 1911 and 1912 season. During this time the club took pride in its policy of amateurism and when World War 1 broke out, the club strongly petitioned for the league being suspended to prevent fit professional footballers from joining the war effort. In 1916 the club refused to take part in the competition for three seasons, returning in 1919. 14 Melbourne players lost their lives in the conflict, including Arthur Mueller 'Joe' Pearce, Clifford Burge, Jack Doubleday, Desmond McDonald, Ralph Robertson, Percy Rodriguez and Alfred Williamson.[15] For instance, in May 1919, an unidentified former Melbourne footballer, wrote to the football correspondent of The Argus as follows:

"In 1914 the Melbourne football team, after its junction with the University, was a fine team, and succeeded in reaching the semi-finals.
Out of this combination the following players enlisted and served at the front:—
C. Lilley (seriously wounded), J. Hassett, H. Tomkins (severely wounded), J. Evans (seriously wounded), W. Hendrie, R. L. Park, J. Doubleday (died), A. Best, C. Burge (killed), C. (viz., A.) Williamson (killed), J. Brake, R. Lowell, E. Parsons (seriously wounded), A. M. Pearce (killed), F. Lugton (killed), A. George, C. Armstrong, P. Rodriguez (killed), J. Cannole (viz., Connole), A. Fraser (seriously wounded), T. Collins.
These are all players of note, and in themselves would have formed a very fine side, but there is only one of them playing at the present time, viz., C. Lilley, who, as a matter of fact, takes the field under some disability owing to severe wounds which he received on service." — The Argus, 16 May 1919.[16]

Melbourne had little success in the immediate post-war years having not played a final since 1915, taking out another Wooden Spoon in 1919. However, finals form would return with the team defeating Geelong and later losing to Collingwood in 1925. In 1926 Albert Chadwick captain-coached the team to its second league Premiership defeating Collingwood in the Grand Final. Melbourne's greatest player at this time was Ivor Warne-Smith, who in the Premiership year won the club's first Brownlow Medal. Warne-Smith went on to win a second Brownlow in 1928, a year in which Melbourne would play finals again. Chadwick and Warne-Smith would both go on to have influential administrative roles in the club's most successful period in the 1950s.

1933–1964: Dominant years

The Great Depression took a financial toll on the club with poor on-field performances and some players having the pressure of having to search for employment. Melbourne's fortunes were lifted however for the 1933 season when it lured Richmond's premiership winning coach Frank "Checker" Hughes and Richmond's secretary Percy Page to the club.

Hughes was a tough and disciplined coach inspiring the changing of the club's nickname from the Fuchsias to the Demons.[17]

You are playing like a lot of flowers. Lift your heads and play like demons!

— Hughes during a speech to his players[18]

Under Hughes' leadership, and with star players including captain Allan La Fontaine, rover Percy Beames, backman Jack Mueller and Norm Smith at full forward, the Demons played finals in 1936 and 1937, and became the third club after Carlton and Collingwood to win three successive premierships in 1939, 1940 and 1941.[19]

Tragedy would fall on the club soon after with 11 players giving their lives whilst serving in World War 2. These players included premiership players Keith 'Bluey' Truscott, Harold Ball, Syd Anderson and Ron Barassi Sr, all for whom club awards have been dedicated to, with the club's Best and Fairest award named in honour of Truscott.

Hughes left the club at the end of the 1941 season but returned in 1945. The next year Don Cordner became the second Demon to win the Brownlow Medal with Melbourne reaching the grand final, losing to Essendon by a margin of 63 points. Fred Fanning was the VFL leading goal scorer in 1943, 1944, 1945 and 1947 when he also kicked the league record 18 goals in a match during the last game of the season (a record that still stands). In 1948, Melbourne met Essendon in a grand final rematch. The Bombers' inaccurate kicking of 7 goals and 27 behinds resulted in the first ever drawn VFL grand final. The Demons returned the next week to win its sixth premiership with Jack Mueller kicking six goals in the match. Hughes retired again as coach at the end of the season and after being denied the position by a single vote of the club's committee, Norm Smith moved to Fitzroy to take a position as captain-coach.

 
Demons great Norm Smith coached the club to six premierships

New coach Allan La Fontaine had limited success despite the Demons playing finals in 1950 and bringing talented new players into the club. After the Demons took out the Wooden Spoon in 1951, Smith returned to take up the coaching position in the 1952 season and set about forging a new team with future club champion Ron Barassi joining in 1953 under the newly created father-son rule. In 1954, the Demons made the Grand Final losing to a rampaging Footscray. In 1955 the Demons cemented their position as the best team in the league finishing top of the ladder and taking out the Premiership in the Grand Final against Collingwood. Melbourne became the only VFL team to win three premierships in succession twice by winning the 1956 and 1957 grand finals against Collingwood and Essendon. The Demons suffered a shock defeat to their rivals Collingwood in the 1958 grand final, but would regain the premiership following wins in the 1959 and 1960 grand finals against Essendon and Collingwood. Between 1955 and 1960, Melbourne finished top of the ladder in every season, winning five premierships. Had the Demons not been defeated in 1958, they may have won seven premierships in a row.

Despite playing in the finals series in 1961, 1962 and 1963, Melbourne failed to reach a grand final until 1964 when the Demons finished top of the ladder again. In one of the most thrilling grand finals, Melbourne won its 12th VFL premiership in the dying seconds of the game against Collingwood with back-pocket player Neil Crompton kicking the winning goal.

After the 1954 Grand Final loss to Footscray, no team was able to score 100 points against the Demons until Collingwood in round 5 1963. The next team was Geelong with 110 in round 1 1964. and dominant period of any team in the VFL/AFL no other team has ever won 10 premierships in just 31 years.[20]

1965–1986: Decades of disappointment

In one of the greatest shock moves in the VFL history, Ron Barassi transferred to Carlton as captain-coach for the 1965 season. Despite this, Melbourne were still the dominant team of the league, winning its first eight games in succession. After having lost just three games, the club's committee made the startling decision to sack Norm Smith as coach before its Round 13 fixture against North Melbourne. Hughes returned to coach the Demons in a losing game, whilst Melbourne identities, including Barassi took to the media to defend Smith. Smith was reinstated however the damage was done, the Demons would only win one more game and subsequently missed out on finals for the first time since 1953. Melbourne would not play in another finals series until 1987.

Smith coached two more seasons with Melbourne and a succession of coaches followed trying to reverse the Demons fortunes including John Beckwith (1968–70), Ian Ridley (1971–73), Bob Skilton (1974–77) and Dennis Jones (1978). Melbourne languished near the bottom of the ladder throughout the late 1960s and 1970s, including three wooden spoons in 1969, 1974 and 1978. Despite possessing gifted players including Robert Flower and Greg Wells, the introduction of country zoning and poor management hampered the club's fortunes. Melbourne tried to supplement its list by recruiting older players from successful teams including Carl Diterich who played in two separate engagements wth the Demons, the first between 1973 and 1975 and then serving as captain-coach in 1979 and 1980.

Melbourne's best start to a season was in 1971 when the club was at the top of the ladder after the first round and maintained that position until it lost to Collingwood in round 6. Melbourne was still in second place at the start of the second half of the season but a dramatic slump had them dropping to fifth position five weeks later. They finished with only two more wins and a draw.

In 1976, Melbourne missed what looked to be an almost certain finals appearance. In the final round, the Demons only needed to beat bottom side Collingwood, and for Footscray to lose to the top side Carlton. The Demons beat Collingwood at Victoria Park but an unexpected drawn match between Footscray and Carlton saw the Bulldogs edge out the Demons for the finals. Melbourne would then fall back into the bottom quarter of the ladder the following season, and in 1979 they suffered the worst defeat in VFL/AFL history, losing to Fitzroy by 190 points in round 17,[21] although they would beat Essendon the following week.

 
Melbourne's 1980s shield logo

In an effort to attract more members and to improve the club's finances the club legally separated from the MCC, becoming a public company. In 1981, under the chairmanship of Sir Billy Snedden, and with a public campaign backed by radio broadcaster Derryn Hinch, Ron Barassi returned to Melbourne as coach and immediately appointed Robert Flower as captain. When he left the Demons in 1965 it was felt Barassi would eventually return and his arrival caused much excitement and an expectation of immediate success. Barassi set about implementing a 5 year plan for the Demons to win a Premiership, however the Demons finished 1981 with the wooden spoon after winning only one game. Recruits Brian Wilson from Footscray and Peter Moore from Collingwood would win the club's 4th and 5th Brownlow Medals in 1982 and 1984. However despite sound recruiting, Barassi was unable to take the Demons to an elusive finals series and John Northey took up the coaching position in 1986.

1987–2006: Rollercoaster years

Melbourne would finally make the finals in 1987 in dramatic fashion needing to beat Footscray at the Western Oval and requiring Geelong to lose to Hawthorn. The Demons beat the Bulldogs by two goals with the Hawks beating the Cats by three points in the dying seconds of the game. Both matches took place at the same time, with the Melbourne fans cheering towards the end of the game when news came through of the Hawks win. Melbourne cruised into the Preliminary Final defeating North Melbourne by 118 points and Sydney by 76 points. In Robert Flower's last game, the Demons lead the Hawks by 4 points at the final siren, though Hawthorn's Gary Buckenara had a free kick 55 metres out. But Melbourne Irish recruit Jim Stynes ran across the mark and incurred a 15-metre penalty, bringing Buckenara close enough to kick the winning goal after the siren. The Demons would try to exact revenge on the Hawks in the 1988 Grand Final but were trounced by 96 points.

From 1987 to 1991, Melbourne had five positive win–loss differentials in successive seasons which the club had not been able to achieve since the 1950s. Thereafter things went downhill for Northey, although Jim Stynes won the Brownlow in 1991. In 1992, the club finished 11th, and Northey was replaced by Neil Balme as coach. Balme coached Melbourne into the finals in 1994, but a last game loss to Brisbane saw them drop out of the top-eight in 1995, and the club lingered at or near the bottom of the ladder for most of the 1996 season.

By 1996, the club was also in dire financial straits. The club's board lead by past club champion Ian Ridley as president decided on the desperate step of a merger with Hawthorn. In the ensuing weeks, a passionate debate was fought between pro and anti-merger supporters. In the first few days of this debate, lifelong supporters Mark and Anthony Jenkins met with coterie member George Zagon to form the Demon Alternative – an anti-merger group that was to significantly impact on the plans of the incumbent board. Former player and politician Brian Dixon and Rabbi Joseph Gutnick became the prominent leaders of the Demon Alternative group. The group quickly organised itself into a credible option for Melbourne supporters; however given the support of the AFL and other factors, when the merger issue was put to a vote, a majority of Melbourne members supported the board. In a meeting on the opposite side of town, Hawthorn members rejected their board's proposal and eventually the merger was defeated.

Gutnick and Mark Jenkins were co-opted onto the club's board in the aftermath with Gutnick later being voted in as President. He put $3 million of his own money into the club, and sacked Balme as coach midway through the 1997 season. In 1998, under new coach Neale Daniher, the club spent most of the season in the top eight and beat the eventual premiers Adelaide in the Qualifying Final. Melbourne also eliminated St Kilda, but lost to North Melbourne in the Preliminary Final. In 1999 Melbourne finished in the bottom three.

In an exciting finish to the 2000 season, Melbourne stormed its way into the Grand Final, but were convincingly beaten by ladder leaders Essendon. Melbourne missed out on finals in 2001 finishing 11th, but would finish sixth in 2002 to eventually lose its Semi Final to Adelaide at the MCG in a controversial ‘away’ game, only played in Melbourne due to the AFL’s contractual obligations with the MCG. Captain David Neitz would play his best season winning the Best and Fairest award and winning the club's first Coleman Medal as the Leagues leading goalscorer kicking 75 goals. Gutnick was replaced by Gabriel Szondy as President at the end of the year winning 65% of the members' vote.

In 2003, Melbourne plunged into new on and off-field crises, winning only five games for the year and posting a $1 million loss. President resigned and it seemed that Daniher's tenure as coach was under threat. Melbourne played finals again in 2004. In a seesawing Elimination Final, the Demons lost to Essendon by less than a goal. During the 2004 post-season, Melbourne player Troy Broadbridge was killed in the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami, when he was swept off Phi Phi island in Thailand. His body was found on 3 January 2005, and brought home. A funeral was held on 20 January 2005 in recognition to the No. 20 guernsey he wore during his playing days. During the 2005 off-season, the whole team travelled to the island in which Broadbridge was killed to build a new school for those struck by the tsunami. The No.20 jumper was then rested for two years.

Melbourne finished the 2005 season in seventh position but lost the elimination final to Geelong by 55 points. In 2006, after a slow start, Melbourne again finished the season in seventh position. After defeating St Kilda in the second Elimination Final by 18 points the season ended the following week when Fremantle beat the Demons by 28 points. Daniher had become the club's the second longest-serving coach whilst Neitz became Melbourne's all-time leading goal-kicker on 19 May, surpassing Norm Smith's previous record of 546 goals. Two weeks later, he broke Robert Flower's long standing record of 272 games, making him the longest serving Demon in history.

2007–2020: Years of struggle

At the start of the 2007 AFL season, Melbourne were thought by many pundits to be contenders for the Premiership, but injuries to key players across the team resulted in the Demons losing its opening nine matches. Daniher resigned as coach mid-season with Mark Riley appointed as caretaker coach. Late in the season, David Neitz became the first Melbourne player to play 300 games.

 
David Neitz retired as the club's games and goals record holder, along with being the longest serving captain

Dean Bailey was appointed coach for the 2008 season, however Melbourne lost their first six matches, before breaking through with a record comeback win in round seven against Fremantle. Melbourne finished the season poorly finishing last on the ladder, taking out its first Wooden Spoon since 1997.

Off field, the club remained in turmoil. In its 150th anniversary year club CEO Steve Harris resigned and was replaced by former Wimbledon tennis champion Paul McNamee in early 2008.[22] Club President Paul Gardner also resigned mid-season making way for former club champion Jim Stynes who inherited a $4.5 million debt.[23] Stynes immediately got to work and was instrumental in Melbourne’s ‘Debt Demolition’ campaign held in a Kensington warehouse on August 5. More than $1.3 million was raised on the night, with more than $3 million pledged to the cause.[24] The Stynes' board sacked McNamee after just four months following criticism of him holidaying in Wimbledon to compete in a legends match.[25] new club CEO Cameron Schwab declared that it required urgent AFL assistance to continue, requesting additional funding to its special annual distribution. In December, a fallout in negotiations between the Melbourne Cricket Club resulted in the MCC not committing an expected $2 million to the club and Schwab declared that the club's immediate future was in doubt.[26] This doubt was quickly put to bed when the AFL and MCC finalised negotiations. The AFL committed $1 million to the club in 2009, with the MCC matching the AFL contribution.[27]

Melbourne endured another poor season in 2009, winning just four matches to claim back-to-back Wooden Spoons. The year was made worse in July when Jim Stynes revealed he was fighting cancer. He temporarily stood down, with vice-chairman Don McLardy stepping up in his absence. In 2010 the club's on-field fortunes lifted, as they finished the season 12th on the ladder.

The club's 2011 season took a dramatic turn when the Demons suffered its second greatest loss in League history, going down to Geelong at Kardinia Park in round 19 by 186 points. Bailey was immediately sacked as coach with former club captain Todd Viney coaching the remaining games to finish 13th on the ladder. In August the club announced that its goal of wiping out the club's debt had finally been achieved[28] and new coach Mark Neeld was announced in September.[29]

In 2012 Jim Stynes retired as president, with vice-president Don McLardy stepping up to take the reins. Tragically, on March 20, Stynes’ long fight with cancer came to an end. He was given a state funeral, given his remarkable legacy on and off the field. The AFL investigated Melbourne’s 2009 season in August, following comments made by former Demon and Carlton player, Brock McLean, that the club had not been trying to win.[30] See: Melbourne Football Club tanking scandal

In 2013, Melbourne managed just one win from its first 11 games and Neeld was sacked as coach in Round 17 with assistant coach Neil Craig being appointed caretaker. This was precipitated by the departures of CEO Schwab and President McLardy. In September the club announced Sydney premiership coach Paul Roos signed a two-year deal to coach the Demons, with the option of a third year.

Paul Roos' first year in his tenure as the Demons' coach saw an improvement from their 2013 season, with the Demons doubling their win tally. Under Roos, the club continued to steadily improve winning 7 games in 2015 and key forward Jesse Hogan won Melbourne's second AFL Rising Star award. Roos left Melbourne after another improved season in 2016 with assistant coach Simon Goodwin taking over in a planned succession.

Melbourne finished the 2017 season in ninth place with a win–loss record of 12–10, missing out on eighth spot to West Coast by 0.5%.

Melbourne made history in 2017, competing as one of the eight foundation clubs in the inaugural AFL Women's competition. Led by captain Daisy Pearce and coach Mick Stinear, Melbourne took on the Brisbane Lions in the first game of the new league at Casey Fields.

At the end of the 2018 season Melbourne finished in fifth place on the ladder reaching the finals series for the first time since 2006. The Demons advanced to an eventual Preliminary final defeat to West Coast after defeating Geelong and Hawthorn. Melbourne's success could not be maintained in 2019 with the Demons finishing 17th on the ladder. In the shortened 2020 season interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, Melbourne would finish ninth on the Ladder winning nine and losing eight games.

2021: Premiership success after 57 years

 
Demons fans celebrate at Forrest Place in Perth following Melbourne’s 2021 premiership win the previous day over the Western Bulldogs at Optus Stadium

Melbourne's victory over North Melbourne in Round 7 of the 2021 season put them on the top of the ladder for the first time since the third round of 2005. They won their first nine matches of a season for the first time since 1956. Melbourne's win over West Coast in Round 21 put them at the top of the ladder again and secured their first double chance in a finals series since the 2000 season. Their next win against Adelaide equalled their most wins in a season from 1956. With captain Max Gawn kicking a goal after the siren in the Round 23 match against Geelong, Melbourne finished the season as minor premiers for the first time since 1964. After defeating Brisbane in a qualifying final at the Adelaide Oval and Geelong in a preliminary final at Optus Stadium, the Demons reached their first grand final since 2000.[31] On 25 September, Melbourne won its 13th VFL/AFL premiership, defeating the Western Bulldogs by 74 points in the grand final at Optus Stadium in Perth; it was their first premiership since their 1964 victory against Collingwood. Christian Petracca was unanimously judged as best on the ground, winning the club's first Norm Smith Medal.[32]

2021 AFL Grand Final G B Total
  Melbourne 21 14 140
  Western Bulldogs 10 6 66
Venue: Perth Stadium Crowd: 61,118[33]

2022-present

Melbourne’s premiership defence began with 10 straight victories, increasing their streak from last year to 17, before suffering three losses on the bounce to fellow finalists Fremantle, Sydney and Collingwood. The Demons’ form in the second half of the 2022 season was inconsistent, but the reigning premiers would emphatically secure a spot in the top four after a comfortable 58-point victory over Brisbane in the final round. The Demons finished second with a win–loss record of 16 wins and six losses, but would come undone in the finals, bowing out in straight sets after losing to Sydney and Brisbane in the qualifying and semi final respectively.

Club symbols

Colours

In one of the first practice matches between Melbourne teammates in 1859, both red and blue were worn and these colours quickly became associated with the Melbourne Football Club, although they were not used as part of the team's uniform.

In 1872, club member Larry Bell brought some red stockings back from England which were teemed with blue knickerbockers and jerseys and red caps. It is at this time that the team became known as the 'Redlegs'. Bell also brought back with him blue stockings which were reputedly given to the Carlton Football Club.[15]

Uniform

In the early days of Australian football, players would wear whatever sporting clothing they had. As most of its players were members of the Melbourne Cricket Club, it quickly became the trend for Melbourne players to wear predominantly white clothes, which gave rise to the team being called the 'Invincible Whites'. For a brief period in 1861 and 1862, the club adopted magenta flannel shirts, but these were soon abandoned.

From 1872, a more standardised uniform was adopted, although it remained common for footballers to wear a mismatch of uniforms. Most footballers had dispensed with wearing cricket whites and were now choosing to wear woollen navy guernseys which were more suitable for winter play. The Melbourne team distinguished itself with red socks and a red cap. A canvas lace up guernsey was introduced in 1884 which featured a red leather strip down the middle and was worn by players up until 1915. In 1906, some players wore a navy woollen guernsey with a small red yoke around the neck. When Melbourne re-entered the competition for the 1919 season, a standardised uniform was used with a red V on a navy jumper. In 1925, the V was made smaller and raised to the collar with a red horizontal band added to the waist.[15]

The current club jumper of a red V shaped yoke on a navy background was first adopted in 1935, and apart from very slight variations over the years, and a period in which royal blue was used between 1975 and 1986 due to the introduction of colour television, the jumper has remained the same.

The Melbourne clash strip, new in 2018, consists of a retro-inspired home strip of royal blue with a red yoke, including white shorts as worn between 1975 and 1986. The alternate away strip is the same as the home strip, with the difference being the back entirely in red to allow the club to wear a non-white alternate strip.

New Balance have manufactured Melbourne's on- and off-field apparel since 2011.[34]

Uniform evolution

Throughout its history, Melbourne has had different guernsey designs, as follows:[35]

 
 
 
 
 
1858–61 & 1863–71
 
 
 
 
 
1861–62
 
 
 
 
1872–83
 
 
 
 
1884–1915
 
 
 
 
1905–15
 
 
 
 
1919–24
 
 
 
 
1925–34
 
 
 
 
1935–74
 
 
 
 
 
1975–86
 
 
 
 
 
1987–present

Mascot

In 1933, Melbourne was beginning to rebuild its side and abandoned the name 'Fuchsias' for a more ferocious title—the 'Demons'. This was inspired by then coach Frank "Checker" Hughes reportedly saying to the players in a game to 'lift up your heads and play like demons!'.[15]

 
Ronald Deeman – Melbourne Football Club's mascot, pictured at Melbourne's home ground, the MCG.
 
Checker and Daisy in February 2017

Over the years, the club has used various iterations of demons as club mascots. This includes Ronald Deeman from the AFL Mascot Manor franchise.[36]

The current club mascots are Chuck, Checker, and Cheeky. Chuck is named after legendary coach Frank "Checker" Hughes; Daisy is named after the inaugural captain of the women's team, Daisy Pearce;[37] and Flash is named after the 2009 Keith "Bluey" Truscott Medallist, Aaron Davey.[38]

Song

The official Melbourne Football Club song is called "It's a Grand Old Flag" (sung to the tune of George M. Cohan's 1906 "You're a Grand Old Flag"). The song was first adopted in by the club 1912. The Demons primarily repeat the first verse of the song.

It's a grand old flag, it’s a high-flying flag,

It’s the emblem for me and for you;

It’s the emblem of the team we love,

The team of the Red and the Blue.

Every heart beats true for the Red and the Blue,

And we sing this song to you:

Should old acquaintance be forgot,

Keep your eye on the Red and the Blue.

A second verse was reputedly written by club champion Keith "Bluey" Truscott in 1940, referencing the club's 1939 and 1926 VFL premiership titles. The club resurrected the original second verse for the 2011 season.[39]

Oh, the team played fine in the year Thirty-nine,

We’re the Demons that no one can lick;

And you’ll find us there at the final bell,

With the spirit of Twenty-six.

Every heart beats true, for the Red and the Blue,

And we sing this song to you:

Should old acquaintance be forgot,

Keep your eye on the Red and the Blue.

Sponsorship

Year Kit Manufacturer Major Sponsor Shorts Sponsor Bottom Back Sponsor Top Back Sponsor
1978–83 - Mayne Nickless - - -
1984 Hertz
1985–91 Drake International
1992 Snowy Mountain
1993 Pioneer Homes
1994 Tooheys Blue Demons Blue Tooheys
1995–97 Tooheys Metway Bank
1998 Canterbury LG Tooheys Victoria LG Electronics
1999 Hahn
2000 Fila
2001–02 Tooheys New
2003 Asics Subway
2004 iPrimus Primus Telecom
2005–06 Primus Telecom Red Energy
2007 The Age
2008 Reebok
2009 Hankook Kaspersky Lab
2010 Volvo
2011 New Balance Metro Solar
2012 Webjet Opel
2013 -
2014–16 AHG NT AHG
2017 IG iSelect
2018 Zurich
2019 Johnnie Walker Jaguar Cars
2020 Hertz Zurich
2021- Beyond Bank Australia

Home and training grounds

Melbourne's home ground has been the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG) since 1889. From that time to 1980, the team was part of the Melbourne Cricket Club's sporting sections. The MCC operates and partially owns the MCG. The two clubs severed ties in 1980, though restored the relationship in 2009.[40][41] The club trained on the MCG until 1985, at which point they shifted to the Junction Oval in St Kilda.[42][43] In 2009, the Demons first moved their training facilities from the Junction Oval to Casey Fields.[44][45] Currently, the Demons' football offices and indoor training facilities are based at AAMI Park, where they moved in late 2010, and its administrative offices located within the MCG.[46] The club trains on the adjacent Gosch's Paddock public oval. In August 2021, The club announced that The oval will be upgraded and redeveloped in the 2021/22 off-season to increase the dimensions to better match the measurements of the MCG and Docklands Stadium.[47][48][49] Redevelopment of Goschs Paddock oval commenced on 5 December 2021.[50] Given AAMI Park is co-tenanted with three other professional sporting clubs, Melbourne have sought to move to a dedicated club-specific facility nearby.[51] As of August 2021, the club was reported to be considering moving all its football and administrative offices, and indoor training facilities, to the land where Car Park E next to AAMI Park is located.[46] Melbourne also still maintains a presence at Casey Fields in Cranbourne East, the home ground of its AFLW team and VFL/VFLW affiliate the Casey Demons. It based its AFL training program at the venue for the duration of the 2021 season, which was interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic.[52]

Membership base and supporters

Melbourne has improved their membership and attendances steadily since the failed Hawthorn merger in 1996, building a membership base of over 30,000 since 2009. The membership record of 36,937 was set in 2011 before it was broken in April 2016 to finish with 39,211 for the 2016 season, this record was broken the next year in April 2017. In May 2017, Melbourne signed up 40,000 members for the first time. In May 2019, Melbourne signed up 50,000 members for the first time. A 2000 Roy Morgan AFL survey suggested that Melbourne supporters had the highest household income.[53]

Year Members Finishing position
1984 6,297 9th
1985 5,801 11th
1986 4,511 11th
1987 3,122 3rd
1988 10,078 2nd
1989 8,184 4th
1990 10,111 4th
1991 10,153 4th
1992 8,681 11th
1993 10,097 10th
1994 10,648 4th
1995 9,544 9th
1996 12,964 14th
1997 15,350 16th
1998 17,870 4th
1999 19,713 14th
2000 18,227 2nd
2001 22,940 11th
2002 20,152 6th
2003 20,844 14th
2004 25,252 7th
2005 24,220 8th
2006 24,698 5th
2007 28,077 14th
2008 29,619 16th
2009 31,506 16th
2010 33,358 12th
2011 36,937 13th
2012 35,345 16th
2013 33,177 17th
2014 35,911 17th
2015 35,953 13th
2016 39,211 11th
2017 42,233 9th
2018 44,279 4th
2019 52,421 17th
2020 40,571 9th
2021 53,188 1st
2022 66,484 5th

Notable supporters

Club honours

Club achievements

Premierships
Competition Level Wins Years Won
Australian Football League Seniors 13 1900, 1926, 1939, 1940, 1941, 1948, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1959, 1960, 1964, 2021
Reserves (1919–1999) 12 1931, 1932, 1933, 1934, 1935, 1939, 1949, 1956, 1969, 1970, 1984, 1993
Under 19s (1946–1991) 6 1947, 1953, 1964, 1971, 1981, 1983
Victorian Premiership Seniors (1870–1876) 3 1870, 1872, 1876
Other titles and honours
McClelland Trophy Seniors 5 1955, 1956, 1958, 1990, 2021
AFLX Tournament Seniors 1 2018
VFL/AFL pre-season competition Seniors 1 1989
VFL Night Series Seniors 2 1971, 1987
Lightning Premiership Seniors 1 1952
Finishing positions
Australian Football League Minor premiership 10 1939, 1940, 1955, 1956, 1957, 1958, 1959, 1960, 1964, 2021
Grand Finalist 5 1946, 1954, 1958, 1988, 2000
Wooden spoons 12 1905, 1906, 1919, 1923, 1951, 1969, 1974, 1978, 1981, 1997, 2008, 2009

Melbourne Team of the Century

The Melbourne Football Club Team of the Century was announced on 24 June 2000 at Crown Casino. The selectors were Percy Beames (former player and journalist), Lynda Carroll (club historian), Bill Guest (MFC Director), Greg Hobbs (journalist), John Mitchell (former MFC and MCC President), Linda Pearce (journalist), Dudley Phillips (supporter), Stephen Phillips (media consultant) and Mike Sheahan (journalist), with CEO John Anderson as non-voting chairman.[58]

Stan Alves, Ian Ridley, Bob Johnson and Greg Wells were all named as emergencies.

Hall of Fame

The Hall of Fame was introduced in 2001 with Norm Smith inducted directly as a legend. The Hall of Fame consists of five legends and forty-four inductees.

Melbourne Football Club
Hall of Fame
Legends Inductees
Players listed in bold are inductees in the Australian Football Hall of Fame.
Players listed in bold and italics are legends in the Australian Football Hall of Fame.


"150 Heroes"

Melbourne FC announced its "150 Heroes" to celebrate its 150th anniversary at Crown Casino on 7 June 2008. Each player, or their closest relative, was presented with an official 150 heroes medallion. The criteria for inclusion was games played (minimum of 100), best-and-fairest awards, premierships, Brownlow Medals, contribution to the club and state representation. Those who died in the war were judged based on their achievements before their death.

The heroes named were:

Jim Abernethy, Frank Adams, Bill Allen, Stan Alves, Syd Anderson, Tony Anderson, Lance Arnold, Ron Baggott, Garry Baker, Harold Ball, Ron Barassi, Percy Beames, John Beckwith, George Bickford, Ray Biffin, Barry Bourke, Harry Brereton, Cameron Bruce, Keith Carroll, Geoff Case, Albert Chadwick, Noel Clarke, Geoff Collins, Jack Collins, Chris Connolly, Bob Corbett, Denis Cordner, Don Cordner, Ted Cordner, Vin Coutie, Harry Coy, Jim Davidson, Frank Davis, Ross Dillon, Carl Ditterich, Brian Dixon, Len Dockett, Adrian Dullard, Hugh Dunbar, Richie Emselle, Fred Fanning, Jeff Farmer, Matthew Febey, Steven Febey, Dick Fenton-Smith, Rowley Fischer, Robert Flower, Laurie Fowler, Maurie Gibb, Peter Giles, Terry Gleeson, Brad Green, Rod Grinter, George Haines, Gary Hardeman, Henry Harrison, Gerard Healy, Greg Healy, Dick Hingston, Paul Hopgood, Danny Hughes, Anthony Ingerson, Eddie Jackson, Alan Johnson, Bob Johnson, Tassie Johnson, Trevor Johnson, Travis Johnstone, Gordon Jones, Les Jones, Bryan Kenneally, Allan La Fontaine, Clyde Laidlaw, Frank Langley, Jack Leith, Andrew Leoncelli, Charlie Lilley, Wally Lock, Harry Long, John Lord, Andy Lovell, Brett Lovett, Glenn Lovett, Garry Lyon, Hassa Mann, George Margitich, Peter Marquis, Bernie Massey, Anthony McDonald, James McDonald, Fred McGinis, Shane McGrath, Bob McKenzie, Col McLean, Ian McLean, Noel McMahen, Ken Melville, Laurie Mithen, Peter Moore, Jack Mueller, David Neitz, Stephen Newport, Jack O'Keefe, Andrew Obst, Gordon Ogden, Greg Parke, Joe Pearce, Jack Purse, Ian Ridley, Guy Rigoni, Frank Roberts, Russell Robertson, Alby Rodda, Brian Roet, Peter Rohde, Alan Rowarth, David Schwarz, Norm Smith, Steven Smith, Earl Spalding, Stuart Spencer, Charlie Streeter, Steven Stretch, Jim Stynes, Tony Sullivan, Dick Taylor, Ted Thomas, Ian Thorogood, Stephen Tingay, John Townsend, Keith Truscott, Geoff Tunbridge, Bill Tymms, Barrie Vagg, Francis Vine, Todd Viney, Ivor Warne-Smith, Ray Wartman, Athol Webb, Greg Wells, Jeff White, Sean Wight, Don Williams, Brian Wilson, Stan Wittman, Shane Woewodin, Graeme Yeats, Charlie Young, Adem Yze

Match records

  • Highest score: 182 points[59]
    Round 21, 1986 (MCG) – Melbourne 28.14 (182) vs North Melbourne 14.13 (97)
    Round 5, 1991 (MCG) – Melbourne 28.14 (182) vs North Melbourne 17.10 (112)
  • Lowest score: 2 points[59]
    Round 16, 1899 (Brunswick Street Oval) – Melbourne 0.2 (2) vs Fitzroy 5.10 (40)
  • Highest score conceded: 238 points[59]
    Round 17, 1979 (Waverley Park) – Melbourne 6.12 (48) vs Fitzroy 36.22 (238)
  • Lowest score conceded: 8 points[59]
    Round 7, 1903 (MCG) – Melbourne 4.8 (32) vs Carlton 1.2 (8)
  • Biggest winning margin: 141 points[59]
    Round 9, 1926 (MCG) – Melbourne 21.28 (154) vs Hawthorn 1.7 (13)
  • Biggest losing margin: 190 points[59]
    Round 17, 1979 (Waverley Park) – Melbourne 6.12 (48) vs Fitzroy 36.22 (238)
  • Highest losing score: 151 points[59]
    Round 10, 1940 (MCG) – Melbourne 22.19 (151) vs Essendon 24.10 (154)
  • Lowest winning score: 28 points[59]
    Round 9, 1908 (MCG) 1897 – Melbourne 4.4 (28) vs Fitzroy 3.7 (25)
    Round 15, 1909 (MCG) – Melbourne 4.4 (28) vs University 2.15 (27)
  • Longest winning streak: 19 games[60]
    Round 15, 1955 vs North Melbourne (MCG) to round 13, 1956 vs Carlton (MCG)
  • Longest losing streak: 20 games[60]
    Round 4, 1981 vs St Kilda (MCG) to round 1, 1982 vs Sydney (SCG)
  • Record attendance (home and away game): 99,346[61]
    Round 10, 1958 (MCG) vs Collingwood
  • Record attendance (finals match): 115,802[61]
    Grand Final, 1956 (MCG) vs Collingwood
  • Most goals in a match by an individual: 18 goals[62]
    Fred Fanning – round 19, 1947 (Junction Oval) vs St Kilda
  • Most disposals in a match by an individual, since 1965: 48 disposals[63]
    Greg Wells – round 13, 1980 (MCG) vs Fitzroy

Current squad

Senior list Rookie list Coaching staff
  • 28 Will Verrall
  • 34 Deakyn Smith
  • 38 Oliver Sestan
  • 41 Judd McVee
  • 42 Daniel Turner
  • 43 Kyah Farris-White (B)
  • 45 Andy Moniz-Wakefield (B)

Head coach

Assistant coaches


Legend:
  • (c) Captain(s)
  • (vc) Vice captain(s)
  • (B) Category B rookie
  • italics - Inactive player list
  •   Long-term injury
  • (ret.) Retired

Updated: 11 December 2022
Source(s): Playing list, Coaching staff

Honour board

The honour board is listed from the first VFL/AFL season and includes the following individual awards:

  • Keith 'Bluey' Truscott Medal – awarded to the Melbourne Football Club's best and fairest player. Named after Keith Truscott who died in World War II.
  • Leading goalkicker award – awarded to the player who kicks the most goals during the season.
  • Harold Ball Memorial Trophy – awarded to the best first-year player between 1933 and 2011, and to the best young player from 2012 onward. Named in honour of Harold Ball who died in World War II and won the award in 1939.

Legend:
 ^  Premiers,  *  Grand finalist,  †  Finals,  ‡  Wooden spoon
Bold italics: competition leading goal kicker

Season Position President Secretary/general
manager/CEO
Coach Captain(s) Best and fairest Leading goalkicker (total) Harold Ball Memorial Trophy2
1897 4th† H. C. A. Harrison R. C. McLeod Ned Sutton Jack Leith (22)
1898 6th H. C. A. Harrison Amos Norcott Ned Sutton Charlie Young (21)
1899 6th H. C. A. Harrison Amos Norcott Eddie Sholl Jack Leith (21)
1900 1st^ H. C. A. Harrison Amos Norcott Dick Wardill Tommy Ryan (24)
1901 5th H. C. A. Harrison Amos Norcott William C. McClelland Frank Langley (17)
1902 4th† H. C. A. Harrison Amos Norcott William C. McClelland Jack Leith (26)
1903 7th H. C. A. Harrison Amos Norcott William C. McClelland Vince Coutie (19)
1904 6th H. C. A. Harrison Amos Norcott William C. McClelland Vince Coutie (39)
1905 8th‡ H. C. A. Harrison Amos Norcott Frank Langley Harry Cordner (16)
1906 8th‡ H. C. A. Harrison Amos Norcott Arthur Sowden Basil Onyons (16)
1907 7th T. F. Morkham George Beachcroft Alex Hall Vince Coutie Jack Leith (21)
1908 8th T. F. Morkham Amos Norcott Alex Hall Hugh Purse Vince Coutie (37)
1909 5th T. F. Morkham J. A. Harper Alex Hall Bernie Nolan Harry Brereton (34)
1910 9th T. F. Morkham G. W. Lamb Eddie Drohan Vince Coutie Stan Fairbairn (24)
1911 7th A. A. Aitken G. W. Lamb Alex Hall Vince Coutie Harry Brereton (46)
1912 6th William C. McClelland Andrew Manzie Alex Hall Alf George Harry Brereton (56)
1913 9th William C. McClelland Andrew Manzie Alex Hall Alf George Mick Maguire (13)
1914 9th William C. McClelland Andrew Manzie Len Incigneri[64][65] Len Incigneri Arthur Best (30)
1915 4th† William C. McClelland Andrew Manzie Jack McKenzie Jack McKenzie Roy Park (35)
1916–19183 William C. McClelland Andrew Manzie George Heinz George Heinz
1919 9th‡ William C. McClelland Andrew Manzie George Heinz George Heinz George Heinz (15)
1920 8th William C. McClelland Andrew Manzie Gerald Brosnan George Heinz Harry Harker (23)
1921 6th William C. McClelland Andrew Manzie Percy Wilson Percy Wilson Harry Harker (47)
1922 6th William C. McClelland Andrew Manzie Percy Wilson Percy Wilson Harry Harker (47)
1923 9th‡ William C. McClelland Andrew Manzie Percy Wilson Percy Wilson Percy Tulloh (31)
1924 8th William C. McClelland Andrew Manzie Gordon Rattray Albert Chadwick Percy Tulloh (24)
1925 3rd† William C. McClelland Andrew Manzie Albert Chadwick Albert Chadwick Harry Davie (56)
1926 1st^ William C. McClelland Andrew Manzie Albert Chadwick Albert Chadwick Harry Moyes (55)
1927 5th Vernon Ransford Andrew Manzie Albert Chadwick Albert Chadwick Harry Davie (40)
1928 3rd† Vernon Ransford Andrew Manzie Ivor Warne-Smith Ivor Warne-Smith Bob Johnson (55)
1929 5th Joe Blair Andrew Manzie Ivor Warne-Smith Ivor Warne-Smith Dick Taylor (30)
1930 5th Joe Blair Andrew Manzie Ivor Warne-Smith Ivor Warne-Smith George Margitich (73)
1931 8th Joe Blair Andrew Manzie Ivor Warne-Smith Ivor Warne-Smith George Margitich (66)
1932 9th Joe Blair Charlie Streeter Ivor Warne-Smith Francis Vine George Margitich (60)
1933 10th Joe Blair Percy Page Frank 'Checker' Hughes Francis Vine Bob Johnson (62) Les Jones
1934 6th Joe Blair Percy Page Frank 'Checker' Hughes Colin Niven Jack Mueller (52) Allan La Fontaine
1935 6th Joe Blair Percy Page Frank 'Checker' Hughes Colin Niven Allan La Fontaine Maurie Gibb (59) Ray Wartman
1936 3rd† Joe Blair Percy Page Frank 'Checker' Hughes Allan La Fontaine Allan La Fontaine Eric Glass (56)
1937 3rd† Joe Blair Percy Page Frank 'Checker' Hughes Allan La Fontaine Jack Mueller Ron Baggott (51)
1938 5th Joe Blair Percy Page Frank 'Checker' Hughes Allan La Fontaine Norm Smith Norm Smith (80) Dick Hingston
1939 1st^ Joe Blair Percy Page Frank 'Checker' Hughes Allan La Fontaine Jack Mueller Norm Smith (54) Harold Ball
1940 1st^ Joe Blair Percy Page Frank 'Checker' Hughes Allan La Fontaine Ron Baggott Norm Smith (86) Col McLean
1941 1st^ Joe Blair Percy Page Frank 'Checker' Hughes Allan La Fontaine Allan La Fontaine Norm Smith (89) Ted Cordner
1942 8th Joe Blair Jack Chessell Percy Beames Percy Beames Allan La Fontaine Fred Fanning (37)
1943 7th Joe Blair Jack Chessell Percy Beames Percy Beames Don Cordner Fred Fanning (62)
1944 8th Joe Blair Jack Chessell Percy Beames Percy Beames Norm Smith Fred Fanning (87) Es Downey
1945 9th Joe Blair Jack Chessell Frank 'Checker' Hughes Norm Smith Fred Fanning Fred Fanning (67)
1946 2nd* Joe Blair Jack Chessell Frank 'Checker' Hughes Norm Smith Jack Mueller Jack Mueller (58) Len Dockett
1947 6th William Flintoft Jack Chessell Frank 'Checker' Hughes Norm Smith Wally Lock Fred Fanning (97) Eddie Jackson
1948 1st^ William Flintoft Alex Gray Frank 'Checker' Hughes Don Cordner Alby Rodda Lance Arnold (41)
1949 5th William Flintoft Alex Gray Allan La Fontaine Don Cordner Len Dockett Bob McKenzie (40) Mike Woods
1950 4th† Albert Chadwick A. S. Thompson Allan La Fontaine Shane McGrath Denis Cordner Denis Cordner (36)
1951 12th‡ Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Allan La Fontaine Denis Cordner Noel McMahen Bob McKenzie (40) John Beckwith
1952 6th Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Denis Cordner Geoff McGivern Noel Clarke (49)
1953 11th Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Denis Cordner Ken Melville Bob McKenzie (38) Ken Melville
1954 2nd* Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Geoff Collins Denis Cordner Noel Clarke (51) Bob Johnson
1955 1st^ Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Noel McMahen Stuart Spencer Stuart Spencer (34) Trevor Johnson
1956 1st^ Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Noel McMahen Stuart Spencer Bob Johnson (43) Jim Sandral
1957 1st^ Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith John Beckwith John Beckwith Athol Webb (56) Geoff Tunbridge
1958 2nd* Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith John Beckwith Laurie Mithen Ron Barassi (44),
Athol Webb (44)
Alan Rowarth
1959 1st^ Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith John Beckwith Laurie Mithen Ron Barassi (46) Hassa Mann
1960 1st^ Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Ron Barassi Brian Dixon Ian Ridley (38) Ray Nilsson
1961 3rd† Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Ron Barassi Ron Barassi Bob Johnson (36) Brian Roet
1962 4th† Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Ron Barassi Hassa Mann Laurie Mithen (37) John Townsend
1963 3rd† Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Ron Barassi Hassa Mann Barry Bourke (48) Barry Bourke
1964 1st^ Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Ron Barassi Ron Barassi John Townsend (35) Graeme Jacobs
1965 7th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Hassa Mann John Townsend John Townsend (34)
1966 11th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Hassa Mann Terry Leahy Barrie Vagg (20) Terry Leahy
1967 7th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Hassa Mann Hassa Mann Hassa Mann (38)
1968 8th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell John Beckwith Hassa Mann Ray Groom Hassa Mann (29) Greg Parke
1969 12th‡ Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell John Beckwith Hassa Mann John Townsend Ross Dillon (48) Paul Rowlands
1970 10th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell John Beckwith Tassie Johnson Frank Davis Ross Dillon (41) Graham Molloy
1971 7th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Ian Ridley Frank Davis Greg Wells Paul Callery (38)
1972 8th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Ian Ridley Frank Davis Stan Alves Greg Parke (63) Ross Brewer
1973 10th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Ian Ridley Stan Alves Carl Ditterich Ross Brewer (32) Robert Flower
1974 12th‡ Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Bob Skilton Stan Alves Stan Alves Ross Brewer (40) Garry Baker
1975 10th John Mitchell Jim Cardwell Bob Skilton Stan Alves Laurie Fowler Greg Wells (32) Marty Lyons
1976 6th John Mitchell Ivan Moore Bob Skilton Stan Alves Greg Wells Ray Biffin (47) Peter O'Keefe
1977 11th John Mitchell Ray Manley Bob Skilton Greg Wells Robert Flower Ross Brewer (26) Tom Flower
1978 12th‡ John Mitchell Ray Manley Dennis Jones Greg Wells Garry Baker Henry Coles (33) Peter Thorne
1979 11th Wayne Reid Ray Manley Carl Ditterich Carl Ditterich Laurie Fowler Robert Flower (33) Peter Giles
1980 9th Wayne Reid Richard Seddon Carl Ditterich Carl Ditterich Laurie Fowler Brent Crosswell (31) Stephen Bickford
1981 12th‡ Billy Snedden Richard Seddon Ron Barassi Robert Flower Steven Smith Mark Jackson (76) Mark Jackson
1982 8th Billy Snedden Richard Seddon Ron Barassi Robert Flower Steven Icke Gerard Healy (77) Adrian Battiston
1983 8th Billy Snedden Richard Seddon Ron Barassi Robert Flower Alan Johnson Robert Flower (40) Russell Richards
1984 9th Billy Snedden Richard Seddon Ron Barassi Robert Flower Gerard Healy Kelvin Templeton (51) Graeme Yeats
1985 11th Billy Snedden Ray Manley Ron Barassi Robert Flower Danny Hughes Brian Wilson (40) Rod Grinter
1986 11th Billy Snedden,6
Stuart Spencer
Ray Manley John Northey Robert Flower Greg Healy Greg Healy (35) Garry Lyon
1987 3rd† Stuart Spencer Tony King John Northey Robert Flower Steven Stretch Robert Flower (47) Steven O'Dwyer
1988 2nd* Stuart Spencer Tony King John Northey Greg Healy Steven O'Dwyer Ricky Jackson (43) Andy Lovell
1989 4th† Stuart Spencer Tony King John Northey Greg Healy Alan Johnson Darren Bennett (34) Luke Beveridge
1990 4th† Stuart Spencer Tony King John Northey Greg Healy Garry Lyon Darren Bennett (87) Rod Keogh
1991 4th† Stuart Spencer,7
Ian Ridley
Tony King John Northey Garry Lyon Jim Stynes Allen Jakovich (71) Allen Jakovich
1992 11th Ian Ridley Tony King7,
Hassa Mann
John Northey Garry Lyon Glenn Lovett Allen Jakovich (40) Chris Sullivan
1993 10th Ian Ridley Hassa Mann Neil Balme Garry Lyon Todd Viney Allen Jakovich (39) David Neitz
1994 4th† Ian Ridley Hassa Mann Neil Balme Garry Lyon Garry Lyon Garry Lyon (79) Paul Prymke
1995 9th Ian Ridley Hassa Mann Neil Balme Garry Lyon Jim Stynes Garry Lyon (77) Adem Yze
1996 14th Ian Ridley,7
Joseph Gutnick
Hassa Mann Neil Balme Garry Lyon Jim Stynes David Neitz (56) Darren O'Brien
1997 16th‡ Joseph Gutnick Hassa Mann,7
Cameron Schwab
Neil Balme,4
Greg Hutchison5
Garry Lyon Jim Stynes David Neitz (30),
Jeff Farmer (30)
Anthony McDonald
1998 4th† Joseph Gutnick Cameron Schwab Neale Daniher Todd Viney Todd Viney Jeff Farmer (47) Guy Rigoni
1999 14th Joseph Gutnick Cameron Schwab,7
John Anderson
Neale Daniher Todd Viney David Schwarz David Neitz (46) Peter Walsh
2000 2nd* Joseph Gutnick John Anderson Neale Daniher David Neitz Shane Woewodin Jeff Farmer (76) Matthew Whelan
2001 11th Joseph Gutnick,7
Gabriel Szondy
John Anderson Neale Daniher David Neitz Adem Yze Russell Robertson (42) Scott Thompson
2002 6th† Gabriel Szondy John Anderson Neale Daniher David Neitz David Neitz David Neitz (82) Steven Armstrong
2003 14th Gabriel Szondy,7
Paul Gardner
Ray Ellis Neale Daniher David Neitz Russell Robertson David Neitz (65) Ryan Ferguson
2004 7th† Paul Gardner Steve Harris Neale Daniher David Neitz Jeff White David Neitz (69) Aaron Davey
2005 8th† Paul Gardner Steve Harris Neale Daniher David Neitz Travis Johnstone Russell Robertson (73) Chris Johnson
2006 5th† Paul Gardner Steve Harris Neale Daniher David Neitz James McDonald David Neitz (68) Clint Bartram
2007 14th Paul Gardner Steve Harris Neale Daniher,6
Mark Riley5
David Neitz James McDonald Russell Robertson (42) Ricky Petterd
2008 16th‡ Paul Gardner,7
Jim Stynes
Paul McNamee4
Cameron Schwab
Dean Bailey David Neitz Cameron Bruce Brad Miller (26) Cale Morton
2009 16th‡ Jim Stynes Cameron Schwab Dean Bailey James McDonald Aaron Davey Russell Robertson (29) Liam Jurrah
2010 12th Jim Stynes Cameron Schwab Dean Bailey James McDonald Brad Green Brad Green (55) Tom Scully
2011 13th Jim Stynes Cameron Schwab Dean Bailey,4
Todd Viney5
Brad Green Brent Moloney Liam Jurrah (40) Jeremy Howe
2012 16th Jim Stynes,7
Don McLardy
Cameron Schwab Mark Neeld Jack Grimes,
Jack Trengove
Nathan Jones Mitch Clark (29) Tom McDonald
2013 17th Don McLardy,7
Glen Bartlett
Cameron Schwab,7
Peter Jackson
Mark Neeld4
Neil Craig5
Jack Grimes,
Jack Trengove
Nathan Jones Jeremy Howe (28) Jack Viney
2014 17th Glen Bartlett Peter Jackson Paul Roos Jack Grimes,
Nathan Jones
Nathan Jones Chris Dawes (20) Dom Tyson
2015 13th Glen Bartlett Peter Jackson Paul Roos Nathan Jones Bernie Vince Jesse Hogan (44) Jesse Hogan
2016 11th Glen Bartlett Peter Jackson Paul Roos Nathan Jones Jack Viney Jesse Hogan (41) Jayden Hunt
2017 9th Glen Bartlett Peter Jackson Simon Goodwin Nathan Jones
Jack Viney
Clayton Oliver Jeff Garlett (42) Clayton Oliver
2018 4th† Glen Bartlett Peter Jackson Simon Goodwin Nathan Jones
Jack Viney
Max Gawn Tom McDonald (53) Bayley Fritsch
2019 17th Glen Bartlett Gary Pert Simon Goodwin Nathan Jones
Jack Viney
Max Gawn
Clayton Oliver
Christian Petracca (22) Harrison Petty
2020 9th Glen Bartlett Gary Pert Simon Goodwin Max Gawn Christian Petracca Bayley Fritsch (22) Luke Jackson
2021 1st^ Glen Bartlett,7
Kate Roffey
Gary Pert Simon Goodwin Max Gawn Clayton Oliver Bayley Fritsch (59) Kysaiah Pickett
2022 5th Kate Roffey Gary Pert Simon Goodwin Max Gawn Clayton Oliver Bayley Fritsch (55) Jake Bowey

Individual awards

Best and Fairest

See Keith 'Bluey' Truscott Medal

Norm Smith Medal winners

Brownlow Medal winners

Leigh Matthews Trophy

VFL Leading Goalkicker Medal winners (1897–1954)

Coleman Medal winners (since 1955)

AFL Rising Star winners

Mark of the Year winners

Goal of the Year winners

All-Australian – AFL (since 1991)

VFL Team of the Year (1982–1990)

All-Australian players – Interstate Carnivals (1953–1988)

National team representatives (since 1998)

AFL Women's team

 
Melbourne captain Daisy Pearce leads her players past the men's side during round 3 of the 2017 AFL Women's season.

In June 2013, the club fielded a women's representative side known as the Chappettes against Western Bulldogs in the first AFL-sanctioned women's exhibition match, held at the MCG. The two teams competed annually over the next three years for the Hampson-Hardeman Cup.[67] In 2016, when the AFL announced plans for AFL Women's, an eight team national women's league competition, Melbourne was asked to submit an application for a licence alongside other AFL clubs. [68] The club was one of four Melbourne-based clubs to be granted a licence that year.[69]

The club's first players were marquee signings Daisy Pearce and Melissa Hickey.[70] The full list was completed later in the year with signings and selections made in the October draft period.

Oakleigh Chargers coach Mick Stinear was appointed the team's inaugural head coach in September 2016.[71]

Current squad

Senior list Rookie list Coaching staff
  • 11 Eliza West (B)
  • 31 Blaithin Mackin

Head coach

Assistant coaches

  • Jane Lange (senior assistant)
  • Dale Amos (head of midfield/technical)
  • Matt Brewer (midfield)
  • Tamara Hyett (back line)
  • Shae Sloane (forward line)
  • Jon Stinear (development/runner)

Legend:
  • (c) Captain(s)
  • (vc) Vice captain(s)
  • (B) Category B rookie
  • italics – Inactive player list
  •   Long-term injury

Updated: 11 December 2022
Source(s): Playing list, Coaching staff

Season summaries

Melbourne AFLW honour roll
Season Ladder W–L–D Finals Coach Captain(s) Best and fairest Leading goal kicker
2017 3rd 5–2–0 DNQ Mick Stinear Daisy Pearce Daisy Pearce Alyssa Mifsud (9)
2018 3rd 4–3–0 DNQ Mick Stinear Daisy Pearce Daisy Pearce (2) Tegan Cunningham (9)
2019 4th ^ 4–3–0 DNQ Mick Stinear Elise O'Dea & Shelley Scott Karen Paxman Tegan Cunningham (8)
2020 4th ^ 4–2–0 Semi-final Mick Stinear Daisy Pearce Shelley Scott Kate Hore (5)
2021 4th 7–2–0 Preliminary final Mick Stinear Daisy Pearce Tyla Hanks & Karen Paxman (2) Kate Hore (12)
2022 2nd 9-1-0 Grand final Mick Stinear Daisy Pearce Daisy Pearce (3) Tayla Harris (18)
S7 (2022) 2nd 9-1-0 Premiers Mick Stinear Daisy Pearce Kate Hore Kate Hore (17)

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

See also

Notes

1.^ The 2020 AFL season was shortened by five rounds as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.
2.^ Awarded to the best first year player (1933–2011), then to the best young player (2012–present).
3.^ In recess owing to war.
4.^ Sacked mid-season.
5.^ Caretaker coach.
6.^ Retired mid-season.
7.^ Resigned mid-season.

References

  1. ^ "Current details for ABN 27 005 686 902". ABN Lookup. Australian Business Register. November 2014. Retrieved 4 August 2020.
  2. ^ Bell's Life in Victoria, 10 July 1858
  3. ^ The Footballer An annual Record of Football in Victoria, 1875
  4. ^ 100 Years of Football, The Story of the Melbourne Football Club, 1958
  5. ^ Smith v Australian Football League [2012] ATMO 20.
  6. ^ "Melbourne Football Club becomes an MCC Sporting Section again". Melbourne Cricket Club. Retrieved 21 February 2012. ...on April 1, 2009, the Melbourne Football Club once again became a Sporting Section of the Melbourne Cricket Club...
  7. ^ "FOOTBALL". Bell's Life in Victoria and Sporting Chronicle. 14 August 1858. Retrieved 26 September 2021.
  8. ^ "A NATIVE BURIAL". Portland Guardian and Normanby General Advertiser. 4 October 1858. Retrieved 26 September 2021.
  9. ^ "MONDAY, MAY 9, 1859". Argus. 9 May 1859. Retrieved 26 September 2021.
  10. ^ "SATURDAY, MAY 14, 1859". Argus. 14 May 1859. Retrieved 26 September 2021.
  11. ^ a b "MONDAY, MAY 1[?], 1859. - The Argus (Melbourne, Vic. : 1848 - 1957) - 16 May 1859". Trove. Retrieved 26 September 2021.
  12. ^ "MONDAY, MAY 23, 1859". The Argus. Melbourne. 23 May 1859. p. 4. Retrieved 7 May 2011 – via National Library of Australia.
  13. ^ "MONDAY, JULY 11, 1859". The Argus. Melbourne. 11 July 1859. p. 4. Retrieved 7 May 2011 – via National Library of Australia.
  14. ^ "FOOTBALL.". The South Australian Advertiser (Adelaide) (National Library of Australia). 13 August 1877. p. 7. Retrieved 21 January 2015.
  15. ^ a b c d e f Carrol, Lynda (1999). The Grand Old Flag. Hardie Grant. p. 41.
  16. ^ 'Old Boy', "Football: Notes and Comments", The Argus, (Friday, 16 May 1919), p.8.
  17. ^ Wilson, Caroline (8 June 2014). "Melbourne president's plan to turn the Demons into the Yankees". The Age. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  18. ^ "Frank E 'Checker' Hughes". SAHOF.org.au. Sport Australia Hall of Fame Awards. Retrieved 26 September 2020.
  19. ^ Taylor, Percy, "Melbourne are Proud of their Great War Record", The Australasian, (Saturday, 24 June 1944), p.23.
  20. ^ https://books.slatterymedia.com/uploads/store_items/grand-finals-volume-ii-1939-1978/files/look_inside.pdf[bare URL PDF]
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  22. ^ AAP (18 March 2008). "McNamee named Melbourne CEO". AFL.com.au. Bigpond. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
  23. ^ McFarlane, Glenn (15 June 2008). "Chairman Jim Stynes drops Melbourne bombshell". Herald Sun. News Corp Australia. Retrieved 1 June 2006.
  24. ^ Stevens, Mark (6 August 2008). "$1.3m raised on Melbourne Demons' most-important night". Herald Sun. News Corp. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
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  33. ^ "Saturday night lights: Massive TV audience for Perth Grand Final". Australian Football League. 26 September 2021. Retrieved 4 October 2021.
  34. ^ "Melbourne extends New Balance partnership". melbournefc.com.au. Retrieved 12 June 2018.
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  37. ^ "Daisy the new female mascot". melbournefc.com.au. Retrieved 6 February 2017.
  38. ^ "'Flash' mascot to be unveiled". melbournefc.com.au. Retrieved 22 July 2017.
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  42. ^ Ashley Browne (7 July 1994). "$500,000 facelift for Junction Oval". The Age. Melbourne. p. 26.
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  45. ^ "Era ends: No more footy at Junction Oval". 21 July 2015. Retrieved 12 March 2022.
  46. ^ a b Tom Morris (18 August 2021). "Exclusive: Demons hatch plans to FINALLY solve eight-year problem". Fox Sports.
  47. ^ "Demons, Community To Win From Gosch's Paddock Upgrade". miragenews.com. 2 August 2021.
  48. ^ "Gosch's Paddock to undergo redevelopment". 1 August 2021. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  49. ^ "Gosch's Paddock Oval to be upgraded for Melbourne Football Club". 4 August 2021. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  50. ^ "Gosch's Paddock redevelopment commences". 5 December 2021. Retrieved 27 March 2022.
  51. ^ "Golly Gosch: Demons eye site for new home". The Age. 24 July 2019.
  52. ^ "Coronavirus protocols: Melbourne move AFL program to Casey". The Age. 2 March 2020.
  53. ^ "Essendon Bombers blitz off-field in Victoria but Sydney Swans Australia's Favourite Team".
  54. ^ a b c Beveridge, Riley (29 January 2016). "Your AFL club's most famous supporters, from Barack Obama to Cam Newton". Fox Sports. Retrieved 25 September 2021.
  55. ^ Walsh, Kay; Schedvin, Bernie. Snedden, Sir Billy Mackie (1926–1987). Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University. Retrieved 25 September 2021.
  56. ^ "Dee force is strong with this one! Skywalker's shout-out". PerthNow. The Sunday Times (Western Australia). 11 September 2021. Retrieved 25 September 2021.
  57. ^ "Nazeem Is Fired Up For The Grand Final". 10 Play. Network 10. 24 September 2021. Retrieved 25 September 2021. It's AFL Grand Final weekend and mad Demons supporter Nazeem Hussain is here to give us a completely unbiased look at the big game.
  58. ^ (4 December 2006) "Celebrating the Century" 27 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Melbourne FC. Retrieved 11 August 2010.
  59. ^ a b c d e f g h "Melbourne – Game Records". AFL Tables. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
  60. ^ a b "Streaks – Melbourne". AFL Tables. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  61. ^ a b "Melbourne Attendances". AFL Tables. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
  62. ^ "Melbourne Goalkicking Records". AFL Tables. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  63. ^ "Melbourne – Season and Game Records (1965–2015)". AFL Tables. Retrieved 4 June 2015.
  64. ^ "FOOTBALL". The Argus. Melbourne. 1 May 1914. p. 13. Retrieved 31 July 2011 – via National Library of Australia.
  65. ^ VFL Football Record, 2 May 1914 p.15
  66. ^ Connolly, Rohan (25 May 2015). "Melbourne Demons Jeremy Howe the greatest 'hanger' of them all". The Age. Fairfax Media. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
  67. ^ Twomey, Callum (16 October 2016). "First bounce for women's footy at the MCG". AFL.com.au. Bigpond. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
  68. ^ Lane, Samantha (20 April 2016). "Gold Coast latest out, but AFL awaits 16 women's team bids". The Age. Retrieved 13 November 2016.
  69. ^ Chalkley-Rhoden, Stephanie (11 July 2016). "AFL Women's league: Collingwood, Carlton among eight clubs in new national competition". ABC.com.au. Retrieved 13 November 2016.
  70. ^ Matthews, Bruce (27 July 2016). "Sixteen of the best: women's marquees named". AFL.com.au. Bigpond. Retrieved 16 October 2016.
  71. ^ Dinny Navaratnam; Bruce Matthews; Nathan Schmook; Lee Gaskin (15 September 2016). "Women's league coaches revealed: Dees name coach". AFL.com,au. Retrieved 13 November 2016.

External links

  • Official website  
  • Demon Wiki – Online Encyclopedia of the Melbourne Football Club

melbourne, football, club, this, article, about, australian, rules, football, club, association, football, soccer, club, melbourne, city, nicknamed, demons, professional, australian, rules, football, club, that, competes, australian, football, league, sport, e. This article is about the Australian rules football club For the association football soccer club see Melbourne City FC The Melbourne Football Club nicknamed the Demons is a professional Australian rules football club that competes in the Australian Football League AFL the sport s elite competition It is based in Melbourne Victoria and plays its home games at the Melbourne Cricket Ground MCG Melbourne Football ClubNamesFull nameMelbourne Football Club Limited 1 Nickname s Demons Dees NarrmFormer nickname s Redlegs Fuchsias prior to 1933 2022 seasonAfter finals5thHome and away season2ndLeading goalkickerBayley Fritsch 55 goals Club detailsFounded1858 165 years ago 1858 2 3 4 5 Colours Red Navy BlueCompetitionAFL MenAFLW WomenVFL MenVFLW WomenPresidentKate RoffeyCEOGary PertCoachAFL Simon GoodwinAFLW Mick StinearVFL Mark CorriganVFLW Peter MercouliaCaptain s AFL Max GawnAFLW Daisy PearceVFL Mitchell WhiteVFLW Samantha JohnstonPremiershipsVFL AFL 13 1900192619391940194119481955195619571959196019642021 AFLW 1 S7 2022 Reserves 12 193119321933193419351939194919561969197019841993Victorian 3 187018721876Ground s AFL Melbourne Cricket Ground 100 024 AFLW VFL VFLW Casey Fields 12 000 Training ground s AFL AFLW Melbourne Rectangular Stadium Gosch s Paddock VFL VFLW Casey FieldsUniformsHomeAwayClashOther informationOfficial websitemelbournefc com auMelbourne is the world s oldest professional club of any football code Its origins can be traced to an 1858 letter in which Tom Wills captain of the Victoria cricket team calls for the formation of a foot ball club with its own code of laws An informal Melbourne team played that winter and officially formed in May 1859 when Wills and three other members codified The Rules of the Melbourne Football Club the basis of Australian rules football The club was a dominant force in the early years of the game and a foundation member of the Victorian Football Association VFA in 1877 and the Victorian Football League VFL in 1896 now the national AFL Melbourne has won 13 VFL AFL premierships the latest in 2021 The club was a foundation team of the AFL Women s league AFLW and won its first AFLW premiership in 2022 Season 7 The football club has been a sporting section of the Melbourne Cricket Club MCC since 2009 having previously been associated with the MCC between 1889 and 1980 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 1858 Foundations 1 2 1859 1876 Establishment and early years 1 3 1877 1896 Victorian Football Association 1 4 1897 1932 Early years in the Victorian Football League 1 5 1933 1964 Dominant years 1 6 1965 1986 Decades of disappointment 1 7 1987 2006 Rollercoaster years 1 8 2007 2020 Years of struggle 1 9 2021 Premiership success after 57 years 1 10 2022 present 2 Club symbols 2 1 Colours 2 2 Uniform 2 2 1 Uniform evolution 2 3 Mascot 2 4 Song 2 5 Sponsorship 3 Home and training grounds 4 Membership base and supporters 4 1 Notable supporters 5 Club honours 5 1 Club achievements 5 2 Melbourne Team of the Century 5 3 Hall of Fame 5 4 150 Heroes 6 Match records 7 Current squad 8 Honour board 9 Individual awards 9 1 Best and Fairest 9 2 Norm Smith Medal winners 9 3 Brownlow Medal winners 9 4 Leigh Matthews Trophy 9 5 VFL Leading Goalkicker Medal winners 1897 1954 9 6 Coleman Medal winners since 1955 9 7 AFL Rising Star winners 9 8 Mark of the Year winners 9 9 Goal of the Year winners 9 10 All Australian AFL since 1991 9 11 VFL Team of the Year 1982 1990 9 12 All Australian players Interstate Carnivals 1953 1988 9 13 National team representatives since 1998 10 AFL Women s team 10 1 Current squad 10 2 Season summaries 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 14 External linksHistory Edit1858 Foundations Edit See also Origins of Australian football After promoting the formation of and captaining an 1858 incarnation of the club Tom Wills co wrote Melbourne s first laws Wills cousin H C A Harrison captained Melbourne from 1861 to 1872 and later served as club president In the winter and spring of 1858 a loosely organised football team known as Melbourne played in a series of scratch matches in the parklands outside the Melbourne Cricket Ground This team was captained by Tom Wills a prominent athlete and captain of the Victoria cricket team who on 10 July that year had a letter of his published by the Melbourne based Bell s Life in Victoria and Sporting Chronicle in which he calls for the formation of a foot ball club with a code of laws to keep cricketers fit during winter Other figures associated with this embryonic Melbourne side included Melbourne Cricket Club members Jerry Bryant William Hammersley and J B Thompson and teacher Thomas H Smith It is possible that the first game played involving the Melbourne team took place on or adjacent to the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 14 August following Bryant s call for all good kicks to take part with a subsequent match held among the Melbourne Cricket Club members on 30 August 7 On 25 September Melbourne was challenged to a match by the South Yarra Football Club featuring 26 players a side with Melbourne winning the game 8 Although the club had not yet been established as a formal entity the year 1858 has long been recognised as being the foundation year of the Melbourne Football Club and for Australian rules football 1859 1876 Establishment and early years Edit With the cricket season finished The Argus reported in early May 1859 that the membership of the Melbourne Football Club was growing owing probably to its being no longer confined to members of the Melbourne Cricket Club 9 On 14 May the club held its first match of the year in the Richmond Paddock with two sides captained by Smith and Bryant with Bryant s side kicking two goals for victory 10 11 A subsequent meeting was held to elect a Secretary Treasurer and committee of five to administer the affairs of the club and to draft its rules whilst an application to the MCC was made for use of the MCG on Wednesdays and Saturdays 11 Although most Melbourne players and officials were associated with the MCC the football club was not initially allowed to use its ground so matches were played on the fields at Yarra Park Former Parade Hotel near the MCG where in 1859 the Rules of the Melbourne Football Club were drafted On 17 and 21 May 1859 Wills Hammersley Thompson and Smith met near the MCG at the Parade Hotel owned by Bryant to draft The Rules of the Melbourne Football Club 12 The resulting ten codified rules are the laws from which Australian rules football evolved In the early years of the club football matches were conducted on a casual basis with no set fixture and teams often having to cancel engagements due to a lack of players The first mention of an interclub match played under the new code was between Melbourne and South Yarra in July 1859 with Hammersley as Melbourne s inaugural captain 13 In 1860 Melbourne played its first match against the Geelong Football Club in Geelong with the match resulting in a draw In 1861 Melbourne participated in the Caledonian Society Challenge Cup but lost the trophy to the Melbourne University Football Club The club pushed for its rules to be the accepted rules however many of the early suburban matches were played under compromised rules decided between the captains of the competing teams Melbourne playing in Yarra Park at the start of the 1874 season By 1866 several other clubs had also adopted an updated version of Melbourne s rules drafted at a meeting chaired by Wills cousin H C A Harrison Harrison was a key figure in the early years of the club he often served as captain and in later years as president Due to his popular reputation and administrative efforts he was officially named Father of Australian Football in 1908 the year of the sport s golden jubilee During the 1870s Melbourne fielded teams in the Seven Twenties and South Yarra Cup competitions 1877 1896 Victorian Football Association Edit Melbourne side of 1879 In 1877 Melbourne became a founding member of the Victorian Football Association VFA During the same year the club took part in the first interstate football match involving a South Australian side Victorian defeating the home side 1 0 14 Melbourne never won a VFA premiership although they were consistently one of the stronger teams in the competition finishing as runners up four times to Carlton in 1877 Geelong in 1878 and twice to Essendon in 1893 and 1894 In 1884 Melbourne s stand at the MCG which catered for 3 000 spectators burned down precipitating a series of financial constraints for the club With mounting debts club officials running up unauthorised accounts poor on field form and players leaving to join other clubs Melbourne s future was in serious jeopardy by 1888 It was proposed that the MCC intervene to provide assistance given the closeness of the two clubs and the fact that football matches generated significant gate revenue for the MCC At the end of the 1889 season the MFC and MCC committees met and agreed to amalgamation of the two The football club would become a section of the cricket club with the MCC handling the MFC s immediate and ongoing financial concerns Melbourne s on field prospects soon lifted finishing fourth on the ladder in 1892 and vying the Premiership in 1893 This was to be the beginning of a long and fruitful partnership that produced 12 VFL Premierships between 1900 and 1964 15 1897 1932 Early years in the Victorian Football League Edit Melbourne team that won its first VFL premiership in 1900 In 1897 Melbourne joined other VFA powerhouse clubs Essendon Collingwood Fitzroy Geelong and South Melbourne to form the breakaway Victorian Football League with Carlton and St Kilda also joining In the first season of the new competition Jack Leith was the League s leading goalscorer whilst Fred McGinis emerged as a champion player and league identity being judged Champion of the Colony for the season 15 In 1900 McGinis helped take Melbourne to its first VFL Premiership defeating Fitzroy in a Grand Final upset at the East Melbourne Cricket Ground and in 1904 Vin Coutie kicked 39 goals to be the League s leading goal scorer But despite this success including playing in the finals again in 1902 Melbourne s first decade of the 20th century was poor on field with the club taking out the Wooden Spoon in 1905 and 1906 In the 1910s the team had adopted the nickname Fuschias alongside the pre existing Redlegs name and in 1912 the club adopted a club song to the tune of You re A Grand Old Flag Harry Brereton was the VFL leading goalscorer in the 1911 and 1912 season During this time the club took pride in its policy of amateurism and when World War 1 broke out the club strongly petitioned for the league being suspended to prevent fit professional footballers from joining the war effort In 1916 the club refused to take part in the competition for three seasons returning in 1919 14 Melbourne players lost their lives in the conflict including Arthur Mueller Joe Pearce Clifford Burge Jack Doubleday Desmond McDonald Ralph Robertson Percy Rodriguez and Alfred Williamson 15 For instance in May 1919 an unidentified former Melbourne footballer wrote to the football correspondent of The Argus as follows In 1914 the Melbourne football team after its junction with the University was a fine team and succeeded in reaching the semi finals Out of this combination the following players enlisted and served at the front C Lilley seriously wounded J Hassett H Tomkins severely wounded J Evans seriously wounded W Hendrie R L Park J Doubleday died A Best C Burge killed C viz A Williamson killed J Brake R Lowell E Parsons seriously wounded A M Pearce killed F Lugton killed A George C Armstrong P Rodriguez killed J Cannole viz Connole A Fraser seriously wounded T Collins These are all players of note and in themselves would have formed a very fine side but there is only one of them playing at the present time viz C Lilley who as a matter of fact takes the field under some disability owing to severe wounds which he received on service The Argus 16 May 1919 16 dd Melbourne had little success in the immediate post war years having not played a final since 1915 taking out another Wooden Spoon in 1919 However finals form would return with the team defeating Geelong and later losing to Collingwood in 1925 In 1926 Albert Chadwick captain coached the team to its second league Premiership defeating Collingwood in the Grand Final Melbourne s greatest player at this time was Ivor Warne Smith who in the Premiership year won the club s first Brownlow Medal Warne Smith went on to win a second Brownlow in 1928 a year in which Melbourne would play finals again Chadwick and Warne Smith would both go on to have influential administrative roles in the club s most successful period in the 1950s 1933 1964 Dominant years Edit The Great Depression took a financial toll on the club with poor on field performances and some players having the pressure of having to search for employment Melbourne s fortunes were lifted however for the 1933 season when it lured Richmond s premiership winning coach Frank Checker Hughes and Richmond s secretary Percy Page to the club Hughes was a tough and disciplined coach inspiring the changing of the club s nickname from the Fuchsias to the Demons 17 You are playing like a lot of flowers Lift your heads and play like demons Hughes during a speech to his players 18 Under Hughes leadership and with star players including captain Allan La Fontaine rover Percy Beames backman Jack Mueller and Norm Smith at full forward the Demons played finals in 1936 and 1937 and became the third club after Carlton and Collingwood to win three successive premierships in 1939 1940 and 1941 19 Tragedy would fall on the club soon after with 11 players giving their lives whilst serving in World War 2 These players included premiership players Keith Bluey Truscott Harold Ball Syd Anderson and Ron Barassi Sr all for whom club awards have been dedicated to with the club s Best and Fairest award named in honour of Truscott Hughes left the club at the end of the 1941 season but returned in 1945 The next year Don Cordner became the second Demon to win the Brownlow Medal with Melbourne reaching the grand final losing to Essendon by a margin of 63 points Fred Fanning was the VFL leading goal scorer in 1943 1944 1945 and 1947 when he also kicked the league record 18 goals in a match during the last game of the season a record that still stands In 1948 Melbourne met Essendon in a grand final rematch The Bombers inaccurate kicking of 7 goals and 27 behinds resulted in the first ever drawn VFL grand final The Demons returned the next week to win its sixth premiership with Jack Mueller kicking six goals in the match Hughes retired again as coach at the end of the season and after being denied the position by a single vote of the club s committee Norm Smith moved to Fitzroy to take a position as captain coach Demons great Norm Smith coached the club to six premierships New coach Allan La Fontaine had limited success despite the Demons playing finals in 1950 and bringing talented new players into the club After the Demons took out the Wooden Spoon in 1951 Smith returned to take up the coaching position in the 1952 season and set about forging a new team with future club champion Ron Barassi joining in 1953 under the newly created father son rule In 1954 the Demons made the Grand Final losing to a rampaging Footscray In 1955 the Demons cemented their position as the best team in the league finishing top of the ladder and taking out the Premiership in the Grand Final against Collingwood Melbourne became the only VFL team to win three premierships in succession twice by winning the 1956 and 1957 grand finals against Collingwood and Essendon The Demons suffered a shock defeat to their rivals Collingwood in the 1958 grand final but would regain the premiership following wins in the 1959 and 1960 grand finals against Essendon and Collingwood Between 1955 and 1960 Melbourne finished top of the ladder in every season winning five premierships Had the Demons not been defeated in 1958 they may have won seven premierships in a row Despite playing in the finals series in 1961 1962 and 1963 Melbourne failed to reach a grand final until 1964 when the Demons finished top of the ladder again In one of the most thrilling grand finals Melbourne won its 12th VFL premiership in the dying seconds of the game against Collingwood with back pocket player Neil Crompton kicking the winning goal After the 1954 Grand Final loss to Footscray no team was able to score 100 points against the Demons until Collingwood in round 5 1963 The next team was Geelong with 110 in round 1 1964 and dominant period of any team in the VFL AFL no other team has ever won 10 premierships in just 31 years 20 1965 1986 Decades of disappointment Edit In one of the greatest shock moves in the VFL history Ron Barassi transferred to Carlton as captain coach for the 1965 season Despite this Melbourne were still the dominant team of the league winning its first eight games in succession After having lost just three games the club s committee made the startling decision to sack Norm Smith as coach before its Round 13 fixture against North Melbourne Hughes returned to coach the Demons in a losing game whilst Melbourne identities including Barassi took to the media to defend Smith Smith was reinstated however the damage was done the Demons would only win one more game and subsequently missed out on finals for the first time since 1953 Melbourne would not play in another finals series until 1987 Smith coached two more seasons with Melbourne and a succession of coaches followed trying to reverse the Demons fortunes including John Beckwith 1968 70 Ian Ridley 1971 73 Bob Skilton 1974 77 and Dennis Jones 1978 Melbourne languished near the bottom of the ladder throughout the late 1960s and 1970s including three wooden spoons in 1969 1974 and 1978 Despite possessing gifted players including Robert Flower and Greg Wells the introduction of country zoning and poor management hampered the club s fortunes Melbourne tried to supplement its list by recruiting older players from successful teams including Carl Diterich who played in two separate engagements wth the Demons the first between 1973 and 1975 and then serving as captain coach in 1979 and 1980 Melbourne s best start to a season was in 1971 when the club was at the top of the ladder after the first round and maintained that position until it lost to Collingwood in round 6 Melbourne was still in second place at the start of the second half of the season but a dramatic slump had them dropping to fifth position five weeks later They finished with only two more wins and a draw In 1976 Melbourne missed what looked to be an almost certain finals appearance In the final round the Demons only needed to beat bottom side Collingwood and for Footscray to lose to the top side Carlton The Demons beat Collingwood at Victoria Park but an unexpected drawn match between Footscray and Carlton saw the Bulldogs edge out the Demons for the finals Melbourne would then fall back into the bottom quarter of the ladder the following season and in 1979 they suffered the worst defeat in VFL AFL history losing to Fitzroy by 190 points in round 17 21 although they would beat Essendon the following week Melbourne s 1980s shield logo In an effort to attract more members and to improve the club s finances the club legally separated from the MCC becoming a public company In 1981 under the chairmanship of Sir Billy Snedden and with a public campaign backed by radio broadcaster Derryn Hinch Ron Barassi returned to Melbourne as coach and immediately appointed Robert Flower as captain When he left the Demons in 1965 it was felt Barassi would eventually return and his arrival caused much excitement and an expectation of immediate success Barassi set about implementing a 5 year plan for the Demons to win a Premiership however the Demons finished 1981 with the wooden spoon after winning only one game Recruits Brian Wilson from Footscray and Peter Moore from Collingwood would win the club s 4th and 5th Brownlow Medals in 1982 and 1984 However despite sound recruiting Barassi was unable to take the Demons to an elusive finals series and John Northey took up the coaching position in 1986 1987 2006 Rollercoaster years Edit Melbourne would finally make the finals in 1987 in dramatic fashion needing to beat Footscray at the Western Oval and requiring Geelong to lose to Hawthorn The Demons beat the Bulldogs by two goals with the Hawks beating the Cats by three points in the dying seconds of the game Both matches took place at the same time with the Melbourne fans cheering towards the end of the game when news came through of the Hawks win Melbourne cruised into the Preliminary Final defeating North Melbourne by 118 points and Sydney by 76 points In Robert Flower s last game the Demons lead the Hawks by 4 points at the final siren though Hawthorn s Gary Buckenara had a free kick 55 metres out But Melbourne Irish recruit Jim Stynes ran across the mark and incurred a 15 metre penalty bringing Buckenara close enough to kick the winning goal after the siren The Demons would try to exact revenge on the Hawks in the 1988 Grand Final but were trounced by 96 points From 1987 to 1991 Melbourne had five positive win loss differentials in successive seasons which the club had not been able to achieve since the 1950s Thereafter things went downhill for Northey although Jim Stynes won the Brownlow in 1991 In 1992 the club finished 11th and Northey was replaced by Neil Balme as coach Balme coached Melbourne into the finals in 1994 but a last game loss to Brisbane saw them drop out of the top eight in 1995 and the club lingered at or near the bottom of the ladder for most of the 1996 season By 1996 the club was also in dire financial straits The club s board lead by past club champion Ian Ridley as president decided on the desperate step of a merger with Hawthorn In the ensuing weeks a passionate debate was fought between pro and anti merger supporters In the first few days of this debate lifelong supporters Mark and Anthony Jenkins met with coterie member George Zagon to form the Demon Alternative an anti merger group that was to significantly impact on the plans of the incumbent board Former player and politician Brian Dixon and Rabbi Joseph Gutnick became the prominent leaders of the Demon Alternative group The group quickly organised itself into a credible option for Melbourne supporters however given the support of the AFL and other factors when the merger issue was put to a vote a majority of Melbourne members supported the board In a meeting on the opposite side of town Hawthorn members rejected their board s proposal and eventually the merger was defeated Gutnick and Mark Jenkins were co opted onto the club s board in the aftermath with Gutnick later being voted in as President He put 3 million of his own money into the club and sacked Balme as coach midway through the 1997 season In 1998 under new coach Neale Daniher the club spent most of the season in the top eight and beat the eventual premiers Adelaide in the Qualifying Final Melbourne also eliminated St Kilda but lost to North Melbourne in the Preliminary Final In 1999 Melbourne finished in the bottom three In an exciting finish to the 2000 season Melbourne stormed its way into the Grand Final but were convincingly beaten by ladder leaders Essendon Melbourne missed out on finals in 2001 finishing 11th but would finish sixth in 2002 to eventually lose its Semi Final to Adelaide at the MCG in a controversial away game only played in Melbourne due to the AFL s contractual obligations with the MCG Captain David Neitz would play his best season winning the Best and Fairest award and winning the club s first Coleman Medal as the Leagues leading goalscorer kicking 75 goals Gutnick was replaced by Gabriel Szondy as President at the end of the year winning 65 of the members vote In 2003 Melbourne plunged into new on and off field crises winning only five games for the year and posting a 1 million loss President resigned and it seemed that Daniher s tenure as coach was under threat Melbourne played finals again in 2004 In a seesawing Elimination Final the Demons lost to Essendon by less than a goal During the 2004 post season Melbourne player Troy Broadbridge was killed in the 2004 Boxing Day tsunami when he was swept off Phi Phi island in Thailand His body was found on 3 January 2005 and brought home A funeral was held on 20 January 2005 in recognition to the No 20 guernsey he wore during his playing days During the 2005 off season the whole team travelled to the island in which Broadbridge was killed to build a new school for those struck by the tsunami The No 20 jumper was then rested for two years Melbourne finished the 2005 season in seventh position but lost the elimination final to Geelong by 55 points In 2006 after a slow start Melbourne again finished the season in seventh position After defeating St Kilda in the second Elimination Final by 18 points the season ended the following week when Fremantle beat the Demons by 28 points Daniher had become the club s the second longest serving coach whilst Neitz became Melbourne s all time leading goal kicker on 19 May surpassing Norm Smith s previous record of 546 goals Two weeks later he broke Robert Flower s long standing record of 272 games making him the longest serving Demon in history 2007 2020 Years of struggle Edit At the start of the 2007 AFL season Melbourne were thought by many pundits to be contenders for the Premiership but injuries to key players across the team resulted in the Demons losing its opening nine matches Daniher resigned as coach mid season with Mark Riley appointed as caretaker coach Late in the season David Neitz became the first Melbourne player to play 300 games David Neitz retired as the club s games and goals record holder along with being the longest serving captain Dean Bailey was appointed coach for the 2008 season however Melbourne lost their first six matches before breaking through with a record comeback win in round seven against Fremantle Melbourne finished the season poorly finishing last on the ladder taking out its first Wooden Spoon since 1997 Off field the club remained in turmoil In its 150th anniversary year club CEO Steve Harris resigned and was replaced by former Wimbledon tennis champion Paul McNamee in early 2008 22 Club President Paul Gardner also resigned mid season making way for former club champion Jim Stynes who inherited a 4 5 million debt 23 Stynes immediately got to work and was instrumental in Melbourne s Debt Demolition campaign held in a Kensington warehouse on August 5 More than 1 3 million was raised on the night with more than 3 million pledged to the cause 24 The Stynes board sacked McNamee after just four months following criticism of him holidaying in Wimbledon to compete in a legends match 25 new club CEO Cameron Schwab declared that it required urgent AFL assistance to continue requesting additional funding to its special annual distribution In December a fallout in negotiations between the Melbourne Cricket Club resulted in the MCC not committing an expected 2 million to the club and Schwab declared that the club s immediate future was in doubt 26 This doubt was quickly put to bed when the AFL and MCC finalised negotiations The AFL committed 1 million to the club in 2009 with the MCC matching the AFL contribution 27 Melbourne endured another poor season in 2009 winning just four matches to claim back to back Wooden Spoons The year was made worse in July when Jim Stynes revealed he was fighting cancer He temporarily stood down with vice chairman Don McLardy stepping up in his absence In 2010 the club s on field fortunes lifted as they finished the season 12th on the ladder The club s 2011 season took a dramatic turn when the Demons suffered its second greatest loss in League history going down to Geelong at Kardinia Park in round 19 by 186 points Bailey was immediately sacked as coach with former club captain Todd Viney coaching the remaining games to finish 13th on the ladder In August the club announced that its goal of wiping out the club s debt had finally been achieved 28 and new coach Mark Neeld was announced in September 29 In 2012 Jim Stynes retired as president with vice president Don McLardy stepping up to take the reins Tragically on March 20 Stynes long fight with cancer came to an end He was given a state funeral given his remarkable legacy on and off the field The AFL investigated Melbourne s 2009 season in August following comments made by former Demon and Carlton player Brock McLean that the club had not been trying to win 30 See Melbourne Football Club tanking scandalIn 2013 Melbourne managed just one win from its first 11 games and Neeld was sacked as coach in Round 17 with assistant coach Neil Craig being appointed caretaker This was precipitated by the departures of CEO Schwab and President McLardy In September the club announced Sydney premiership coach Paul Roos signed a two year deal to coach the Demons with the option of a third year Paul Roos first year in his tenure as the Demons coach saw an improvement from their 2013 season with the Demons doubling their win tally Under Roos the club continued to steadily improve winning 7 games in 2015 and key forward Jesse Hogan won Melbourne s second AFL Rising Star award Roos left Melbourne after another improved season in 2016 with assistant coach Simon Goodwin taking over in a planned succession Melbourne finished the 2017 season in ninth place with a win loss record of 12 10 missing out on eighth spot to West Coast by 0 5 Melbourne made history in 2017 competing as one of the eight foundation clubs in the inaugural AFL Women s competition Led by captain Daisy Pearce and coach Mick Stinear Melbourne took on the Brisbane Lions in the first game of the new league at Casey Fields At the end of the 2018 season Melbourne finished in fifth place on the ladder reaching the finals series for the first time since 2006 The Demons advanced to an eventual Preliminary final defeat to West Coast after defeating Geelong and Hawthorn Melbourne s success could not be maintained in 2019 with the Demons finishing 17th on the ladder In the shortened 2020 season interrupted by the COVID 19 pandemic Melbourne would finish ninth on the Ladder winning nine and losing eight games 2021 Premiership success after 57 years Edit Demons fans celebrate at Forrest Place in Perth following Melbourne s 2021 premiership win the previous day over the Western Bulldogs at Optus Stadium Melbourne s victory over North Melbourne in Round 7 of the 2021 season put them on the top of the ladder for the first time since the third round of 2005 They won their first nine matches of a season for the first time since 1956 Melbourne s win over West Coast in Round 21 put them at the top of the ladder again and secured their first double chance in a finals series since the 2000 season Their next win against Adelaide equalled their most wins in a season from 1956 With captain Max Gawn kicking a goal after the siren in the Round 23 match against Geelong Melbourne finished the season as minor premiers for the first time since 1964 After defeating Brisbane in a qualifying final at the Adelaide Oval and Geelong in a preliminary final at Optus Stadium the Demons reached their first grand final since 2000 31 On 25 September Melbourne won its 13th VFL AFL premiership defeating the Western Bulldogs by 74 points in the grand final at Optus Stadium in Perth it was their first premiership since their 1964 victory against Collingwood Christian Petracca was unanimously judged as best on the ground winning the club s first Norm Smith Medal 32 2021 AFL Grand Final G B Total Melbourne 21 14 140 Western Bulldogs 10 6 66Venue Perth Stadium Crowd 61 118 33 2022 present Edit Melbourne s premiership defence began with 10 straight victories increasing their streak from last year to 17 before suffering three losses on the bounce to fellow finalists Fremantle Sydney and Collingwood The Demons form in the second half of the 2022 season was inconsistent but the reigning premiers would emphatically secure a spot in the top four after a comfortable 58 point victory over Brisbane in the final round The Demons finished second with a win loss record of 16 wins and six losses but would come undone in the finals bowing out in straight sets after losing to Sydney and Brisbane in the qualifying and semi final respectively Club symbols EditColours Edit In one of the first practice matches between Melbourne teammates in 1859 both red and blue were worn and these colours quickly became associated with the Melbourne Football Club although they were not used as part of the team s uniform In 1872 club member Larry Bell brought some red stockings back from England which were teemed with blue knickerbockers and jerseys and red caps It is at this time that the team became known as the Redlegs Bell also brought back with him blue stockings which were reputedly given to the Carlton Football Club 15 Uniform Edit In the early days of Australian football players would wear whatever sporting clothing they had As most of its players were members of the Melbourne Cricket Club it quickly became the trend for Melbourne players to wear predominantly white clothes which gave rise to the team being called the Invincible Whites For a brief period in 1861 and 1862 the club adopted magenta flannel shirts but these were soon abandoned From 1872 a more standardised uniform was adopted although it remained common for footballers to wear a mismatch of uniforms Most footballers had dispensed with wearing cricket whites and were now choosing to wear woollen navy guernseys which were more suitable for winter play The Melbourne team distinguished itself with red socks and a red cap A canvas lace up guernsey was introduced in 1884 which featured a red leather strip down the middle and was worn by players up until 1915 In 1906 some players wore a navy woollen guernsey with a small red yoke around the neck When Melbourne re entered the competition for the 1919 season a standardised uniform was used with a red V on a navy jumper In 1925 the V was made smaller and raised to the collar with a red horizontal band added to the waist 15 The current club jumper of a red V shaped yoke on a navy background was first adopted in 1935 and apart from very slight variations over the years and a period in which royal blue was used between 1975 and 1986 due to the introduction of colour television the jumper has remained the same The Melbourne clash strip new in 2018 consists of a retro inspired home strip of royal blue with a red yoke including white shorts as worn between 1975 and 1986 The alternate away strip is the same as the home strip with the difference being the back entirely in red to allow the club to wear a non white alternate strip New Balance have manufactured Melbourne s on and off field apparel since 2011 34 Uniform evolution Edit Throughout its history Melbourne has had different guernsey designs as follows 35 1858 61 amp 1863 71 1861 62 1872 83 1884 1915 1905 15 1919 24 1925 34 1935 74 1975 86 1987 presentMascot EditIn 1933 Melbourne was beginning to rebuild its side and abandoned the name Fuchsias for a more ferocious title the Demons This was inspired by then coach Frank Checker Hughes reportedly saying to the players in a game to lift up your heads and play like demons 15 Ronald Deeman Melbourne Football Club s mascot pictured at Melbourne s home ground the MCG Checker and Daisy in February 2017 Over the years the club has used various iterations of demons as club mascots This includes Ronald Deeman from the AFL Mascot Manor franchise 36 The current club mascots are Chuck Checker and Cheeky Chuck is named after legendary coach Frank Checker Hughes Daisy is named after the inaugural captain of the women s team Daisy Pearce 37 and Flash is named after the 2009 Keith Bluey Truscott Medallist Aaron Davey 38 Song Edit The official Melbourne Football Club song is called It s a Grand Old Flag sung to the tune of George M Cohan s 1906 You re a Grand Old Flag The song was first adopted in by the club 1912 The Demons primarily repeat the first verse of the song It s a grand old flag it s a high flying flag It s the emblem for me and for you It s the emblem of the team we love The team of the Red and the Blue Every heart beats true for the Red and the Blue And we sing this song to you Should old acquaintance be forgot Keep your eye on the Red and the Blue A second verse was reputedly written by club champion Keith Bluey Truscott in 1940 referencing the club s 1939 and 1926 VFL premiership titles The club resurrected the original second verse for the 2011 season 39 Oh the team played fine in the year Thirty nine We re the Demons that no one can lick And you ll find us there at the final bell With the spirit of Twenty six Every heart beats true for the Red and the Blue And we sing this song to you Should old acquaintance be forgot Keep your eye on the Red and the Blue Sponsorship Edit Year Kit Manufacturer Major Sponsor Shorts Sponsor Bottom Back Sponsor Top Back Sponsor1978 83 Mayne Nickless 1984 Hertz1985 91 Drake International1992 Snowy Mountain1993 Pioneer Homes1994 Tooheys Blue Demons Blue Tooheys1995 97 Tooheys Metway Bank1998 Canterbury LG Tooheys Victoria LG Electronics1999 Hahn2000 Fila2001 02 Tooheys New2003 Asics Subway2004 iPrimus Primus Telecom2005 06 Primus Telecom Red Energy2007 The Age2008 Reebok2009 Hankook Kaspersky Lab2010 Volvo2011 New Balance Metro Solar2012 Webjet Opel2013 2014 16 AHG NT AHG2017 IG iSelect2018 Zurich2019 Johnnie Walker Jaguar Cars2020 Hertz Zurich2021 Beyond Bank AustraliaHome and training grounds EditMelbourne s home ground has been the Melbourne Cricket Ground MCG since 1889 From that time to 1980 the team was part of the Melbourne Cricket Club s sporting sections The MCC operates and partially owns the MCG The two clubs severed ties in 1980 though restored the relationship in 2009 40 41 The club trained on the MCG until 1985 at which point they shifted to the Junction Oval in St Kilda 42 43 In 2009 the Demons first moved their training facilities from the Junction Oval to Casey Fields 44 45 Currently the Demons football offices and indoor training facilities are based at AAMI Park where they moved in late 2010 and its administrative offices located within the MCG 46 The club trains on the adjacent Gosch s Paddock public oval In August 2021 The club announced that The oval will be upgraded and redeveloped in the 2021 22 off season to increase the dimensions to better match the measurements of the MCG and Docklands Stadium 47 48 49 Redevelopment of Goschs Paddock oval commenced on 5 December 2021 50 Given AAMI Park is co tenanted with three other professional sporting clubs Melbourne have sought to move to a dedicated club specific facility nearby 51 As of August 2021 the club was reported to be considering moving all its football and administrative offices and indoor training facilities to the land where Car Park E next to AAMI Park is located 46 Melbourne also still maintains a presence at Casey Fields in Cranbourne East the home ground of its AFLW team and VFL VFLW affiliate the Casey Demons It based its AFL training program at the venue for the duration of the 2021 season which was interrupted by the COVID 19 pandemic 52 Membership base and supporters EditMelbourne has improved their membership and attendances steadily since the failed Hawthorn merger in 1996 building a membership base of over 30 000 since 2009 The membership record of 36 937 was set in 2011 before it was broken in April 2016 to finish with 39 211 for the 2016 season this record was broken the next year in April 2017 In May 2017 Melbourne signed up 40 000 members for the first time In May 2019 Melbourne signed up 50 000 members for the first time A 2000 Roy Morgan AFL survey suggested that Melbourne supporters had the highest household income 53 Year Members Finishing position1984 6 297 9th1985 5 801 11th1986 4 511 11th1987 3 122 3rd1988 10 078 2nd1989 8 184 4th1990 10 111 4th1991 10 153 4th1992 8 681 11th1993 10 097 10th1994 10 648 4th1995 9 544 9th1996 12 964 14th1997 15 350 16th1998 17 870 4th1999 19 713 14th2000 18 227 2nd2001 22 940 11th2002 20 152 6th2003 20 844 14th2004 25 252 7th2005 24 220 8th2006 24 698 5th2007 28 077 14th2008 29 619 16th2009 31 506 16th2010 33 358 12th2011 36 937 13th2012 35 345 16th2013 33 177 17th2014 35 911 17th2015 35 953 13th2016 39 211 11th2017 42 233 9th2018 44 279 4th2019 52 421 17th2020 40 571 9th2021 53 188 1st2022 66 484 5thNotable supporters Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed September 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Sir Henry Bolte Premier of Victoria Rupert Murdoch businessman John So Lord Mayor of Melbourne 54 Anthony Mundine Boxer and Rugby League player 54 Sir Billy Snedden Politician 55 Baz Lurhman Film Director 54 Rod Laver Tennis player 56 Don Lane Television personality Derryn Hinch Radio Presenter Neil Mitchell Radio Presenter Russel Howcroft Businessman and Radio Presenter Ron Walker Businessman Rod Carnegie Businessman Robert Champion de Crespigny Businessman Hamish Blake Comedian Ryan Shelton Comedian Rob Sitch Comedian Christian O Connell radio presenter Jord Singer Songwriter Ella Hooper musician Wilbur Wilde Musician Jim Keays Musician Nazeem Hussain Comedian 57 Shane Bourne Comedian Ian Henderson newsreader Mal Walden Newsreader Temper Trap Music group David Hobson Singer Peter Russell Clarke chef author and illustrator Alan Stockdale Politician Tony Staley Politician Brad Hodge Australian cricketer Steve Moneghetti marathon runner Titus O Reily Comedian Beverley O Connor television and radio personality James Tomkins Olympic Rower Mack Horton Olympic Swimmer Nicky Buckley television personality Geoff Cox television presenter Rob Gell television weatherman Greg Evans television host Mike Sheahan sports writer Michael Veitch comedian and writer Tim Wilson Politician Clint Stanaway Channel 9 news reporter Archie Thompson Soccer player Andrew Daddo Television presenter Matt Doran Journalist James Frecheville Actor Adam Samuel Radio personality Club honours EditClub achievements Edit PremiershipsCompetition Level Wins Years WonAustralian Football League Seniors 13 1900 1926 1939 1940 1941 1948 1955 1956 1957 1959 1960 1964 2021Reserves 1919 1999 12 1931 1932 1933 1934 1935 1939 1949 1956 1969 1970 1984 1993Under 19s 1946 1991 6 1947 1953 1964 1971 1981 1983Victorian Premiership Seniors 1870 1876 3 1870 1872 1876Other titles and honoursMcClelland Trophy Seniors 5 1955 1956 1958 1990 2021AFLX Tournament Seniors 1 2018VFL AFL pre season competition Seniors 1 1989VFL Night Series Seniors 2 1971 1987Lightning Premiership Seniors 1 1952Finishing positionsAustralian Football League Minor premiership 10 1939 1940 1955 1956 1957 1958 1959 1960 1964 2021Grand Finalist 5 1946 1954 1958 1988 2000Wooden spoons 12 1905 1906 1919 1923 1951 1969 1974 1978 1981 1997 2008 2009Melbourne Team of the Century Edit The Melbourne Football Club Team of the Century was announced on 24 June 2000 at Crown Casino The selectors were Percy Beames former player and journalist Lynda Carroll club historian Bill Guest MFC Director Greg Hobbs journalist John Mitchell former MFC and MCC President Linda Pearce journalist Dudley Phillips supporter Stephen Phillips media consultant and Mike Sheahan journalist with CEO John Anderson as non voting chairman 58 Melbourne Team of the Century B John Beckwith Tassie Johnson Don CordnerHB Noel McMahen Gary Hardeman Don WilliamsC Brian Dixon Allan La Fontaine Robert FlowerHF Hassa Mann Ivor Warne Smith Garry LyonF Jack Mueller Norm Smith Percy BeamesFoll Denis Cordner Ron Barassi Captain Stuart SpencerInt Frank Adams Albert Chadwick Wally LockLaurie Mithen Jim Stynes Todd VineyCoach Norm SmithStan Alves Ian Ridley Bob Johnson and Greg Wells were all named as emergencies Hall of Fame Edit The Hall of Fame was introduced in 2001 with Norm Smith inducted directly as a legend The Hall of Fame consists of five legends and forty four inductees Melbourne Football ClubHall of FameLegends Ron Barassi Don Cordner Ian Ridley Norm Smith Ivor Warne SmithInductees Frank AdamsSam AllicaStan AlvesRon BaggottPercy BeamesJohn BeckwithJoe BlairBarry BourkeJim Cardwell Geoff CaseAlbert ChadwickDenis CordnerBrian DixonRobert FlowerMaurie GibbGary HardemanH C A HarrisonGreg Healy Frank HughesAlan JohnsonBob JohnsonTassie JohnsonAllan La FontaineClyde LaidlawWally LockBrett LovettGarry Lyon Hassa MannWilliam McClellandFred McGinisShane McGrathNoel McMahenLaurie MithenJack MuellerDavid NeitzPercy Page Dudley PhillipsStuart SpencerJim StynesTodd VineyGreg WellsSean WightDon WilliamsTom WillsPlayers listed in bold are inductees in the Australian Football Hall of Fame Players listed in bold and italics are legends in the Australian Football Hall of Fame 150 Heroes Edit Melbourne FC announced its 150 Heroes to celebrate its 150th anniversary at Crown Casino on 7 June 2008 Each player or their closest relative was presented with an official 150 heroes medallion The criteria for inclusion was games played minimum of 100 best and fairest awards premierships Brownlow Medals contribution to the club and state representation Those who died in the war were judged based on their achievements before their death The heroes named were Jim Abernethy Frank Adams Bill Allen Stan Alves Syd Anderson Tony Anderson Lance Arnold Ron Baggott Garry Baker Harold Ball Ron Barassi Percy Beames John Beckwith George Bickford Ray Biffin Barry Bourke Harry Brereton Cameron Bruce Keith Carroll Geoff Case Albert Chadwick Noel Clarke Geoff Collins Jack Collins Chris Connolly Bob Corbett Denis Cordner Don Cordner Ted Cordner Vin Coutie Harry Coy Jim Davidson Frank Davis Ross Dillon Carl Ditterich Brian Dixon Len Dockett Adrian Dullard Hugh Dunbar Richie Emselle Fred Fanning Jeff Farmer Matthew Febey Steven Febey Dick Fenton Smith Rowley Fischer Robert Flower Laurie Fowler Maurie Gibb Peter Giles Terry Gleeson Brad Green Rod Grinter George Haines Gary Hardeman Henry Harrison Gerard Healy Greg Healy Dick Hingston Paul Hopgood Danny Hughes Anthony Ingerson Eddie Jackson Alan Johnson Bob Johnson Tassie Johnson Trevor Johnson Travis Johnstone Gordon Jones Les Jones Bryan Kenneally Allan La Fontaine Clyde Laidlaw Frank Langley Jack Leith Andrew Leoncelli Charlie Lilley Wally Lock Harry Long John Lord Andy Lovell Brett Lovett Glenn Lovett Garry Lyon Hassa Mann George Margitich Peter Marquis Bernie Massey Anthony McDonald James McDonald Fred McGinis Shane McGrath Bob McKenzie Col McLean Ian McLean Noel McMahen Ken Melville Laurie Mithen Peter Moore Jack Mueller David Neitz Stephen Newport Jack O Keefe Andrew Obst Gordon Ogden Greg Parke Joe Pearce Jack Purse Ian Ridley Guy Rigoni Frank Roberts Russell Robertson Alby Rodda Brian Roet Peter Rohde Alan Rowarth David Schwarz Norm Smith Steven Smith Earl Spalding Stuart Spencer Charlie Streeter Steven Stretch Jim Stynes Tony Sullivan Dick Taylor Ted Thomas Ian Thorogood Stephen Tingay John Townsend Keith Truscott Geoff Tunbridge Bill Tymms Barrie Vagg Francis Vine Todd Viney Ivor Warne Smith Ray Wartman Athol Webb Greg Wells Jeff White Sean Wight Don Williams Brian Wilson Stan Wittman Shane Woewodin Graeme Yeats Charlie Young Adem YzeMatch records EditHighest score 182 points 59 Round 21 1986 MCG Melbourne 28 14 182 vs North Melbourne 14 13 97 Round 5 1991 MCG Melbourne 28 14 182 vs North Melbourne 17 10 112 Lowest score 2 points 59 Round 16 1899 Brunswick Street Oval Melbourne 0 2 2 vs Fitzroy 5 10 40 Highest score conceded 238 points 59 Round 17 1979 Waverley Park Melbourne 6 12 48 vs Fitzroy 36 22 238 Lowest score conceded 8 points 59 Round 7 1903 MCG Melbourne 4 8 32 vs Carlton 1 2 8 Biggest winning margin 141 points 59 Round 9 1926 MCG Melbourne 21 28 154 vs Hawthorn 1 7 13 Biggest losing margin 190 points 59 Round 17 1979 Waverley Park Melbourne 6 12 48 vs Fitzroy 36 22 238 Highest losing score 151 points 59 Round 10 1940 MCG Melbourne 22 19 151 vs Essendon 24 10 154 Lowest winning score 28 points 59 Round 9 1908 MCG 1897 Melbourne 4 4 28 vs Fitzroy 3 7 25 Round 15 1909 MCG Melbourne 4 4 28 vs University 2 15 27 Longest winning streak 19 games 60 Round 15 1955 vs North Melbourne MCG to round 13 1956 vs Carlton MCG Longest losing streak 20 games 60 Round 4 1981 vs St Kilda MCG to round 1 1982 vs Sydney SCG Record attendance home and away game 99 346 61 Round 10 1958 MCG vs Collingwood Record attendance finals match 115 802 61 Grand Final 1956 MCG vs Collingwood Most goals in a match by an individual 18 goals 62 Fred Fanning round 19 1947 Junction Oval vs St Kilda Most disposals in a match by an individual since 1965 48 disposals 63 Greg Wells round 13 1980 MCG vs FitzroyCurrent squad EditMelbourne Football Clubviewtalkedit Senior list Rookie list Coaching staff 1 Steven May 2 Jacob Van Rooyen 3 Christian Salem 4 James Harmes 5 Christian Petracca 6 Brodie Grundy 7 Jack Viney vc 8 Jake Lever 9 Charlie Spargo 10 Angus Brayshaw 11 Max Gawn c 12 Lachie Hunter 13 Clayton Oliver 14 Michael Hibberd 15 Ed Langdon 16 Bailey Laurie 17 Jake Bowey 18 Jake Melksham 19 Josh Schache 20 Adam Tomlinson 21 Matthew Jefferson 22 Blake Howes 23 James Jordon 24 Trent Rivers 25 Tom McDonald 26 Jed Adams 27 Luke Dunstan 29 Joel Smith 30 Alex Neal Bullen 31 Bayley Fritsch 32 Tom Sparrow 35 Harrison Petty 36 Kysaiah Pickett 37 Kade Chandler 40 Taj Woewodin 50 Ben Brown 28 Will Verrall 34 Deakyn Smith 38 Oliver Sestan 41 Judd McVee 42 Daniel Turner 43 Kyah Farris White B 45 Andy Moniz Wakefield B Head coach Simon GoodwinAssistant coaches Alan Richardson GM of AFL football performance Adem Yze midfield Troy Chaplin defence Greg Stafford forwards Mark Williams head of development Legend c Captain s vc Vice captain s B Category B rookie italics Inactive player list Long term injury ret RetiredUpdated 11 December 2022Source s Playing list Coaching staffHonour board EditThe honour board is listed from the first VFL AFL season and includes the following individual awards Keith Bluey Truscott Medal awarded to the Melbourne Football Club s best and fairest player Named after Keith Truscott who died in World War II Leading goalkicker award awarded to the player who kicks the most goals during the season Harold Ball Memorial Trophy awarded to the best first year player between 1933 and 2011 and to the best young player from 2012 onward Named in honour of Harold Ball who died in World War II and won the award in 1939 Legend Premiers Grand finalist Finals Wooden spoon Bold italics competition leading goal kicker Season Position President Secretary generalmanager CEO Coach Captain s Best and fairest Leading goalkicker total Harold Ball Memorial Trophy21897 4th H C A Harrison R C McLeod Ned Sutton Jack Leith 22 1898 6th H C A Harrison Amos Norcott Ned Sutton Charlie Young 21 1899 6th H C A Harrison Amos Norcott Eddie Sholl Jack Leith 21 1900 1st H C A Harrison Amos Norcott Dick Wardill Tommy Ryan 24 1901 5th H C A Harrison Amos Norcott William C McClelland Frank Langley 17 1902 4th H C A Harrison Amos Norcott William C McClelland Jack Leith 26 1903 7th H C A Harrison Amos Norcott William C McClelland Vince Coutie 19 1904 6th H C A Harrison Amos Norcott William C McClelland Vince Coutie 39 1905 8th H C A Harrison Amos Norcott Frank Langley Harry Cordner 16 1906 8th H C A Harrison Amos Norcott Arthur Sowden Basil Onyons 16 1907 7th T F Morkham George Beachcroft Alex Hall Vince Coutie Jack Leith 21 1908 8th T F Morkham Amos Norcott Alex Hall Hugh Purse Vince Coutie 37 1909 5th T F Morkham J A Harper Alex Hall Bernie Nolan Harry Brereton 34 1910 9th T F Morkham G W Lamb Eddie Drohan Vince Coutie Stan Fairbairn 24 1911 7th A A Aitken G W Lamb Alex Hall Vince Coutie Harry Brereton 46 1912 6th William C McClelland Andrew Manzie Alex Hall Alf George Harry Brereton 56 1913 9th William C McClelland Andrew Manzie Alex Hall Alf George Mick Maguire 13 1914 9th William C McClelland Andrew Manzie Len Incigneri 64 65 Len Incigneri Arthur Best 30 1915 4th William C McClelland Andrew Manzie Jack McKenzie Jack McKenzie Roy Park 35 1916 19183 William C McClelland Andrew Manzie George Heinz George Heinz1919 9th William C McClelland Andrew Manzie George Heinz George Heinz George Heinz 15 1920 8th William C McClelland Andrew Manzie Gerald Brosnan George Heinz Harry Harker 23 1921 6th William C McClelland Andrew Manzie Percy Wilson Percy Wilson Harry Harker 47 1922 6th William C McClelland Andrew Manzie Percy Wilson Percy Wilson Harry Harker 47 1923 9th William C McClelland Andrew Manzie Percy Wilson Percy Wilson Percy Tulloh 31 1924 8th William C McClelland Andrew Manzie Gordon Rattray Albert Chadwick Percy Tulloh 24 1925 3rd William C McClelland Andrew Manzie Albert Chadwick Albert Chadwick Harry Davie 56 1926 1st William C McClelland Andrew Manzie Albert Chadwick Albert Chadwick Harry Moyes 55 1927 5th Vernon Ransford Andrew Manzie Albert Chadwick Albert Chadwick Harry Davie 40 1928 3rd Vernon Ransford Andrew Manzie Ivor Warne Smith Ivor Warne Smith Bob Johnson 55 1929 5th Joe Blair Andrew Manzie Ivor Warne Smith Ivor Warne Smith Dick Taylor 30 1930 5th Joe Blair Andrew Manzie Ivor Warne Smith Ivor Warne Smith George Margitich 73 1931 8th Joe Blair Andrew Manzie Ivor Warne Smith Ivor Warne Smith George Margitich 66 1932 9th Joe Blair Charlie Streeter Ivor Warne Smith Francis Vine George Margitich 60 1933 10th Joe Blair Percy Page Frank Checker Hughes Francis Vine Bob Johnson 62 Les Jones1934 6th Joe Blair Percy Page Frank Checker Hughes Colin Niven Jack Mueller 52 Allan La Fontaine1935 6th Joe Blair Percy Page Frank Checker Hughes Colin Niven Allan La Fontaine Maurie Gibb 59 Ray Wartman1936 3rd Joe Blair Percy Page Frank Checker Hughes Allan La Fontaine Allan La Fontaine Eric Glass 56 1937 3rd Joe Blair Percy Page Frank Checker Hughes Allan La Fontaine Jack Mueller Ron Baggott 51 1938 5th Joe Blair Percy Page Frank Checker Hughes Allan La Fontaine Norm Smith Norm Smith 80 Dick Hingston1939 1st Joe Blair Percy Page Frank Checker Hughes Allan La Fontaine Jack Mueller Norm Smith 54 Harold Ball1940 1st Joe Blair Percy Page Frank Checker Hughes Allan La Fontaine Ron Baggott Norm Smith 86 Col McLean1941 1st Joe Blair Percy Page Frank Checker Hughes Allan La Fontaine Allan La Fontaine Norm Smith 89 Ted Cordner1942 8th Joe Blair Jack Chessell Percy Beames Percy Beames Allan La Fontaine Fred Fanning 37 1943 7th Joe Blair Jack Chessell Percy Beames Percy Beames Don Cordner Fred Fanning 62 1944 8th Joe Blair Jack Chessell Percy Beames Percy Beames Norm Smith Fred Fanning 87 Es Downey1945 9th Joe Blair Jack Chessell Frank Checker Hughes Norm Smith Fred Fanning Fred Fanning 67 1946 2nd Joe Blair Jack Chessell Frank Checker Hughes Norm Smith Jack Mueller Jack Mueller 58 Len Dockett1947 6th William Flintoft Jack Chessell Frank Checker Hughes Norm Smith Wally Lock Fred Fanning 97 Eddie Jackson1948 1st William Flintoft Alex Gray Frank Checker Hughes Don Cordner Alby Rodda Lance Arnold 41 1949 5th William Flintoft Alex Gray Allan La Fontaine Don Cordner Len Dockett Bob McKenzie 40 Mike Woods1950 4th Albert Chadwick A S Thompson Allan La Fontaine Shane McGrath Denis Cordner Denis Cordner 36 1951 12th Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Allan La Fontaine Denis Cordner Noel McMahen Bob McKenzie 40 John Beckwith1952 6th Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Denis Cordner Geoff McGivern Noel Clarke 49 1953 11th Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Denis Cordner Ken Melville Bob McKenzie 38 Ken Melville1954 2nd Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Geoff Collins Denis Cordner Noel Clarke 51 Bob Johnson1955 1st Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Noel McMahen Stuart Spencer Stuart Spencer 34 Trevor Johnson1956 1st Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Noel McMahen Stuart Spencer Bob Johnson 43 Jim Sandral1957 1st Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith John Beckwith John Beckwith Athol Webb 56 Geoff Tunbridge1958 2nd Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith John Beckwith Laurie Mithen Ron Barassi 44 Athol Webb 44 Alan Rowarth1959 1st Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith John Beckwith Laurie Mithen Ron Barassi 46 Hassa Mann1960 1st Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Ron Barassi Brian Dixon Ian Ridley 38 Ray Nilsson1961 3rd Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Ron Barassi Ron Barassi Bob Johnson 36 Brian Roet1962 4th Albert Chadwick Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Ron Barassi Hassa Mann Laurie Mithen 37 John Townsend1963 3rd Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Ron Barassi Hassa Mann Barry Bourke 48 Barry Bourke1964 1st Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Ron Barassi Ron Barassi John Townsend 35 Graeme Jacobs1965 7th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Hassa Mann John Townsend John Townsend 34 1966 11th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Hassa Mann Terry Leahy Barrie Vagg 20 Terry Leahy1967 7th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Norm Smith Hassa Mann Hassa Mann Hassa Mann 38 1968 8th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell John Beckwith Hassa Mann Ray Groom Hassa Mann 29 Greg Parke1969 12th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell John Beckwith Hassa Mann John Townsend Ross Dillon 48 Paul Rowlands1970 10th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell John Beckwith Tassie Johnson Frank Davis Ross Dillon 41 Graham Molloy1971 7th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Ian Ridley Frank Davis Greg Wells Paul Callery 38 1972 8th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Ian Ridley Frank Davis Stan Alves Greg Parke 63 Ross Brewer1973 10th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Ian Ridley Stan Alves Carl Ditterich Ross Brewer 32 Robert Flower1974 12th Donald Duffy Jim Cardwell Bob Skilton Stan Alves Stan Alves Ross Brewer 40 Garry Baker1975 10th John Mitchell Jim Cardwell Bob Skilton Stan Alves Laurie Fowler Greg Wells 32 Marty Lyons1976 6th John Mitchell Ivan Moore Bob Skilton Stan Alves Greg Wells Ray Biffin 47 Peter O Keefe1977 11th John Mitchell Ray Manley Bob Skilton Greg Wells Robert Flower Ross Brewer 26 Tom Flower1978 12th John Mitchell Ray Manley Dennis Jones Greg Wells Garry Baker Henry Coles 33 Peter Thorne1979 11th Wayne Reid Ray Manley Carl Ditterich Carl Ditterich Laurie Fowler Robert Flower 33 Peter Giles1980 9th Wayne Reid Richard Seddon Carl Ditterich Carl Ditterich Laurie Fowler Brent Crosswell 31 Stephen Bickford1981 12th Billy Snedden Richard Seddon Ron Barassi Robert Flower Steven Smith Mark Jackson 76 Mark Jackson1982 8th Billy Snedden Richard Seddon Ron Barassi Robert Flower Steven Icke Gerard Healy 77 Adrian Battiston1983 8th Billy Snedden Richard Seddon Ron Barassi Robert Flower Alan Johnson Robert Flower 40 Russell Richards1984 9th Billy Snedden Richard Seddon Ron Barassi Robert Flower Gerard Healy Kelvin Templeton 51 Graeme Yeats1985 11th Billy Snedden Ray Manley Ron Barassi Robert Flower Danny Hughes Brian Wilson 40 Rod Grinter1986 11th Billy Snedden 6Stuart Spencer Ray Manley John Northey Robert Flower Greg Healy Greg Healy 35 Garry Lyon1987 3rd Stuart Spencer Tony King John Northey Robert Flower Steven Stretch Robert Flower 47 Steven O Dwyer1988 2nd Stuart Spencer Tony King John Northey Greg Healy Steven O Dwyer Ricky Jackson 43 Andy Lovell1989 4th Stuart Spencer Tony King John Northey Greg Healy Alan Johnson Darren Bennett 34 Luke Beveridge1990 4th Stuart Spencer Tony King John Northey Greg Healy Garry Lyon Darren Bennett 87 Rod Keogh1991 4th Stuart Spencer 7Ian Ridley Tony King John Northey Garry Lyon Jim Stynes Allen Jakovich 71 Allen Jakovich1992 11th Ian Ridley Tony King7 Hassa Mann John Northey Garry Lyon Glenn Lovett Allen Jakovich 40 Chris Sullivan1993 10th Ian Ridley Hassa Mann Neil Balme Garry Lyon Todd Viney Allen Jakovich 39 David Neitz1994 4th Ian Ridley Hassa Mann Neil Balme Garry Lyon Garry Lyon Garry Lyon 79 Paul Prymke1995 9th Ian Ridley Hassa Mann Neil Balme Garry Lyon Jim Stynes Garry Lyon 77 Adem Yze1996 14th Ian Ridley 7Joseph Gutnick Hassa Mann Neil Balme Garry Lyon Jim Stynes David Neitz 56 Darren O Brien1997 16th Joseph Gutnick Hassa Mann 7Cameron Schwab Neil Balme 4Greg Hutchison5 Garry Lyon Jim Stynes David Neitz 30 Jeff Farmer 30 Anthony McDonald1998 4th Joseph Gutnick Cameron Schwab Neale Daniher Todd Viney Todd Viney Jeff Farmer 47 Guy Rigoni1999 14th Joseph Gutnick Cameron Schwab 7John Anderson Neale Daniher Todd Viney David Schwarz David Neitz 46 Peter Walsh2000 2nd Joseph Gutnick John Anderson Neale Daniher David Neitz Shane Woewodin Jeff Farmer 76 Matthew Whelan2001 11th Joseph Gutnick 7Gabriel Szondy John Anderson Neale Daniher David Neitz Adem Yze Russell Robertson 42 Scott Thompson2002 6th Gabriel Szondy John Anderson Neale Daniher David Neitz David Neitz David Neitz 82 Steven Armstrong2003 14th Gabriel Szondy 7Paul Gardner Ray Ellis Neale Daniher David Neitz Russell Robertson David Neitz 65 Ryan Ferguson2004 7th Paul Gardner Steve Harris Neale Daniher David Neitz Jeff White David Neitz 69 Aaron Davey2005 8th Paul Gardner Steve Harris Neale Daniher David Neitz Travis Johnstone Russell Robertson 73 Chris Johnson2006 5th Paul Gardner Steve Harris Neale Daniher David Neitz James McDonald David Neitz 68 Clint Bartram2007 14th Paul Gardner Steve Harris Neale Daniher 6Mark Riley5 David Neitz James McDonald Russell Robertson 42 Ricky Petterd2008 16th Paul Gardner 7Jim Stynes Paul McNamee4Cameron Schwab Dean Bailey David Neitz Cameron Bruce Brad Miller 26 Cale Morton2009 16th Jim Stynes Cameron Schwab Dean Bailey James McDonald Aaron Davey Russell Robertson 29 Liam Jurrah2010 12th Jim Stynes Cameron Schwab Dean Bailey James McDonald Brad Green Brad Green 55 Tom Scully2011 13th Jim Stynes Cameron Schwab Dean Bailey 4Todd Viney5 Brad Green Brent Moloney Liam Jurrah 40 Jeremy Howe2012 16th Jim Stynes 7Don McLardy Cameron Schwab Mark Neeld Jack Grimes Jack Trengove Nathan Jones Mitch Clark 29 Tom McDonald2013 17th Don McLardy 7Glen Bartlett Cameron Schwab 7Peter Jackson Mark Neeld4Neil Craig5 Jack Grimes Jack Trengove Nathan Jones Jeremy Howe 28 Jack Viney2014 17th Glen Bartlett Peter Jackson Paul Roos Jack Grimes Nathan Jones Nathan Jones Chris Dawes 20 Dom Tyson2015 13th Glen Bartlett Peter Jackson Paul Roos Nathan Jones Bernie Vince Jesse Hogan 44 Jesse Hogan2016 11th Glen Bartlett Peter Jackson Paul Roos Nathan Jones Jack Viney Jesse Hogan 41 Jayden Hunt2017 9th Glen Bartlett Peter Jackson Simon Goodwin Nathan JonesJack Viney Clayton Oliver Jeff Garlett 42 Clayton Oliver2018 4th Glen Bartlett Peter Jackson Simon Goodwin Nathan JonesJack Viney Max Gawn Tom McDonald 53 Bayley Fritsch2019 17th Glen Bartlett Gary Pert Simon Goodwin Nathan JonesJack Viney Max GawnClayton Oliver Christian Petracca 22 Harrison Petty2020 9th Glen Bartlett Gary Pert Simon Goodwin Max Gawn Christian Petracca Bayley Fritsch 22 Luke Jackson2021 1st Glen Bartlett 7Kate Roffey Gary Pert Simon Goodwin Max Gawn Clayton Oliver Bayley Fritsch 59 Kysaiah Pickett2022 5th Kate Roffey Gary Pert Simon Goodwin Max Gawn Clayton Oliver Bayley Fritsch 55 Jake BoweyIndividual awards EditBest and Fairest Edit See Keith Bluey Truscott MedalNorm Smith Medal winners Edit Main article Norm Smith Medal Christian Petracca 2021 Brownlow Medal winners Edit Main article Brownlow Medal Ivor Warne Smith 1926 1928 Don Cordner 1946 Brian Wilson 1982 Peter Moore 1984 Jim Stynes 1991 Shane Woewodin 2000 Leigh Matthews Trophy Edit Main article Leigh Matthews Trophy Jim Stynes 1991 VFL Leading Goalkicker Medal winners 1897 1954 Edit Jack Leith 1897 Vince Coutie 1904 Harry Brereton 1911 1912 Fred Fanning 1943 1944 1945 1947 Coleman Medal winners since 1955 Edit Main article Coleman Medal David Neitz 2002 AFL Rising Star winners Edit Main article AFL Rising Star Jared Rivers 2004 Jesse Hogan 2015 Luke Jackson 2021 Mark of the Year winners Edit Main article Mark of the Year Shaun Smith 1995 Mark of the Century 66 Michael Newton 2007 Liam Jurrah 2010 Jeremy Howe 2012 Goal of the Year winners Edit Main article Goal of the Year AFL Jeff Farmer 1998 All Australian AFL since 1991 Edit Main article All Australian team Jim Stynes 1991 1993 Garry Lyon 1993 1994 1995 Stephen Tingay 1994 Neil Balme 1994 Coach David Neitz 1995 2002 Todd Viney 1998 Jeff Farmer 2000 Adem Yze 2002 Jeff White 2004 James McDonald 2006 James Frawley 2010 Mark Jamar 2010 Max Gawn 2016 2018 2019 2020 2021 Captain 2022 Michael Hibberd 2017 Clayton Oliver 2018 2021 2022 Christian Petracca 2020 2021 2022 Jake Lever 2021 Steven May 2021 2022 Simon Goodwin 2021 Coach VFL Team of the Year 1982 1990 Edit Gerard Healy 1982 1984 Robert Flower 1982 1983 1984 Steven Icke 1982 Brian Wilson 1982 Peter Moore 1984 Steven Stretch 1987 Sean Wight 1987 Steven O Dwyer 1988 Brett Lovett 1988 1989 1990 Alan Johnson 1989 Garry Lyon 1989 1990 All Australian players Interstate Carnivals 1953 1988 Edit Ron Barassi 1956 1958 1961 Brian Dixon 1961 Hassa Mann 1966 Gary Hardeman 1972 Robert Flower 1980 1983 Danny Hughes 1988 National team representatives since 1998 Edit Main article Australia international rules football team Jeff Farmer 1998 David Neitz 1998 2002 Jim Stynes 1998 Todd Viney 1998 Shane Woewodin 2000 Adem Yze 2000 2002 Cameron Bruce 2002 2004 Clint Bizzell 2003 Brad Green 2004 2010 2011 Aaron Davey 2005 2006 2013 Brent Moloney 2005 Russell Robertson 2005 James McDonald 2006 James Frawley 2010 2011 Colin Sylvia 2011 Jack Trengove 2011 Dom Barry 2013 Michael Hibberd 2017 Neville Jetta 2017 AFL Women s team Edit Melbourne captain Daisy Pearce leads her players past the men s side during round 3 of the 2017 AFL Women s season In June 2013 the club fielded a women s representative side known as the Chappettes against Western Bulldogs in the first AFL sanctioned women s exhibition match held at the MCG The two teams competed annually over the next three years for the Hampson Hardeman Cup 67 In 2016 when the AFL announced plans for AFL Women s an eight team national women s league competition Melbourne was asked to submit an application for a licence alongside other AFL clubs 68 The club was one of four Melbourne based clubs to be granted a licence that year 69 The club s first players were marquee signings Daisy Pearce and Melissa Hickey 70 The full list was completed later in the year with signings and selections made in the October draft period Oakleigh Chargers coach Mick Stinear was appointed the team s inaugural head coach in September 2016 71 Current squad Edit Melbourne Football Club AFL Women s viewtalkedit Senior list Rookie list Coaching staff 1 Georgia Campbell 2 Olivia Purcell 3 Maddison Gay 4 Karen Paxman 5 Tyla Hanks 6 Daisy Pearce c 7 Tayla Harris 8 Sarah Lampard 9 Libby Birch 10 Kate Hore vc 13 Maeve Chaplin 14 Lily Mithen 15 Lauren Pearce 16 Alyssa Bannan 17 Tahlia Gillard 18 Casey Sherriff 19 Jordan Ivey 20 Charlotte Wilson 21 Maggie Caris 22 Eliza McNamara 23 Sinead Goldrick 24 Megan Fitzsimon 25 Sammie Johnson 26 Rhiannon Watt 27 Georgia Gall 29 Eden Zanker 30 Shelley Heath 32 Gabrielle Colvin 11 Eliza West B 31 Blaithin Mackin Head coach Mick StinearAssistant coaches Jane Lange senior assistant Dale Amos head of midfield technical Matt Brewer midfield Tamara Hyett back line Shae Sloane forward line Jon Stinear development runner Legend c Captain s vc Vice captain s B Category B rookie italics Inactive player list Long term injuryUpdated 11 December 2022Source s Playing list Coaching staffSeason summaries Edit Melbourne AFLW honour rollSeason Ladder W L D Finals Coach Captain s Best and fairest Leading goal kicker2017 3rd 5 2 0 DNQ Mick Stinear Daisy Pearce Daisy Pearce Alyssa Mifsud 9 2018 3rd 4 3 0 DNQ Mick Stinear Daisy Pearce Daisy Pearce 2 Tegan Cunningham 9 2019 4th 4 3 0 DNQ Mick Stinear Elise O Dea amp Shelley Scott Karen Paxman Tegan Cunningham 8 2020 4th 4 2 0 Semi final Mick Stinear Daisy Pearce Shelley Scott Kate Hore 5 2021 4th 7 2 0 Preliminary final Mick Stinear Daisy Pearce Tyla Hanks amp Karen Paxman 2 Kate Hore 12 2022 2nd 9 1 0 Grand final Mick Stinear Daisy Pearce Daisy Pearce 3 Tayla Harris 18 S7 2022 2nd 9 1 0 Premiers Mick Stinear Daisy Pearce Kate Hore Kate Hore 17 Denotes the ladder was split into two conferences Figure refers to the club s overall finishing position in the home and away season See also Edit Sports portal Australia portalCasey Demons Melbourne is in an affiliation with Casey in the Victorian Football League and VFL Women s List of Melbourne Football Club players Melbourne Football Club Hawthorn Football Club planned merger Sport in Victoria Sport in AustraliaNotes Edit1 The 2020 AFL season was shortened by five rounds as a result of the COVID 19 pandemic 2 Awarded to the best first year player 1933 2011 then to the best young player 2012 present 3 In recess owing to war 4 Sacked mid season 5 Caretaker coach 6 Retired mid season 7 Resigned mid season References Edit Current details for ABN 27 005 686 902 ABN Lookup Australian Business Register November 2014 Retrieved 4 August 2020 Bell s Life in Victoria 10 July 1858 The Footballer An annual Record of Football in Victoria 1875 100 Years of Football The Story of the Melbourne Football Club 1958 Smith v Australian Football League 2012 ATMO 20 Melbourne Football Club becomes an MCC Sporting Section again Melbourne Cricket Club Retrieved 21 February 2012 on April 1 2009 the Melbourne Football Club once again became a Sporting Section of the Melbourne Cricket Club FOOTBALL Bell s Life in Victoria and Sporting Chronicle 14 August 1858 Retrieved 26 September 2021 A NATIVE BURIAL Portland Guardian and Normanby General Advertiser 4 October 1858 Retrieved 26 September 2021 MONDAY MAY 9 1859 Argus 9 May 1859 Retrieved 26 September 2021 SATURDAY MAY 14 1859 Argus 14 May 1859 Retrieved 26 September 2021 a b MONDAY MAY 1 1859 The Argus Melbourne Vic 1848 1957 16 May 1859 Trove Retrieved 26 September 2021 MONDAY MAY 23 1859 The Argus Melbourne 23 May 1859 p 4 Retrieved 7 May 2011 via National Library of Australia MONDAY JULY 11 1859 The Argus Melbourne 11 July 1859 p 4 Retrieved 7 May 2011 via National Library of Australia FOOTBALL The South Australian Advertiser Adelaide National Library of Australia 13 August 1877 p 7 Retrieved 21 January 2015 a b c d e f Carrol Lynda 1999 The Grand Old Flag Hardie Grant p 41 Old Boy Football Notes and Comments The Argus Friday 16 May 1919 p 8 Wilson Caroline 8 June 2014 Melbourne president s plan to turn the Demons into the Yankees The Age Retrieved 4 June 2015 Frank E Checker Hughes SAHOF org au Sport Australia Hall of Fame Awards Retrieved 26 September 2020 Taylor Percy Melbourne are Proud of their Great War Record The Australasian Saturday 24 June 1944 p 23 https books slatterymedia com uploads store items grand finals volume ii 1939 1978 files look inside pdf bare URL PDF Brodie Will 1 August 2011 Demon legends disappointed by coach sacking The Age Retrieved 31 December 2015 AAP 18 March 2008 McNamee named Melbourne CEO AFL com au Bigpond Retrieved 1 June 2015 McFarlane Glenn 15 June 2008 Chairman Jim Stynes drops Melbourne bombshell Herald Sun News Corp Australia Retrieved 1 June 2006 Stevens Mark 6 August 2008 1 3m raised on Melbourne Demons most important night Herald Sun News Corp Retrieved 1 June 2015 Paul McNamee wanted Jonathan Brown Herald Sun News Corp Australia 24 July 2008 Retrieved 1 June 2015 Funding critical for Dees The Courier Mail News Corp Australia 18 December 2008 Retrieved 1 June 2015 Demons given 2m funding package ABC 19 December 2008 Retrieved 1 June 2015 Niall Jake 5 August 2010 Demons wipe out last of their 5m debt The Age Australia Retrieved 5 August 2010 Lienert Sam 17 September 2011 Neeld aims to toughen up Demons The Age Fairfax Media Retrieved 1 June 2015 Carlton midfielder Brock McLean reveals he left Melbourne Demons because the club was tanking Fox Sports News Corp 30 July 2012 Retrieved 20 February 2013 Party like it s 1954 Bulldogs stun footy world to book date with Demons AFL Grand Final guide Fox Sports 11 September 2021 Retrieved 11 September 2021 Laughton Max 25 September 2021 A Grand New Flag Demons end 57 years of AFL agony with 17 minutes of magic Fox Sports Retrieved 25 September 2021 Saturday night lights Massive TV audience for Perth Grand Final Australian Football League 26 September 2021 Retrieved 4 October 2021 Melbourne extends New Balance partnership melbournefc com au Retrieved 12 June 2018 VFL Uniforms by season since 1897 on FootyJumpers com Meet Jock Moz Bruiser The Age 12 December 2003 Retrieved 14 May 2021 Daisy the new female mascot melbournefc com au Retrieved 6 February 2017 Flash mascot to be unveiled melbournefc com au Retrieved 22 July 2017 Carroll Lynda 11 February 2011 The second verse returns MelbourneFC com au Bigpond Melbourne Football Club Melbourne Cricket Club MCC logo embedded on MFC jumper Melbourne Football Club 11 December 2013 Ashley Browne 7 July 1994 500 000 facelift for Junction Oval The Age Melbourne p 26 Damian Barrett 28 March 2008 Dees to move department to Casey Herald Sun Melbourne Retrieved 21 December 2014 Dees to move department to Casey 27 March 2008 Retrieved 11 November 2021 Era ends No more footy at Junction Oval 21 July 2015 Retrieved 12 March 2022 a b Tom Morris 18 August 2021 Exclusive Demons hatch plans to FINALLY solve eight year problem Fox Sports Demons Community To Win From Gosch s Paddock Upgrade miragenews com 2 August 2021 Gosch s Paddock to undergo redevelopment 1 August 2021 Retrieved 27 March 2022 Gosch s Paddock Oval to be upgraded for Melbourne Football Club 4 August 2021 Retrieved 27 March 2022 Gosch s Paddock redevelopment commences 5 December 2021 Retrieved 27 March 2022 Golly Gosch Demons eye site for new home The Age 24 July 2019 Coronavirus protocols Melbourne move AFL program to Casey The Age 2 March 2020 Essendon Bombers blitz off field in Victoria but Sydney Swans Australia s Favourite Team a b c Beveridge Riley 29 January 2016 Your AFL club s most famous supporters from Barack Obama to Cam Newton Fox Sports Retrieved 25 September 2021 Walsh Kay Schedvin Bernie Snedden Sir Billy Mackie 1926 1987 Australian Dictionary of Biography National Centre of Biography Australian National University Retrieved 25 September 2021 Dee force is strong with this one Skywalker s shout out PerthNow The Sunday Times Western Australia 11 September 2021 Retrieved 25 September 2021 Nazeem Is Fired Up For The Grand Final 10 Play Network 10 24 September 2021 Retrieved 25 September 2021 It s AFL Grand Final weekend and mad Demons supporter Nazeem Hussain is here to give us a completely unbiased look at the big game 4 December 2006 Celebrating the Century Archived 27 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Melbourne FC Retrieved 11 August 2010 a b c d e f g h Melbourne Game Records AFL Tables Retrieved 1 June 2015 a b Streaks Melbourne AFL Tables Retrieved 4 June 2015 a b Melbourne Attendances AFL Tables Retrieved 1 June 2015 Melbourne Goalkicking Records AFL Tables Retrieved 4 June 2015 Melbourne Season and Game Records 1965 2015 AFL Tables Retrieved 4 June 2015 FOOTBALL The Argus Melbourne 1 May 1914 p 13 Retrieved 31 July 2011 via National Library of Australia VFL Football Record 2 May 1914 p 15 Connolly Rohan 25 May 2015 Melbourne Demons Jeremy Howe the greatest hanger of them all The Age Fairfax Media Retrieved 1 June 2015 Twomey Callum 16 October 2016 First bounce for women s footy at the MCG AFL com au Bigpond Retrieved 16 October 2016 Lane Samantha 20 April 2016 Gold Coast latest out but AFL awaits 16 women s team bids The Age Retrieved 13 November 2016 Chalkley Rhoden Stephanie 11 July 2016 AFL Women s league Collingwood Carlton among eight clubs in new national competition ABC com au Retrieved 13 November 2016 Matthews Bruce 27 July 2016 Sixteen of the best women s marquees named AFL com au Bigpond Retrieved 16 October 2016 Dinny Navaratnam Bruce Matthews Nathan Schmook Lee Gaskin 15 September 2016 Women s league coaches revealed Dees name coach AFL com au Retrieved 13 November 2016 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Melbourne Football Club Official website Demon Wiki Online Encyclopedia of the Melbourne Football Club Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Melbourne Football Club amp oldid 1126755327, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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