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This report contains an introduction, which provides a description of the main features and events of the season. A profile of the participating clubs, provides information about the meetings, officials and major events of the season. All matches of the season are presented in chronological order and include descriptions of the play, as documented in newspaper reports together with a summary. Club records for the season are presented in a table format, which provides match by match details including players, scores, venue, date and teams. Finally, a description for each known player for the season, with their notable events and circumstances
"South Australia's bar developed like no other bar in Australia, better termed "independent" than "separate", its independent spirit showing in the distinctive preference for small sets of chambers"--P. [4] of cover.
A complete history of the Australian city of Adelaide, this volume includes chapters on its founders, architects, laws, railways and more.
The Bankers Football Club was formed in 1877 for Adelaide bank employees, and was one of the founding members of the South Australian Football Association. Includes player list and statistics.
This book fits under the banner of South Australian country football history but it focused on the specific topic of 'leading goalkickers'. This is the author's fifth book on South Australian country football history. Previous books have focused on the records of goalkickers but this book is dedicated to them. The author has included profiles for every leading goalkicker. -- from Introduction.
A report of the 1962 South Australian National Football League season.
Various local history documents used by A.M. Dolling in her research.
The book examines a period when football underwent a seismic and ineradicable change brought about by the determination of the Victorian Football League to wrest control of the game's development and destiny from the various state controlling bodies and the Australian Football Council. Whereas the VFL had initially been the first among equals, it gradually assumed the role of the sole and undisputed guardian of the code. The AFC, once football's ostensible national controlling body, became an irrelevance. Instead of a national sport with a national remit we ended up with an expanded VFL with a majority of Victorian member clubs supplemented by a token sprinkling of teams from interstate. Such teams were in most cases created from scratch and could in no way be said to derive directly from the states' unique and distinctive football traditions and culture. For some, it was a brave new world, but evolution does not inevitably entail improvement.
A ready-reference guide to all twenty-two clubs to have so far competed in the South Australian National Football League.