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View Full Version : Dogs v Essendon rd 17, 1984



Webby
11-06-2015, 11:34 PM
This game came up tonight as the last one in which Essendon Footy club went goal-less in a half of league footy... Problem was, we matched them!

For some background, we'd controlled our round 7 clash at Windy Hill, winning by 22 points.

In rd 17 at the Western Oval, it pissed rain all day - with a strong southerly breeze. (Magic!) we didn't kick a goal until the 12th minute of the last quarter. Bizarrely, we then banged on three in three minutes. We took the lead, then Essendon got one back - pipping us by 2 points. 4.10 to 3.14.

Wash up was that we missed the 1984 Finals on percentage and Essendon won the flag. A real sliding doors moment!
Just can't stand 'em!

1eyedog
11-06-2015, 11:40 PM
Oh yeah, thanks for reminding me! :p

Remi Moses
11-06-2015, 11:44 PM
Terrific win in round 7, and then proceeded to lose at Moorabbin the next week:mad:
My memories are of a very wet windy day, and John Bennett kicking our first goal from the boundary line.
Neil Cordy left Peter Bradbury 100 metres clear, and then became Mick Malthouse's whipping boy.

Twodogs
11-06-2015, 11:44 PM
Bloody Neil Cordy. :mad:

40 metres away from his man kick chasing when his opponent kicked the winner from the goal square.

Twodogs
11-06-2015, 11:46 PM
Terrific win in round 7, and then proceeded to lose at Moorabbin the next week:mad:
My memories are of a very wet windy day, and John Bennett kicking our first goal from the boundary line.
Neil Cordy left Peter Bradbury 100 metres clear, and then became Mick Malthouse's whipping boy.

Tim Watson kicked to him as Cordy stood and watched him.

Remi Moses
11-06-2015, 11:49 PM
Tim Watson kicked to him as Cordy stood and watched him.

Cordy's career headed South from that moment ( with us) and I think Mick pulled Beasley out of the line up for John Bennett.

Bulldog4life
11-06-2015, 11:53 PM
Terrific win in round 7, and then proceeded to lose at Moorabbin the next week:mad:
My memories are of a very wet windy day, and John Bennett kicking our first goal from the boundary line.
Neil Cordy left Peter Bradbury 100 metres clear, and then became Mick Malthouse's whipping boy.

Yes Remi you are right I stood in the forward pocket at the Geelong Rd end grandstand side with my dad and we were drenched The wettest I have ever been at the footy Fairly certain it was that pocket that Bradbury kicked the goal from too

Remi Moses
11-06-2015, 11:58 PM
Yes Remi you are right I stood in the forward pocket at the Geelong Rd end grandstand side with my dad and we were drenched The wettest I have ever been at the footy Fairly certain it was that pocket that Bradbury kicked the goal from too

Probably the wettest I've been as well.
The coldest was that period of games in the early 80's where the bins were used for heating . Even the cops came over to warm up!:o

Webby
12-06-2015, 12:09 AM
Terrific win in round 7, and then proceeded to lose at Moorabbin the next week:mad:
My memories are of a very wet windy day, and John Bennett kicking our first goal from the boundary line.
Neil Cordy left Peter Bradbury 100 metres clear, and then became Mick Malthouse's whipping boy.

John Bennet was an interesting one. Crossed from the Aints in 1984, played a few games, then went back to Moorabbin for '85.

always right
12-06-2015, 10:45 AM
Didn't stop raining all day, very few goals, yet surprisingly it was a gripping game that has stayed with me vividly.

Pretty sure John Bennett kicked two of our three goals whilst the highlight was the amazing battle on the wing between Hawkins and Neagle. The two of them stood out in tough conditions with their skill and attack on the ball.

Twodogs
12-06-2015, 12:37 PM
Yes Remi you are right I stood in the forward pocket at the Geelong Rd end grandstand side with my dad and we were drenched The wettest I have ever been at the footy Fairly certain it was that pocket that Bradbury kicked the goal from too



Yep. Bradbury kicked the winner at the Geelong road end.



Probably the wettest I've been as well.
The coldest was that period of games in the early 80's where the bins were used for heating . Even the cops came over to warm up!:o

I've never seen rain like it. It was incredible, my head started to hurt from the raindrops hitting it so hard.

I remember those cold days in the early '80s and setting fire to pretty much anything that would burn to try and keep warm.
;)

John Bennet was an interesting one. Crossed from the Aints in 1984, played a few games, then went back to Moorabbin for '85.

Kicked a century in the twos one year for St Kilda. He was behind Plugger for the full forwards spot at St kilda so came to us but we had Beasley. I wonder why he didn't go to a club without an ace full forward? Benno was the sort of player you'd get to the footy early just to watch play in the reserves. Geez Malthouse has always hated full forwards. From Beasley to Sav Rocca he would drop them at a minutes notice but dud players like Michael Rolfe walked into the side.


Didn't stop raining all day, very few goals, yet surprisingly it was a gripping game that has stayed with me vividly.

Pretty sure John Bennett kicked two of our three goals whilst the highlight was the amazing battle on the wing between Hawkins and Neagle. The two of them stood out in tough conditions with their skill and attack on the ball.

Yep. Bennett kicked 2 of our 3 goals, did Brian Royal kick the other goal?

Eastdog
12-06-2015, 08:46 PM
As someone born in the very late 80s it's great to hear some reminiscing from the old VFL days. Back to the game you described Webby yes that is frustrating. 85 I read was a great year for us. Nearly made it to the GF. 84 I believe was the first year under Mick Malthouse.

Twodogs
12-06-2015, 10:42 PM
As someone born in the very late 80s it's great to hear some reminiscing from the old VFL days. Back to the game you described Webby yes that is frustrating. 85 I read was a great year for us. Nearly made it to the GF. 84 I believe was the first year under Mick Malthouse.

Correct. Talent wise that 1985 side was the best bulldog side I've seen us put on the park. It bristled with stars in every line. It's one real weakness was a lack of a good CHF. Not really a lack but the inability of Groenewegan, Sewell or Peart to snatch the opportunity and fill the last hole. We had a goal to goal line of Kennedy, Foster, Wallis, one of the three mentioned above, mostly Sewell early in the year but Gronna came into the team later on and Beasly.

The back six was Hardie Kennedy Egan, Fruicake Ford Foster B. Cordy. Hardie won the Brownlow , Tits was the best fullback in the competition and Egan covered Hardie when he went for a run with the ball. Fruicake was the HBF with the crazy eyes that all good defensive units need. Foster is the best CHB I've seen at our club. Ever. And Brian Cordy was one of the first running halfbacks who'd mark the ball and then take off before anyone else had realised that he was 30 metres away. Him missing the 1986 with a knee was the single biggest factor in our going backward that year.

I don't have the vocabulary to do justice to how good our two wingman were that year. Doug Hawkins' feats are pretty well known but Magic Maclean on the other wing was never beaten. He is the cleverest footballer I've ever seen. He was always two steps in front of his opponents who spent their time grabbing at spaces he'd been in a moment before and tackling bits of air. He wouldn't pick up the ball but roll it along the ground alongside him before picking it up at the last moment and dance around his opponent in the same movement. He made very good players look silly. Steve Wallis just won contests for the footy. That's what he did.

The half forward line was a changing beast but the full forward line was top shelf. Edmond Beasly Bamblett. Beasly kicked the ton and was a better full forward than Templeton IMO. KT was the best player ever and won a Brownlow playing at CHF, but the pieman had him shaded as a FF. He had more big bags, did the job at a high level for longer. Then there was Lallie, Les Bamblett is my favourite Footscray/Bulldogs player of all time. His 1985 season was my highlight of all the years I've been watching. Some of the things he did I haven't seen done again to this day. He would suddenly appear between two defenders and intercept a pass then waddle into the goal square and tap the ball through. Then he'd shark a ruck tap from a boundary throw in take off at a million miles and roll it through from the boundary line two minutes later. Jim Edmond was the captain and one of the best captains we've had. He was tough, a great shot at goal from a set shot or a snap from the boundary or on the run from 40 metres out. He's also one of the best overhead marks to play for the club.

The ruck of Purser Maylin Royal speaks for itself.




I saw every game in person including practice matches that year in person at the ground.


1985 is the closest we've come to completing the puzzle.

Webby
12-06-2015, 11:49 PM
Didn't stop raining all day, very few goals, yet surprisingly it was a gripping game that has stayed with me vividly.

Pretty sure John Bennett kicked two of our three goals whilst the highlight was the amazing battle on the wing between Hawkins and Neagle. The two of them stood out in tough conditions with their skill and attack on the ball.

Hawkins' handling in the wet was amazing. As was his ability to bomb torps with ease with the breeze. He just never seemed to shank them. That '84 side really had matured. They came good in '83 - taking some big scalps, yet struggling with consistency. Essendon was a real bogey team in '83, having smashed us twice. However in '84 we did them at Windy Hill and should've gotten them at WO.

Had we snuck into the 5 (in hindsight, Bradbury's goal was the reason we didn't), we could've done some real damage. As it was, Essendon won the flag. The following year, we also split the honours with Essendon. However, Brad Hardie let Lethal Leigh off the leash in the last quarter of the prelim and we missed out on testing Essendon in the big one...

What might've been!

We were also a smokey in '87, but ran into an inspired Melbourne - again missing finals by a whisker. Melbourne were very close to being the best team in the league in September '87. But for Jimmy Stynes running through the mark, they might've worried Carlton in the GF)..... Aargh, sliding doors moments..!

Remi Moses
13-06-2015, 12:07 AM
Melbourne plucked that game out of their arse. Flukey snaps and ordinary players " doing it for Robbie".
They played for Northey in that era, as he was a real fire and brimstone coach .
I thought we did well to get that close to be honest, although I think we could have beaten North .
I really enjoyed 1983 as it was the first time we'd been " match of the day" with Peter Landy and Louie Richards .

Twodogs
13-06-2015, 12:46 AM
Hawkins' handling in the wet was amazing. As was his ability to bomb torps with ease with the breeze. He just never seemed to shank them. That '84 side really had matured. They came good in '83 - taking some big scalps, yet struggling with consistency. Essendon was a real bogey team in '83, having smashed us twice. However in '84 we did them at Windy Hill and should've gotten them at WO.

Had we snuck into the 5 (in hindsight, Bradbury's goal was the reason we didn't), we could've done some real damage. As it was, Essendon won the flag. The following year, we also split the honours with Essendon. However, Brad Hardie let Lethal Leigh off the leash in the last quarter of the prelim and we missed out on testing Essendon in the big one...

What might've been!

We were also a smokey in '87, but ran into an inspired Melbourne - again missing finals by a whisker. Melbourne were very close to being the best team in the league in September '87. But for Jimmy Stynes running through the mark, they might've worried Carlton in the GF)..... Aargh, sliding doors moments..!

They were good years all of a sudden after all the bleak, bleak years of the late '70s and the early '80s.

Webby
13-06-2015, 01:06 AM
Melbourne plucked that game out of their arse. Flukey snaps and ordinary players "I really enjoyed 1983 as it was the first time we'd been " match of the day" with Peter Landy and Louie Richards .

I probably bang on about '83 more often than I should! I think I described it as a "Cocoon" moment in another post. After years of not much other than cellar dwelling, culminating in rock bottom last in 1982, losing the final game at home by 25 goals, Templeton leaving, Dunstan leaving, EJ Jnr retired, Wheeler gone, Jennings virtually finished etc etc, we came out and beat premiers Carlton, Melbourne & KT, runners up, Richmond, and eventual premiers, Hawthorn in the first six or so weeks. I think the Hawthorn game might've been the match of the day you're thinking of.

It was surreal for a while there... Until Essendon smashed us at Windy Hill...! They really had our measure. That's why the '84 results against them were a real sign of progress. By '84 we could mix it with anyone. Thus the shame we missed finals that year.

Twodogs
13-06-2015, 02:06 AM
Melbourne plucked that game out of their arse. Flukey snaps and ordinary players " doing it for Robbie".
They played for Northey in that era, as he was a real fire and brimstone coach .
I thought we did well to get that close to be honest, although I think we could have beaten North .
I really enjoyed 1983 as it was the first time we'd been " match of the day" with Peter Landy and Louie Richards .

That was a terrific game of footy but they were in front when the siren went but we'd kicked the last two goals I seem to remember. Bloody Flower carried them over. He got Doug over onto the members wing he was playing so well.

Webby
13-06-2015, 07:30 AM
That was a terrific game of footy but they were in front when the siren went but we'd kicked the last two goals I seem to remember. Bloody Flower carried them over. He got Doug over onto the members wing he was playing so well.

My clear recollections are that Robbie Flower had Dpug's measure way more often than not. He was a sweet, sweet footballer to watch. They both were, but I have to say, Robbie Flower shaded our Doug.

Doug had plenty of "bitches" - Dipper comes to mind, however Robbie Flower was certainly the alpha dog whenever he crossed the Maribyrnong. There's no shame in that, as Flower was a champ. Even Warne had his Laras, and even Lara had his McGraths.

craigsahibee
15-06-2015, 11:35 AM
Didn't stop raining all day, very few goals, yet surprisingly it was a gripping game that has stayed with me vividly.

Pretty sure John Bennett kicked two of our three goals whilst the highlight was the amazing battle on the wing between Hawkins and Neagle. The two of them stood out in tough conditions with their skill and attack on the ball.

Remember that game vividly. One poignant moment for me was the roar from the crowd when one of the Little League teams kicked a goal at half time. For many in the crowd who had arrived between the reserves and the seniors, it was the first goal they had seen for the day and they were very appreciative of it.

Twodogs
15-06-2015, 11:40 AM
Remember that game vividly. One poignant moment for me was the roar from the crowd when one of the Little League teams kicked a goal at half time. For many in the crowd who had arrived between the reserves and the seniors, it was the first goal they had seen for the day and they were very appreciative of it.


Oh wow, I had forgotten the big cheers the kids got that for actually kicking a goal that day.

Those kids would be in their mid 30s by now.

westdog54
15-06-2015, 01:23 PM
http://afltables.com/afl/stats/games/1984/050719840728.html

Wouldn't have believed it had I not read it.

Twodogs
15-06-2015, 04:26 PM
http://afltables.com/afl/stats/games/1984/050719840728.html

Wouldn't have believed it had I not read it.


I reckon I did pretty well remembering of the top of my head that Brian Royal kicked the other goal.

westdog54
15-06-2015, 07:36 PM
Don't worry, I'm sure in 30 years well still be talking about Liam Jones kicking 5 in the VFL granny, or Bonti's miracle against Melbourne last year, or Easton's karate kick against the Swans followed by that chase and pickup.

Twodogs
15-06-2015, 08:16 PM
Don't worry, I'm sure in 30 years well still be talking about Liam Jones kicking 5 in the VFL granny, or Bonti's miracle against Melbourne last year, or Easton's karate kick against the Swans followed by that chase and pickup.

In 30 years time I will be doing well remembering my own name...

westdog54
16-06-2015, 07:19 AM
In 30 years time I will be doing well remembering my own name...

As long as you remember the important stuff.

craigsahibee
16-06-2015, 01:09 PM
http://afltables.com/afl/stats/games/1984/050719840728.html

Wouldn't have believed it had I not read it.

98 Free Kicks for the match. Andrew Purser received 12. Footy's changed a bit.

Twodogs
16-06-2015, 02:03 PM
98 Free Kicks for the match. Andrew Purser received 12. Footy's changed a bit.


I saw that! The umpires did pretty well to get a 50/48 split.


But I vividly remember getting a raw deal from them that day.;)

craigsahibee
16-06-2015, 05:22 PM
I saw that! The umpires did pretty well to get a 50/48 split.


But I vividly remember getting a raw deal from them that day.;)

Same old story. Not how many you get, but where you get them.

Sedat
23-06-2015, 03:10 PM
Bloody Neil Cordy. :mad:

40 metres away from his man kick chasing when his opponent kicked the winner from the goal square.
Peter Bradbury from memory.

Twodogs
23-06-2015, 03:44 PM
Peter Bradbury from memory.


It's scarred into my psyche. Peter Bradbury in the goal square at the Geelong rd end with a shit eating grin on his face waiting for the perfectly weighted Tim Warson drop punt to fall into his lap. Neil Cordy is closer to me than Bradbury or Watson and I am sheltering under an advertising hoarding at the Barkly st end.