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ANZAC FOOTBALL By now we are familiar with the Anzac Day football rituals. Since 1995 Collingwood and Essendon have battled for Anzac supremacy at the MCG. Following the AFL’s lead St George and Eastern Suburbs commemorate the day in the NRL. It’s a tradition to which supporters of both codes have been drawn in vast numbers. Both codes supplied a great many troops who served at Gallipoli and across Europe, many of whom were never to return. Collingwood lost 6 players, Essendon 7. So these clubs’ own histories add to the solemnity of Anzac commemorations. Yet football too made its contribution. Prior to WW1 the game had undergone something of a renaissance. Recovering from the depression and energised by waves of migrants, football was blooming. In Victoria, the Dockerty Cup (starting in 1909) had been a central plank in the game’s growth and club fixtures were regular. 1913 saw the reinstatement of the NSW-Victoria clash after 25 years. Even though plans to form a national association were scuttled by the outbreak of war in 1914, the game soldiered on as best it could. The Argus of 9 August 1915 reports:
Yet it was clear that the war was taking its toll. The Argus went on:
The strong commitment made by footballers to the war effort meant that the suspension of the game was inevitable. And by 1916 competition was ended, not to be resumed until after the war. According to the Argus, when football did resume, in 1919:
The Irymple tragedy underlines a question that many in the football community have asked: why don’t we in football honour the Anzac legend with a celebration similar to those arranged by other codes? This year the FFV has inaugurated a series of games to mark Anzac Day. Hume City will take on South Melbourne at Broadmeadow’s Valley Park for the right to hold aloft the inaugural Anzac Day Cup. Green Gully and Heidelberg will meet in Bendigo. Perhaps in years to come the FFV might consider playing a game in Mildura to honour the story of the lost Irymple footballers. |
DAS
LIBERO Issue no.
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