SYDNEY SWANS


'Sydney Swans' is an Australian Football League (AFL) club based in Sydney, New South Wales.
The club, originally founded in 1874, was known as the 'South Melbourne Football Club' until it relocated to Sydney in 1982 to become the Sydney Swans. Sydney is the only AFL club based in New South Wales, and was also the first non-Victorian club in the competition.
The Swans play most home games at the Sydney Cricket Ground, with 'blockbuster' games played at Telstra Stadium (the former Olympic Stadium at Homebush Bay).
The club has won premierships in 1909, 1918 and 1933 (as South Melbourne), and in 2005 (as the Sydney Swans).
Sydney played in the 2006 Grand Final, but was defeated by the West Coast Eagles for the premiership title, losing by one point - the closest Grand Final result since 1966 [1]. The previous year, the Swans narrowly defeated the Eagles in the 2005 Grand Final by 4 points in an epic low scoring encounter. This had been their first Grand Final win in 72 years.

Contents
History
Early success
Struggling Victorian club
Relocation to Sydney
Dark times
Return to finals football and media spotlight
2005 Grand Final
2006 Season
2006 Grand Final
Supporter base
Rivalries
West Coast Eagles
Brisbane Lions
St Kilda
Trivia
VFL/AFL Premierships
Premiers
Runners-up
Current squad
Honour roll
Team records
Individual awards
Best and Fairest
Brownlow Medal winners
South Melbourne
Sydney
Leigh Matthews Trophy winners
Coleman Medal winners
AFL Rising Star winners
Mark of the Year winners
Australian Football Hall of Fame players
Team of the Century
Corporate
Administration
Supported Charities
Club jumper
Club mascot
See also
References
External links

History


Old South Melbourne Football Club shield

All that remains of the Swan's old Lake Oval ground, a single grandstand built in 1926, now unused and in a state of disrepair, but flagged as a possible club museum

The inauguration date of the club is officially June 19 1874, but it only adopted the title ''South Melbourne Football Club'' four weeks later, on July 15. The club represented the Melbourne suburb of South Melbourne, one of the city's oldest. In 1880 it absorbed the Albert Park club, and by 1890 had replaced the original blue and white with the now familiar red and white of the South Melbourne coat of arms. Nicknamed "The Bloods" (short for Blood-Stained Angels, in reference to the colours), it played in the Victorian Football Association until 1896 when it was a founding club of the Victorian Football League. The club was based at Lake Oval.
Early success

The club had early success and won three VFL premierships in 1909, 1918 and 1933. The club was at its most successful in the 1930s, when key recruits from both Victoria and interstate led to a string of appearances in the finals, including 4 successive grand final appearances from 1933-1936, albeit with only one premiership in 1933. It was during this period that the team became known as the Swans, the nickname having been given courtesy of the number of West Australians in the team (Swans being the state emblem of WA). The name stuck, partially due to the association with nearby Albert Park and Lake, also known for its white swans (ironically there are no longer any non-native white swans and only black, indigenous swans in the lake).
After several years with only limited success, South Melbourne next reached the grand final in 1945. The match, played against Carlton, was to become known as "the Bloodbath", courtesy of the brawl that overshadowed the match, with a total of 9 players being reported by the umpires. Carlton won the match by 28 points, and from then on, South Melbourne struggled.
Struggling Victorian club

In the following years, South Melbourne consistently struggled as their inner-city recruiting area largely emptied. The club missed the finals in 1946 and continued to fall so that by 1950 they were second-last on the ladder. Though they temporarily bounced back and nearly made the finals in 1952, in the following seventeen years South Melbourne did not finish above eighth position (though in 1953 and 1965 they won as many games as they lost). By the 1960s it was clear that South Melbourne's financial resources would not be capable of allowing them to compete in the growing market for country and interstate players, and their own local zone was never strong enough to compensate for this.
Under the legendary Norm Smith, South Melbourne finally improved substantially in 1970 with a fourth place. However, having probably the worst country zone in the league and a poor metropolitan zone meant South Melbourne still possessed not the slightest access to the best emerging players, and their 1970 joy was short-lived. Between Round 7, 1972 and Round 13, 1973, they lost 29 consecutive games and by the end of the 1970s South Melbourne had massive debts after struggling for so long. Despite strong supporter opposition, in the early 1980s they were given the choice of relocation to Sydney or oblivion.
Relocation to Sydney

Sydney 1980s shield logo
The Swans moved to Sydney (and the SCG) in 1982 as part of the VFL's attempts to broaden its appeal, a move which ultimately culminated in its extension into a national competition, the AFL.
The move to Sydney is the subject of the Weddings Parties Anything song 'The Swans Return'.
In 1985 the VFL created one of the messiest deals ever associated with football and almost brought an end to the Sydney Swans. On 31 July 1985, for what was thought to be $6.3 million, Dr. Geoffrey Edelsten "bought" the Swans. In reality it was $2.9 million in cash with funding and other payments spread over five years. Edelsten resigned as chairman in less than twelve months.
During the Edelsten years, the Swans were seen by the Sydney public as a flamboyant club, typified by the style of its spearhead, Warwick Capper, his long bright blond mullet and bright pink boots made him unmissable on the field and his pink ferrari, penchant for fashion models and eccentricity made him notorious off the field - all somewhat fashionable in the 1980s. During Capper's peak years, the Swans had made successive finals appearances for the first time since relocating. His consistently spectacular aerial exploits earned him consecutive Mark of the Year awards while his goalkicking efforts (amassing 103 goals in 1987) made him runner up in the Coleman Medal two years running. The Swans successive finals appearances saw crowds during this time peak at an average of around 25,000 per game. Capper's status saw him move to the Brisbane Bears the next season.
Dark times

The club's form was to slump in the following year.
By 1988 the licence was sold back to the VFL for ten dollars. Losses were in the millions. A group of financial backers including Mike Willessee, Basil Sellers, Peter Weinert and Craig Kimberley purchased the licence and bankrolled the club until 1993, when the AFL stepped in.
Attendances consistently dropped below 10,000 when the team was performed poorly between 1990 and 1994, far below many of the other clubs in the league.
The AFL began to step in to save the Swans, offering substantial monetary and management support. The club survived, and with player draft concessions in the early 1990s, the team fielded a competitive team through the decade. During this time, the side was largely held together by two inspirational skippers, both from the Wagga Wagga region of country New South Wales, Dennis Carroll and later the courageous captain Paul Kelly.
Desperate to hang on, the club was keen to enlist the biggest names and identities in the AFL, and recruited legendary coach Ron Barassi who helped save the club from extinction while serving them as coach from Round 7, 1993 to 1995. At roughly the same time, Hawthorn legend Dermott Brereton was also recruited.
Although the club was building, it still continued to struggle.
Return to finals football and media spotlight

The Red and White army celebrate a goal at the AFL Grand Final

A big coup for the club was recruitment of St Kilda Football Club champion Tony "Plugger" Lockett in 1995. Lockett became a cult figure in Sydney, with an instant impact and along wth the Super League war in the rival rugby league football code in Australia, helped the Swans to pull in larger crowds.
In 1996 the Swans lost the grand final to North Melbourne, which had been their first appearance in a grand final since 1945. The game was played in front of 93,102 at the MCG.
Since 1996, the Swans have made the finals in each season except 2000 and 2002.
By 1997, the average for home ground attendances had peaked at 36,612.
Former Swans favourite son Paul Roos was appointed coach part-way through the 2002 season after it became obvious that Rodney Eade was not performing as coach. Roos had an immediate impact, winning most of the remaining games that year, and continuing a record as a successful coach with the Swans for over half a decade.
A new home ground in Telstra Stadium provided increased capacity over the SCG. The Swans' first game played at the stadium in round 9, 2002 attracted 54,169 spectators. The Sydney Swans v Collingwood match at Telstra Stadium on August 23, 2003 set an attendance record for the largest crowd to watch an AFL game outside of Victoria with an official attendance of 72,393 (near capacity) and was the largest home and away AFL crowd at any stadium for 2003. A preliminary final against the Brisbane Lions at Telstra Stadium in 2003 attracted 71,019 people.
Sydney was able to recruit another St Kilda export in the Lockett mould, Barry Hall, a large forward with a wily reputation, who after initially playing in the shadow of Lockett in his twilight years, relished in the new surrounds and eventually became a cult figure and club leader in his own right.
When Telstra Stadium was unavailable for the 2005 semi final, the game against Geelong drew a crowd of 39,079 at the SCG. The record crowd for an AFL fixture at that venue is 46,168 in 1997 also against Geelong.
The culmination of the recent success is the 2005 premiership against the West Coast Eagles played in front of 91,898 at the MCG taking the flag to Sydney for the first time and breaking a 72 year drought for the club. It also broke the longest premiership drought in the history of the competition.
Partly as a result of the exclusive marketshare, crowds at home games tend to be larger on average than those drawn by the nine National Rugby League clubs in Sydney, despite the fact that rugby league is well established as Sydney's most popular football code.
Over the history of the AFL, the Swans have been one of the most innovative clubs in the VFL/AFL in finding new markets. In recent years, the club has invested time and energy in the US market (with the help of coach Paul Roos). In 2006 as part of ''Australia Week'' celebrations in the USA, the Sydney Swans were beaten by the Kangaroos Football Club in an exhibition match at the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA). The club formed affiliation agreements with the Los Angeles Swans and the Chicago Swans in the USAFL.
2005 Grand Final

Main articles: 2005 AFL Finals Series

''2005 Toyota AFL Grand Final'' ''G'' ''B'' ''Total''
'Sydney'
'8' '10' '58'
West Coast
7 12 54
Venue: Melbourne Cricket Ground Crowd: 91,898

Sydney played the AFL Grand Final on 24 September 2005 against the West Coast Eagles defeating them by 4 points, final score 8.10 (58) to West Coast's 7.12 (54). In the last few minutes, the Sydney defence held strong, with Leo Barry marking the ball just before the siren to stop the Eagles' final desperate shot at goal. The premiership was the Swans' first in 72 years and their first since being based in Sydney. It was also the fifth premiership in succession to be won by a team outside Victoria.
In 2005 the Swans came under enormous public scrutiny, even from AFL commissioner Andrew Demetriou for their unorthodox, "boring" defense-oriented tactics that included tightly controlling the tempo of the game and starving the opposition of possession (in fact, seven teams that season had their lowest possession total whilst playing against the Swans). The coach Paul Roos maintained that playing contested football was the style used by all recent premiership winning teams, and felt that it was ironic that the much criticised strategy proved ultimately successful.
On Friday, 30 September 2005 a ticker tape parade down Sydney's George Street was held in honour of the Swans' achievements, which ended with a rally at Town Hall, where Sydney Lord Mayor Clover Moore presented the team with the key to the city. The flag of the Swans also flew on top of the Sydney Harbour Bridge during the week; the same flag was later given to WA premier Geoff Gallop to fly on top of the state legislature in Perth as part of the friendly wager between Gallop and NSW premier Morris Iemma.
2006 Season

Main articles: Sydney Swans 2006 Season

Rnd 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
Opp Ess PA Car Mel Gee BL Ric WB Haw Kan StK Col Fre Ade WCE Ric PA Ess Mel Gee BL Car
Venue TD SCG TD SCG TS G TD SCG MCG MO SCG TS SCG SCG S SCG AS SCG MCG SS TS SCG
Result L L W L W W W W W W L L W L L W W W W L W W
Margin 27 26 7 5 22 32 118 26 65 7 2 13 33 39 2 48 27 43 32 27 57 92
Postn 12 14 12 12 9 8 5 4 4 4 4 6 6 6 7 7 6 4 3 5 5 4

The Swans started 2006 quietly with multiple pre-season losses and poor performances early in the home and away season. The media diagnosed a "premiership hangover". Despite this, they finished the season strongly in 4th place, obtaining a double chance in the finals and a home Preliminary Final berth after a strong one-point victory over the West Coast Eagles at Subiaco Oval in Perth. The Swans defeated Fremantle by a considerable margin at Telstra Stadium.
2006 Grand Final

Main articles: 2006 AFL Grand Final

Sydney Swans squad for the 2006 AFL Grand Final

''2006 Toyota AFL Grand Final'' ''G'' ''B'' ''Total''
Sydney
12 12 84
'West Coast'
'12' '13' '85'
Venue: Melbourne Cricket Ground Crowd: 97, 431

The 2006 AFL Grand Final was contested between the Sydney Swans and West Coast Eagles at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on September 30, 2006. The West Coast Eagles avenged their 2005 Grand Final defeat by beating the Sydney Swans by one point, only the fourth one-point Grand Final margin in the competition's history.
The rivalry between the Sydney Swans and West Coast Eagles has become one of the greatest rivalries in VFL/AFL history. The last six games between the two sides have been decided by a combined margin of 13 points. Four of those six games were finals.

Supporter base


As the only AFL club in Sydney, the Swans have a large population base to draw on.
In 2006, following the first premiership in 72 years, the club achieved a record membership and the biggest since 1999. There is still a healthy Melbourne following for the Swans, particularly a revival in the late 1990s. Almost 10,000 Swans members are (South) Melbourne based and the club experiences good support when the team plays in Melbourne and many also make the long trip to Sydney for home games as well. The club recently celebrated in 2007 their 25th anniversary since relocating from South Melbourne, with parties hosted both in Sydney and their former home.
Year Members Finishing position² Average Home crowd
1982 7th15,993
1983 11th12,025
19842,75010th12,497
19852,77710th10,137
19864,9274th, semi-finalists25,819
19873,5944th, semi-finalists22,032
19882,5167th12,311
19892,6317th12,317
19902,62413th9,178
19912,90712th11,521
19923,02015th9,881
19933,09715th9,423
19943,32715th9,813
19956,08812th15,949
19969,5252nd, runners-up24,996
199722,1097th, qualifying finalists36,612
199831,0895th, semi-finalists31,549
199931,1758th, qualifying finalists30,586
200030,17710th25,308
200128,0227th, elimination finalists27,556
200227,75511th25,270
200321,2703rd, preliminary finalists32,244
200425,0105th, semi-finalists30,964
200524,955'1st, premiers'31,516
200630,3822nd, runners-up32,877¹
2007'31,600¹'-36,931¹

¹(as at 18 May, 2007) [2]
²following finals matches

Rivalries


West Coast Eagles


The Swans are developing arguably their most famous modern rivalry against the Perth based 'West Coast Eagles'. The six most recent games between the two teams (that is, from the 2005 Qualifying Final to the Round 1 match of 2007) have each been decided by less than a goal, resulting in two wins to Sydney and 4 to West Coast (including a Grand Final win each). The difference in aggregate across the six games is three points and the sum of the margins is thirteen points.
Ironically, in 2005, Sydney lost the Qualifying Final to the Eagles by four points, only to later win the Grand Final by four points against the Eagles. In 2006, the Eagles lost the Qualifying Final to Sydney by one point, only to later win the Grand Final by one point against the Swans.
Below are the results of recent clashes between these rivals:
'2005 Qualifying Final, Subiaco'

★ West Coast 10.9 (69) beat Sydney 10.5 (65)
'2005 Grand Final, MCG'

★ Sydney 8.10 (58) beat West Coast 7.12 (54)
'2006 Round 15, Subiaco'

★ West Coast 9.13 (67) beat Sydney 9.11 (65)
'2006 Qualifying Final, Subiaco'

★ Sydney 13.7 (85) beat West Coast 12.12 (84)
'2006 Grand Final, MCG'

★ West Coast 12.13 (85) beat Sydney Swans 12.12 (84)
'2007, Round 1, Telstra Stadium'

★ West Coast 11.8. (74) beat Sydney Swans 10.13 (73)
Brisbane Lions

The Swans share a strong rivalry with the Brisbane Lions, which is based on the ongoing sporting and political rivalry between the two states New South Wales and Queensland. Since the mid 1990s the two sides have played for the Alan Schwab Shield, named after the late AFL administrator who worked to establish the two sides in traditional rugby league territory. Between them the two clubs have won four of the past six AFL Premierships.
The most recent match fought out between these sides ended on a 63-all draw - the first for the Swans since 2002.
St Kilda

The Swans share a long and storied rivalry with St Kilda that dates back to the days when South Melbourne played at the Lake Oval on the other side of Melbourne's Albert Park Lake, not far from St Kilda's old home ground Junction Oval. Because the Swans and the Saints used to be towards the bottom of the ladder on a regular basis after the Second World War up until St Kilda's move away from the Junction Oval clashes between both sides used to be dubbed "The Lake Premiership".

Trivia



★ On Grand Final eve, 1935, as the Swans prepared to take on Collingwood, star full-forward Bob Pratt was clipped by a truck moments after stepping off a tram and subsequently missed the match for South.

★ South Melbourne's original team logo in Latin was "aut vincere aut mori" which in modern English translates to "either to conquer or to die".

VFL/AFL Premierships


Premiers


★ 1909 (as South Melbourne) -- defeated Carlton 4.14 (38) to 4.12 (36)

★ 1918 (as South Melbourne) -- defeated Collingwood 9.8 (62) to 7.15 (57)

★ 1933 (as South Melbourne) -- defeated Richmond 9.17 (71) to 4.5 (29)

★ 2005 (as Sydney Swans) -- defeated West Coast 8.10 (58) to 7.12 (54)
Runners-up


★ 1899 (as South Melbourne) -- defeated by Fitzroy 3.9 (27) to 3.8 (26)

★ 1907 (as South Melbourne) -- defeated by Carlton 6.14 (50) to 6.9 (45)

★ 1912 (as South Melbourne) -- defeated by Essendon 5.17 (47) to 4.9 (33)

★ 1914 (as South Melbourne) -- defeated by Carlton 6.9 (45) to 4.15 (39)

★ 1934 (as South Melbourne) -- defeated by Richmond 19.14 (128) to 12.17 (89)

★ 1935 (as South Melbourne) -- defeated by Collingwood 11.12 (78) to 7.16 (58)

★ 1936 (as South Melbourne) -- defeated by Collingwood 11.23 (89) to 10.18 (78)

★ 1945 (as South Melbourne) -- defeated by Carlton 15.13 (103) to 10.15 (75); match is legendary for the brutal violence that earned the Swans the moniker "Blood-Stained Angels"

★ 1996 -- defeated by the Kangaroos 19.17 (131) to 13.10 (88); first grand final appearance after relocation

★ 2006 -- defeated by West Coast Eagles 12.13 (85) to 12.12 (84)

Current squad


''As of December 20, 2006:''

Honour roll



Year Posn Coach Captain Best & Fairest Leading goalkicker (goals)
1949 10 Jack Hale Bert Lucas Ron Clegg Ray Jones (27)
1950 11 Gordon Lane Gordon Lane Bill Williams Gordon Lane (47)
1951 8 Gordon Lane Gordon Lane Ron Clegg Bill Williams (41)
1952 5 Gordon Lane Gordon Lane Keith Schaefer Gordon Lane (33)
1953 8 Laurie Nash Ron Clegg Jim Taylor Ian Gillett (34)
1954 10 Herbie Matthews Ron Clegg Eddie Lane Eddie Lane (28)
1955 10 Herbie Matthews Bill Gunn Ian Gillett Eddie Lane (36)
1956 9 Herbie Matthews Ian Gillett Jim Dorgan Bill Gunn (28)
1957 10 Herbie Matthews Ron Clegg Jim Taylor Fred Goldsmith (43)
1958 9 Ron Clegg Ron Clegg Bob Skilton Max Oaten (34)
1959 9 Ron Clegg Ron Clegg Bob Skilton Bob Skilton (60)
1960 8 Bill Faul Ron Clegg Frank Johnson Max Oaten (39)
1961 11 Bill Faul Bob Skilton Bob Skilton Brian McGowan (38)
1962 12 Noel McMahen Bob Skilton Bob Skilton Bob Skilton (36)
1963 11 Noel McMahen Bob Skilton Bob Skilton Bob Skilton (36)
1964 11 Noel McMahen Bob Skilton Bob Skilton Max Papley (25)
1965 8 Bob Skilton Bob Skilton Bob Skilton Ron Kingston (48)
1966 8 Bob Skilton Bob Skilton Max Papley Austin Robertson junior (60)
1967 9 Allan Miller Bob Skilton Bob Skilton John Sudholz (35)
1968 9 Allan Miller Bob Skilton Bob Skilton John Sudholz (36)
1969 9 Norm Smith Bob Skilton Peter Bedford John Sudholz (35)
1970 4 Norm Smith Bob Skilton Peter Bedford John Sudholz (62)
1971 12 Norm Smith Bob Skilton Peter Bedford Peter Bedford (44)
1972 11 Norm Smith John Rantall Russell Cook Peter Bedford (28)
1973 12 Graeme John Peter Bedford Peter Bedford Peter Bedford (52)
1974 9 Graeme John Peter Bedford Norm Goss Norm Goss (37)
1975 12 Graeme John Peter Bedford Peter Bedford Graham Teasdale (38)
1976 8 Ian Stewart Peter Bedford Rick Quade Robert Dean (37)
1977 5 Ian Stewart Rick Quade Graham Teasdale Graham Teasdale (38)
1978 8 Des Tuddenham Rick Quade John Murphy John Murphy (31)
1979 10 Ian Stewart Rick Quade Barry Round Tony Morwood (56)
1980 6 Ian Stewart Barry Round David Ackerly John Roberts (67)
1981 9 Ian Stewart Barry Round Barry Round John Roberts (51)
19821 7 Rick Quade Barry Round David Ackerly Tony Morwood (45)
1983 11 Rick Quade Barry Round Mark Browning Craig Braddy (48)
1984 10 Rick Quade,Bob Hammond Barry Round,Mark Browning Bernie Evans Warwick Capper (39)
1985 10 John Northey Mark Browning Stephen Wright Warwick Capper (45)
1986 4 Tom Hafey Dennis Carroll Gerard Healy Warwick Capper (92)
1987 4 Tom Hafey Dennis Carroll Gerard Healy Warwick Capper (103)
1988 7 Tom Hafey Dennis Carroll Gerard Healy Barry Mitchell (35)
1989 7Col Kinnear Dennis Carroll Mark Bayes Bernard Toohey (27)
1990 13 Col Kinnear Dennis Carroll Stephen Wright Jim West (34)
1991 12 Col Kinnear Dennis Carroll Barry Mitchell Jason Love (52)
1992 15 Gary Buckenara Dennis Carroll Paul Kelly Simon Minton-Connell (60)
1993 15 Gary Buckenara, Ron Barassi Paul Kelly Paul Kelly Simon Minton-Connell (41)
1994 15 Ron Barassi Paul Kelly Daryn Creswell Simon Minton-Connell (68)
1995 12 Ron Barassi Paul Kelly Tony Lockett Tony Lockett (110)
1996 2 Rodney Eade Paul Kelly Paul Kelly Tony Lockett (121)
1997 7 Rodney Eade Paul Kelly Paul Kelly Tony Lockett (37)
1998 5 Rodney Eade Paul Kelly Michael O'Loughlin Tony Lockett (109)
1999 8 Rodney Eade Paul Kelly Wayne Schwass Tony Lockett (82)
2000 10 Rodney Eade Paul Kelly Andrew Schauble Michael O'Loughlin (53)
2001 7 Rodney Eade Paul Kelly Paul Williams Michael O'Loughlin (35)
2002 11 Rodney Eade, Paul Roos Paul Kelly Paul Williams Barry Hall (55)
2003 4 Paul Roos Stuart Maxfield Adam Goodes Barry Hall (64)
2004 5 Paul Roos Stuart Maxfield Barry Hall Barry Hall (74)
2005 1 Paul Roos Stuart Maxfield² Brett Kirk Barry Hall (80)
2006 2 Paul Roos Barry Hall, Brett Kirk and Leo Barry Adam Goodes Barry Hall (78)


1: Relocated to Sydney

²: Six rounds into the 2005 season, Stuart Maxfield ended his playing career due to chronic injury. Six players rotated as captain throughout the rest of the season: Brett Kirk (rounds 7, 8, 19 and 20), Leo Barry (rounds 9, 10, 21 and 22), Barry Hall (rounds 11, 12 and the entire finals series), Ben Mathews (rounds 13 and 14), Adam Goodes (rounds 15 and 16) and Jude Bolton (rounds 17 and 18).

Team records



★ Most games - Michael O'Loughlin (261)

★ Most goals - Bob Pratt (681)

★ Most goals in match - Tony Lockett (16)

★ Most goals in a season - Bob Pratt (150)

★ Highest team score - 36.20 (236) vs Essendon 1987

Individual awards


Best and Fairest

:See Bob Skilton Medal
Brownlow Medal winners

South Melbourne/Sydney have provided more Brownlow Medal winners (14) than any other club.
South Melbourne


Herbie Matthews (1940)

Ron Clegg (1949)

Fred Goldsmith (1955)

Bob Skilton (1959, 1963 & 1968)

Peter Bedford (1970)

Graham Teasdale (1977)

Barry Round (1981) (co-winner)
Sydney


Greg Williams (1986 co-winner)

Gerard Healy (1988)

Paul Kelly (1995)

Adam Goodes (2003 co-winner & 2006)
Leigh Matthews Trophy winners


Gerard Healy (1988)
Coleman Medal winners


Tony Lockett (1996, 1998)
AFL Rising Star winners


Adam Goodes (1999)
Mark of the Year winners


Warwick Capper (1986, 1987)
Australian Football Hall of Fame players


Bob Skilton (''Legend'')

Roy Cazaly (''Legend'')

Bob Pratt (''Legend'')

Herbie Matthews

Mark Tandy

Vic Belcher

Laurie Nash

Ron Clegg

Peter Bedford

John Rantall

Barry Round

Greg Williams

Gerard Healy

Paul Roos

Tony Lockett

Team of the Century


Sydney announced its team of the century on August 8 2003:


Corporate


Administration

'Directors':

★ Richard Colless Chairman (1993-present)

Jason Ball

★ Bob Campbell

★ Andrew McMaster

★ Robert Morgan

★ Rob Pascoe

★ Andrew Pridham

★ Ricky Quade

★ Lynn Ralph
'CEOs':

★ Myles Baron-Hay (2004-present)

Mike Willesee
Supported Charities


Wally Jackson Research Fund

Club jumper


The home jumper is red with a white "V" and stylized Sydney Opera House down the front.

The jumper is white with a red back and a red yoke with a silhouette of the Sydney Opera House at the point of the yoke. The Opera House design was first used at the start of the 1987 season, replacing the traditional red "V" on white design. Until 1991, the back of the jumper was white with the yoke only extending to the back of the shoulders and each side of the jumper had a red vertical stripe. The current predominantly red design appeared at the start of the 1992 season. The club's 2007 major sponsor is QBE Insurance.

Club mascot


Syd 'Swannie' Skilton, Sydney Swans Mascot Manor mascot

The Sydney Swans mascot for the AFL's Mascot Manor is Syd 'Swannie' Skilton.
He is named after Swans legend Bob Skilton.
The actual mascot at Swans home games is still known as Cygie. (as in cygnet).

See also





South Melbourne/Sydney Football Club coaches

Australian rules football in New South Wales

Sydney Swans 2006 Season

Lake Oval - former home of the Swans

AFL Canberra - Sydney Swans reserves fields a team in this competition.

References


1. [1] Eagles hold off Swans in thriller


Plugger and the Mighty Swans, Jim Main, , , Wilkinson Books, 1996, ISBN 1-86350-229-7

External links



Official Website of the AFL

Official Website of the Sydney Swans Football Club

Red and White Online -- Fans' site and Forum

BigFooty.com Swans Forum

Full Points Footy History of the Sydney Football Club

Sydney Swans Club Song

Sydney Swans Club Jumpers/Guernseys

Sydney Swans 1996 site IN ARCHIVE

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