hondo71 wrote:After reading the write up of Sturt's 1 point win over Port on Full Points Footy, it was interesting to read that Sturt didn't win another game for the season (IIRC), including the Elim final v Glenelg.
Then Keane was sacked, players left for the AFL and other SANFL clubs (maybe just West Torrens), Rick Davies arrived; and Sturt sped to the bottom of the table and stayed there for 8 years or so. How may Sturt fans would have predicted such a bleak future when the siren sounded that day at Footy Park?
This is not a dig at Sturt BTW, just a comment on how fortunes change over time, and how quickly they can change.
Not sure, but I think we had one more victory for the season, over West or Torrens I think. Perhaps Spelly can help out here?
I think it is a pretty moot point anyway, after we defeated Port we were in the top three, had defeated every other side and were looking the goods for a premiership and who knew what else after that.
None of us ever thought things would turn the way they did.
GWW wrote:Sturt basically had the guts ripped out of the side with D Smith, Popplestone and Schache leaving to play for WT. I wonder if the club knew they were likely to lose the players whether they would have still sacked Keane.
D. Smith was a big supporter of Mervyn Keane, and was also a very big team man and popular with the supporters. He actually got sacked for being such an obvious supporter of the old coach, I guess the board felt he was potential trouble. Popplestone and Schache followed him over to Torrens.
Popplestone was a huge loss owing to his persona as well as him being an automatic selection in our starting 18. After some victories he'd get on the mike at presentations and have the clubrooms roaring with laughter. Usually it'd be his casual observation of some incident in the game or reference to something that happened on the sidelines. He had a real gift for telling a story. Either he or Smithy would come over to the cheersquad's table with three or four jugs of beer "Get stuck in to it boys!" It was a great place to be with those blokes around.
Schache of course had unbelievable hands, very mobile and good height for a key position. His value was best measured by his own performances on the field, at times he could singlehandedly lift the side or stop an opposition run on.
The loss of those three was obviously a big blow, but sacking Smith was clearly the catalyst IMO.
I'm gonna sit back, crack the top off a Pale Ale, and watch the Double Blues prevail
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