by Pseudo » Mon Mar 03, 2008 10:58 pm
by spell_check » Mon Mar 03, 2008 11:45 pm
by Leaping Lindner » Tue Mar 04, 2008 12:59 am
Pseudo wrote:......
Second case in point: The Complete Guide to Australian Football by Ken Piesse: An utter misnomer if ever there was one. Alphabetical listing of all V/AFL clubs, and major players in the V/AFL over history. If a South Aussie (or West Aussie, Tassie, etc) is mentioned then it's only in the context of his V/AFL career. The entire SANFL is given a 2 page entry, as was the WAFL. The Queensland League also got an entry, some of the other leagues might also have gotten short entries. Suffice to say the book should have been titled "complete guide to VFL football with a few notes on a handful of other leagues".
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by godoubleblues » Tue Mar 04, 2008 8:18 am
by MightyEagles » Tue Mar 04, 2008 9:09 am
Leaping Lindner wrote:Pseudo wrote:......
Second case in point: The Complete Guide to Australian Football by Ken Piesse: An utter misnomer if ever there was one. Alphabetical listing of all V/AFL clubs, and major players in the V/AFL over history. If a South Aussie (or West Aussie, Tassie, etc) is mentioned then it's only in the context of his V/AFL career. The entire SANFL is given a 2 page entry, as was the WAFL. The Queensland League also got an entry, some of the other leagues might also have gotten short entries. Suffice to say the book should have been titled "complete guide to VFL football with a few notes on a handful of other leagues".
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If IIRC this book published SA's best team since the war and it didn't include Barrie RobranWhat they meant to say was SA's best team since the war featuring players that had played VFL. Bias, partisan crap that it is.
Geoffrey Blainey's "A Game of our own" is pretty good. Whilst been slanted toward the birth and rise of the game in Victoria it does give good coverage to SA,WA,Tas and even NSW and QLD.
The thing is though we don't even record our own state's footy history well, so who are we to have a go at the Vics. Apart from Bernard Whimpress' superb "South Australian Football Story" name a book that deals with the history(not stats but history) of the SANFL. There is the Pash Papers, but that covers a specific era and deals more with Pash's opinion of players.
When the VFL/AFL turned 100 they released a 384 page book that year by year dealt with the history. They then followed this up with a 395 page book that dealt with the clubs. When the SANFL turned 125 in 2002 we managed a 20 page lift out in the Advertiser of which 6-7 pages was advertising and they "dedicated" 3/4 of a page to the history of each club. Well congratulations on that![]()
You can also chase up club histories or books on most of (if not all of) the original VFL clubs here in Melbourne. How many SANFL clubs currently have a Club history book available??
Rant over.
by johntheclaret » Tue Mar 04, 2008 9:15 am
by godoubleblues » Tue Mar 04, 2008 10:14 am
by rogernumber10 » Tue Mar 04, 2008 10:20 am
by Dogwatcher » Tue Mar 04, 2008 10:28 am
by johntheclaret » Tue Mar 04, 2008 10:36 am
by PhilH » Tue Mar 04, 2008 5:28 pm
by FlyingHigh » Tue Mar 04, 2008 5:40 pm
Pseudo wrote:
Perhaps the only post-1990 football book I have encountered which attempts to give equal weight to the SANFL and WAFL is Dave Warner's "Footy's Hall Of Shame". This is a truly excellent book, celebrating the worst performances by umpires, clubs, and individual players over the three major leagues - with a few anecdotes from minor leagues - over the history of the game. And being a collection of lowlights our beloved Tigers get a few solid mentions. However despite its good intentions, even this book falls short of truly equal coverage. There is a LOT of obvious lowlights from SANFL clubs which have been missed; the SANFL easily gets the least coverage of the three leagues. I do not know why this should be. Perhaps the author was a Sandgroper and thus had little exposure to the SANFL. Still, any chapter which lists the seven dirtiest players of the game and fails to find room for David Granger, let alone any other South Australian (Robbie Muir is one of the 7, but his time at Torrens is condensed to a single sentence!) surely can not be taken seriously.
by JAS » Tue Mar 04, 2008 6:31 pm
johntheclaret wrote:I am pretty sure Norwood has one too. JAS could probably confirm that as she is always going on about a book.
Over to you JAS
rogernumber10 wrote:Side point - Norwood has two histories, both by Mike Coward. Red and Blue Blooded, written for the centenary in 1978 which is very much club-focused and Men of Norwood, the update written with a focus on key individuals, written in the early 90s.
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