Jump to content


Recommended Posts

Posted
3 hours ago, Bring-Back-Powell said:

Gotta love some of the Richmond turkeys on Bigfooty, stating that Melbourne are damn lucky that a power house like Richmond let Melbourne play this game.

That what is meant when people say "the sleeping giant has woken" ...... the giant sense of entitlement.

Posted
28 minutes ago, old dee said:

So more than three quarters of the membership Chris?

Not one in five where I was.

Watching from the  packed terraces  MCC ground level opposite the Blazer Bar our support was at least 60% . Only in the last quarter did the Tiger fans really spark -up . 

Scurrying past Gate 4 with a couple of minutes to go , I could see  feral Toig supporters who traditionally loiter in that northern-side  pocket up on their feet in their hundreds chanting unintelligibly at departing  Dees fans . 

Posted
6 minutes ago, dee-eee said:

Scurrying past Gate 4 with a couple of minutes to go , I could see  feral Toig supporters who traditionally loiter in that northern-side  pocket up on their feet in their hundreds chanting unintelligibly at departing  Dees fans . 

"YELLOW AND ......... um .......... um .... YELLOW AND  ........ ummm .... chooka, do youse know what we're supposed ta shout?"

"I fink it's a colour?"

"Don't be shtoopid. It's somefink to do with our jumper."

"Oh I know! YELLOW AND BINGLE! YELLOW AND BINGLE!"

  • Like 1
Posted
5 hours ago, deebug said:

You should of seen them in the 80s they had their own cheer squad it was called the Richmond grog squad; i only know this because one time at the footy with my dad they sat in front of us and had Richmond grog squad shaved in the back of their heads.

They're still there, standing room section Punt Rd end. Annoying as hell and massive bunch of feral bogans.

Posted (edited)

As an aside it is interesting to look at the inner city clubs of the earlier years. Richmond and Collingwood went on from a supporter base but Fitzroy and St Kilda did not.

Melbourne had its own pluses and minuses which goes some way to explaining why we are where we are but really Fitzroy and St Kilda came from the same place as Richmond and Collingwood.

Even Richmond is strange... no premierships between 1943 and 1967 but they then had four more including their last win in 1980. Perhaps it was the MCG move in 1966(?)

North Melbourne is another one but to me they never really had the historic supporter base. (I could be wrong... which I often am.)

It underscores how brittle/fickle public opinion is and how we really have to do something about getting the MFC back on track.

Edited by Diamond_Jim

Posted
1 hour ago, Diamond_Jim said:

As an aside it is interesting to look at the inner city clubs of the earlier years. Richmond and Collingwood went on from a supporter base but Fitzroy and St Kilda did not.

Melbourne had its own pluses and minuses which goes some way to explaining why we are where we are but really Fitzroy and St Kilda came from the same place as Richmond and Collingwood.

Even Richmond is strange... no premierships between 1943 and 1967 but they then had four more including their last win in 1980. Perhaps it was the MCG move in 1966(?)

North Melbourne is another one but to me they never really had the historic supporter base. (I could be wrong... which I often am.)

It underscores how brittle/fickle public opinion is and how we really have to do something about getting the MFC back on track.

Fitzroy is the weird one - dominated the comp from its inception until the mid-20s. Massive rivalry with Collingwood and another with Carlton. Obviously only one flag post 1922 hurt (they had 7 to that point, the most in the comp) but you would've thought they'd have consolidated a bit of a supporter base by then. Collingwood did off the back of their early success (11 flags to 1936 and only 4 since) however I guess they have still been a powerhouse onfield in terms of finals/GF if not premierships which would help explain it.

I think the Saints have a lot of dormant support just a culture of failure (27 wooden spoons and 1 flag) has crippled them. Also the fact it's impossible to build a massive membership/support base out of Docklands.

Posted

Sorry... I missed Carlton .... not really sure where they are going on the power club stakes but I get the feeling that their supporters are not exactly rusted on a la Collingwood... more like Hawthorn who have yet to mange a sustained downturn

Posted
4 hours ago, old dee said:

So more than three quarters of the membership Chris?

Not one in five where I was.

Plenty of non member supporters out there. 

  • Like 2

Posted
7 hours ago, old dee said:

Sorry there were not IMO 30k there on Monday night. If lucky we had one in four which means out of 85K we got 21.5 even one in three only gets  28k.

I don't believe it was as high as every third person there was a Dees supporter.

Were you there, OD?

Posted
12 hours ago, Dr. Gonzo said:

Fitzroy is the weird one - dominated the comp from its inception until the mid-20s. Massive rivalry with Collingwood and another with Carlton. Obviously only one flag post 1922 hurt (they had 7 to that point, the most in the comp) but you would've thought they'd have consolidated a bit of a supporter base by then. Collingwood did off the back of their early success (11 flags to 1936 and only 4 since) however I guess they have still been a powerhouse onfield in terms of finals/GF if not premierships which would help explain it.

I think the Saints have a lot of dormant support just a culture of failure (27 wooden spoons and 1 flag) has crippled them. Also the fact it's impossible to build a massive membership/support base out of Docklands.

Geographically, Fitzroy was the small suburb (in area) squeezed between the bigger Carlton and Collingwood. It may simply have been the geography that kept Fitzroy's numbers of supporters small.

  • Like 1
Posted

Just about any melb tiges game ive been seems about 25% us...rest them.

Other night seemed similar. Gets bit distorted with many of us in one area...then spread amongst the ground they seem very numerous ( cos they are )

  • Like 1
Posted
17 minutes ago, beelzebub said:

Just about any melb tiges game ive been seems about 25% us...rest them.

Other night seemed similar. Gets bit distorted with many of us in one area...then spread amongst the ground they seem very numerous ( cos they are )

That is my reading too bb.

Posted
20 hours ago, deebug said:

You should of seen them in the 80s they had their own cheer squad it was called the Richmond grog squad; i only know this because one time at the footy with my dad they sat in front of us and had Richmond grog squad shaved in the back of their heads.

They still exist. Go to Richmond games a few times a year because half of my family and what seems like all of my mates go for the Toiges (although they're all bangwagon supporters without memberships who rely on my AFL membership to get into games). They stand behind the goals at the Punt Road end. They're pretty funny if you're "part of the crew" but they jeer and chant towards any opposition fan that walks by. They're very soccer-esque in their support.

16 hours ago, Wrecker45 said:

It was heavily Melbourne in the MCC.

From the Southern Stand, seemed like 100% Melbourne in the MCC. Which was weird because where I was sitting, it was 50 Richmond supporters for 1 Melbourne supporter. They were LOUD. The ground was literally shaking (not exaggeration). 

  • Like 1
Posted
49 minutes ago, La Dee-vina Comedia said:

Geographically, Fitzroy was the small suburb (in area) squeezed between the bigger Carlton and Collingwood. It may simply have been the geography that kept Fitzroy's numbers of supporters small.

Their home ground probably had something to do with it too - whereas Princes Park could hold up to 45k and Vic Park 35?k Brunswick St would've struggled to hold 20k I would've thought. After moving from their they became nomads, playing far from their spiritual home on the other side of the Yarra at Junction Oval, then the other side of the Maribyrnong later on at Western Oval with stints at Vic Park & Princes Park in between.

  • Like 2
Posted
19 minutes ago, praha said:

They still exist. Go to Richmond games a few times a year because half of my family and what seems like all of my mates go for the Toiges (although they're all bangwagon supporters without memberships who rely on my AFL membership to get into games). They stand behind the goals at the Punt Road end. They're pretty funny if you're "part of the crew" but they jeer and chant towards any opposition fan that walks by. They're very soccer-esque in their support.

"More porn on SBS" usually gets a run


Posted
2 minutes ago, Dr. Gonzo said:

Their home ground probably had something to do with it too - whereas Princes Park could hold up to 45k and Vic Park 35?k Brunswick St would've struggled to hold 20k I would've thought. After moving from their they became nomads, playing far from their spiritual home on the other side of the Yarra at Junction Oval, then the other side of the Maribyrnong later on at Western Oval with stints at Vic Park & Princes Park in between.

Without the MCG we might have suffered the same fate a few times in the last 50 years Dr.

  • Like 2
Posted
2 hours ago, Dr. Gonzo said:

Their home ground probably had something to do with it too - whereas Princes Park could hold up to 45k and Vic Park 35?k Brunswick St would've struggled to hold 20k I would've thought. After moving from their they became nomads, playing far from their spiritual home on the other side of the Yarra at Junction Oval, then the other side of the Maribyrnong later on at Western Oval with stints at Vic Park & Princes Park in between.

Now you mention it Fitzroy was very nomadic.

SEN by co-incidence had a remember the old grounds theme late last night. Lots of talk about toilets.

They mentioned Moorabbin and were saying it was "state of the art" when built. Only went there once and stood on the outer terraces.

North stayed all those years at Arden Street but they never cracked the supporter market. Perhaps as LDC says like Fitzroy, North as a population base were squeezed between the relatively bigger clubs.

Then there was the Swans............?

History has a lesson for the present clubs .... perhaps the most vulnerable is Hawthorn

Posted
2 minutes ago, Diamond_Jim said:

Now you mention it Fitzroy was very nomadic.

SEN by co-incidence had a remember the old grounds theme late last night. Lots of talk about toilets.

They mentioned Moorabbin and were saying it was "state of the art" when built. Only went there once and stood on the outer terraces.

North stayed all those years at Arden Street but they never cracked the supporter market. Perhaps as LDC says like Fitzroy, North as a population base were squeezed between the relatively bigger clubs.

Then there was the Swans............?

History has a lesson for the present clubs .... perhaps the most vulnerable is Hawthorn

Only if they do an MFC for the next 50 years DJ

Posted
3 minutes ago, old dee said:

Only if they do an MFC for the next 50 years DJ

Just have that gut feel that many Hawthorn members are not rusted on and as they meander downwards those members will change to supporters and then to occasional attendees.

The Tasmanian deal papers over some matches that would have low attendances if played in Melbourne.

Time will tell and who knows it would not surprise me if they won their next five or six games and were back as boring old winning Hawthorn !

Posted
6 hours ago, old dee said:

ok 21!!

Definitely 30,000+. The MCC was sold out and was at least 80/20 Melbourne's way. We had a great portion in Gate 3 as well and in the Punt Road pocket. 30,000 easily. It's just whether there were 35,000+.

  • Like 1
Posted
22 hours ago, Ted Fidge said:

That what is meant when people say "the sleeping giant has woken" ...... the giant sense of entitlement.

I have always said, even having lived through 2 Collingwood flags, 2 Essendon flags, and a Carlton flag, that a Richmond flag would be the end of civilization.

I've always considered them to be bigger than the other "powerhouses". Our city will be a warzone the night of a Richmond Grand Final win.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Demonland Forums  

  • Match Previews, Reports & Articles  

    TRAINING: Wednesday 18th December 2024

    It was the final session of 2024 before the Christmas/New Years break and the Demonland Trackwatchers were out in force to bring you the following preseason training observations from Wednesday's session at Gosch's Paddock. DEMONLAND'S PRESEASON TRAINING OBSERVATIONS TRAINING: Petracca, Oliver, Melksham, Woewodin, Langdon, Rivers, Billings, Sestan, Viney, Fullarton, Adams, Langford, Lever, Petty, Spargo, Fritsch, Bowey, Laurie, Kozzy, Mentha, George, May, Gawn, Turner Tholstrup, Kentfi

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Training Reports

    TRAINING: Monday 16th December 2024

    Demonland Trackwatchers braved the sweltering heat to bring you their Preseason Training observations from Gosch's Paddock on Monday morning. SCOOP JUNIOR'S PRESEASON TRAINING OBSERVATIONS I went down today in what were pretty ordinary conditions - hot and windy. When I got there, they were doing repeat simulations of a stoppage on the wing and then moving the ball inside 50. There seemed to be an emphasis on handballing out of the stoppage, usually there were 3 or 4 handballs to

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Training Reports 1

    TRAINING: Friday 13th December 2024

    With only a few sessions left before the Christmas break a number of Demonlander Trackwatchers headed down to Gosch's Paddock to bring you their observations from this morning's preseason training session. DEMONLAND'S PRESEASON TRAINING OBSERVATIONS PLAYERS IN ATTENDANCE: JVR, Salem, McVee, Petracca, Windsor, Viney, Lever, Spargo, Turner, Gawn, Tholstrup, Oliver, Billings, Langdon, Laurie, Bowey, Melksham, Langford, Lindsay, Jefferson, Howes, McAdam, Rivers, TMac, Adams, Hore, Verrall,

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Training Reports

    TRAINING: Wednesday 11th December 2024

    A few new faces joined our veteran Demonland Trackwatchers on a beautiful morning out at Gosch's Paddock for another Preseason Training Session. BLWNBA'S PRESEASON TRAINING OBSERVATIONS I arrived at around 1015 and the squad was already out on the track. The rehab group consisted of XL, McAdam, Melksham, Spargo and Sestan. Lever was also on restricted duties and appeared to be in runners.  The main group was doing end-to-end transition work in a simulated match situation. Ball mov

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Training Reports

    TRAINING: Monday 9th December 2024

    Once again Demonland Trackwatchers were in attendance at the first preseason training session for the week at Gosch's Paddock to bring you their observations. WAYNE WUSSELL'S PRESEASON TRAINING OBSERVATIONS Looks like very close to 100% attendance. Kelani is back. Same group in rehab. REHAB: Spargo, Lever, Lindsay, Brown & McAdam. Haven’t laid eyes on Fritsch or AMW yet. Fritsch sighted. One unknown mature standing with Goody. Noticing Nathan Bassett much m

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Training Reports

    TRAINING: Friday 6th December 2024

    Some veteran Demonland Trackwatchers ventured down to Gosch's Paddock to bring you the following observations from another Preseason Training Session. WAYNE WUSSELL'S PRESEASON TRAINING OBSERVATIONS Rehab: Lever, Spargo, McAdam, Lindsay, Brown Sinnema is excellent by foot and has a decent vertical leap. Windsor is training with the Defenders. Windsor's run won't be lost playing off half back. In 19 games in 2024 he kicked 8 goals as a winger. I see him getting shots at g

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Training Reports

    TRAINING: Wednesday 4th December 2024

    A couple of intrepid Demonland Trackwatchers headed down to Gosch's Paddock for the midweek Preseason Training Session to bring you the following observations. Demonland's own Whispering Jack was not in attendance but he kicked off proceedings with the following summary of all the Preseason Training action to date. We’re already a month into the MFC preseason (if you started counting when the younger players in the group began the campaign along with some of the more keen older heads)

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Training Reports 2

    BEST OF THE REST by Meggs

    Meggs' Review of Melbourne's AFLW Season 9 ... Congratulations first off to the North Melbourne Kangaroos on winning the 2024 AFLW Premiership. Roos Coach Darren Crocker has assembled a team chock-full of competitive and highly skilful players who outclassed the Brisbane Lions in the Grand Final to remain undefeated throughout Season 9. A huge achievement in what was a dominant season by North. For Melbourne fans, the season was unfortunately one of frustration and disappointment

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    AFLW Melbourne Demons 3

    TRAINING: Monday 2nd December 2024

    There were many Demonland Trackwatchers braving the morning heat at Gosch's Paddock today to witness the players go through the annual 2km time trials. DEMONLAND'S PRESEASON TRAINING OBSERVATIONS Max, TMac & Melksham the first ones out on the track.  Runners are on. Guess they will be doing a lot of running.  TRAINING: Max, TMac, Melksham, Woey, Rivers, AMW, May, Sharp, Kolt, Adams, Sparrow, Jefferson, Billings, Petty, chandler, Howes, Lever, Kozzy, Mentha, Fullarton, Sal

    Demonland
    Demonland |
    Training Reports 1
  • Tell a friend

    Love Demonland? Tell a friend!

×
×
  • Create New...