Collingwood Park Australian Football Club

Last updated

Collingwood Park Power
Collingwood park power logo.png
Names
Full nameCollingwood Park Australian Football Club
Nickname(s)Power
2019 season
Club details
Founded1984;38 years ago (1984)
Colours   
Competition QFA
PresidentScott Willoughby
CoachAndrew Philp
Ground(s)Moreton Avenue Redbank Plains QLD 4301
Uniforms
Kit body whiteray black.png
Kit body sleeveless.png
Kit shorts.svg
Kit socks teal top.png
Kit socks long.svg
Home
Other information
Official website Collingwood Park

Collingwood Park Power Australian Football Club (nicknamed "The Power") is an Australian rules football club based in Redbank Plains. The club competes in the AFL Queensland and AFL SEQ Juniors leagues. [1] [2]

Contents

The Junior teams participate in the AFL SEQ Juniors competition and caters for boys and girls up to Under 16's, including the Auskick program for skills development of our younger players. [3]

The Senior team (established in 2009) competes in the AFLQ: QFA Community Football competition. [4]

Origins

Collingwood Park Power was established in the mid 1980s as the Moreton-Ipswich Gazelles JAFC Inc, and boasts a proud history of several finals appearances, grand finals wins and several local and state representative players.

During 1999, the club became formally known as registered under its new name Collingwood Park Power JAFC and gained permission to wear the Port Adelaide pre season Competition jumper.

In 2007 the club changed its name to Collingwood Park Power Australian Football Club. And in 2010 "The Power" had kicked off their inaugural senior's campaign.

The power take much pride in their clubhouse facility built by the Ipswich City Council in 2013 and their playing field.

Life members

There are seven life members of the club: Phil Grieger (dec.), Rex Watts, Bert Fahey, Phil Coombs, Kerryn Coombs, Andrew Coombs, Scott Willoughby.

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">AFL Queensland</span>

AFL Queensland (AFLQ) is the governing body of Australian rules football in Queensland. AFL Queensland has over 216,000 participants playing at all levels of football from the introductory NAB AFL Auskick program to the AFL Masters Competition. AFL Queensland covers 13 regions, 24 leagues and 159 clubs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Australian rules football in Queensland</span>

Australian rules football in Queensland was the first official football code played in 1866. The Colony of Queensland was the second after Victoria to adopt Australian rules football, just days after there rules were widely published. For two decades it was the most popular football code, however a strong desire for representative football success saw Queenslanders favour British football variants for more than a century. 120 years later in 1986 Queensland was the first state awarded a licence to have a club, the Brisbane Bears, in the national competition, also its first privately owned club. However the Gold Coast based Bears had a detrimental effect until the 1993 redevelopment of the Brisbane Cricket Ground (Gabba). In contrast the Bears transformation into a Brisbane and traditional membership based club resulted in enormous growth, and a tripling of average AFL attendances by 1996.

AFL Capricornia is an amateur Australian rules football competition played across Central Queensland between the months of March to September. Spanning across three main regions of Central Queensland. Including Rockhampton, Gladstone and Livingstone.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Australian rules football in South East Queensland</span>

Australian rules football in South East Queensland has a varied history and many changes were made especially in the 21st century. Ruled and organised by the AFL Queensland, the region had a total of 46 teams playing in different divisions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Queensland Australian Football League</span> Australian rules football competition

The Queensland Australian Football League (QAFL) is an Australian rules football competition organised by the AFL Queensland, contested by clubs from South East Queensland.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Morningside Australian Football Club</span>

The Morningside Australian Football Club, also known as the Morningside Panthers, is an Australian rules football club based at Jack Esplen Oval in the suburb of Hawthorne in Brisbane. The club consists of Masters, Amateurs, Women's, Junior and Senior football sections. Its senior team competed in the North East Australian Football League (NEAFL) competition in 2011–14 and now is a member club of the Queensland Australian Football League. Its junior sides compete in the AFL Brisbane Juniors (AFLBJ) competition. The club also caters for young girls and boys by running Auskick skills clinics, which are held at the beginning of the season and do not involve competitive games.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Southport Australian Football Club</span>

Southport Australian Football Club, nicknamed the Sharks, is an Australian rules football club based on the Gold Coast, Queensland, that competes in the Victorian Football League (VFL).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">University of Queensland Australian Football Club</span>

The University of Queensland Australian Football Club (UQAFC) is an amateur Australian rules football club playing in the QFA Division 1, Division 4 and QAFLW League competitions, overseen by AFL Queensland. UQAFC home games are played at the University of Queensland's Playing Field 2, on the corner of Sir William MacGregor Drive and Thynne Road, St Lucia, Brisbane.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Zillmere Eagles Australian Football Club</span>

Zillmere Eagles Australian Football Club is an Australian rules football club based in the suburb of Zillmere in the northern suburbs of Brisbane. The team plays in the QAFA Division 4.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kenmore Australian Football Club</span>

The Kenmore Australian Football Club, also known as the Kenmore Bears is an Australian rules football club formed as an offshoot of an older junior club which is notable as having produced Australian Football League players Mal Michael and Courtenay Dempsey. Other Australian rules football players Max Hudghton, Jackson Allen, Peter Yagmoor and Rex Liddy spent a significant amount of their junior careers at Kenmore's junior club.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sherwood Districts Australian Football Club</span>

The Sherwood Magpies Australian Football Club is the senior Australian rules football club of the western suburbs of Brisbane which competes in Division One of the AFLQ State League. The club is based at McCarthy Homes Oval, 41 Chelmer st, Chelmer, at the same grounds as the Sherwood Junior Australian Football Club and fields a team in the AFLQ senior, reserve, under 18 and women's grade competitions. The Western Magpies AFC provides a focal point for talented players from all of the junior clubs that lie within Brisbane's western suburbs. The club aims to provide a pathway into the AFL for players from these junior clubs, develop the network of surrounding senior and junior Australian rules football clubs, and provide a fun, friendly, family oriented hub for local football in the western suburbs. The Sherwood Magpies Australian Football Club and Sherwood Junior Australian Football Club are sponsored by Tradelink, Hog's Breath Cafe and Cleanway.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Wilston Grange Football Club</span>

The Wilston Grange Football Club is an Australian rules football club which competes in the Queensland Australian Football League. It is based in inner-northern Brisbane and fields senior men's and women's, masters, youth and junior teams. The club's home at Hickey Park, Stafford, also hosts the largest AFL9s league in Queensland.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Aspley Football Club</span>

Aspley Football Club, nicknamed the Hornets, is an Australian rules football club based in the northern-Brisbane suburb of Aspley. The club competes in multiple Queensland-based competitions, including in the Queensland Australian Football League, Division 1 of the Queensland Football Association, the Queensland AFL Women's League, and several underage competitions for boys and girls. The senior men's team has in the past competed in second-tier state league competitions, notably the North East Australian Football League from 2011 to 2020 and the Victorian Football League in 2021.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Coomera Magpies Australian Football Club</span>

Coomera Australian Football Club is an Australian rules football club based in Gold Coast, Queensland. The team currently competes in the QFA South league.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">South East Suns Australian Football Club</span>

South East Australian Football Club is a Brisbane based club competing in the Queensland Amateur Football Association 'A' competition fielding Seniors & Reserves teams. Previously they were known as the Logan City Australian Football Club.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carrara Saints</span>

Carrara Australian Football Club is a Carrara based club competing in the SEQAFL Div 3 Australian rules football competition & also caters for teams in junior & youth divisions AFLQGC juniors.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sabrina Frederick</span> Australian rules footballer

Sabrina Frederick is an English-born Australian rules footballer who plays for the Collingwood Football Club in the AFL Women's competition. She was one of Brisbane's two marquee players for the 2017 season, alongside Tayla Harris.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Erica Fowler</span> Australian rules footballer

Erica Fowler is an Australian rules footballer playing for the Collingwood Football Club in the AFL Women's (AFLW). Originally a rugby sevens player, Fowler joined Collingwood's VFL Women's team and became a senior player after she was selected with the club's ninth selection and the 70th pick overall in the 2018 AFLW draft. She made her debut in a loss to Geelong at GMHBA Stadium in round 1 of the 2019 season.

Ipswich Cats Australian Football Club is an Australian rules football club based at Ivor Marsden Memorial Sports Centre in Amberley suburb of West Ipswich. The club currently has mixed Junior and Men's Senior teams in the QFA Division 4, managed by the AFL Queensland.

References

  1. "aflbj.com". aflbj.com. Retrieved 31 October 2016.
  2. "Home - AFL Queensland". Aflq.com.au. Retrieved 31 October 2016.
  3. "Collingwood Park Power JAFC - Collingwood Park JAFC - SportsTG". Sportingpulse.com. Retrieved 31 October 2016.
  4. Collingwood Park AFC website