Kew Football Club

Last updated
Kew Football Club
Kew Football Club.png
Names
Full nameKew Football Club [1]
Nickname(s)Bears
MottoVigore Honoreque
("With vigor and honor")
Club details
Founded1876;148 years ago (1876)
Colours  Brown   Gold
Ground(s)J.J. Higgins Reserve
Uniforms
Kit body goldrightsash.png
Kit body sleeveless.png
Kit shorts.svg
Kit socks long.svg
Home
Other information
Official website kewfc.com

The Kew Football Club, nicknamed the Bears, is an Australian rules football club based in the Melbourne suburb of Kew. The club's men's team currently competes in Division 1 of the Victorian Amateur Football Association (VAFA), while the women's team is in the Premier Division of the VAFA Women's (VAFAW) competition. [2]

Contents

History

Early years

Kew was founded in 1876 and won its first premiership in 1880 in the second-rate ranks of the Hawthorn District Zone competition. [3] The club entered a first-rate league for the first time in 1889 when it joined the Victorian Junior Football Association (VJFA), finishing 20th with two wins and six draws. [4]

The club withdrew during the 1891 season after failing to win a game, and dropped down to the 2nd rate and 3rd rate ranks of the VJFA. [3] [5] The club continued in the Association until 1896, when the VJFA mandated that all clubs must play on a fenced oval. As Victoria Park was unfenced, the club withdrew from the VJFA and "reluctantly" went into recess for two years. [3]

In 1899, Kew returned and entered the Suburban Junior Football Association (SJFA). However, in May of that year, Metropolitan Junior Football Association (MJFA) club St Francis Xavier disbanded. [6] [7] [8] Kew was chosen to fill the vacancy, and it played in the MJFA for the remainder of the 1899 season. [9] [10] [11]

RDFA and VJFA return

Following the 1900 season, Kew left the MJFA and joined another competition, also known as the MJFA. [lower-alpha 1] They joined the Reporter District Football Association (RDFA) in 1911, withdrawing mid-season in 1915 because of a loss of players due to World War I enlistments, but resumed when the RDFA returned after the war in 1919. [3]

Kew returned to the VJFA in 1920. [14] [15] The club was winless in its return season, but eventually rose up the ladder and finished sixth with 10 wins in 1926. [3] Kew also applied for admittance into the Victorian Football Association (VFA) when Brunswick was temporarily excluded, but although VFA officials were "greatly impressed" with the club's home ground and surroundings, its application was unsuccessful and Brunswick remained in the VFA for the 1927 season. [16] [17]

At the time, the VJFA was also transitioning to become a reserves competition for the VFA, and as Kew was not a VFA member, it left the VJFA. [3]

VFL Sub-Districts

For the 1927 season, Kew entered the Victorian Football League (VFL) Sub-Districts, and won the premiership in its first year in the competition. [3] Further premierships came in 1929, 1931, 1932, and 1934, and the club ultimately made finals in all but 5 of its 18 seasons in the Sub-Districts. [3]

Kew also had an autonomous reserves team, the Kew Junior Football Club, which was formed in 1922 and won a premiership in the Eastern Suburban Junior Football Association in 1925. [18] The juniors entered the Metropolitan Amateur Football Association (MAFA, formerly MJFA) in 1926 and was renamed to Kew District Football Club, before joining the Sub-Districts in 1927 and winning premierships in 1928, 1929, and 1930. [3] Kew District joined the Eastern Suburban Football League in 1934 but folded in 1938 after an unsuccessful finals campaign in 1937. [18]

VAFA return

In 1949, amid "unruly behaviour" from a majority of other Sub-Districts clubs, Kew left and returned to the MJFA/MAFA, which had been renamed to the Victorian Amateur Football Association (VAFA) in 1933. [19] The club was ranked very highly by the VAFA Executive, and was admitted into C Section instead of the lower D Section for its return season. [3]

Kew won the 1949 minor premiership and was set to be automatically promoted to B Section, but after a round 18 victory over East Caulfield, an anonymous caller to VAFA headquarters stated Kew was fielding an ineligible player who had fought as a professional boxer during his army service in World War II. Kew was stripped of the eight games he played in, along with their place in the finals series, and remained in C Section for the 1950 season. [3]

In 1950, Kew were undefeated and won the premiership, earning a promotion to B Section for 1951. The B Section grand final was won in 1953, and Kew entered A Section for the first time in 1954. [5] [20]

Further premierships followed in 1962, 1964 (C Section) and 1966 (B Section). However, with the exception of the 1979 (C Section), Kew was unable to find further premiership success. [21] By the 1990s, the club had fallen to D Section for the first time in its history, and fell all the way down to Division 4 (F Section) in 2004. [21]

21st century

In 2007, the North Kew Football Club amalgamated with Kew. [22] North Kew was formed in 1932 and had been competing in the Southern Football League (SFL) prior to the merger. [23]

Former Carlton footballer Ian Aitken was appointed Kew senior coach in 2011. [24] He led the club to a three-peat in 2013, 2014 and 2015, before leaving at the end of the 2016 season. Aitken returned in 2019 and remained in the role until the end of the 2023 season. [25]

Kew entered two women's in the Victorian Women's Football League (VWFL) in 2014. Dwindling squad numbers meant one of the sides withdrew after round 7, while the other able to continue and ended up as runners-up in the grand final. [5] The women's sides entered the Northern Football League (NFL) in 2017, then the VAFA Women's (VAFAW) in 2018. [3]

In August 2021, a Richmond Central player recorded Kew players training (against COVID-19 lockdown rules) at Richmond Central's home ground, Kevin Bartlett Oval, and was also involved in a verbal confrontation with Ian Aitken. [26] Kew said it did not sanction the training session, and the VAFA did not sanction the club, however they did refer Aitken to AFL Victoria. [27]

Seasons

Source: [28]

PremiersGrand FinalistMinor premiersFinals appearanceWooden spoonDivision leading goalkickerDivision best and fairest

Men's

Seniors

YearLeagueDivisionFinishWLDCoachCaptainBest and fairestLeading goalkickerGoalsRef
1876
1877
1878
1879
1880 HDZ2nd rate
1881
1882
1883
1884
1885
1886
1887
1888
1889 VJFA 1st rate20th2611 [29]
1890 VJFA 1st rate23rd3124 [30]
1891 VJFA 1st rate24th [31]
1892 VJFA
1893 VJFA
1894 VJFA
1895 VJFA
1896 VJFA
1897 N/A(In recess)
1898 N/A(In recess)
1899 MJFA
1900 MJFA 7th2140 [32]
1901
1902
1903
1904
1905
1906
1907
1908
1909
1910
1911 RDFA
1912 RDFA A Section2nd820
1913 RDFA A Grade4th1341
1914 RDFA A Grade2nd1040
1915 RDFA A Grade6th650
1916 RDFA (No season due to World War I)
1917 RDFA (No season due to World War I)
1918 RDFA (No season due to World War I)
1919 RDFA A Grade2nd1059
1920 VJFA
1921 VJFA 9th3131 [33]
1922 VJFA 8th4140 [34]
1923 VJFA 9th6130 [35]
1924 VJFA Division 15th790 [36]
1925 VJFA
1926 VJFA
1927 VFLSD Division 1
1928 VFLSD Division 1
1929 VFLSD Division 1
1930 VFLSD Division 1
1931 VFLSD Division 1
1932 VFLSD Division 1
1933 VFLSD Division 1
1934 VFLSD Division 1
1935 VFLSD Division 1
1936 VFLSD
1937 VFLSD
1938 VFLSD
1939 VFLSD
1940 VFLSD
1941 VFLSD
1942 VFLSD
1943 VFLSD
1944 VFLSD
1945 VFLSD
1946 VFLSD
1947 VFLSD
1948 VFLSD
1949 VAFA
1950 VAFA
1951 VAFA
1952 VAFA
1953 VAFA
1954 VAFA
1955 VAFA
1956 VAFA
1957 VAFA
1958 VAFA
1959 VAFA
1960 VAFA
1961 VAFA
1962 VAFA
1963 VAFA
1964 VAFA
1965 VAFA
1966 VAFA
1967 VAFA
1968 VAFA
1969 VAFA
1970 VAFA B Section 6th
1971 VAFA B Section
1972 VAFA B Section 6th
1973 VAFA B Section
1974 VAFA B Section
1975 VAFA B Section 10th
1976 VAFA C Section 8th
1977 VAFA C Section 7th
1978 VAFA C Section 8th
1979 VAFA C Section
1980 VAFA B Section
1981 VAFA B Section
1982 VAFA B Section
1983 VAFA B Section 3rd
1984 VAFA A Section 10th
1985 VAFA B Section
1986 VAFA C Section 6th
1987 VAFA C Section 1st1710Matthew Cavanagh72 [37]
1988 VAFA B Section 1st
1989 VAFA A Section 10th
1990 VAFA B Section
1991 VAFA B Section 10th
1992 VAFA C Section
1993 VAFA C Section
1994 VAFA
1995 VAFA
1996 VAFA D Section
1997 VAFA E East 3rd
1998 VAFA E White 3rd
1999 VAFA
2000 VAFA Division 2
2001 VAFA Division 2 6th
2002 VAFA Division 2 10th
2003 VAFA Division 3
2004 VAFA Division 4 2nd
2005 VAFA Division 3 6th
2006 VAFA Division 3 7th
2007 VAFA Division 3 10th
2008 VAFA Division 4
2009 VAFA Division 4
2010 VAFA Division 3
2011 VAFA Division 3 8th Ian Aitken
2012 VAFA Division 3 Ian Aitken
2013 VAFA Division 3 1st Ian Aitken
2014 VAFA Division 2 1st Ian Aitken
2015 VAFA Division 1 2nd Ian Aitken
2016 VAFA Premier C 5th7110 Ian Aitken [38]
2017 VAFA Premier C 10thPeter Callinan [39]
2018 VAFA Division 1 8th6120Michael Shmerling [40] [41]
2019 VAFA Division 1 3rd1251 Ian Aitken
2020 VAFA Division 1 (No season) Ian Aitken (No season)
2021 VAFA Division 1 3rd920 Ian Aitken [42]
2022 VAFA Division 1 2nd Ian Aitken [43]
2023 VAFA Division 1 7th8100 Ian Aitken
2024 VAFA Division 1 Jack Cole [44]
  • Although Kew finished third in 2021, no finals series was held as the season was curtailed due to the COVID-19 pandemic

Notes

  1. In 1900, the MJFA decided on a change of name to the Metropolitan Football Association (MFA). MJFA president Lawrence Adamson brokered a deal that the existing MFA (of 1899) became the MJFA, giving his MJFA (of 1892) the "Metropolitan Football Association" name. [3] [12] Despite this, various newspaper reports from 1900 until 1912 still use the MJFA name when referring to Adamson's competition, most consensus is that "MJFA" in this time period refers to the now-VAFA, and the VAFA's official history continues to use the MJFA name until 1912. [6] [13]

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