Northern Bullants

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Northern Bullants
Northern Bullants logo 2021.png
Names
Full namePreston Football Club Inc., trading as Northern Bullants Football Club Inc. [1]
Former name(s)Northern Blues Football Club (2012−2020)
Nickname(s)Bullants, Tonners, Ants
Former nickname(s)Knights, Blues
2023 season
Home-and-away season20th
Club details
Founded1882;142 years ago (1882)
Colours  Red   White
Competition Victorian Football League
PresidentWhitlam Malkoun
Coach Rohan Welsh
Captain(s)Matthew King & Liam Mackie
PremiershipsVFA/VFL (D1) (4) VFA (D2) (2) VJFA (5)
Ground(s) Preston City Oval (10,000)
Uniforms
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Home
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Clash
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Original
Other information
Official website northernbullantsfc.com.au

The Northern Bullants are a semi-professional Australian rules football club that plays in the Victorian Football League (VFL). Based in Preston, the Bullants play their home games at the Preston City Oval.

Contents

The club was established in 1882 as the Preston Football Club, the name which the club is still legally registered under. The club participated in the Victorian Football Association (VFA) between 1903 and 1911, and then since 1926. After World War II, the club was known as the Bullants, and wore a plain red guernsey with a white monogram. The club later became the Northern Bullants. It was affiliated with the Carlton Blues in the Australian Football League (AFL) from 2003 to 2020; and, from 2012 until 2020, the club adopted the colours and nickname of its AFL affiliate to become the Northern Blues. [2] The alignment was terminated in 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic; [3] and, from 2021, the club again operated as a stand-alone VFL club under the Northern Bullants name. [4]

The club has won four Division 1 premierships and two Division 2 premierships, all during its most successful period from the 1960s to the 1980s.

History

The club was formed in 1882 but little is known of its first three years before the Shire of Jika Jika changed its name in September 1885 to Preston. Preston and another local club, Gowerville, then merged and competed at lower levels of the Victorian Junior Football Association (VJFA). After a battle with the council, the club was finally granted permission in 1887 to play on Preston Park, where it has remained with the exception of one year when it played at Coburg to allow the ground to be widened.

Victorian Junior Football Association

From 1890, the club played in the First Rate Division of the VJFA and despite its remote location compared with other clubs, was the only one of the 28 teams of 1890 to survive the decade, despite finishing last or second last in five consecutive seasons.

By the late 1890s, the district was starting to grow and the struggling club gathered depth and strength. It took out the first of three consecutive First-Rate premierships in 1900, defeating Collingwood Juniors (effectively the League team's Seconds) before 5,000 people at the Brunswick Street Oval. Further premierships followed in 1901 and 1902, with no finals being played as Preston finished the requisite two games clear of its nearest rivals to claim the title.

VFA

With the VFA keen to expand, Preston was a logical choice to join the senior body in 1903. The uniform changed from a blue jumper with yellow sash (which would have clashed with Williamstown) to a plain maroon jumper with navy blue knicks. Despite a reasonable opening season where it won six games, the club struggled to find players and finished last in 1904 in the middle of what was to be a 27-game losing streak.

Several other bottom-of-the list results came before a brief resurgence in 1909 under former Collingwood champion Charlie Pannam, but with the loss of several key players to League clubs, Preston again went on a downward spiral and won just one game through 1910 and 1911.

Back to the juniors

With Northcote joining the Association in 1908, pressure was applied for the two neighbouring clubs to merge and the VFA forced the issue early in 1912. Preston officials encouraged their players to move, but diverted all the club's trophies and assets to the junior Preston Districts club that had acted as its Seconds. Northcote became known as the Northcote and Preston Football Club for the next few years, but it played its games in Northcote, retained Northcote's colours, and its team in the VFA continued to be known as Northcote. [5] The merged entity is considered a continuation of the Northcote Football Club.

Preston was simply promoted before its time: by 1912, the district numbered just 4,800 people spread over 8,800 acres (an average of 0.6 persons per acre). Of the other suburbs represented in the VFA, the next smallest was Brighton with 11,000. Preston's leading player during the early VFA days was Sid Hall, a centre half-back regarded as the best high mark in the competition. Despite the lack of success, Preston managed to supply some fine players to League ranks in Percy Ogden (Essendon), Hedley Tomkins and Bill Hendrie (Melbourne), Hugh James (Richmond), Joe Prince (St Kilda, South Melbourne and Carlton), George Doull (Geelong) and Eric Woods (University). Preston's place was taken by Melbourne City which didn't win a game in the two years before it folded.

Preston City Oval, traditional home to the Preston Bullants. Preston city oval.jpg
Preston City Oval, traditional home to the Preston Bullants.

The nucleus of the Preston club returned to the First-Rate Division of the Victorian Junior Football Association. Ogden returned to captain-coach the club in 1916 and 1917 while Essendon was in recess for the First World War and by 1919 Preston had re-established itself as one of the top teams in junior football. Young George Gough was recruited by Fitzroy as a rover. Premierships came in 1921 and again in 1923 with Preston, under the coaching of William "Bull" Adams, who had been refused a clearance to Fitzroy by his West Australian club, overrunning Yarraville in the final term despite playing one man short.

Rejoining the VFA

With the loss of North Melbourne, Footscray and Hawthorn to the League in 1925, the Association accepted Preston (just proclaimed a city) and Camberwell into its ranks for the 1926 season.

The team used the uniform from its junior days, a broad red stripe down the chest and back with white sides and sleeves. This time the club was ready for senior ranks, raising a few eyebrows when it won nine of the 18 games in its first season as well as supplying the Recorder Cup winner, William "Bluey" Summers. A finals appearance came the following year. Preston's first ever senior final finished in a draw with Brighton, which won the replay a fortnight later.

The club remained in the middle ranking of the Association up until the cessation of play during World War I, the highlight being a remarkable 1931 season under the legendary Roy Cazaly who sacked half the side mid-season and promoted youngsters. Needing to win 12 games straight to ensure a finals spot, Preston managed to sneak in with 11 wins and a draw, but was bundled out in the preliminary final due to several injuries (including Cazaly).

Despite its modest finals record (the semi-final win was the only finals match Preston won), the club provided the 1934 and 1936 Recorder Cup winners in Danny Warr and Bert Hyde respectively. Leading players up to World War 2 included Summers, Warr, "Bert" Smith, Frankie "Dickie" Dowling and Bill "Socks" Maslen, the latter pair being the club's record-holders for number of senior games played. Although he was never a star with Preston, 17-year-old Bert Deacon played his first match in 1940, later becoming Carlton's first Brownlow Medallist in 1947. With the abolition of clearance agreements between the League and Association in 1938, Preston snared Footscray champion Alby Morrison as captain-coach for 1939–40 (although Morrison did obtain a clearance), and in 1941 a young Geelong ruckman, Jack Lynch who was switched to full-forward early in the season and finished with 133 goals. Lynch, sadly, is the only known player to have been killed during the War.

The "Bullants" nickname was first mentioned in the Herald newspaper in 1938, with an article on Association clubs adopting new nicknames, noting that "Preston will be known as the 'Bullants', because they can sting". [6] 1930s radio commentator Wallace "Jumbo" Sharland referred to the small Preston team in its bright uniforms as "like a swarm of busy bullants".

Post-war, the uniform was changed to plain red with a PFC monogram, but finals appearances remained few and usually with little success. The club again was to the fore in the new Liston Trophy, providing the 1949 and 1953 winners in Jack Blackman and Ted Henrys. Henrys, a moderate utility player with Brunswick in previous years, switched to Preston at age 26 and moved to full-back in just his second match where he made the position his own, adding three consecutive club best-and-fairest awards to his Liston and becoming one of the first two Association players to be named in the All-Australian team.

Deacon returned as captain-coach in 1952 and other leading players through the 1950s including centre-half forward Pat Foley, Kevin Pritchard, rover George Bradford, back pocket Bob "Moggie" McLachlan, and the Chard brothers, Kevin and Fred, the latter leading the goal kicking on three occasions. Despite building a solid combination, the loss of several experienced players saw the club plummet to fifteenth in 1960 and forced into Second Division when the VFA opted for two levels. The club played second division finals in 1961 and 1962, but were beaten both times.

By 1963, Preston's all-time VFA finals record stood at just one win and one draw from 18 attempts, with 13 losses in succession. Again their premiership hopes looked doomed when the Bullants went down to Waverley in the second semi-final, but fate finally smiled when Preston beat Prahran comfortably in the Preliminary Final and then downed Waverley to take out a long-awaited premiership, and earn promotion to Division 1.

Preston was relegated back to Division 2 at the end of 1964, and ironically it was 1963 runners-up Waverley – who had been promoted to Division 1 only to replace Moorabbin after it was disqualified from the Association for being complicit in St Kilda's takeover of Moorabbin Oval – who defeated Preston in the final round to ensure their relegation. The return to Division 2 lasted only one year, with a minor premiership and Grand Final victory against Mordialloc seeing them promoted again. With substantially more depth and keen recruiting, Preston finishing third in Division 1 in 1966.

Bert Hyde, Preston's 1936 Recorder Cup winner, had lived in the area since his playing days and was an active official at Hawthorn, which was then rapidly emerging from years in the wilderness to become the power side of the 1960s. It was probably Hyde's influence that saw two Hawthorn players that were to become the cornerstone of Preston's success move to Association ranks – John McArthur, captain-coach of the 1965 premiership side was transferred to Western Australia on business and replaced by Alan Joyce, later to coach two AFL premiership sides. Joyce (with McArthur returning as a player) led Preston to back-to-back premierships in 1968 and 1969. Preston players won four out of six Liston Trophies between 1968 and 1971, with the award collected in 1968 by Dick Telford, in 1969 and 1971 by Laurie Hill, and in 1973 by Ray Shaw, who was then the youngest winner of the award.

Preston was beaten by Dandenong in the 1971 VFA Grand Final, which remains one of the most controversial in football history. Field umpire Jim McMaster awarded Dandenong full-forward Jim 'Frosty' Miller a free kick before the opening bounce, resulting in a goal; Dandenong ultimately won by six points. Preston protested, and despite several opinions from leading lawmakers that McMaster had no right to award the free kick because he had not officially started the game, Preston's protest proved to be of no avail.

Preston's fortunes slumped in the early 1970s, and the club narrowly avoided relegation at Coburg's expense in 1973, after defeating the Lions 171–154 in a famous high-scoring final round match. [7] It wasn't until 1976 that Preston again played a major role in the finals, finishing second on the ladder, then crashing out after losses in the second semi and preliminary finals.

The club enjoyed a resurgence under Harold Martin in 1978, reaching the Grand Final where a crowd of nearly 30,000 packed the Junction Oval for what is still rated by many as one of the greatest ever Grand Finals. After a tense opening, the crowd erupted late in the second term when Martin and another of football's legendary hard men, Sam Kekovich, went head-to-head in a wild brawl. Unfortunately for the Bullants, Prahran settled down much better in the second half and ran out comfortable winners.

1980s

The club was one of the VFA's strongest in the 1980s, and it reached four Grand Finals in a row between 1981 and 1984. The team fell well short in the 1981 decider, unable to match Port Melbourne who inflicted a record Grand Final defeat (both score and winning margin) on the Bullants. The Borough kicked 23 goals to six in the second half to record its first score above 200 ever against the Bullants. The following season saw the return of Ray Shaw, captain of Collingwood in 1982 but disillusioned with bitter infighting at the club. Shaw's influence and a number of highly rated recruits had many believing that this would be Preston's year, but again Port Melbourne proved the nemesis with a seven-point win in the Grand Final.

Further strong recruiting brought together probably the greatest depth of players ever at an Association club. Preston rewrote the record books in 1983 by becoming the first club to win the Senior, Seconds and Thirds premierships in the same year in Division 1, and repeated the achievement in 1984. Preston was a dominant force in the Seconds over that period, reaching eight of ten Grand Finals between 1978 and 1987, winning five. The club had been a perennial force in the Thirds competition since the 1950s, missing the Grand Final only nine times over a 37-season stretch between 1953 and 1989 and winning the premiership a VFA-record 13 times (eleven in Division 1 and two in Division 2); its 1980s form was particularly strong, missing only one Grand Final between 1978 and 1989. [8] Neil Jordon capitalised on the club's strong minor grade form, playing an astonishing 84 matches with the club across all three grades before ever playing in a losing side. [9]

Eight straight wins in 1985 extended Preston's winning stretch to a record 23, but with the loss of Shaw to the Diamond Valley, retirement of a few experienced players and the movement of several promising younger players to League ranks, Preston's period of dominance was at an end. The club reached a further four finals series between 1985 and 1990, winning the minor premiership in 1990, but was eliminated from the finals by Williamstown on all four occasions. During this time, the club unearthed a new legend in Jamie "Spider" Shaw who kicked 106 in his first season and followed up with an astonishing 146 in 1986 before an unsuccessful stint at Fitzroy.

1990s: decline

With the ethnic mix of the Preston area rapidly changing and the almost saturation coverage of the now Australian Football League, the club's off-field position deteriorated in the 1990s, and it was constantly battling for survival. Preston was not the only club struggling, and at the end of 1994, the VFA Board of Management merged with the Victorian State Football League (VSFL) (now controlling the elite under-18 competition that had effectively replaced both the League and Association Thirds), and plans gradually evolved for the development of a new competition, which became the Victorian Football League. With a mounting debt, Preston entered into a merger with the Northern Knights under-18 team in 1996. The combined entity was known as the Preston Knights and adopted the Knights uniform of white with black and blue hoops. The move provided some financial stability off the field, but little success on the football front.

In October 1997, the VSFL executive announced that the Preston Knights' licence with the League had been withdrawn and that Preston, after 95 years, was effectively out of the competition. A number of protest meetings were organised and the club found a willing ally in Don Gillies, an administrator appointed by the State Government to replace the long-dysfunctional Preston Council, who through years of neglect had allowed the Preston Oval to degenerate to a standard well below that required for senior football. Gillies, in meeting with the VSFL, undertook to initiate significant drainage and lighting improvements at the ground and after around about a month of uncertainty, the Knights' license was reinstated when Traralgon announced its withdrawal from the VFL after an unsuccessful two-year trial.

The shaky alliance with the Knights continued until 1999 when the Board announced it could not recommend continuing. A new group approached the now VFL with a proposal to resurrect the club under the name of the Northern Bullants, market research having revealed that much of the club's support and player base no longer lay within the old Preston area. The revived club returned to a variation of the traditional red uniform, replacing the PFC monogram with a white bullant. The PFC initials were later added to the back of the guernsey below the collar.

At the same time, the AFL abandoned its Reserves competition in favour of a restructured VFL comprising a number of AFL–VFL affiliations, AFL Reserve teams and 'stand-alone' VFL clubs. The Northern Bullants opted not to pursue affiliation with an AFL club. 2000 and 2001 saw the stand-alone Bullants post six wins in each season, but the difficulty of having part-time players and coaching staff competing with full-time AFL counterparts was obvious in many games where the Bullants were highly competitive for much of the match but outgunned by fitter, bigger and stronger opposition late in the game.

Affiliation

Just before the end of the 2002 season, proposals for affiliation were received from both Essendon and Carlton. Essendon's plans were virtual domination of the club with a jumper change, renaming as the Northern Bombers and playing several games each season at Windy Hill. Carlton's, on the other hand, was for a cooperative playing group with no change to traditional values and was accepted without major modification by the Bullants board.

The affiliated team continued under long-serving coach Mark P. Williams, but there was to be no instant success, the club coincidentally matching the 2001–02 result with six wins in 2003. With a few personal tensions emerging, Carlton announced its intention to withdraw from the two-year agreement at the end of the 2003 season, but subsequent negotiations between the two clubs and the VFL saw the problems resolved and a new arrangement established. Williams had already resigned, citing lack of time, (later accepting the role at Sandringham) and under the terms of the agreement, Carlton retained the right to nominate one of their assistant coaches, eventually Barry Mitchell, as his replacement.

Carlton at the time was struggling in the AFL due to the loss of National Draft picks because of salary cap infringements. This worked in the Bullants' favour in the mid-2000s, as Carlton opted to recruit a number of experienced mid-range AFL players recycled from other teams, who went on to provide a backbone of a very strong VFL team. The club surprised most by finishing third in 2005, then won the minor premiership with a club best 17–1 record in 2006, but suffered heavy losses in two finals to finish third.

Under coach David Teague, the Bullants managed to finish third on the ladder in 2009, then win through to the Grand Final for the first time since the 1984 victory; but, the team was comfortably beaten by North Ballarat. The Bullants reached a second consecutive Grand Final the following season, winning through to the Grand Final from sixth on the ladder, but again lost to North Ballarat. The club reached another preliminary final from sixth place in 2011.

In 2012, the club adopted many features of Carlton's identity. The club was renamed the Northern Blues, and the playing colours were changed to navy blue and white, featuring Carlton's CFC monogram but in a slightly different design to the AFL club's guernsey. Home games were split between Preston City Oval and Princes Park. The club retained a red and white guernsey for matches played in Preston, and when a clash guernsey was required. [10] The club never made VFL finals under the Northern Blues name.

By the end of their affiliation, the Northern Blues existence as a club was thought to be reliant on the Carlton Football Club's financial backing. When the start of the 2020 AFL and VFL seasons, along with all other football, were suspended due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Carlton was forced to cut its expenses, and this included withdrawing its financial support for Northern, and ending its reserves affiliation. The Northern Blues initially announced they would be wound up and dissolved, and they were not included in revised plans for the cancelled 2020 VFL season. [11] [12] However, the club regrouped during the pandemic, and found a way to remain viable as a stand-alone senior club, earning a licence to return in that capacity for the 2021 season. The club returned to trading under the Northern Bullants name, and wearing its traditional red and white guernsey. [4]

Standalone club (2021−present)

Since returning as a standalone club, the Bullants have struggled in the VFL. The club only managed a single win in 2022, finishing last on the ladder. It included a loss to Werribee in round 22 where the Bullants only scored 0.10 (10) for the game, which set a new record as the heaviest loss in its history. [13]

The club appointed former Collingwood player Brodie Holland as their coach for the 2023 season. [14] The club had two wins early on in the season, but were unable to achieve anymore, finishing 20th. In round 18 they scored only 0.4 (4) against Footscray, equalling the lowest score in the club's VFA/VFL history and the lowest score by any club since 1919. [15] Holland resigned as coach effective immediately shortly after the club's final game of the season, and was replaced by former Carlton player Rohan Welsh. [16]

The club's identity is also present in the Preston Bullants Amateur Football Club, which is a separate entity that comepetes in the Victorian Amateur Football Association (VAFA), however the clubs use the same logo, colours and jumper design. [17] Preston AFC was formerly known as the Northern Bullants and later the Northern Blues, and by their current name since 2016. [18]

Honours

Premierships

LeagueDivisionLevelWinsYears won
Victorian Football League Division 1 Seniors 4 1968, 1969, 1983, 1984
Reserves 6 1957, 1978, 1983, 1984, 1985, 1987
Under-19s 11 1954, 1959, 1960, 1964, 1974, 1976, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1989
Division 2 Seniors 2 1963, 1965
Reserves 2 1961, 1962
Under-19s 2 1961, 1962
Victorian Junior Football Association N/AReserves51900, 1901, 1902, 1921, 1923

Other Division 1 Awards

Seasons

Premiers Grand Finalist Minor premiers Finals appearanceWooden spoon VFA/VFL leading goalkicker VFA/VFL best and fairest
YearLeagueFinishWLDCoachCaptainBest and fairestLeading goalkickerGoalsRef
1890 VJFA
1891 VJFA
1892 VJFA
1893 VJFA
1894 VJFA
1895 VJFA
1896 VJFA
1897 VJFA
1898 VJFA
1899 VJFA
1900 VJFA
1901 VJFA 1st [19]
1902 VJFA 1st
1903 VFA 7th6120-W. Gates-
1904 VFA 10th0180-William Dickens-
1905 VFA 10th1170-Claude Stanlake-
1906 VFA 9th5130- Tod Collins;

Parry Hall
-
1907 VFA 10th1170 Percy Ogden Arthur Hollis;
Percy Ogden
-
1908 VFA 8th4131 Percy Ogden Fred Howard;
Percy Ogden
-
1909 VFA 8th5130 Charlie Pannam Charlie Pannam-
1910 VFA 10th0180-Bill Punch-
1911 VFA 10th1170 George Sparrow;
Billy McGee
George Sparrow;
Billy McGee
-
1912 VJFA
1913 VJFA
1914 VJFA
1915 VJFA
1916 VJFA Percy Ogden Percy Ogden
1917 VJFA Percy Ogden Percy Ogden
1918 VJFA
1919 VJFA
1920 VJFA
1921 VJFA
1922 VJFA
1923 VJFA Bill Adams
1924 VJFA
1925 VJFA
1926 VFA 6th990 Gus Dobrigh Gus Dobrigh William "Bluey" Summers
1927 VFA 4th1260 Gus Dobrigh Gus Dobrigh -
1928 VFA 4th1170 Bill Adams Bill Adams H Bridgeford
1929 VFA 3rd1660 Jimmy Goonan Jimmy Goonan -
1930 VFA 6th1091 Jimmy Goonan Jimmy Goonan -
1931 VFA 3rd1251 Roy Cazaly Roy Cazaly -
1932 VFA 4th1460 Harry Hunter Harry Hunter -
1933 VFA 6th1291 Charlie McSwain Charlie McSwain -
1934 VFA 2nd1440 Charlie McSwain Charlie McSwain Danny Warr
1935 VFA 6th1071 Danny Warr Danny Warr -
1936 VFA 6th1080 Bert Hyde Bert Hyde Noel Fisher
1937 VFA 11th4120 Bert Hyde Bert Hyde -
1938 VFA 6th880 Wyn Murray; Bob Muir Wyn Murray -
1939 VFA 8th9110 Alby Morrison Alby Morrison -
1940 VFA 4th1460 Alby Morrison Alby Morrison W. Maslen
1941 VFA 4th1460Frank DowlingFrank Dowling-
1942 VFA (No season)
1943 VFA (No season)
1944 VFA (No season)
1945 VFA 5th1190 Frank Anderson Frank Anderson -
1946 VFA 11th5150 Frank Anderson Frank Anderson -
1947 VFA 10th7141 Jack Blackman Jack Blackman -
1948 VFA 6th1280 Jack Blackman Jack Blackman - Ray Potter 84
1949 VFA 9th8130 Jack Blackman Jack Blackman Jack Blackman
1950 VFA 11th3160 Hugh Thomas Charlie Stewart -
1951 VFA 10th8102 Reg Ryan; Ray Riddell Reg Ryan;
Dick Goldin
Ted Henrys [20]
1952 VFA 11th7121 Bert Deacon Bert Deacon -
1953 VFA 9th8120 Bert Deacon Bert Deacon Ted Henrys
1954 VFA 5th1370 Bert Deacon Ted Henrys -
1955 VFA 2nd1730 Bert Deacon Fred Lalor-
1956 VFA 5th1460 Bert Deacon Fred Lalor-
1957 VFA 4th1370 Les Foote Les Foote -
1958 VFA 12th6111 Les Foote Les Foote -
1959 VFA 11th8120Pat FoleyClaud Howard-
1960 VFA 14th4140Pat FoleyClaud Howard-
1961 VFA (D2) 3rd1170Bert EdmondsBob McLachlan-
1962 VFA (D2) 1st1420Bert EdmondsJohn O'KeefeGraham Pinfold [21]
1963 VFA (D2) 2nd1240 Charlie Stewart George Hancock-
1964 VFA (D1) 10th3141 Charlie Stewart Graham PinfoldBob Treloar [22]
1965 VFA (D2) 1st1330 John McArthur John McArthur -John Walker116
1966 VFA (D1) 4th1260 Alan Joyce Alan Joyce -John Walker84
1967 VFA (D1) 4th1080 Alan Joyce Alan Joyce -John Walker83
1968 VFA (D1) 1st1530 Alan Joyce Alan Joyce Dick Telford
1969 VFA (D1) 1st1710 Alan Joyce Alan Joyce Laurie Hill
1970 VFA (D1) 6th1170 Alan Joyce Alan Joyce -
1971 VFA (D1) 1st1341 Kevin Wright Laurie Hill Laurie Hill
1972 VFA (D1) 4th1170 Kevin Wright Laurie Hill Len Clark Len Clark 107 [23]
1973 VFA (D1) 9th6120 Ken Greenwood Ken Greenwood Ray Shaw
1974 VFA (D1) 6th990 Bob Syme Harold Martin -
1975 VFA (D1) 5th8100 Dick Telford Noel Zunneberg -
1976 VFA (D1) 2nd1350 Dick Telford Gary Grainger-
1977 VFA (D1) 9th5130 Graeme Renwick Graeme Renwick -
1978 VFA (D1) 2nd1251 Harold Martin Harold Martin Trevor Durward
1979 VFA (D1) 7th8100 Harold Martin Harold Martin -
1980 VFA (D1) 7th6120 Harold Martin Harold Martin -
1981 VFA (D1) 2nd1260 Harold Martin Peter Marshall-
1982 VFA (D1) 1st1620 Ray Shaw Ray Shaw Geoff Austen
1983 VFA (D1) 1st1530 Ray Shaw Ray Shaw -
1984 VFA (D1) 1st1620 Ray Shaw Ray Shaw -
1985 VFA (D1) 3rd1440 Peter Weightman David Brine -
1986 VFA (D1) 4th1260 Peter Weightman David Brine - Jamie Shaw 145
1987 VFA (D1) 8th891 Peter Weightman David Brine -
1988 VFA (D1) 2nd1260 Peter Weightman David Brine - Jamie Shaw 105
1989 VFA 7th990 Len Thompson Neil Jordan-
1990 VFA 1st1341Neil JordanNeil JordanMatthew Burrows Jamie Shaw 103
1991 VFA 11th3150Neil JordanNeil Jordan-
1992 VFA 9th8100Neil JordanNeil Jordan-
1993 VFA 10th7110 David Dickson Glenn Reeves-
1994 VFA 9th5130 Peter Weightman Glenn Reeves-
1995 VFA 7th5110 Peter Weightman Simon Taylor-
1996 VFL 9th6120 Peter Weightman Simon Taylor-
1997 VFL 7th7110 Peter Weightman Phillip Plunkett-
1998 VFL 5th1080 Mark Williams Phillip Plunkett-
1999 VFL 10th1152 Mark Williams Phillip Plunkett-
2000 VFL 16th4150 Mark Williams Shannon Gibson -
2001 VFL 14th6140 Mark Williams Shannon Gibson -
2002 VFL 13th6140 Mark Williams Shannon Gibson Cameron Ramsay
2003 VFL 11th6120 Mark Williams Shannon Gibson Shane Watson
2004 VFL 12th5130 Barry Mitchell Brett ZorziBrett Zorzi;
Jarrod McCorkell
2005 VFL 2nd1341 Barry Mitchell Frankie Raso Glen Bowyer
2006 VFL 1st1710 Barry Mitchell Frankie Raso Daniel Harford
2007 VFL 9th8100 Barry Mitchell Frankie Raso Adam Iacobucci
2008 VFL 8th880 David Teague Josh Vansittart Jason Saddington
2009 VFL 3rd1260 David Teague Adam Iacobucci David Ellard
2010 VFL 6th1080 David Teague Adam Iacobucci Jarrod McCorkell
2011 VFL 6th1080 Darren Harris Adam Iacobucci Brock McLean
2012 VFL 10th6120 Robert Hyde;
Darren Harris
Brent Bransgrove;
Andre Gianfagna
Adam Marcon
2013 VFL 9th8100 Luke Webster Brent Bransgrove;
Andre Gianfagna
Kane Lambert
2014 VFL 11th7110 Luke Webster Brent BransgroveTom Wilson
2015 VFL 14th4140 Luke Webster Brent Bransgrove Brad Walsh
2016 VFL 13th6120 Josh Fraser Tom WilsonTom Wilson
2017 VFL 9th8100 Josh Fraser Tom Wilson Cam O'Shea
2018 VFL 12th6120 Josh Fraser Tom WilsonTom Wilson
2019 VFL 10th7110 Josh Fraser Tom Wilson Hugh Goddard
2020 VFL (No season) Josh Fraser Tom Wilson(No season)
2021 VFL 18th370 Josh Fraser Tom WilsonTynan Smith13 [24]
2022 VFL 21st1170 Ben Hart Tom WilsonJack Boyd24 [25]
2023 VFL 20th2160 Brodie Holland Matthew King;
Liam Mackie
Jean-Luc Velissaris Brandon Ryan 18 [26]
2024 VFL TBC Rohan Welsh Matthew King;
Liam Mackie

Grand finals

Premiers Runners-up Drawn
YearLeagueGradeOpponentScoreVenueAttendanceDateReport
1957 VFA Reserves Moorabbin 11.12 (78) d. 5.12 (42) St Kilda Cricket Ground 5 October 1957 [27]
1963 VFA D2 Seniors Waverley 11.14 (80) d. 9.15 (69) Toorak Park 15,00015 September 1963 [28]
1965 VFA D2 Seniors Mordialloc 15.12 (102) d. 9.10 (64) Toorak Park 10,00012 September 1965 [29]
1968 VFA D1 Seniors Prahran 15.8 (98) d. 12.12 (84) Punt Road Oval 18,00022 September 1968 [30]
1969 VFA D1 Seniors Dandenong 12.11 (83) d. 10.11 (71) Punt Road Oval 10,00021 September 1969 [31]
1971 VFA D1 Seniors Dandenong 14.14 (98) d. 13.14 (92) St Kilda Cricket Ground 14,52926 September 1971 [32]
1978 VFA D1 Reserves Port Melbourne 10.13 (73) d. 10.12 (72) Toorak Park 16 September 1978 [33]
1978 VFA D1 Seniors Prahran 21.15 (141) d. 17.17 (119) St Kilda Cricket Ground 29,59524 September 1978 [34]
1981 VFA D1 Seniors Port Melbourne 32.19 (211) d. 15.8 (98) St Kilda Cricket Ground 20,18020 September 1981 [35]
1982 VFA D1 Seniors Port Melbourne 21.15 (141) d. 20.14 (134) St Kilda Cricket Ground 20,73219 September 1982 [36]
1983 VFA D1 Seniors Geelong West 14.10 (94) d. 12.15 (87) St Kilda Cricket Ground 14,71918 September 1983 [37]
1983 VFA D1 Reserves Frankston 14.20 (104) drew 16.8 (104) Toorak Park 18 September 1983 [38]
Frankston 18.15 (123) d. 12.13 (85) Frankston Park 25 September 1983 [39]
1983 VFA D1 Thirds unknownunknownunknownSeptember 1978 [38]
1984 VFA D1 Seniors Frankston 19.21 (135) d. 12.9 (81) St Kilda Cricket Ground 8,66423 September 1984 [40]
2009 VFL Seniors North Ballarat 14.7 (91) d. 10.8 (68) Etihad Stadium 14,02625 September 2009 [41]
2010 VFL Seniors North Ballarat 20.13 (133) d. 13.8 (86) Etihad Stadium 11,00019 September 2010 [42]

Club song

The club song is sung to the tune of "The Yankee Doodle Boy", which is also the basis for the Hawthorn/Box Hill and Sandringham club songs.

We’re from Northern, we’re the Bullants
The good old red and white, are we
All good stickers for the red and white
Always we fight for victory, at Northern
We’re the best in the competition,
We won’t give up while there’s a chance
We’re a team of champions, full of fighting spirit
That’s why they call us the Bullants

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References

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Further reading