Sunday, March 22, 2009



This is Mark William (power coach) in the middle with two new port adelaide player. Jackson Trengove (left) and Hamish Hartlett (right) who got drafted last year.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

The Port Adelaide Football club is arguably the most successful senior football club, not only in South Australia but Australia-wide.
Since playing our first game on 24 May, 1870 the club has gone on to win an Australian record of 34 SANFL premierships including six in a row and achieve the honour of being Champions of Australia on four occasions.
In 1997 the club reached another landmark in its history by joining the country’s national competition – the Australian Football League.
As surprising as it sounds, the players did not always wear the traditional black and white in its SANFL days. For its first game back in 1870, the players donned a blue and white guernsey with a pink cap!

Someone must have come to their senses however, as they changed to the famous black and white colours in 1902, which Port Adelaide wore right through to 1996 (up until AFL entry).
Port Adelaide quickly established itself as a force in the SANFL, winning its first flag in 1884. Success started coming regularly and in 1914 it created history by going the whole season undefeated and in the process winning the honour of being Champions of Australia.
After capturing three flags in the 1930’s, with superb talent such as dual Magarey Medallist Bob Quinn, the club would embark on its next great era with the arrival of Fos Williams to Alberton in 1950.
Fos led the Magpies to nine premierships overall and in many ways, propelled the club to where it is today. Port won seven premierships in the 50’s including a SANFL record six in a row.
The tradition continued to grow. Through great players such as four-time Magarey Medallist Russell Ebert, Port Adelaide continued its SANFL supremacy peaking just before entering the AFL in 1997. The club, coached by John Cahill, won seven out of nine flags between 1988 and 1996, making it the obvious choice for the second SANFL licence to join the AFL, which the club was awarded in 1994.
On joining the AFL, teal blue and silver were added to the famous black and white, along with a new nickname, Port Power (since changed to Power), to avoid a clash with the Collingwood Magpies.
>Cahill was appointed inaugural coach of a young Power squad, led by Brownlow Medallist and former player Gavin Wanganeen.
After two seasons of just missing out on the finals, Mark Williams was appointed coach and in his first season, 1999, took Port Adelaide to its first finals appearance.
After ten seasons in the AFL, the Power has competed in finals six times, including five consecutive years. It has won two pre-season premierships in 2001 and 2002, finished minor premiers in three consecutive years (2002-2004) and won the club’s first AFL Premiership in 2004.