St Patrick's Old Collegians Football Club

St Patrick's Old Collegians Football Club
Full name St Patrick's Old Collegians Football Club
Nickname The Saints
Sport Australian rules football
Founded 1931
First season 1931
League Northern Tasmanian Football Association
Home ground St Patrick's Old Collegians Football Club, Morris Street, Prospect Vale, Tasmania
Anthem "Oh When the Saints Go Marching In"
President Ian McCallum
Secretary Dennis Barnes
2015 Seniors: Undefeated Minor Premiers and Grand Final Runners Up. Reserves: Undefeated Premiers.
Strip
Home: Green, with two gold horizontal hoops with "the Champ" in the middle of the front until 2015 when it was altered to be Green with a Gold Cross on the front and a miniature version of "The Champ" placed on the back between the shoulders.

St Patrick's Old Collegians Football Club Inc. Est. 1931 (known as SPOCFC or St Pat's Football Club) is an Australian rules football club in Prospect Vale, Tasmania, and competes in the Northern Tasmanian Football Association.

The mascot for the "Saints" is "the Champ" a footballer on the run with ball under the arm and the other arm outstreached, dressed in his football gear with a halo above his head.

Prior to the formation of the Northern Tasmanian Football Association the club competed in the Tasmanian Amateur Football League.

The club as the name suggests was originally formed as an offshute for past school boys to continue playing organised sport.

The club continues to foster a relationship with St Patricks College, but not all players are recruited from the school.

The club is situated in Prospect Vale on a lower oval of the schools grounds.

The oval has adequate lighting facilities[1] to host night games.

The oval is unique in that it has a very sandy soil and is very difficult for grass to grow at the top end of the oval. The oval has been used as a conceptual model for urban salinity in Launceston, Tasmania.[2]

Premierships

Seniors

Reserves

Competition best and fairest

References

  1. "2005-06 Facilities Grant Program" (PDF). www.development.tas.gov.au. Retrieved 21 July 2009.
  2. "Conceptual Model for Urban Salinity in Launceston, Tasmania" (PDF). www.wsroc.com.au. Archived from the original on 18 September 2007. Retrieved 21 July 2009.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 9/12/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.