Photo: Rothmans State Manager John O'Brien (right) presents cheques to Olympia captain Dick Girling (left), Croatia-Glenorchy Captain Joe Fiamengo (second from left) and Juventus skipper Joe Hanna (second from right). Olympia received $101 for finishing second, Croatia-Glenorchy $90 for third place, and Juventus $109 for first place.
This 2019 season
will be the 50th anniversary of Hobart Juventus winning their first
league title.
In 1969,
under coach Karl Schwesinger and captained by the late Joe Hanna, Juventus won
the Southern Tasmanian title, as well as the State Championship with a 6-5
aggregate win over two legs against their sister club, Launceston Juventus.
Launceston
Juventus won the first leg 4-2 at White City in Launceston, while Hobart
Juventus won the second leg 4-1 at South Hobart, thus claiming the Captain W.
Cottrell-Dormer Cup, which was the trophy awarded to the State champions.
Hobart
Juventus scored twice in the last three minutes to clinch the State title.
Johnny
Genovesi headed home Australian youth international Phil Owen’s cross to make
the aggregate score level, while the unfortunate Peter Mies turned a Remo
Carnevale cross into his own net to give the Southerners the State title.
Joe Hanna
played an inspirational captain’s game despite a fractured wrist [take note,
Tom Rogic], holding the defence together and feeding his forwards with
brilliant passes.
It was the
13th year of Hobart Juventus’s existence and the Southern title was
clinched on the 13th day of September with a 3-0 win over South
Hobart, coached by John Kirkpatrick, at Grove Road, the goals coming from Remo
Carnevale, Joe Scaramuzza and Domenic Rizzolo.
Two years
later, Kirkpatrick would become the inaugural winner of the Rothmans Gold Medal
for the best-and-fairest player in Tasmania.
It was Joe Hanna’s
first premiership and Karl Schwesinger’s first year as Juventus coach.
The regular
Hobart Juventus squad in 1969 was:
Jaegar, Howarth, Watson, Tria, Scaramuzza, Schwesinger, Hanna, Phil
Owen, Genovesi, Rizzolo, Carnevale, Wood, Giusti, Richardson, Palermo, Cengia.
The
Northern Juventus squad was: Lockett,
Wilson, Baird, de Paoli, Brown, Mies, Strickland, Schraeder, Whinnett,
Visentin, Morosini, Streit, Van der Pols, Cook.
The Captain
W. Cottrell-Dormer Cup was put on display later that week at Hobart’s
Fitzgerald’s store because there was so much public interest in the State
Final.
Also on
display at Fitzgerald’s was the Grimwood Perpetual Trophy, awarded to the
Southern champions, Juventus, and the John Clemente Top Goal-Scorer’s Cup, won
by Juventus’s centre-forward, Domenic Rizzolo.
Dr
Clemente, by the way, was the president of Hobart Juventus and was in his first
year in office.
Action
photos from games throughout the season were also part of the display at the
Hobart department store.
It was the
first season that Croatia played under their new name, Croatia-Glenorchy. Rudi Hancl was their president and Frank
Hesman their secretary. Both gentlemen
are still about.
Alex
Sarfalvy, the doyen of local coaches, was in charge of Croatia-Glenorchy, while
the renowned Peter Cagialis coached Olympia.
Croatia-Glenorchy
won the State-wide Ampol Cup that year with 4-0 win against Hobart Juventus.
There was
crowd trouble at South Hobart that season during the Olympia versus Northern
Suburbs Caledonians game, and police reinforcements had to be called.
Referee
Rodger Marlor claimed he has been kicked, struck and spat upon by spectators in
a wild melee.
Things are
so quiet these days and it takes the tame antics of such wannabe coaches as Gabriel
Markaj to spark up some interest amongst the general populace.
Referees were
paid $6 a game in the top-tier Cambridge League in the South, with linesmen
earning $3 a game. In the lower leagues,
referees earned the princely sum of $4 a game.
1969 was
also the year that the North (6 teams) and North-West (4 teams) got together and
formed the inaugural Combined League.
Sixteen young
members of the Ulverstone club, only three of whom were actually players, also
embarked on a tour of Holland and the UK.
The Ulverstone
club had strong links with Holland, of course, and many Dutch migrants played
for the club.
I recall
many years later watching the televised Olympic qualifier between Australia and
the Netherlands in Holland - yes, the game in which Ned Zelic scored that
incredible goal from an impossible angle to give Australia victory and
qualification and which kick-started his career
- and the cameras suddenly zoomed
in to a section of the crowd and people were holding up a huge banner which
read: “Hello Ulverstone.”
So, there’s
the challenge for you, David Smith and Nick Di Giovanni.
Can Hobart
Zebras (what an underwhelming name compared to Juventus) celebrate a league title
on the 50th anniversary of the club’s first such success?
10 comments:
Zebras have a top quality coach now which they haven't in years gone by.As good as K Morton.should be a fascinating battle along with ports coach. Just like pep klopp & pochettino.Bring it on 2019 season
As a parent of Zebras players i am just hoping for some stability at the club, back the coach in for an extended period and give him the ability to then teach and mould the team into a cohesive unit that is predictable to each other.
"Johnny Genovesi headed home Australian youth international Phil Owen’s cross..." Apologies for the pedantry Walter, but it should probably be 'Australian Youth International John Genovesi' (U/23 tour of Indonesia in 1974), as Phil is an Australia Schoolboy representative, rather than youth international. Fascinating recap as always.
Hi Paul Thanks for your clarification. Phil Owen played for Australia's Under-16s, so I guess that's a schoolboy side. Perhaps it was the precursor to the current Joeys, Australia's Under-17s? I know John Genovesi was in the Australian Under-23 squad for the tour of Indonesia in 1974, but I thought he was injured and never actually played on that tour. I'll ask him next time I see him. Nevertheless, my article was about 1969, which was after Owen had represented Australia and before Genovesi did. Having said that, I must admit I did jump into the future when I wrote that John Kirkpatrick won the inaugural Rothmans Gold Medal two years later. Thanks for your interest and kind words. It's wonderful that such articles generate discussion. That is one of the reasons for writing them. Cheers! Walter
Beachside vs Nelson @ KGV 13/01 4pm
Beachside vs Clarence @ KGV 16/01 7pm
Ned’s goal was truly amazing, thought we were deservedly gone.
Under 16s is considered separate from Under 17s in official records from memory. Eduardo Castenada represented Aus U/16s a few years ago, so the age group is still going. Would be great to hear if John played in the Indonesian tour, I have found no exact team lists from the 3 matches. Always enjoy the historical recaps, makes the off season much more enjoyable.
Hi Paul. John played half a practice match in Sydney before the team left for Indonesia. In Indonesia, he broke down with an ankle injury at the first training session and did not play a game. He had sprained his ankle against Olympia about six weeks before joining the Australian U23 squad in Sydney. The games in Indonesia were played in Surabaya, Jakarta and Palembang. The Under-23s won all three games. Incidentally, Willy Peters (Croatia-Glenorchy) and David Smith (Metro) had also been considered for selection. Cheers! Walter
PS The Australians played the Indonesian U23s and a touring Danish team. They left Sydney on 28 March 1974 and returned to Australia on 9 April 1974. Half the 20-man Australian squad was born overseas. The squad played five games in all (3 games in Indonesia and two in Australia), scoring 26 goals and conceding just one.
That is amazing information Walter, thank you for chasing that up. I also did not know there was a Danish team touring at that time either, nor that the matches were played in 3 different locations. Cheers, Paul
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