Ablett, Brereton, Matthews, Bartlett, Doull, DiPierdomenico, Lockett,
Barassi, Hafey, Jeans, Sheedy and Dyer. Just some of the names who made
1980s football a sight (and sound) to behold. If the 1970s was the
decade the game went technicolour, the 80s—spanning from the dying days
of Richmond’s golden era, through the rise of Allan Jeans’
indestructible Hawks and Kevin Sheedy’s brilliant Bombers, and
culminating in the peerless 1989 Grand Final—was heaven for footy
purists.
In Electrifying 80s, all the outsized characters and eye-popping
events of a colourful football decade are brought back to life in the
words of an equally impressive cast of football writers, including Mike
Sheahan, Trevor Grant, Martin Flanagan, Garrie Hutchinson, Scot Palmer,
Garry Linnell and Caroline Wilson. If the action on the field was
memorable, so too was the writing of a richly talented and innovative
generation of sports journalists.
Trawling through a decade of the best writing in the major Melbourne
newspapers, editor Russell Jackson has collected the profiles, match
reports, columns and feature articles that explain one of the most
eventual 10-year stretches in AFL history. Moving from the boardrooms of
a financially stricken game, to the windswept terraces of the suburban
stadiums which still endured, and into the middle of the ground among a
host of all-time greats, readers will delight in the crunching tackles,
soaring marks and shocking antics.
Reviving memories of cult heroes like Rene Kink, Mark ‘Jacko’ Jackson,
Peter Bosustow, Billy Duckworth, Vinny Catoggio, Leon Baker and Warwick
Capper, Electrifying 80s is the perfect piece of nostalgia for
lovers of the game who cherished the days of flawed heroes, lukewarm
pies and the crumbling splendour of the suburban outer, where myths and
legends were born.
About the Author
Russell Jackson is The Slattery Media Group's senior editor, and a former sports
editor and columnist at Guardian Australia. His writing has appeared in numerous
books and anthologies, and in the 1980s he experienced the misfortune of choosing
to support St Kilda, the club which collected more wooden spoons than anyone else.