East Burwood Football Club

The East Burwood Football Club is an Australian rules football club located in East Burwood, Victoria. They play in Division 3 of the Eastern Football League.

East Burwood
Full nameEast Burwood Football Club
NicknameRams
Founded1910
LeagueEastern Football League
Home groundEast Burwood Reserve
Strip
Black with white monogram

History

Formed in 1910 and in commenced playing in the Box Hill Reporter DFA in 1911. In the early years, the club had a habit of moving from competition to competition: they were a founding member of the Scoresby DFA in 1925 and won the last two premierships in 1929 and 1930. In 1931, they joined the Federal FL and were premiers in 1932. They left at the end of the 1937 season.

In 1940 the club appeared in the East Suburban FL and played in the "East Section" and then in "B" grade until winning in 1954 as premiers and champions. Promoted to "A" Grade in 1955, they returned to "B" Grade in 1956 before regaining a place in "A" Grade in 1959. In 1960 they won the "A" Grade flag.

East Burwood then joined the Eastern Districts Football League in 1961 where it remains today. Starting in Division 1, it maintained that position for many years, winning premierships in 1963–1965, 1967–1968, 1973, 1976, 1985, 1987, 1992, 1999 and 2000.

Following an exodus of players and financial problems, the club was demoted from Division 1 for the first time after the 2013 season, and played in Division 2 for three seasons before being demoted again.

While they reached the Division 3 preliminary final in 2017, a restructure of the EFL means that the club will play in the newly formed Division 4 for 2018.

VFL/AFL players

gollark: Are they going to be as valuable in trading as the muskies were?
gollark: A new release and I have no slots; typical .
gollark: Am I likely to be able to trade two CB Zyus for a CB Copper? Three? Four?
gollark: Annoyingly, traders only seem to want yellow and pink zyumorphs. I caught a blue one.
gollark: I suppose you can turn the 3Gs you sell into a moneypile.

References

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