It was the era of mullets and moustaches; a time when tight shorts and lace-up jumpers were the trends; and when footy expansion meant national, not international as it does today.
Remember the ‘80s?
If you can, you will recall it as one of the most volatile periods in Australian football history. It was a time of seismic change which dragged a near-broke Victorian Football League – with its 12 parochial clubs who played predominantly on suburban grounds each Saturday afternoon (often on muddy grounds) – towards the Australian Football League of today – when 18 clubs play in every state and territory at an assortment of times during the day and night (often under a roof).
If can’t recall them, you missed a remarkable decade for the game, and for Collingwood.
But don’t fret; Collingwood Forever plans to transport you back in time each week for a blast from the 1980s past, profiling a player who made an impact for one reason or another during that decade. They might not have all been stars, but each contributed to one of the club’s most tumultuous periods.
Paul Hawke appeared to have the football world at his feet when he was runner-up to Gavin Brown - by a solitary vote - in the 1989 Copeland Trophy.
Wearing a bow-tie and a beaming smile on the night of the count, the one-time Sydney ruck rover had reeled off the most consistent season of his career, and looked to have guaranteed himself a long and successful career in black and white.
The fact he had polled so well, despite playing three fewer games than Brown, validated how good his season had been.
Just as telling was the fact the 25-year-old polled a club-high 14 votes in the 1989 Brownlow Medal, only eight behind the winner, Geelong's Paul Couch. Only Couch, John Platten, Tim Watson, Jason Dunstall, Nicky Winmar and Greg Williams - all genuine stars of the game – won more votes than Hawke that season.
Incredibly, he never played another senior game for Collingwood.
Hawke’s rise to elite company at Collingwood and his Copeland near-miss followed by his swift return to earth the next season remains one of the great mysteries of the Leigh Matthews-era.
He was a strong player in his first season at Victoria Park (1988), transformed into one of the game's best players a year later (1989) and then inexplicably was unable to crack it for even one senior AFL game the season after that (1990).
Bad timing - not for the first time in his career - counted against him.
His moment in the Magpie sun faded when he fell out of favour with the coach. Tellingly, other players recruited to the club, and the maturation of younger teammates, meant his chances dried up at the most inopportune time.
This hard-working player was one of the least remembered hard-luck stories of those who missed out on the 1990 premiership success.
Ron McKeown (omitted after the qualifying final replay) and Alan Richardson (injured in the second semi-final) deserve more sympathy, but Hawke was still listed as one of the club's emergencies leading into the Grand Final, despite having not played a game that season.
Hawke was a native of Wagga, in New South Wales. As a youngster, he coaxed a young cricketer and soccer player to also take up the game of Australian football when he was about 11. The kid's name was Mark Taylor, and he would later find fame as one of Australia's most successful cricket captains.
Taylor would recount in his book, Time To Declare: "Around the time I befriended Paul Hawke I was getting a bit tired of soccer, and he said to me: 'Come and play Aussie Rules'. Paul made that game his sporting life ... he was a terrific player and I loved the game, too."
Hawke was recruited to the Sydney Swans, where initially he found it difficult to gain a spot in a midfield that boasted Gerard Healy, Greg Williams, Barry Mitchell, David Murphy and Steve Wright. One newspaper said at the time he was "on permanent stand-by on the forward line or the bench ... a spare part for a machine that rarely needed replacements."
However, he made his mark in 72 games across four seasons (1984-1987), averaging a goal per game for the Swans, alternating between the forward-line and changing ruck rover with Healy.
"With Gerard Healy there, I didn't just have the best ruck-rover in the team to change with, but the best ruck-rover in Australia. I suppose there weren't that many chances," Hawke said, explaining why he sought greater opportunities at Collingwood and left the Swans after the 1987 season on a $75,000 transfer fee.
At his first training session for the Magpies, at La Trobe University sports ovals, Hawke was still in the process of moving house and had a television and a video recorder in the back seat of his car. By the time he returned to his car, his electronic equipment had been stolen and he had to use his first black and white pay cheque to buy replacements.
On the field, it was a better start. He played in the first match of 1988 - after representing New South Wales in the Bicentennial Carnival - kicking two goals in the Magpies' win over the Brisbane Bears, and he had 20 or more disposals in his first eight games with the Magpies.
In a short time, one newspaper described him as "a vital cog in an engine room that has the splutters", with Leigh Matthews conceding "if we hadn't got Hawke, we might be in a bit of trouble." The coach said: "He gets a lot of his possession at close quarters, on the bottom of packs, so he doesn't stand out."
Hawke possessed good skills and was a clever reader of the play, though he was often unobtrusive and went about his business with a minimum of fuss. He wasn’t overly quick, but had good stamina, and had an uncanny knack of kicking goals. “I’ve never been real quick,” he confessed, “so I make up for it by running out a whole game.”
He played 22 games as a ruck rover/forward in his first year at Victoria Park in 1988, but found his best form when, in part, he became "a Clayton's rover" (even though he was 182cm) in 1989.
As the Herald said: "In the absence of a natural Platten-Naley-Weightman-style first rover, Collingwood set out to make a Clayton's rover of Paul Hawke - and in turn it’s been the making of the player."
Hawke played 19 games in 1989, having almost 500 disposals for the season. Twice he was awarded the three Brownlow votes from the umpires, though he only received two when he had a career-high 41 disposals in a Round 12 game against Richmond.
Frustratingly, the next time the Magpies played the Tigers, in Round 21, he suffered a hamstring injury, which cost him a spot in the club's elimination final loss to Melbourne a few weeks later. It may also have cost him a Copeland Trophy, given he missed the last round.
He never played a senior game for Collingwood after that, as he first battled against injury, and then was overlooked later in the season as the Magpies went on to win the 1990 premiership.
One of his teammates, Brian Taylor, was shocked he didn’t play one match in that 1990 season: “'Hawkey' no doubt should have been given a game at some stage during the season, particularly after finishing second in the Copeland Trophy the year before."
Hawke, though, was confident he could win favour with the selectors once more, saying immediately after the Grand Final: "I'll be back in the side next year."
He wasn't.
A phone call from football manager Graeme Allan just before the start of the season – after he had played a few practice matches - revealed his services were no longer required.
"I wasn't expecting anything like that. And when you're not expecting something like that, it really does come as a shock," Hawke said at the time.
"I guess injuries were the key last year - we didn't get any. We got one in the finals and that was ‘Richo’ (Alan Richardson) and then it came down to one of three of us playing in the grand final but ‘Kerro’ (Shane Kerrison) got it."
Hawke's original club, Sydney, granted him a reprieve in 1991, but he could manage only one more AFL game - for a total of 114 - before being delisted by the Swans.
His abbreviated AFL career was over at 27, only two years after he almost won a best-and-fairest, and after he upstaged more than a few higher profile players on Brownlow Medal night.
Turning Points
Written by Glenn McFarlane of the Herald Sun
A lasting impact: Greg Phillips
A loved rover's big year: Matthew Ryan
A comet in the Magpie sky: Phil Walsh