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.

The brevity of Phillip Walsh’s time at Collingwood should never diminish the impact he made in one breathtaking season or underestimate what the club lost in its controversial parting from him.

Like a comet, Walsh flashed spectacularly, but all-too-briefly in Black and White.

He played every game of the 1983 season and was considered the league's best first-year player.

Then he was gone with what seemed like an indecent haste, swept up in a wave of enmity between two bitter rivals intent on doing as much damage to the other as possible, even if it was to their own detriment.

Recruited from Hamilton, Walsh was a largely unheralded, bargain-basement recruit when he came to Victoria Park before the 1983 season, at a time when Collingwood was embarking on the most audacious and expensive recruiting sprees in the club's history.

Initially, he was barely noticed against a backdrop of high-priced recruits that included Richmond stars David Cloke and Geoff Raines, as well as interstaters Mike Richardson, Gary Shaw and Greg Phillips.

Walsh had played for Hamilton Kangaroos as well as Redan under John Northey, but had come to Collingwood on the recommendation of former Magpie Paul Cranage.

Cranage told the Magpies Walsh was a readymade recruit who would "play the first game of the year". The talented, hard-working left-footer would do that in front of an MCG crowd of more than 72,000 in the round one clash against Melbourne.

Walsh's debut came 11 days after his 23rd birthday, and instantly he looked comfortable at the level, having 20 disposals followed by another 18 against Geelong the following week.

Those early games set the scene for a remarkable debut season, where Walsh balanced his ability for winning possessions with his pace and creative flair on the wing.

His form was so good that in his fifth game, he took on and beat Hawk Russell Greene, amassing 33 disposals as well as kicking a goal. His impact was such that Hawthorn coach Allan Jeans was forced to switch Greene to the other wing to play on the more seasoned Ricky Barham.

He appeared to settle perfectly into Melbourne, and into life at Victoria Park. His teammate Bill Picken would tell the Hamilton Spectator in 2014: “He was always very professional on and off the field … he was doing extras when it wasn’t the norm.”

“Probably another thing, he hung around with the footy nerds like the Mark Williams and Jon Annear’s of the world. He got a lot of accolades and rightly so, he worked extremely hard for it.”

Tellingly, as it would turn out, Walsh had 27 disposals in Collingwood's 48-point win over Richmond in round eight. The Tigers took note of the wingman wearing the No. 41 for the first time.

With his form starting to turn heads inside and outside the club, Walsh told Lou Richards in an interview with the Sun which gave a hint he was already a deep thinker about the game.

“I really like country life,” he said. “Football is just a small part of things, but down here (in Melbourne) it is all consuming.”

“I think there is a big brother element where the administrators always want to know what you are doing. I admire guys like Billy Picken and a few others who have established good jobs and futures for themselves. Too many blokes expect football to do it all for them.”



Phil Walsh in full flight during season 1983. Photo supplied by Collingwood historian Michael Roberts.

Walsh, working as a teacher at Gladstone Park High School at the time, showed he was different to the run-of-the-mill recruits too timid to stay anything in fear of saying something wrong.

He told Richards: “If it all ended tomorrow, well I doubt very much that it would be the end of the world ... I like to think I know where I am going and what I'm doing.”

When Richards asked if Walsh could win the Copeland Trophy in his first year, the wingman said: “I reckon Billy (Picken) and Mick (Michael Taylor) have it between them.”

Incredibly, one of the school kids pictured in the photograph with Walsh for the story ahead of the round 17 game against North Melbourne was a 12-year-old student called Andrew Krakouer. Walsh would be playing against Krakouer's famous brothers - Jim and Phil - on the Saturday, and young Andrew (uncle of future Magpie Andrew Krakouer) would in time also represent the Kangaroos in the future.

Walsh saved his best game for Collingwood against the Tigers in round 19, the day Kevin Bartlett became the first footballer to reach 400 league games. He had 33 disposals and kicked three goals. He kicked goals in the first, third and final term and made a massive difference after Barham, the club's other key wingman, was injured during the game.



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The Herald said: “The absence of the speedy Magpie (Barham) was made up by the brilliant play of young Walsh who kicked (three) magnificent goals.”

The Sun added: “While the star of the show, Bartlett, battled hard all day for his tidy sum of 16 kicks, it was a first-year kid from Collingwood named Phillip Walsh who stole a share of memorable scenes.”

“At 23, he'll never get near KB's games tally, but he'll do a lot of damage before he departs the VFL scene. Two of his three goals were superb - the first was a 60m finishing touch to a towering mark, and the second a deft, running chip from the pocket, which put victory beyond Richmond's reach.”

His third goal put Collingwood in front, before Richardson kicked a sealer late in the game. Walsh would end up with seven Brownlow Medal votes for the year - and three undoubtedly came that memorable day.

But the joy that Magpie fans had that day against the Tigers proved short-lived.

The war between Richmond and Collingwood had already been ugly, but it was about to draw Walsh into it as well. The Magpies thought they had unearthed a star who was going to shine for a decade or more. The Tigers were intent on pinching him.

The Age reported years later that Cranage contacted Collingwood at the end of the 1983 season to warn them that Richmond was trying to poach Walsh.

It detailed: “(Cranage) phoned Walsh one night and said Collingwood had a brown paper bag ready for him: a sign-up payment. ‘How much is in the paper bag?’ Walsh wanted to know. ‘Forty thousand dollars,’ he was told. ‘Well, Richmond's is bigger. It's got $60,000 in it.’”

Sadly, Walsh would not attend the Copeland Trophy night after the 1983 season, having already been estranged from the club. But on the night – in absentia - he won the Harry Collier Trophy as Collingwood’s best first year player and would ultimately finish third in the best-and-fairest count.



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Just as Walsh had predicted months earlier, Picken would win the Trophy (with 87 votes), and Taylor was second (65). Walsh was third in the count with 56 votes.

On Copeland night, President Ranald Macdonald said: “I will be surprised if Walsh turns up at Richmond.” But that's precisely what happened, and it came after a legal battle that threatened to drag on for many months before a resolution - albeit a begrudging one - ended with Walsh being cleared to Richmond before the start of the 1984 season.

The bright young star was gone within a season. He would go on to play 40 games in three seasons at Richmond before transferring to the Brisbane Bears, where he won the club’s inaugural best and fairest. Again, his time was short-lived there, playing 60 games across four seasons.

Walsh would soon start a journey that many saw as his destiny - to be a senior AFL coach – when he was an assistant at several clubs for many years, before being appointed coach of Adelaide in October 2014.

Tragically, only 12 games into his coaching career with the Crows, Walsh was killed in July 2015, aged only 55. His short stint as a senior AFL coach- much like his time spent at Collingwood - left many wondering what might have been if the circumstances had been different.