Footscray JUST explained

Clubname:Footscray JUST
Fullname:Footscray Jugoslav United Soccer Team
Nickname:JUST
Footscray
Blues (Plavi)
Founded:
as Jugoslav United Soccer Team
Dissolved:
(Under new ownership as Footscray City & Melbourne City Football Club)
Ground:Schintler Reserve, Footscray (1961–1990)
Western Oval (1980)[1]
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Footscray Jugoslav United Soccer Team, commonly referred to as Footscray JUST or simply JUST, was an association football club from Melbourne, Australia. The club was established by Yugoslav migrants in 1950, and was a founding member of the National Soccer League.

History

Early years (1950–1961)

The football team JUST was founded through the initiative of Ivan Kuketz (Serbo-Croatian: Kukec), a Melbourne hotelier and vice president of Brighton Soccer Club.

Kuketz was impressed by post-war migrant footballers from Yugoslavia and Czechoslovakia who had recently joined Brighton. Kuketz, himself an immigrant of Croatian descent had migrated to Australia in the 1930s envisioned a team composed solely of players from the respective nations of the new club members. With the assistance of Jovan "John" Ivanovic, Kuketz took the new arrivals from Brighton and began scouting players from migrant camps throughout Victoria and New South Wales, with a great many gathered from the Bonegilla facility. In March 1950 the Jugoslav United Soccer Team was officially established with Kuketz as its first president, whilst the club quickly became known by its acronym JUST.[2] [3]

JUST rapidly progressed in their debut season winning the Victorian Division Three South in 1950.[4] The team comfortably achieved promotion to the Victorian Division One after winning the second tire in 1951.[5] JUST also topped a successful year by being crowned Dockerty Cup champions following a 1–0 triumph over Brighton.[6] JUST narrowly missed out on the league title in 1952 and 1953, finishing 3rd in both seasons, and in 5th place the following three years before securing their first title in 1957, and ended the five season league dominance of Juventus.[7] [8] [9] [10] The following year JUST struggled to maintain their successful run in the newly renamed Victorian State League, slumping to 10th spot, the club's worst finish since formation.[11]

1961–1977

JUST were the dominant entity in an amalgamation with the Italian backed Footscray Capri in 1961. The club was renamed to Footscray Jugoslav United Soccer Team and permanently relocated to Schintler Reserve.[12] The arrival of club legend Zvonimir "Rale" Rasic and Aleksandar Jagodić as new coach in 1962 made a swift impact as the team won the Victorian State League in 1963 and Dockerty Cup that same year, winning 4–2 against Marabyinong Polonia.[13] [14] The following season JUST narrowly missed out on back-to-back league titles, losing out to South Melbourne Hellas by 1 point (equal with George Cross), and finishing runners up after succumbing to a 1–0 defeat against Port Melbourne Slavia in the 1964 Dockerty Cup final.[15] [16]

The club fluctuated in mid table before ended the 1968 league season in 11th spot, the club's worst placing in a decade.[17] The crisis was averted under coach Rale Rasić who lead JUST to victory in the 1969 league championship before taking on the Australian national team coaching role the following year.[18] [19] JUST had also managed to reach the 1969 Victorian State League Cup final but were defeated. The end of the 1960s ushered in a golden era as JUST were crowned league champions for the fourth time in 1971.[20] The club also reach the 1971 Dockerty Cup final but lost 2–0 to Juventus.[21] League success was achieved for the fifth, and what would be the final time in the club's history in 1973.[22] The Plavi were Victorian State League Cup champions for three consecutive seasons in 1974, 1975, 1976.[23] The team's last Dockerty Cup triumph came in 1976 as JUST won the final 2–0 against Marabyinong Polonia.[24]

National Soccer League (1977–1990)

In 1977 JUST became a foundation member of the National Soccer League, where they largely struggled, with the exception of 1986, where they lost to Adelaide City in the Southern Conference grand final.[25] In that year Footscray recruited legendary Red Star Belgrade player and trainer Dragoslav Šekularac who also brought with him Vlada Stošić which immediately lifted the club from the bottom to the top of the league.

However poor performances returned and in their final season as members of the NSL in 1989, after the club changed their name to Melbourne City JUST to broaden their appeal and with Schintler Reserve having undergone significant renovations, the club were demoted to the Victoria State League along with fellow Melbourne club Heidelberg United FC after finishing second bottom, recording only five league wins.

Their last NSL home match took place on 10 July 1989, when 1,830 turned up to Schintler Reserve to witness a 1–1 draw with Sydney Olympic.[26] The following week they needed to win final game of the season to avoid relegation but lost to Melbourne Croatia at Middle Park.

State Leagues and dissolution (1990–1994)

The club performed dismally in the 1990 Victorian State League Division 1 season, and were relegated after finishing in 15 place.[27] The club was subsequently taken over by the Argentine community which signalled the end of their historic Yugoslav/Serbian connections and effectively the end of the original Footscray JUST.[28]

1991 was another poor season where Melbourne JUST finished 13th out of 15th and were again relegated.[29]

1992 Melbourne JUST finished last in State League Division 2 and a third consecutive relegation ensued.[30]

1993 was the last season played at Schintler Reserve with the club finished 10th out of 15.[31]

The club carried on as South Vietnamese club Footscray City and Melbourne City playing at Schintler Reserve, however, it was vacated in 1994 and is now a container storage facility, with the clubrooms converted into offices. Today the club compete in the Victorian State League 4 still as Melbourne City [32] (no connection to the A League franchise of that name [33]) playing at Edwards Reserve in South Kingsville.

Crest and colours

The kit of JUST mirrored that of the Yugoslavia national team, which in turn was inspired by the Yugoslav tricolour. From the early 1980s the team's shirt corporate sponsor was Jat Airways.

The club crest consisted of a red stylised football with white outline, on a blue background. The words "FOOTSCRAY SOCCER CLUB" were displayed above the football in bold, white lettering whilst the acronym "J.U.S.T" was featured on the bottom.[34] [35]

Supporters and rivalries

The club's main supporter base consisted of ethnic peoples from Yugoslavia who had immigrated to Melbourne. JUST received particularly strong support from ethnic Serbs, although sympathies amongst Croats and Macedonians were torn as both communities had established rival football clubs. JUST maintained warm relations with Sydney affiliates SSC Yugal, whilst the club was perceived by its rivals as having close ties to the Yugoslav communist authorities.[36] [37] The club's player ranks included members of the broad Australian community.[38]

Throughout its history JUST maintained a fierce rivalry with fellow Melbourne club Croatia, which was founded in 1953 by Croatian migrants to the exclusion of other Yugoslav ethnic groups.[39] The rivalry had clear political undertones as Croatia's fan base espoused Croat nationalism and Ustaša allegiance.[40] [41] [36]

A less heated rivalry also existed with Preston Makedonia, a club that further split members of the Yugoslav migrant community. It was founded in 1947 by ethnic Macedonian migrants who developed a political orientation towards Macedonian nationalism.[42] [43] [44] [45]

Statistics

NSL record

SeasonPldWDLGFGAPtsTable Position
19772696113639248th of 14
197826781129372212th of 14
197926831529432011th of 14
19802679103241239th of 14
198130971432482513th of 16
1982305141134462414th of 16
198330991225423612th of 16
198428105132933258th of 12 (Sth)
198522521525411212th of 12 (Sth)
19862210842927282nd of 12 (Sth)
19872478917272211th of 13
198826791034322310th of 14
198926581324371813th of 14
(Pld)=Games Played, (W)=Wins, (D)=Draws, (L)=Losses, (GF)=Goals For, (GA)=Goals Against, (Pts)=Points, (Sth)=Southern Conference

Honours

Individual honours

Bill Fleming Medal

Victorian Premier League Top Goalscorer Award

NSL U21 Player of the Year

NSL Coach of the Year

International players

Coaches

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1980 National Soccer League Results . OzFootball . 15 January 2024.
  2. News: New club makes the grade. 29 April 1950. The Argus. 17 May 2020.
  3. Web site: Teams no longer with us. Footscray JUST – Sports & Editorial Services Australia. Roy Hay. 13 September 2010. sesasport.com. 17 May 2020.
  4. Web site: Victorian Division Three South – 1950 Season Table. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-24.
  5. Web site: Victorian Football Club Archive – Fairfield to Frankston City. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-24.
  6. Web site: 1951 Dockerty Cup – Results. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  7. Web site: 1952 Victorian Division One – Final Table. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  8. Web site: Victorian Division One Table – 1953. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  9. Web site: 1957 Victorian Division One – Final Table. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  10. Web site: Footscray J.U.S.T. Divisional History. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  11. Web site: Victorian State League Table – 1958. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  12. Web site: Teams no longer with us. Footscray JUST Sports & Editorial Services Australia. en-US. 2020-02-25.
  13. Web site: 1963 Victorian State League – Final Table. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  14. Web site: 1963 Dockerty Cup – Results. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  15. Web site: 1964 Victorian State League – Final Table. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  16. Web site: 1964 Dockerty Cup – Results. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  17. Web site: 1968 Victorian State League – Final Table. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  18. Web site: 1969 Victorian State League – Final Table. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  19. Web site: Rale Rasic. MyFootball. 30 September 2014 . en. 2020-02-25.
  20. Web site: 1971 Victorian State League – Final Table. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  21. Web site: 1971 Dockerty Cup – Results. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  22. Web site: 1973 Victorian State League – Final Table. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  23. Web site: 1974 Victorian State League Cup – Results. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  24. Web site: Dockerty Cup. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  25. Web site: Australian Soccer. www.ozfootball.net. 5 December 2018.
  26. Web site: 1989 National Soccer League results. www.ozfootball.net. 5 December 2018.
  27. Web site: Victorian State League Table – 1990. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-01-28.
  28. Web site: Victorian State League Division One – 1991 Season Table. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-01-28.
  29. Web site: 1991 Victorian State League Division 1 Table. www.ozfootball.net. 31 January 2024.
  30. Web site: 1992 Victorian Men's State League Division 2 Table. www.ozfootball.net. 31 January 2024.
  31. Web site: Victorian State League Division Three - 1993 Season Table. www.ozfootball.net. 31 January 2024.
  32. Web site: Melbourne City Club Page. www.ozfootball.net. 5 December 2018.
  33. Web site: Legal fight over 'Melbourne City' name will be lost: expert. Alana. Schetzer. 15 June 2014. The Sydney Morning Herald. 5 December 2018.
  34. Web site: The World's Best Photos of australia and nsl – Flickr Hive Mind. hiveminer.com. 2020-02-14.
  35. Web site: Footscray J.U.S.T. T-shirt. Futbol Cult. en. 2020-02-14.
  36. James. Kieran. Tolliday. Chris. Walsh. Rex. Where to now, Melbourne Croatia?: Football federation Australia's use of accounting numbers to institute exclusion upon ethnic clubs. Asian Review of Accounting. 10 April 2024 . en. 19. 2. 112–124. 10.1108/13217341111181050. 1321-7348.
  37. Book: James, Kieran. Goodbye Leederville Oval: History of West Perth Cheer Squad 1984–86 (large print). 2018-01-05. Lulu.com. 978-0-244-34819-9. en.
  38. Web site: Footscray JUST - Players from A-Z. worldfootball.net. en. 2020-02-14.
  39. Web site: Early days. Melbourne Knights FC. en-AU. 2020-02-01.
  40. Web site: "Antifaux Pas" – "When Antifa comes knocking on the wrong door". 2019-09-04. Glas Hrvatske Dijaspore – Croatian Diasporan Voice. en-AU. 2020-01-30.
  41. Web site: Neo-Nazis rock Melbourne club. 2007-10-26. www.couriermail.com.au. en. 2020-01-30.
  42. Web site: An Old Lion Roars Again- The Resurgence of Preston Makedonia in Victorian Football. wmca2017. 2017-11-22. World Macedonian Congress – Australia. en-AU. 2020-01-30.
  43. Web site: The Arrival and Settlement of Macedonians in the Inner Western Suburbs of Melbourne. www.pollitecon.com. 2020-01-30.
  44. Web site: Melbourne derbies dossier: what you need to know. MyFootball. 9 February 2016 . en. 2020-01-30.
  45. Web site: Our Club – Preston Lions FC. plfc.com.au. 2020-02-01. 1 February 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200201125524/https://plfc.com.au/our-club. dead.
  46. Web site: Australian Soccer. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.
  47. Web site: Victorian Ampol Night Soccer Cup Winners. www.ozfootball.net. 2020-02-25.