From coal to gold: The story of Adamstown Rosebud

By Janek Speight / Expert

From the origins of the coalfields, where miners would emerge from the dark depths during the week to play football on their days off, comes a story of grit and determination, a battle of the underdog overcoming prestige and money to emerge victorious.

The setting is not in the suburbs of Sydney or Melbourne, often cited as the heartlands of the old National Soccer League, but in the city of Newcastle, at times forgotten in the annals of football history among many self-proclaimed aficionados.

Newcastle’s place in Australian football is as strong as they come. Two of the country’s oldest clubs hail from the Hunter, the oldest of all being Minmi Rangers, formed in 1884.

The second is Adamstown Rosebud, formed in 1889, whose exploits in the mid-1980s are one of Australian sport’s most heartwarming stories.

But to understand their achievements, it’s important to revisit their predecessor – Newcastle KB United.

KB United had become the first community club to compete in the NSL in 1978, and they soon recorded the largest crowd for a regular season match – 18,357 – which was only broken at the introduction of the A-League.

Football in Newcastle began with the Anglo-Saxon descendants, the miners and sons of convicts who pulled black coal from the beautiful Hunter Valley landscape from the 1800s.

Soon, however, football in the region was richened with the arrival of Italians, Greeks, Macedonians, Croats, Poles, Serbs, Germans and Dutch. Where ethnic tension has at times gripped Australian football and splashed newspapers with damaging headlines, the same was rarely the case along the Hunter River.

Of course, the Greeks had Hamilton Olympic, the Macedonians had Broadmeadow Magic, and the Italians had Highfields Azzurri, now Charlestown City Blues, but there has never been the same tales of exclusivity in this bastion of Australian football.

Joe Senkalski, captain and playmaker, said last year that there was nothing like KB United in the NSL at the time.

“There were a lot of Newcastle players who starred in State Cups and the history of Newcastle football was already there,” he said.

“What KB United did was to bring the people to follow a one-town team – that model compared to the suburban teams in Sydney or Melbourne was a huge difference.”

So it was that KB United took hold of the hearts and minds of all Novocastrians, from the white boys to the wog boys, Sheilas and blokes. Sir Bobby Charlton enjoyed a stint with the club, as did local hero Craig Johnston.

Yet financial instability robbed the city of their beloved KB, leaving an empty hole that desperately needed filling as the club disbanded in 1983.

Enter the aforementioned Adamstown Rosebud, an amateur club playing local league football, who emerged from the ashes of the defunct KB United to take up the mantle of Steel City in the NSL.

They weren’t given much hope, but they took on the challenge all the same, making use of big hearts, fast legs and tough heads to form Newcastle Rosebud United.

Many expected them to be the whipping boys of Australian football. However, the established big clubs didn’t account for a fighting spirit that overshadowed any amount of skill and technique.

“We weren’t a flash team,” goalkeeper Clint Gosling told Fairfax Media in 2008.

“We just worked our nuts off for each other.”

Rosebud never really competed at the top of the table in the NSL league, though managed a respectable mid-table finish in their first season in 1984.

“It was a club on a shoestring,” Gosling said.

“Basically, we were amateurs. We didn’t get a zack for the whole season.”

Yet the league was just a sideshow to what was happening in the NSL Cup, with Rosebud fighting their way through to the final, and with it a showdown against powerhouse Melbourne Knights.

They’d played all their cup games on the road, and hurdled every superior side in their path, though the unfancied side from the coalface were still written off by experts and fans alike.

But on a cold mid-winter’s day at Olympic Park, Newcastle Rosebud went out to claim history.

Coached by the fiery Willie Gallagher, led in midfield by Senkalski, with Gosling in goals and Michael Boogaard, father of Nigel Boogaard, in defence, Rosebud did the unthinkable.

“We were complete underdogs,” Boogaard told Fox Sports last month.

“The bus driver who took us to the ground only got us there with around 45 minutes to spare ahead of the game. I think he went the long way from the airport. Our coach, Willie Gallagher, was filthy.

“We never expected to win – even in the paper it was all about the opposition.”

The man who grabbed the decisive goal was English striker Derek Todd, poking home the rebound of his own shot in the first half, with the score ending 1-0 to Rosebud.

The celebrations in the stands were understandably muted, but on returning back to Newcastle the party began at Adamstown’s licensed club.

Unfortunately, further financial woes meant Rosebud disappeared in 1986, despite finishing fifth in the northern conference. It was just two years after their historic triumph, and Newcastle was starved of football for four years before the Newcastle Breakers were born at Birmingham Gardens.

Now it’s the Newcastle Jets, and with the financial trouble ongoing at club with Nathan Tinkler, and Con Constantine before him, it’s worth remembering the Rosebud class of 1984, and tipping your hat to Newcastle’s football history.

It’s a major reason why KB United still has a special place in the hearts of Newcastle fans with long memories or a keen interest in history.

This city has deep roots in the sport, and a major reason football still has a large following in the Hunter is because of Newcastle KB United and their successor Rosebud United.

There’s a lot of love for those teams of the past, which continues to shine through for the Jets. In these times of woe and misfortune for Newcastle football, it’s moments like the NSL Cup win that helps lighten the mood, and reminds us of the game’s origins in the coalfields.

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The Crowd Says:

2015-11-22T19:58:47+00:00

Derek todd.

Guest


Hi, I've just read this article it brought back great memories at my time in newcastle and of course scoring the winning goal in the final.love from the uk.TODDY.

2015-01-26T06:00:09+00:00

Todd

Guest


Great write up guys, If anyone is interested in checking out more of the history of football in Newcastle come and check out. https://www.facebook.com/NewcastleFootballHistory

2015-01-24T13:37:45+00:00

apaway

Roar Guru


I also remember Roy Drinkwater scoring one of the most stunning own goals of all time - from halfway! It even made it over to English Football's "Big Match" letters segment.

2015-01-24T02:49:07+00:00

matthew_gently

Guest


Lovely article. My step-father grew up in Newcastle, and actually played for Adamstown in the late '60s. I fowarded him this article. He really enjoyed it, and fondly recalls many of the names mentioned. He loves to tell stories of how he played alongside future Australian reps, and sank pints with Manchester United players while they were in town for a friendly. The article seems to be spot-on: Newcastle is a football town with a rich history.

2015-01-24T02:15:26+00:00

Hamish Alcorn

Guest


:)

2015-01-23T23:35:11+00:00

art pagonis

Guest


lovely story...should be more like this.

2015-01-23T21:40:50+00:00

Batou

Guest


Nah, that would never happen... !

2015-01-23T13:05:26+00:00

apaway

Roar Guru


Well done, Janek. The history of Newcastle football is such a rich one, and KB United were a club at least 25 years ahead of their time. I played at Rosebuds in 1986 and contrary to what the article implies, the club didn't fold. The NSL went from a 24 team, 2 Conference system to a 14 team league in 1987, and despite finishing just out of the top 5 in the Northern Conference, Newcastle Rosebud were one of the sides to miss out on the condensed league, literally on goal difference. Former Socceroos coach Frank Arok always feels he owes Hunter football a debt; it was his St George side that beat Rosebud 2-1 in the last game of the season on a chilly night in August 1986, a game that sealed Rosebuds fate despite the fact that had we won that night, we'd have made the top 5! Also, KB United's record crowd lasted more than 20 years but it was broken in 1998 by Northern Spirit's first ever NSL game - a match at North Sydney Oval against Sydney Olympic which drew 19,500.

2015-01-23T10:31:35+00:00

Stevo

Roar Rookie


A fellow Melb City supporter recently told me of the rich football history in Newcastle. He lived there for a while and experienced it first hand. This excellent article simply expands on that story.

2015-01-23T10:05:05+00:00

Griffo

Roar Guru


In Newy right now there are only two kinds of people: Those that have tickets... ...and those that wish they did ;-) Plenty of kids kicking the football around in Socceroos shirts today :-P

2015-01-23T10:01:52+00:00

Griffo

Roar Guru


Thank you Janek. Brilliant piece.

2015-01-23T06:54:32+00:00

Sir Alex

Guest


I think you'll find the Northern Spirit vs Sydney Olympic game in 1998 had a larger regular season crowd. And that was still NSL and not A-league. Apart from that, I enjoyed the article.

2015-01-23T01:21:44+00:00

1860melbourne

Guest


Can only imagiine the excitement the town must be feeling. Paint the town green and gold..

2015-01-22T23:53:12+00:00

Patrick Effeney

Editor


Janek, I thought this was a great read mate. Never heard of it before I edited it, and thought the story was a cracker. The Hunter football legend grows on me!

2015-01-22T23:51:59+00:00

The Bear

Guest


Big night in Newcastle ... Has a sense of destiny about it.

2015-01-22T23:26:01+00:00

AZ_RBB

Guest


Imagine the scenes if UAE beat Japan hahaha. UAE have been quite decent so far this tournament so it's not that far beyond the realms of possibility. Uzbekistan were oh so close last night!

2015-01-22T23:11:40+00:00

Midfielder

Guest


Great article and most folk don't appreciate what a Football town the Hunter / Newcastle is ...

2015-01-22T22:41:23+00:00

madmonk

Guest


Thanks Janek. DoW, I remember Roy Drinkwater, Joe Senkalski, Buddy Curran, Peter and Howie Tredenick, Malcolm McClellan from the Bread cards. I also have some vague memory of watching KB on TV playing a game in Hong Kong from around his time. I had the pleasure of playing over 35's with Howie Tredenick at Rosebuds for about 5 years. Good to see the Rosebuds getting back to State League. Great club with a great history.

2015-01-22T22:33:10+00:00

Greg

Guest


Australia v Japan in Newcastle would truly be a massive occasion, both in a football and historic sense. Who would have thought I could sit in my usual spot on the hill, but this time I get to see the Socceroos v Japan (assuming they beat UAE).

2015-01-22T22:17:25+00:00

Dogs Of War

Roar Guru


We used to get the player cards with your bread. I pretty sure I had the complete set of KB United players. Being an Adamstown boy, quite proud of what the Rosebuds did back in the day.

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