It's one of the peculiarities of football in the 1890s that players could be snapped up from local clubs by just about any senior team at any time. Which sometimes meant an in-demand player being chosen by more than one club at the same time. And that's exactly what happened with Horace 'Ozzie' Mann. He had been starring with Port Imperials as a young captain for a couple of seasons when, late in 1893, he agreed to turn out for Collingwood. Unfortunately he soon afterwards made a similar undertaking to South Melbourne. Indeed, on the Friday night before his proposed debut, he actually went to a theatre party with his soon-to-be South teammates. But then he had a change of heart. And while South delayed the start of their game by several minutes while they waited for him to turn up, across town Ozzie was pulling on the black-and-white jumper for the first time against Richmond. The Southeners would obviously not have been happy, but others were impressed. "Mann, who promised to play with Collingwood first, and not South, kept his promise," noted the Sportsman. "Good, Mann." South would have been even more upset when they read the reports of Mann's first game with the Magpies. The Herald said he played "a real ding dong game first up". "The Magpies reckon they got a good player in Mann. He showed fine form at times last Saturday." The Australasian agreed: "Mann, who appeared for the first time as a senior, distinguished himself by annexing the first goal as well as in the taking of more than one rattling high mark during the encounter."