If you’ve never seen the game before, you owe it to yourself to track down a copy of the 1981 first semi-final between Collingwood and Fitzroy. It is a staggeringly brilliant game of end-to-end footy that finishes with the Pies winning by a solitary point, 133-132. The winning goal that day came from the boot of a player with a family connection unique in Magpie history, Ross Brewer. Ross’s brother Ian had been a Collingwood full-forward in the 1950s. He had made his debut as a 20-year-old in 1956 and would go on to top the VFL goalkicking in our Premiership year of 1958 before later playing with St Kilda, Claremont in the WAFL and Norwood in the SANFL, amongst others. He finished his top level career with Norwood in 1970. But by that stage, Ross hadn’t even started his career (it wouldn’t begin until 1971, when he was part of a Melbourne under-19s Premiership side). The reason is that there was a massive 17-year gap between Ian and Ross in the family stakes, Ian being born in 1936 and Ross in 1953 (both, interestingly, Magpie Premiership years). That’s not a VFL/AFL record, which sits at 23 years between debuts and a massive 31 years in age, but it is the largest known gap between Collingwood siblings. The end result was that Ross only began his VFL career almost a decade after Ian had finished his. And he wasted no time making his mark.