Showing: Collingwood Cult Figures

A '20s cult figure

By: Michael Roberts, Collingwood Historian. Football in the late 1920s was a tough caper for

Collingwood Cult Figures: Bob Heard

By: Michael Roberts, Collingwood Historian. What is it that makes a player a cult figure? Sometimes

Collingwood Cult Figures: Phil Manassa

By: Michael Roberts, Collingwood Historian. Thirteen and a half seconds. That is all Phil Manassa

Collingwood Cult Figures: Athas Hrysoulakis

Lou Richards loved him; Jack Dyer wasn't as enamoured for pronunciation reasons, but there was no

Collingwood Cult Figures: Alan Didak

GLENN McFARLANE, of the Herald Sun Footballers who own the clutch moments - those who almost

Collingwood Cult Figures: Ray Gabelich

Collingwood has known no bigger – in all senses of the word – or more loved character

Collingwood Cult Figures: Mick Gayfer

Few Collingwood footballers have extracted as much out of their natural abilities as Mick Gayfer,

Collingwood Cult Figures: Stan Magro

By: Michael Roberts, Collingwood Historian. Collingwood fans have always loved their hard-as-nails

Collingwood Cult Figure: James Manson

Sometimes the thing that makes a footballer vulnerable becomes the very trait that endears him to

Collingwood Cult Figures: Ron Wearmouth

By: Glenn McFarlane, Herald Sun journalist and Collingwood historian. Think Ron Wearmouth, and the

Collingwood Cult Figures: Dannie Seow

By: Glenn McFarlane, Herald Sun journalist and Collingwood historian. When Leigh Matthews took

Collingwood Cult Figures: Rene Kink

By: Michael Roberts, Collingwood Historian He was built so strongly that he was nicknamed "the