• About Us
  • Advertising
  • Support Us
  • Contact Us
  • Community
  • Politics
  • Art & Culture
  • Local Business
  • Environment
Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
The Tawny Frogmouth
  • About Us
  • Advertising
  • Support Us
  • Contact Us
  • Community
  • Politics
  • Art & Culture
  • Local Business
  • Environment
The Tawny Frogmouth
Home » Online Articles » The Mighty Avalon Bulldogs
Sport

The Mighty Avalon Bulldogs

Tom MyersBy Tom MyersSeptember 26, 20253 Mins Read
Avalon Bulldogs: If you weren't in this pile, were you even at Rat Park?
If you weren't in this pile, were you even at Rat Park?

Welcome to our new column, the Tommy Would Go Awards, in honour of the King of Queenscliff Bombie, Tommy Myers, and each month showcasing a local team, individual or cause going all in for glory. We start this month with The Mighty Avalon Bulldogs, as told by club Vibe Guy, Stef Puskar…

The Avalon A-Grade side had been gone a few years. After back-to-back glory of 2016/17, the fanatics were hanging out to MAKE SUNDAYS GREAT AGAIN at Hitchy. The 2016/17 crew were a bunch of young lunatic mates who’d been playing footy together since they were six, surfing the way they play league – flat out, no fear, and partying like it’s a Midnight Oil gig in the late 80s.

Now Avalon might be changing quicker than you can say “oat latte with almond milk”, but the footy club’s still got the same DNA, the same skinny surfy kids who’ll happily whack anything in a different coloured jersey. With some of those past premiership players on hiatus, others at rival clubs, and a few dragged straight out of the surf or the RSL on a Sunday morning, the Avalon A-Grade side was reborn. 

Out of it came a motto: Make kids aspire to be a Bulldog. Play hard, play tough, build a club that makes the whole community smile. And bang, the brotherhood kicked off. The town bought in. Suddenly it was the only thing people were yapping about. You couldn’t walk down Avalon Parade without spotting a North Av Boardriders shirt, a Bulldogs hoodie, or both.

We all know how powerful socials are. The Doggies leant in, took the piss, banged out hard-hitting comedy posts, sprinkled in a bit of Mark Gasnier. Training sessions looked like rock concerts. Locals turning up just to see what was unfolding. The Doggies were back.

At 125 kilos, flame-haired wrecking ball Max Girdler teamed up with Kelso, a bloke with more footwork than Michael bloody Jackson, to weld this ragtag crew into the tightest of units. Backing them was Haig Sare, former professional union rep who brought discipline and just the right amount of mongrel. 

The wins started early. The crowds followed. One by one, Narraweena, Bondi, Belrose all got rolled. Fans were ditching NRL memberships to get down to Hitchy on a Sunday. Out of the chaos came a cult figure: the Back Fence Bruiser. What did he do? He ran straight. That’s it. That’s the show. And the crowd went off their heads for it. 

The season had it all; slick wins, boggy-weather hiccups, and a stumble against Narrabeen. But the boys bounced back hard, storming home as minor premiers. Then came Rat Park. A sea of Avalon. OG crew shoulder-to-shoulder with the new blow-ins. It wasn’t just a footy crowd; it was the whole suburb stitched together in red and green to see the Doggies put Asquith to the sword and lift the premiership.

The silverware’s only half the story. The Doggies being back has lit a fire in the community. Kids now see their heroes at the coffee shop, waxing boards at the beach, or strapping up at training, and they want to be them. The ripple effect of A-Grade. It’s not just about the blokes on the field; it’s about giving the town pride, something to cling onto, something to yell about. And in a joint like Avalon, that’s worth more than any trophy.

The Tommy Would Go awards

Is someone you know worthy of the Tommy Would Go award? 

Send in details to liam@thetawnyfrogmouth.com.au   Let’s go!

Issue 53 Rugby Tommy Would Go award
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

Related Posts

Coastrek 2026: How hiking saved my life

Manly Surf School: Front foot, safety first

Cromer’s Top Gun Cooper Ottaway

Comments are closed.

Stories from Past Tawnies

Silver Surfers: Empowering Over 55’s on the Northern Beaches

October 30, 2024

Dr Mindy Da: Supporting women, families and young people

April 1, 2026

Home Cooking: Delicious Hoppy Easter Bake

March 28, 2023

Women and Children First: Safer Together

May 30, 2024

Just Better Care, national award winner

August 28, 2024

The GoodBar: Goodradigbee Distillery launches in Brookvale

November 3, 2023

James Griffin MP update: WOTSO North Head, ANZAC Day & more

May 24, 2023

Good Politics Starts at the Kitchen Table

July 30, 2021

The hearty meal of speech-making 

March 25, 2022

Diabetes: A societal problem requiring a Government response

July 31, 2024

Standing up for Lizard Rock

July 20, 2023

Backing our business community

September 26, 2025

Just Better Care

March 25, 2022

Co2efficient: Offset your direct carbon emissions in just a few minutes

December 1, 2021

Local Business: Serenity Now Sliding Door Repairs

September 26, 2024
Our Mag

Online Articles

Back Issues

Media

Advertising

Advertising

Media Kit

Say Hi!

Contact Us

Support Us

Tip Jar

Facebook Twitter Instagram LinkedIn
© 2026 The Tawny Frogmouth

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.