
In the car park of the Rivulet Café, at the base of Hobart’s famous mountain backdrop Lance Spaulding points towards West Hobart on a sunny, warm September spring morning, with the excitement of finals football present in the air.
“You know, after starting out 51 years ago just over that hill there, I think I’m enjoying it as much now as I ever have,” he recalls with an equally warm and bright smile on his face.
He recently reflected on his lengthy career as both a player and coach, with the latter profession having now long surpassed his time running around on the playing surface.
From the Goulburn Street Primary School team to leading young men on their own journey, Spaulding progressed from football student to football teacher.
Like a university academic, Spaulding has decided to stay on in the game, now five decades down the track. To research, to soak in information and pass it on to the new generations coming through. The desire to learn and remain involved has never left him, regardless of his age or experience.
Every academic, even a football one, started their career as a ‘student’, with Spaulding no exception and he recalled where it all began, with fond memories of the trips to games.
“There’s a tiny little ground at Mount Stuart. We used to catch the bus up and it would battle its way up Mellifont Street. Those old buses, half the time you wouldn’t know if it was going to get up there or not,” Spaulding laughed.
Then there were the trips without the bus.
“The footy team and the netball team would all walk from Goulburn Street to Albuera Street, South Hobart or Lansdowne Crescent. All the places we played, other than Mount Stuart, we walked en masse.”
His eyes wandered out towards the rivulet from inside the café and he reminisced.
“Looking out this window here, we used to come straight over and down that hill, through the bush, jump the creek to South Hobart School where we’d play South Hobart. We’d walk up Forest Road, down Liverpool Crescent and straight down the bank. It was easy for us as kids then, but the teachers used to battle their way back. I feel sorry for them now looking at that hill out there and how bloody steep it is.”
Spaulding’s first coach was also the headmaster and he can remember well his first mentor’s struggles making his way to those games on foot.
“Mister Cole was our headmaster and also our footy coach. I remember he used to huff and puff his way up the hill,” he joked.
Like most kids back then he also played soccer and cricket, but was drawn to football because of the lure of the unique team culture that football brought, which grabbed him stronger than the other sports he dabbled in.
Lance Spaulding was hooked.
“I remember how much of a community thing it was. Right from the start, you felt connected. To the school, the community, the whole lot. You just wanted to be in that team. That is my first recollection of it.”
Such was the impact football had on him from such an early age, it was ironically the games he didn’t play that has burned an everlasting image into his memory.
“My most vivid recollection as a young bloke was when it rained, and it would be called off. You couldn’t sleep the night before you played and I’m sure everyone else is the same. You just kept waking up. One o’clock, three o’clock. You just couldn’t wait to get to footy and if it rained and was called off, you’d have to wait another week. It was just torture if it was ever washed out.”

With the love for the game evident in Spaulding’s recollections and the genuine, thoughtful manner with which he recalled that introduction as a youngster, it is easy to see why he has been a fixture in Tasmanian football for such a long period.
From those much-loved school days, he moved on to his next venture in football, with his transition from junior player to life at club level, albeit with some serious hiccups along the way.
Through his residing in the Hobart Football Club zone, Spaulding was tied to the Tigers, but felt that it was never a realistic option for him.
The Spaulding family had strong family ties to sailing at Sandy Bay’s Derwent Sailing Squadron (DSS) and a memory full of days spent as a young spectator at the small, famous hedge lined Queenborough oval with million dollar views over the River Derwent. The Sandy Bay Seagulls were already his team, and this was where Spaulding was destined to play.
“Mum and I used to go down to Queenborough while dad was sailing and we’d watch the reserves and then the seniors. All the yachties would come rolling in to Queenborough after they had finished. All the DSS boys would line up along the hedge to watch the ‘Bay play. I was sitting on the half forward flank there freezing with mum and I’d done that forever. I guess I was an entrenched Seagull,” Spaulding said.
“Our family, through my grandfather, who played for South Easts way back in the day, and dad had always followed Sandy Bay. The Morrisons, who were family friends, all the blokes I knew through junior sailing. David Edwards, who was captain of Sandy Bay under 19s. There was almost an implicit pressure to go to Sandy Bay.”
Even with the Seagulls ingrained in his DNA, it was not as simple as turning up at the club, with the zoning issue to be resolved. The move to Sandy Bay was made possible however, through some wheeling and dealing at the Spaulding residence.
“The great Billy Butler was friends with mum and dad. He came up and saw me when I was about 16 or 17 to talk about getting a clearance. I didn’t even know what was going on, I was just told that it had been done. I think Warren Cripps may have been involved in that, as he made the move to Hobart at the time. We all know what a good player he was, so obviously the Tigers did pretty well out of that [as well].”
With the deal done and after a childhood of being that entrenched Seagull, Spaulding could now set his sights on writing the next chapter of his football career as a player.
Until the unthinkable happened.
Almost as soon as it began, it came crashing down with immediate effect, as Spaulding suffered a major injury before even lining up for his first match in the blue and white.
“The day I got cleared, in 1977, I broke my leg playing for St Virgil’s in the morning and it put me back a bit. I missed that year.”
Spaulding is philosophical about it after all these years, but at such a young age and not that far removed from the kid who couldn’t sleep at night waiting for the next match, it must have been devastating.
To prevent such a major setback playing on his mind, Spaulding was given an opportunity to put himself to another use on Saturdays, which also allowed him to earn some money.
“Vern O’Byrne, who was an umpiring legend, had the Cornish Mount Hotel and he gave me a job working Saturdays in the bar, even though I was underage,” Spaulding laughed.
“I used to work in the bar there, pouring beers and taking orders for counter lunches. Vern was a fantastic publican, a great bloke, a real character and very much a football person as well. That was a good experience.”
That was 1977 for Spaulding.
Instead of representing his beloved Seagulls at Queenborough, he was pouring beers on busy Saturday afternoons in the city, although it did help ease the pain of missing the entire year of football.
With the disappointment of missing the 1977 season behind him, Spaulding was looking forward to 1978 and finally getting his opportunity to pull on the Seagulls jumper.
Upon making his club debut in the under 19s, he was again struck down. This time with a shoulder dislocation in the very first game of the season against New Norfolk.
Another devastating blow for the young, talented player, with a big future if only he could spend some time on the ground instead of on the injury list.
That shoulder injury cost Spaulding most of the 1978 season, with him managing to get back to play late in the season, accumulating only a handful of games in his entire first two years with the club.
Even with the disappointment of the injuries in his under 19 days, Spaulding shared one of the lighter moments at a Glenorchy match at KGV Oval.
“As a young bloke, we wanted to play really well in the first half of the under 19’s so you’d get asked to go up and play reserves. Kevin Pelham, former state winger, was the coach of Sandy Bay reserves. We were out at KGV and he must have had a big night the night before because he’s given it to us at half time. Anyway, his teeth fell out and they shot out and slid across the floor. I’m just aghast. Henry Pastoor was there, and they’ve landed underneath his feet. He bent over and picked them up. I wouldn’t have even touched them. He’s jiggled them in his drink of orange juice in the cup as if to wash them and gave him his teeth back. Anyway, Kevin just popped them back in again and continued on and Henry continued drinking. I’m going, Oh no, this is what the big league is about.”
After the injury setbacks in consecutive seasons, there was to be a silver lining the following year, under club and state football legend, Graeme Mackey.
“I played my first senior game in ’79 when ‘Macka’ was coach. It was a really ‘nervy’ place to be because all these blokes like Chris Saunders, Mackey, Kuipers, Des James. These blokes were larger than life to me.”
With the Seagulls coming off such a successful period in the mid to late 1970s, Spaulding started his senior career during a rebuild phase under Mackey from 1979 to 1981, with Mackey being the perfect choice to mentor the young men back onto a platform for future success.
Spaulding’s uncanny skills on both sides of his body, a fierce desire to compete and a willingness to learn from those around him, had him building a reputation as a reliable and attacking defender.

Gary Linton took over as coach of Sandy Bay in 1982, just for the one season, with Spaulding relishing the culture and team spirit at the Seagulls.
By that 1982 season, he had built his game to such a level that state honours were inevitable. He was selected in the extended Tasmanian squad to play an Escort Shield match against New South Wales and was due to play for the TANFL in an under 23 curtain raiser, in which he was named captain.
After some injuries and suspensions to Tasmanian senior squad players in club games, Spaulding was elevated to the Tasmanian senior team for the match at North Hobart.

He did however endure a tough start to the game and still cops a bit of stirring from his mates from time to time, although he had the last laugh in the end.
“We played against New South Wales and Ray Harwood from New Norfolk was on the other half back flank. I’ve gone over and there’s this really big tall bloke, Dempster. He’s standing on the bottom and I’ve run across to this medium size bloke on the top side of the ground and I’ve thought, that’s okay. In the meeting ‘Sprouley’ (Paul Sproule) had said, ‘I don’t mind which one you pick up, but whoever gets Dempster just be aware.’ I’ve shot over and picked this other bloke up and I’m standing on him. Their runner has come out and said, ‘We want to play the top side,’ so I’ve ended up on him (Dempster). I remember the photo went everywhere, this Dempster bloke has jumped on me and taken the mark of the year. That’s gone with me everywhere. Every so often it pops up in the media, this photo. This all happened in the first one and a half minutes of the game. I reckon it was close to the mark of the century the way I keep hearing about it from everybody,” Spaulding laughed.
Despite the minor early setback, the boys wearing the Map were victorious by 45 points, with Spaulding playing a big part in the win, as the backline group was credited in the media as being instrumental to the victory.

State honours would become a regular gig for Spaulding, as his talent and work rate were rewarded, with him pulling on the famous state jumper on multiple occasions.
The return of a Tasmanian great saw Linton stand down as Sandy Bay coach and another phase in the burgeoning rebuild was underway.
“In 1983 ‘Sprouley’ (Paul Sproule) came back, but luckily and thankfully Gary Linton stayed on, because what a player he was and just a fantastic bloke. He was a bloke that just got the job done but had a really good balance, train hard and play hard.”
1983 also had more interstate football action for Spaulding and he recalled a tough match against Fitzroy at North Hobart Oval.
“We had some really good experiences and a couple of really horrible ones. We played in an Escort Cup game against Fitzroy and they beat us by bloody heaps. I remember I started on Garry Wilson. I had some time on Conlan and a little bit on Bernie Quinlan, and I think Matt Rendell might have come forward. That was a tough day at the office. I think Les Parish kicked four or five goals against us off a half back flank.”

Things at Queenborough were indeed taking shape and by 1984 the Seagulls had worked their way back into finals contention under Sproule.
“We played off in a preliminary in ’84 and got knocked out by New Norfolk, so we were half decent. We were starting to get there.”
That very same year, Spaulding himself was more than “half decent” and took the highest prize at club level home, winning the Sandy Bay senior best and fairest award.
“I remember the vote [count], because they used to wangle it so it was tight and I got up on the last vote. I got the three. It was a game against North Hobart and I played on Darryl Sutton and he kicked four on me, but I had a really good game. I remember Michael Elliot had been interviewed on the TV and he said, ‘We were really happy with Lance’s game.’ I didn’t think it at the time, but I remember when the best and fairest count was on, I thought I might be okay here because I played okay that day on a really good player.”
The best and fairest win was a proud moment for Spaulding, edging out some magnificent players to be crowned as the best player for that season. The achievement was not something that he put a lot of thought into, however, until much later.
“You don’t worry about it too much. It’s something that later on you think, well with the people that were playing, it was a fair effort,” Spaulding said.

With Paul Sproule characterised as a professional, intense and no-nonsense coach, who had played at the highest level, he expected the very same from his players. What he wouldn’t have been expecting was a man by the name of Paul Heerey, as Spaulding explains.
“Paul Heerey is one of the funniest human beings that God put breath into and was a half decent player too. He went away and played at Southport, was a premiership player there. He came back to Tasmania and Sproule was coaching. He (Sproule) didn’t really have a lot of time for Paul because he was a bit of a comedian.”
Heerey certainly proved that to be so, as literally the centre of attention at the home of Tasmanian football.
“There was a game at North Hobart where Paul was running through the centre of the ground and he’s had a bounce. It was a bit muddy and the ball didn’t really bounce back up, so he tapped it up to himself and ran on and thought he’d touch it down this time. So, he’s gone to touch the ball down and the ball fell out of his hands in the glue pot. Anyway, every other player in the world would have ran back and picked the ball up. But Heerey, and this is in a senior game, has continued running and done a pretend kick and then, in an aeroplane fashion sort of veered off and yelled, ‘Coming Paul,’ and zoomed off to the interchange bench. It wasn’t just us laughing. It was the 18 blokes on the opposition that were laughing as well. A: Because it was just funny and B: Because it was ‘Sprouley’. That’s just, no.”
Sproule finished up at the end of 1985 after lifting his men to the brink of another successful period, with another former VFL/AFL player ready to take them to the next step.
Come 1986 and Andy Bennett was in charge.
Players that had started alongside Spaulding who had shown early promise as younger men now had the bodies and experience to really become a threat.
“A lot of the group that had come through the tougher times and were still there, now we were 23, 24 instead of 18, 19, 20. So we’d played a bit of football, underpinned by the work ethic that Paul embedded in a lot of that group. Andy came along and with his focus and intensity, just the way he went about it, he had an immediate impact,” Spaulding said.
Spaulding is in no doubt that the arrival of Bennett came at the right time for that group and was the icing on the cake for the groundwork that had already been done.
“I think we were ready. As a group we were ready for him as coach. We were a little unknowing of what was required, but we had the work rate that ‘Sprouley’ had put into us in ’83 and ’84. He was exactly what we needed.”
Now a part of Tasmanian football folklore, the Seagulls of course went on to dominate the roster season and cruise straight into the Grand Final, only to face a Glenorchy team that in Spaulding’s eyes did not deserve the huge underdog status that so many had them pegged as.
“We had a good side but when you look at Dykes, Curley, Linton, Mansfield, Lovell, Collis, Grace, Ling. So, they were good too. We’d beaten them in the second semi and that was my 150th game. We had a good day that day, but whether it was they had been there and done that, or a jab in the arm from the second semi final. We just couldn’t get things done. Klug smashed us, Todd Spearman, so they had a good side,” he recalled.
The Seagulls eventually went down by 32 points, after being jumped at the start of the match and playing catch up football from there on. Glenorchy held their nerve and spoiled an otherwise near perfect season for the men in blue and white.
Even after that 1986 season domination, albeit without the ultimate prize, Spaulding actually rates the 1988 team as the pinnacle of his time with the club, from a team perspective.
“1988 was the best side I played in I reckon. Burnie knocked us out (of the finals). We were 31 points up at three quarter time and got beat. We ended up with a heap of injuries. Billy Dunne, Dolliver, Bennett, Seddon, Martyn. That was a good team. I guess we just fell over at important times.”
Devonport went on to beat Glenorchy in the 1988 grand final, to become the first team from the North West Coast to win a State League grand final.

Former Sandy Bay teammate, Graham Hills, remembered Spaulding’s progress from the very early 1980’s, and then later that decade after Hills returned to the ‘Bay.
“In 1980 and ’81 I can remember Lance running to training all the time. That would have been when he was a lot younger obviously and real keen to get going again (following his injuries),” Hills said.
This high work rate and level of fitness that Spaulding displayed was matched only by his willingness to compete which gave him the chance he deserved.
“There were a lot of blokes a lot older than him playing good senior footy, so it was a pretty hard side to break into in those very early stages,” Hills said.
Once he did break in however, there was no looking back.
“He was always really commanding the ball. He was bloody hard at the ball all the time, there was no question about that, hence why he probably did his shoulder in the early part. He did cop a few injuries from time to time, purely from going into the packs that hard. He was a really good half back. He would run his guts out. He would work hard at training, was really tenacious and never shirked an issue,” Hills said.

At the conclusion of the 1988 season, Spaulding was in two minds as to where his future would lie, with other priorities starting to impact on his football commitments.
He made the tough call to leave Sandy Bay, but the desire to remain embedded in the Seagulls culture became too much.
Spaulding played the first part of the 1989 season with St. Virgil’s in the then Amateurs at the age of 28. Even though the enjoyment was there, something was missing, and he made the decision to move back to the ‘Bay after the start of the season.
“I was expanding the business and was under a lot of pressure to stay healthy. I went off to play (the beginning of the 1989 season) with the Saints and they were terrific, but after six or seven games I was really missing Sandy Bay and State League footy. So I went back, and I played the last part, including the last game of the year at Queenborough against Hobart in my 200th game.”

Spaulding called time, for the second and final time with Sandy Bay Football Club as a player at the conclusion of the 1989 season, with Shane Williams as coach.
He had played exactly 200 games, had won a best and fairest amongst other household names in Tasmanian football, played for the state and had little left to prove, but the decision still weighed heavily on him.
“It had been for me, since I was 17, a staple, a consistent thing in my life. 18th birthday parties, engagement parties, weddings, kids being born. All that sort of stuff. In hindsight I wish I’d have stayed a few more years at Sandy Bay before I left but it was more about the balance with work that started to really get tough,” Spaulding said.
A magnificent player in his own right, the status of the men that Spaulding played with was never lost on him, from that first senior game and seemingly right up to this moment.
In fact, after 200 games and the accolades that Spaulding would accumulate over the years, he still finds it difficult to put himself in the same company as them.
“I’m 59 years old and I still worry about how they see me and what they think of me. They were very, very important figures in my life. People I looked up to as a young bloke. That is the respect I have for those blokes and from the coaches later on, but that’s how I am.”
When pressed on why a player who could rightfully be placed alongside the champion team mates to which he refers would feel uncomfortable being held in similar regard, he found it difficult to express fully why, but feels finals success may be the difference that he sees.
“I’m really proud that I played 200 games and I won a best and fairest, but I didn’t play in any premierships with Sandy Bay which was really disappointing. That to me is what sets the people that I look up to apart. I’m not saying that you have to be a premiership player to be a fantastic club man or a really great footballer. I guess to a degree you feel a bit like they are on another rung. They are premiership players and they really set the standard for the club in the ‘70s. We are talking about great players, not good players.”
The irony of it all is it could be argued that if it wasn’t for the injuries that Spaulding suffered right back at the beginning in his first two years with the Seagulls, he may have been a chance to feature at the back end of their three consecutive premierships, culminating in the 1978 flag.
Typifying his thoughts on the former champions to which he refers, one memory from his very early days at the club, still as a schoolboy, gives Spaulding great pleasure and sums him up perfectly.
“I remember clearly walking through town with my mates coming home from school. I had my bag over my shoulder and Graeme Mackey walks past and says, Hello and you think, How good is that?”

Knowing he still had plenty to give to the game but acknowledging to himself that he could not stay at State League level, Spaulding knew where he was headed to continue his footballing path.
He would venture back to where he had started the 1989 season and became coach of St Virgil’s in 1990, in what would begin the next vocation of his football journey that spans right through to the current day.
“The work pressure was eased a bit with St Virgil’s because that was Tuesday and Thursday. 1990, ’91 and ’92 I coached. We made the Grand Final and we got pipped on the last kick of the day basically, against University,” Spaulding said.
He recalls his time with the Saints fondly, and enjoyed the ability to still contribute, with less time required relative to his days at Sandy Bay.
His playing days concluded with his retirement from St Virgil’s and he looked nostalgically and gratefully back at those who mentored him through his playing career, helping to lay the foundations for his future pursuits.
“I’ve been really lucky. I’ll go through them. My first coach was Doug Cole at Goulburn Street and it was all about get it and run. Going into St Virgil’s school footy I was really lucky, Neville Legro coached for a year, a Hobart great. I had Stuart Spencer for a couple of years. Again, another legend of the game. Outstanding character in Graeme Mackey, another great leader in Gary Linton. Sproule was just work rate, work rate. Tim Maxwell was interesting, a country bloke who could really play. I don’t think we were ready for him. Then Bennett came in and just added something to us and then Shane Williams was learning his craft. If he had been given a bit more time and the injuries he had, he would have done really well,” Spaulding said.
With his introduction to coaching at St Virgil’s and with heavy work commitments, plus wear and tear on his body catching up with him, Spaulding knew that an off-field role was where his future in the game was going to be.
It would be the newly appointed 1994 Sandy Bay, and future AFL coach, who would lure Spaulding back to Queenborough to maintain his coaching progression.
“In 1994 Chris Fagan rang me up and I took on the role as reserves coach and that was a fantastic time.”
With Fagan’s well documented success as a coach, now competing at the highest level, Spaulding is not surprised to see him where he is, having an insight into the man 25 years before he took the Brisbane Lions deep into September in 2019.
“I see a lot of the stuff that he is doing with Brisbane now. I know he is miles developed from what he was then, but I see a lot of the core pillars that he is doing with Brisbane. He’s bonding with the blokes. How special they are to him and how he is with them. That reflects exactly how it was at Sandy Bay when he came in and coached that group. I see it as clear as a bell.”
Fagan clearly made an impression in 1994 and what was a loss for Sandy Bay became a win, holistically, for Tasmanian football.
“The disappointing thing was we only had the one year because he was offered the Mariners job and took them in 1995.”
The appointment of Fagan to the state position indirectly opened the door to Spaulding taking on the senior coaching role for the Seagulls, with 1995 coach Mick Hibberd resigning part way through the season.
“I took over and it was an awkward time. It wasn’t great. In the end Mick went and I guess I was in best position to take over, so I did ’95 and ’96,” Spaulding said.

After his second season at the helm and with some turbulence in recent years with several upheavals, Spaulding’s club first mentality told him a change in direction was needed for the ‘Bay, and he was only too willing to step up again.
This time by stepping down.
“We were starting to battle a little bit and I remember the discussion with (Club President) Bill Sorell. You could see the club needed regeneration, a reboot. I think the chase for Troy Clarke was a really good one. I stepped down as senior coach then to get ‘Swooper’ in and I coached the reserves. He brought some AFL stuff in and rebooted things. He was just a ripping bloke.”
The Troy Clarke move was not enough, however, to ward off a very sad chapter in Tasmanian football, although Spaulding saw it as more of an opportunity rather than a complete loss.
“I thought we could hold this off a bit. Of course, eventually the ‘Bay moved to become the Southern Cats. To be quite frank, I was all for that relocation because it was getting squashed in town with how many clubs there were and that whole Huon area should have been represented in there. All the footy I played at Sandy Bay, we were always underpinned by the blokes that would come up. The Deneheys, the Keatings and these sorts of blokes. They were just awesome,” Spaulding said.
Even though he was in principle supportive of such a move, Spaulding foresaw the demise of the new venture before it had begun due to the model undertaken, and it was the main factor in his decision to not pursue a future with the new club.
“The reason I didn’t go down with them was because they basically took the Sandy Bay list with them to Kingston, which I thought was doomed because you’re going to struggle to get the locals to buy in on that,” Spaulding said.
There was perhaps another option that could have been explored, allowing the club hold on to maybe one day launch a bid to re-enter the State League at a later date.
“In the whole time of these discussions and talking about moving, only one bloke and that was the great Roger Henderson who said, ‘Well, why don’t we drop back a tier and survive [just] as Hobart, the great survivors have done on a number of occasions.’ Anyway, that’s not how it went.”
Fast forward to the present day and Spaulding looks back at what could have been.
“The irony of it is, people like Mick Arnold, Ian Anderson and Steven Hay rebuilt the Sandy Bay Junior Football Club, in alliance with Hutchins School and it became a really dynamic growth area and strong junior footy club, which may have underpinned Sandy Bay had they survived through it.”
In 1998, Spaulding crossed the bridge to Clarence, through links with Grant Fagan and was impressed with Fagan’s coaching and management style.
“He set the parameters and there was a lot of coaching by the players themselves in the group and that’s why they were bloody hard to beat, because it was sort of self driven.”
After having 1999 off, Spaulding was coaxed into assisting Paul Burnell at Hutchins, along with Tiger Coulson.
The move eventually culminated in a premiership win, which was satisfying, as there was that strong Sandy Bay connection at Hutchins.
With Hutchins and St. Virgil’s bitter rivals, Spaulding’s presence at Hutchins added an extra bit of spice, given his own time at the Saints.
“There were a lot of Sandy Bay blokes there and that was what lured me in, I guess. I don’t know as it went down all that well with the St Virgil’s fellas, but life moves on. They’re all over it now,” Spaulding said.
From football at club level and with a variety of coaching roles in different environments, Spaulding was ready to make the step into the next stage of his coaching career.
This next step would inevitably be into the state program.
The transition to this state role would eventually take Spaulding through to the current day, other than a brief stint with Hobart Football Club alongside Graham (Brer) Fox, and another part time role with North Hobart in the mid 2000s.
“In 2001 I started with the Mariners. Martin King was coach, based in Launceston and I was the midfield coach. That was an interesting time. It was a real eye opener to just how good some of these TAC Cup kids are. I think that year we saw Hodge, Judd, Dal Santo, Montagna, Rhodan, Ball, Ablett, Johnson. There were seven drafted out of Geelong Falcons and they beat us by two points at York Park. That was the ‘super draft’ and don’t worry, our kids acquitted themselves really well against some really good players.”
At the conclusion of the 2001 season, a footballing partnership grew and came to be very successful to this day, both professionally, and on a personal level as great friends.
“Mathew (Armstrong) got in my ear early in the pre-season for 2002 and I came on board with the Devils (VFL team) then. I worked my way into the group and ended up looking after defence a lot of the time,” Spaulding said.
With the first couple of years yielding relatively few wins, the club made finals in three successive years from 2003 – 2005. Spaulding has no doubts that Armstrong was just the man for the job and spoke about his impact.
“When Mathew came into footy here, and he’s a vastly different character now to what he was then, he grabbed a bunch of blokes, and these blokes were very good players, don’t get me wrong, but he dragged them kicking and screaming to the next level. They didn’t want to go where he took them. But when he got them there, if you spoke to Callinan, Blight, Walker, Atkin, Howard, they didn’t necessarily like where he was taking them, but I reckon they would all say they are bloody glad he took them there.”

Spaulding is grateful for this up close experience and continued to soak it all in, for his own use further down the track.
“I was lucky enough to be there first hand watching that and it was ferocious, but it paid off. So, again it was another influence on me,” Spaulding said.
With the experience alongside different coaches starting to mount up, Spaulding continued to soak it in, all the while knowing he would have to tread his own path to some degree.
“In the middle of that, you’ve got to find your own way to do things. What I’ve learnt through the trip is the green bug doesn’t last long in a brown field. You’ve got to adapt and change. That is a fair definition of professional, is always learning.”
Along with the learning came some laughs.
Due to his great mateship with Armstrong, Spaulding was only too willing to share an amusing story about a VFL match in country Victoria in which Armstrong was coaching, which still has him in stitches after all this time.
Leading up to the quarter time break, the Devils camp was approached by the producer of a local community radio station that was covering the match. They wanted to do a live cross to the address given by the Tasmanian coach.
“I think we were playing North Ballarat. He comes up to (team manager) Rob Direen and said, ‘Can you ask your coach not to swear.’ Rob didn’t know what to say, he was lost. He said, ‘I’ll see what I can do.’ He (the producer) comes over to me and asks, ‘Are you the coach?’ I said, ‘No I’m one of the assistant coaches.’ He said, ‘We’re trying to get your coach not to swear, we’re going to be around the group, can you tell him at quarter time.’ I said, ‘We’ll see how we go,’” Spaulding joked.
Quarter time came along and the group huddled in together, with the local radio guys approaching the Tasmanian group.
“We were going ok, we were in the game. I’m standing next to Mathew. I’m holding the board and he’s giving it to the players. I’ve looked at this bloke walking over with this big, long boom pole thing, like a fishing line type thing. He’s dropping down one of those furry grey microphones. I’m watching it come down and all the players are watching because it’s coming down over Armstrong’s back. He can’t see it. It’s coming lower and lower and lower and it’s just about level with his hat and he can’t see it. At this stage he’s really going. Anyway, this bloody microphone just bobbed down low enough right in front of his face just below the peak of his cap. He shouted, ‘What the f… is that!’ This bloke has just whipped the thing out and it was like a yo-yo banging on a string. Everyone, I mean everyone, just cracked up. It must have come over live radio.”
Spaulding had a big impact himself in his time with the Devils, along with quenching his own thirst for knowledge, being around that environment.
He was so highly regarded that when former coach Daryn Cresswell departed mid-way through the 2008, and final season Spaulding was named as coach to conclude the Tasmanian Devils VFL adventure for that time around.

Upon the demise of the Devils VFL team, Spaulding assisted both Hobart and North Hobart Football Clubs in various roles, until making his return to state level duties, back with the Mariners under 18s team as an assistant coach under Adam Sanders from 2014 – 2016.
After the period as an assistant to Sanders he took the reins himself.
“In 2017 and 2018 I coached, and 2019 I was assistant coach to Fletch (Adrian Fletcher),” Spaulding said.
Spaulding was typically modest when summarising his head coaching stint with the Mariners, most recently in the 2018 season when he led the team to magnificent performances against the other State Academy teams. This was prior to the re-introduction of a Tasmanian team in 2019 as a full time participant in the NAB League (former TAC Cup) Under 18 competition.
In fact, in that 2018 year, Spaulding was named as All Australian assistant coach for his outstanding contribution to justifiably be given that honour.
From his post playing career of reserves coach, to senior coach, state under 18s coach, VFL senior coach and All Australian recognition speaks volumes of not only the talent he has, but of his willingness to embrace knowledge as he encounters it and actively seeks it out.
One aspect he spoke of which has been a part of his success, is that he is always keen to ‘borrow’ ideas or qualities that he identifies and, sees it as a crucial aspect of learning his craft as a coach.
“The one thing I do without having to think is, most environments I go into I’m always trying to pick things up. I reckon one of the most valuable things I tried to instil in the last couple of years I coached the Mariners, with the assistant coaches was, if you see a good idea, pinch it and we’ll use it. We did that. We’d see different things the Swans academy were doing, or Lions or whatever.”
He recalled a specific instance of this from recent years.
“I remember we saw the way the Northern Territory boys warmed up and (assistant) Robbie Devine made a comment, ‘Gee we’re in trouble here,’ so we started to think, well they were ready to go at the start. What can we do to? So in consultation with our strength and conditioning staff we tried to implement it. If you see good things, there’s no reason you can’t pinch them.”
“I think that’s natural to me. I’m not so precious as to want to think that I invented the idea, but I’m happy to pinch it. You have interesting conversations with say, Darren Winter, because he’s a challenging type. There’s always something in what everyone says to you and I’m like, How can I apply that? If he’s saying it works for him, what bit of it can I apply?”
Another part of the learning that Spaulding speaks about is not confined to AFL football. As a sports tragic, Spaulding is constantly watching and analysing other codes from all over the world. This passion also has him looking for an opportunity to learn even the most minute detail and use it in his own teaching.
“I think that’s what Australian football is about. If you look at it, there’s a lot of basketball, a lot of hockey, a lot of soccer.”
The desire to continually learn from seemingly any source has always been strong in Spaulding and it is this desire that has kept his outlook and teaching fresh, even though he has been in the game for such a long period.

When questioned on whether he felt destined to become a coach, Spaulding admitted that it was not a pre-conceived idea when he was playing. It was more so just the next logical step and what you did, rather than actively seeking it out.
It was, however, how he went about coaching that set Spaulding apart from many other players making the transition from the field to the coaches box. With many influences on him that lead him on to coach, he highlights two in particular as having a big impact on him.
“The big influences on me was when I saw the way (Chris) Fagan operated. I went along with ‘Fages’ and battled my way through and got mixed up with Mathew (Armstrong). Fagan was regarded as the bloke who wrote the rule book for TAC Cup footy.”
Spaulding has identified one common denominator with the men who made the biggest impact in his career.
“The core characteristic that was really consistent through Sproule, Bennett, Fagan and Armstrong, was they had the ability to make something that looked complex, simple. They could express it in the simplest of terms. It’s not necessarily the language you use. It’s how you paint the picture. I guess where I’m at now, I try to use why. If you can explain to a young fellow why you are doing it. Not because I say to, if you explain why, they will grasp it a lot easier. Getting them to understand why, it gets you halfway there.”
One of Spaulding’s recent players at Mariners/Devils level, Lachlan Gadomski was glowing in his assessment of his former coach.
“His coaching style is very positive and he is very good at opposition analysis and how we can counteract them to beat them. He understood each and every one of us. One on one he always knew something you could improve on and it was always something simple, as he’s all about the fundamentals,” Gadomski said.
The learning from other sports was a common exercise for Spaulding, as Gadomski explains.
“At training and before games he’s usually got a theme and they very much so come from other sports. There was definitely an NFL one, about zones. He’s always trying to adapt what he wants to get across into something we understand.”
Along with the team aspect of his coaching style, Gadomski described how Spaulding’s coaching on a one on one basis evolved during his time in the state program.
“He was backline coach as well, so I’ve had a lot to do with him. He’s helped me quite a bit. Originally it was about my kicking but then as it progressed it became more defensive and how I can beat my man. He’s probably the one coach who has shaped me the most in that regard, and how to read the game as well. He always said you’re not thinking about the next kick, you’re thinking about the one after and how you can be involved in that. That’s something that’s always stuck with me,” Gadomski said.
Looking back, Lance Spaulding is aware of the impact that his time in the game has had on his life, and the lives of others.
“I wouldn’t have been the same person without footy. I think, if I’ve got one thing to be proud of, I feel confident that I could walk into any footy club in Tasmania at any level, because I’m really respectful of footballers. I don’t care what level they play at and judge them on that. You can talk to footy players about footy and footy things regardless of the level. When you have a beer after the game you didn’t say, I’m having a beer with him, he’s a reserves player. You just had a beer with a club mate, because he trained the same, everything was the same. For that 120 minutes on the Saturday he just played in a different side. He still represented you and your values and your beliefs exactly the same and just as well. You just hung out with club mates. There were no cliques. That’s why I love Sandy Bay so much,” Spaulding explained.
He summed up his 51 years (and counting) in the game and typically showed exactly why he is so respected around this state.
“Footy people are footy people. When you walk into a football club and have a conversation, whether you are a lawyer or a bricklayer the terminology might be different, but the intent is the same.”
He tilted his head back around to face West Hobart.
“51 years, just over that hill. I’m enjoying it now as much as then.”
“So that’s a journey,” Spaulding said.
Where will it take him next?

Thank you to The Mercury for photos and other content. Thank you also to AFL Tasmania, Sandy Bay Football Club, ‘Seagulls On The Wing’ publication and everyone I reached out to who was only too willing to contribute to this story.
Of course, a special thank you goes to Lance Spaulding for being a part of In an Under – Tasmanian Football Stories.




