Casey Demons

{{Short description|Australian rules football club}}

{{Use Australian English|date=January 2018}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2020}}

{{Infobox australian football club

| color1 =#061A33

| color2 =#ffffff

| color3 =solid #de0316

| clubname = Casey Demons

| image = Casey Demons Logo.png

| image_size = 220px

| fullname = Casey Football Club{{Cite web|url=http://abr.business.gov.au/|title=ABN Lookup|date=2014-11-01|website=abr.business.gov.au|language=en|access-date=2019-03-22}}

| formernames = Springvale Football Club
(1903–2005)
Casey Scorpions
(2006–2016)

| nicknames = Demons, Dees

| formernicknames = Scorpions, Vales

| motto =

| season = 2023

| home&away = 7th

| afterfinals =

| topgoalkicker =

| bestandfairest =

| founded = {{Start date and age|1903}}

| colours = {{color box|#DE0316}} Red {{color box|#061A33}} Navy blue

| league = VFL: Men's football
VFLW: {{nowrap|Women's football}}
VNL: Netball

| coach = Mark Corrigan

| captain = Mitchell White

| premierships = VFA/VFL (6) {{hlist|1987|1995|1996|1998|1999|2022}}

| president = David Dillon

| ground = Casey Fields

| ground2 =

| capacity = 10,000{{cite web|title=Casey Fields|url=http://www.austadiums.com/stadiums/stadiums.php?id=300|website=austadiums.com|publisher=Austadiums|access-date=20 May 2023}}

| capacity2 =

| most recent premiership =

| pattern_b1 = _red_v_top

| pattern_sh1 = _redsides

| pattern_so1 =

| body1 = 061A33

| shorts1 = 061A33

| socks1 = FF0000

| pattern_b2 = _red_v_top

| pattern_sh2 = _redsides

| pattern_so2 =

| body2 = 061A33

| shorts2 =

| socks2 = ff0000

| pattern_b3 = _red_v_top

| pattern_sh3 = _redsides

| pattern_so3 =

| body3 = 004AE5

| shorts3 =

| socks3 = ff0000

| url = {{URL|https://www.melbournefc.com.au/teams/casey-demons|melbournefc/casey}}

| jumper =

}}

The Casey Football Club, nicknamed the Demons, is an Australian rules football club based in the Melbourne suburb of Cranbourne East.

The club, which was previously known as the Springvale Football Club (1903–2005) and the Casey Scorpions (2006–16), plays in the Victorian Football League (VFL). It has a reserves affiliation with the Melbourne Football Club.[http://www.heraldsun.com.au/leader/localfooty/vfl/casey-scorpions-officially-change-name-to-casey-demons-in-alignment-with-melbourne/news-story/58a6136342e1a22d7d27601f384c6f21 Casey Scorpions officially change name to Casey Demons in alignment with Melbourne] by Ben Higgins on Herald Sun, 19 December 2016

The club changed its nickname to the "Demons" prior to the 2017 season to strengthen its alliance with the Melbourne Football Club, also known as the "Demons".[http://www.melbournefc.com.au/news/2016-12-19/casey-demons-becomes-official Casey Demons becomes official], Melbourne FC website, 19 December 2016.

Casey also has a netball team which has competed in the Victorian Netball League (VNL) since 2019.{{cite web |last1=Burgan |first1=Matt |title=Casey joins Victorian Netball League |url=https://www.melbournefc.com.au/news/254701/casey-joins-victorian-netball-league |publisher=Melbourne Football Club |access-date=29 June 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230813112255/https://www.melbournefc.com.au/news/254701/casey-joins-victorian-netball-league |archive-date=13 August 2023 |date=19 September 2018}}

History

Casey was founded in 1903 as the Spring Vale Football Club (later spelt Springvale), and from 1915 it played at what became its traditional home ground, the Spring Vale Recreation Reserve at Newcomen Road, Spring Vale. After initially playing in the Mulgrave Football Association, the club joined the Berwick District Football Association in 1911, where it played until the Second World War; in its time in the BDFA, the club won seven premierships. After the war, the club switched to the more metropolitan-based Caulfield Oakleigh District League. After winning the 1956 premiership, the club switched to the Federal Football League, the top suburban league in the southern suburbs of Melbourne. The club became a powerhouse of the Federal League, and in its 25 years in the league from 1957 to 1981, it won seven premierships, including four in a row from 1960 to 1963, and missed the finals only twice. Overall, the club won fifteen senior premierships at suburban level.{{cite web|url=http://www.scorpions.com.au/the-club/34-history.html|author=Casey Scorpions|date=21 September 2007|access-date=14 July 2014|title=The Club – History}}

Due to Springvale's strength as a club, it was seen as a strong contender to join the Victorian Football Association, the second-highest level of senior football in Melbourne. The club was offered entry to the VFA in 1961, after its first Federal League premiership, but the club turned down the offer, seeking to consolidate its strength in the Federal League, and worried that the proximity of Oakleigh and Dandenong could stifle its competitiveness.{{cite news|newspaper=The Sporting Globe|publication-place=Melbourne, VIC|page=10|author=Frank Morley|date=5 November 1960|title=VFA approach to Springvale}} The club applied for VFA membership in 1978, but the VFA was not looking to expand at that time.{{cite news|newspaper=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne, VIC|author=Marc Fiddian|page=24|date=14 August 1981|title=Springvale bid to join VFA}} Finally, as part of the VFA's expansion and restructure in 1982, Springvale was admitted to Division 2.{{cite news|newspaper=The Herald|publication-place=Melbourne, VIC|author=John Craven|page=28|date=16 October 1981|title='Springy' for VFA}} Springvale won the Division 2 premiership in its second year in 1983, and was promoted to Division 1 in 1984, and narrowly avoided relegation for the next three years.

In December 1986, Springvale was earmarked for exclusion under the Association's controversial Football Organisation Review Team (FORT) recommendations, which sought to rationalise the Association to a stronger twelve-club competition in a single division, but which were never formally enacted after being rejected by the clubs.{{cite news|newspaper=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne, VIC|author=Len Johnson|page=39|date=6 December 1986|title=Radical plan to cut VFA to 12 teams}} Less than a year later, after recruiting Phil Maylin and three other former League players in the pre-season,{{cite news|newspaper=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne, VIC|author=Sam Prenesti|page=36|date=2 May 1987|title=Maylin's men spring back}} Springvale proved the FORT wrong by rising to the finals for the first time and winning the 1987 Division 1 premiership. Springvale was one of only two of the FORT review's excluded clubs to survive in the VFA beyond 1991, the other being Werribee. Springvale dominated the VFA/VFL in the late 1990s, winning four premierships in five years: 1995, 1996, 1998 and 1999.

When the VFA/VFL was aligned with the TAC Cup, Springvale was initially aligned with the nearby Oakleigh Chargers,{{cite news|newspaper=Herald Sun|publication-place=Melbourne, VIC|page=73|author=Adrian Dunn|date=13 October 1994|title=Plan a 'victory' for VFA identity|edition=Afternoon}} with that affiliation lasting from 1995 until 1998. Since 1999, Springvale has been affiliated with the Gippsland Power.{{cite web|url=http://www.parliament.vic.gov.au/images/stories/committees/rrc/footy/cf_report.pdf|page=217|date=December 2004|title=Inquiry into country football|author=Rural and regional services development committee}}{{cite web|url=http://www.portmelbournefc.com.au/borough-continue-to-build-on-oakleigh-chargers-relationship/|title=Borough Continue To Build On Oakleigh Chargers Relationship|date=23 February 2016|access-date=30 July 2016|publisher=Port Melbourne Football Club}}

File:Caseyscorpians.jpg

By 2000, the club was hindered by its Newcomen Road ground. Aside from the rundown condition of the facilities, the surrounding area of Springvale had developed a bad reputation as a drugs hotspot, which was keeping people away. The club continued to train and play some of its games at Newcomen Road, but played most home games nomadically at a variety of south-eastern suburban grounds for the next few years, initially at Waverley Park in 2000, and then in 2001 and 2002 at venues including Moorabbin Oval and Shepley Oval.{{citation|author1=Santo Caruso|author2=Marc Fiddian|author3=Jim Main|title=Football Grounds of Melbourne|publisher=Pennon Publishing|year=2002|publication-place=Essendon North, VIC|pages=140–143}} It returned almost full-time to Newcomen Road from 2003 until 2005.{{cite web|url=http://australianfootball.com/seasons/season/VFL/2003/ |title=Victorian Football League (VFL), 2003 |publisher=Australian Football.com |access-date=7 March 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402114030/http://australianfootball.com/seasons/season/VFL/2003/ |archive-date=2 April 2015 |df=dmy }}{{cite web|url=http://australianfootball.com/seasons/season/VFL/2004/ |title=Victorian Football League (VFL), 2004 |publisher=Australian Football.com |access-date=7 March 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402132832/http://australianfootball.com/seasons/season/VFL/2004/ |archive-date=2 April 2015 |df=dmy }}{{cite web|url=http://australianfootball.com/seasons/season/VFL/2005/ |title=Victorian Football League (VFL), 2005 |publisher=Australian Football.com |access-date=7 March 2015 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150402103933/http://australianfootball.com/seasons/season/VFL/2005/ |archive-date=2 April 2015 |df=dmy }}

In 2005, to attempt to financially secure its long-term future, the club came to an arrangement with the City of Casey, which had developed the new Casey Fields multi-sports complex in Cranbourne East and was seeking a VFL team to play there. The club moved its training and playing base to Casey Fields in 2006, and changed its name to the Casey Scorpions Football Club.{{cite web|url=http://carbosclassichits.blogspot.com.au/2006_04_01_archive.html|author=Ben Carbonaro|title=Good start out at Casey Fields|date=29 April 2006|access-date=30 March 2014}} This also brought the club geographically closer to its Gippsland Power affiliate.

When the VFL and the AFL Reserves merged in 2000, Springvale carried on as a stand-alone club for one season before entering reserves affiliations with Australian Football League clubs. From 2001 until 2008, the club was affiliated with the St Kilda Football Club.{{cite news|newspaper=The Age|url=http://www.theage.com.au/afl/afl-news/saints-staying-in-seaford-despite-government-funding-at-moorabbin-20140503-zr3wi.html|title=Saints staying in Seaford despite government funding at Moorabbin|date=3 May 2014|access-date=14 June 2014|author=Daniel Cherny|publication-place=Melbourne, VIC}} Since 2009, it has been affiliated with the Melbourne Football Club, which also maintains a training base at Casey Fields.{{cite web|url=http://conferences.alia.org.au/access2010/pdf/Paper_Fri_1100_Cezna_Fulco.pdf |title=Read like a demon: football heroes promoting reading to primary school students |author1=Cenza Fulco |author2=Debbie Lee |year=2010 |access-date=30 March 2014 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140204024946/http://conferences.alia.org.au/access2010/pdf/Paper_Fri_1100_Cezna_Fulco.pdf |archive-date=4 February 2014 |df=dmy }} In December 2016, the club was renamed the Casey Demons Football Club to strengthen the alliance with Melbourne, which is also nicknamed the Demons. The club will adopt Melbourne's traditional guernsey design from 2017, retaining the navy blue and red colours common to both teams.{{cite web|url=http://www.scorpions.com.au/home/match-reports/35-season-2013/1040-media-release-casey-demons-football-club.html|title=Media Release: Casey Demons Football Club|work=Casey Scorpions|date=19 December 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161219231736/http://www.scorpions.com.au/home/match-reports/35-season-2013/1040-media-release-casey-demons-football-club.html|archive-date=19 December 2016 }}{{cite web|url=http://www.melbournefc.com.au/news/2016-12-19/casey-demons-becomes-official|title=Casey Demons becomes official|work=Melbourne Football Club|date=19 December 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161219231911/http://www.melbournefc.com.au/news/2016-12-19/casey-demons-becomes-official|archive-date=19 December 2016 }}

Honours

= Club =

class="wikitable"
colspan="4" style="background:#bdb76b;" align="center"| Premierships
style="background:#bdb76b;"

!Competition

!Level

!Wins

!Years Won

rowspan=2 scope="row" style="text-align: left"|VFA/VFL SeniorsSeniors (Division 1)61987, 1995, 1996, 1998, 1999, 2022
|Seniors (Division 2)11983
rowspan=2 scope="row" style="text-align: left"|VFA/VFL ReservesDivision 131988, 1995, 2017
|Division 211982
VFA/VFL ThirdsDivision 111985
colspan="4" style="background:#bdb76b;" align="center"| Finishing positions
rowspan=3 scope="row" style="text-align: left"|Victorian Football League
(Division 1)
Minor premiership51995, 1999, 2012, 2016, 2022
|Grand Finalists31990, 2016, 2018
|Wooden spoons12004

=Individual=

  • JJ Liston Medallists: Stuart Nicol 1990, D. Robbins 2000.
  • Norm Goss Medallists: D. Vernon 1987, M. Mellody 1995, K. Taylor 1996, B Delaure 1998, D. Donati 1999, M. White 2022.
  • Games Record Holder: Damian Carroll 233.
  • Goals Record Holder: Shayne Smith 470
  • Longest Winning Sequence: 17 (2022)
  • Longest Losing Sequence: 10 (2005)

Seasons

class="wikitable"

| style=background:#F0E68C|Premiers

| style=background:#C0BFBD|Grand Finalist

| style=background:#D0E7FF|Minor premiers

| style=background:#96CDCD|Finals appearance

| style=background:#FFCCCC|Wooden spoon

| style=background:#FAECC8|VFA/VFL leading goalkicker

| style=background:#DDFFDD |VFA/VFL best and fairest

class="wikitable"; style="width:100%;"
valign="top"

!style="background:#061A33; color:#FFFFFF; border:solid #de0316 2px"|Year

!style="background:#061A33; color:#FFFFFF; border:solid #de0316 2px"|League

!style="background:#061A33; color:#FFFFFF; border:solid #de0316 2px"|{{Tooltip|Finish|Finishing position on the ladder after the home-and-away season}}

!style="background:#061A33; color:#FFFFFF; border:solid #de0316 2px"|{{Tooltip|W|Won}}

!style="background:#061A33; color:#FFFFFF; border:solid #de0316 2px"|{{Tooltip|L|Lost}}

!style="background:#061A33; color:#FFFFFF; border:solid #de0316 2px"|{{Tooltip|D|Drawn}}

!style="background:#061A33; color:#FFFFFF; border:solid #de0316 2px"|Coach

!style="background:#061A33; color:#FFFFFF; border:solid #de0316 2px"|Captain

!style="background:#061A33; color:#FFFFFF; border:solid #de0316 2px"|Best and fairest

!style="background:#061A33; color:#FFFFFF; border:solid #de0316 2px"|Leading goalkicker

!style="background:#061A33; color:#FFFFFF; border:solid #de0316 2px"|Goals

!style="background:#061A33; color:#FFFFFF; border:solid #de0316 2px"|{{Tooltip|Ref|Reference}}

align="center" | 1982

| align="center" | {{nowrap|VFA D2}}

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Phillip Pinnell

| Phillip Pinnell

|

| style=background:#FAECC8| Ted Carroll

| align="center" | 118

| align="center" | {{cite news|newspaper=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne, Victoria|author=Marc Fiddian|page=25|date=16 August 1982|title=Victory for Bullants in battle of big two}}

align="center" | 1983

| align="center" | VFA D2

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Laurie Fowler

| Laurie Fowler

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1984

| align="center" | VFA D1

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Laurie Fowler

| Laurie Fowler

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1985

| align="center" | VFA D1

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Laurie Fowler

| Geoff Anderson

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1986

| align="center" | VFA D1

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Phil Fryer

| Daryl Vernon

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1987

| align="center" | VFA D1

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Phil Maylin

| Phil Maylin

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1988

| align="center" | VFA D1

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Phil Maylin

| Phil Maylin

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1989

| align="center" | VFA

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Phil Maylin

| Phil Maylin

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1990

| align="center" | VFA

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Phil Maylin

| Craig Meade

| style=background:#DDFFDD | Stuart Nicol

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1991

| align="center" | VFA

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Phil Maylin

| Graham Dempster

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1992

| align="center" | VFA

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Bernie Sheehy

| Rod Morgan

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1993

| align="center" | VFA

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Bernie Sheehy

| Rod Morgan

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1994

| align="center" | VFA

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Bernie Sheehy

| Denis Knight

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1995

| align="center" | VFA

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Michael Ford

| Denis Knight

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1996

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Brad Gotch

| Kain Taylor

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1997

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Brad Gotch

| Kain Taylor

|

| style=background:#FAECC8| Shayne Smith

| align="center" | 107

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1998

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Peter Nicholson

| Kain Taylor

|

| style=background:#FAECC8| Shayne Smith

| align="center" | 78

| align="center" |

align="center" | 1999

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Peter Nicholson

| Kain Taylor

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2000

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Peter Nicholson

| Jason Caples

| style=background:#DDFFDD | David Robbins

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2001

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Peter Nicholson

| Jason Caples

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2002

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Ken Sheldon

| Jason Caples

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2003

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Gerard FitzGerald

| Steven Harrison

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2004

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Graham Wright

| Steven Harrison

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2005

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Peter Banfield

| Steven Harrison

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2006

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Peter Banfield

| Steven Harrison

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2007

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Peter Banfield

| Nigel Carmody

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2008

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Greg Hutchison

| Kyle Matthews

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2009

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Peter German

| Kyle Matthews

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2010

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Brad Gotch

| Kyle Matthews

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2011

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Brad Gotch

| Kyle Matthews;
James Wall

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2012

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Brett Lovett

| Evan Panozza

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2013

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Rohan Welsh

| Evan Panozza

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2014

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Rohan Welsh

| Evan Panozza

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2015

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Justin Plapp

| Evan Panozza

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2016

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Justin Plapp

| Jack Hutchins

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2017

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Justin Plapp

| Jack Hutchins

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2018

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

|Jade Rawlings

|Jack Hutchins

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2019

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

|Jade Rawlings;
Sam Radford

|Mitch White

| Jimmy Munro

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" | {{cite web |title=Munro claims top award for Casey |url=https://pakenham.starcommunity.com.au/sport/2021-09-28/munro-claims-top-award-for-casey/ |publisher=Pakenham Gazette |access-date=29 June 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240629124834/https://pakenham.starcommunity.com.au/sport/2021-09-28/munro-claims-top-award-for-casey/ |archive-date=29 June 2024 |date=28 September 2021}}

align="center" | 2020

| align="center" | VFL

| colspan="4"; align="center" | (No season)

| Sam Radford

| Mitch White

| colspan="3"; align="center" | (No season)

| align="center" | {{cite web |last1=Nobes |first1=Caitlin |title=Radford steps down as Casey coach |url=https://www.melbournefc.com.au/news/832423/radford-steps-down-as-casey-coach |publisher=Melbourne Football Club |access-date=29 June 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221113203526/https://www.melbournefc.com.au/news/832423/radford-steps-down-as-casey-coach |archive-date=13 November 2022 |date=29 October 2020}}

align="center" | 2021

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

|Mark Corrigan

|Mitch White

| Jimmy Munro

| Sam Weideman

| align="center" | 21

| align="center" | {{cite web |last1=Goodrope |first1=Matt |title=Casey welcomes Corrigan |url=https://www.melbournefc.com.au/news/839029/casey-welcomes-corrigan |website=melbournefc.com.au |publisher=Melbourne Football Club |access-date=16 June 2022 |date=30 November 2020}}

align="center" | 2022

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

|Mark Corrigan

|Mitch White

| Jimmy Munro

| Mitch Brown

| align="center" | 38

| align="center" |

align="center" | 2023

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Taylor Whitford

| Mitch White

| Deakyn Smith

| Josh Schache

| align="center" | 29

| align="center" | {{cite web |last1=Nobes |first1=Caitlin |title=Casey appoints Whitford |url=https://www.melbournefc.com.au/news/1242178/casey-appoints-whitford |publisher=Melbourne Football Club |access-date=29 June 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240303193447/https://www.melbournefc.com.au/news/1242178/casey-appoints-whitford |archive-date=3 March 2024 |date=28 October 2022}}

align="center" | 2024

| align="center" | VFL

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

| Taylor Whitford

| Mitch White

|

|

| align="center" |

| align="center" |

=Grand finals=

  • 1983 – Springvale 17 9 (111) d. Brunswick 13 16 (94) at Toorak Park
  • 1987 – Springvale 14.16 (100) d. Port Melbourne 7.20 (62) at Junction Oval
  • 1995 – Springvale 14.10 (94) d. Sandringham 6.15 (51) at Victoria Park
  • 1996 – Springvale 11.7 (73) d. Frankston 10.10 (70) at Princes Park
  • 1998 – Springvale 11.17 (83) d. Werribee 5.15 (45) at TEAC Oval
  • 1999 – Springvale 19.11 (125) d. Nth Ballarat 9.11 (65) at TEAC Oval
  • 2022 – Casey Demons 10.10 (70) d. Southport 5.8 (38) at Ikon Park

Club song

The club song is sung to the tune of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic”, but changed to “it’s a grand old flag”, when they changed the club name to demons after the Melbourne/Casey affiliation began and solidified the partnership as a reserves team for Melbourne.

References

{{Reflist|30em}}