Allan Reval

Australian rules footballer, born 1913

Australian rules footballer
Allan Reval
Personal information
Full name Allan R. V. Reval
Nickname(s) Bull
Date of birth 29 March 1913
Place of birth South Australia
Date of death 3 April 2005(2005-04-03) (aged 92)
Position(s) Ruck rover
Playing career1
Years Club Games (Goals)
1932–1945 Port Adelaide 187 (79)
Representative team honours
Years Team Games (Goals)
1934–1939 South Australia 13 (5)
Coaching career3
Years Club Games (W–L–D)
1940–1941 Port Adelaide 37 (25–11–1)
1949 Glenelg 17 (8–9–0)
1 Playing statistics correct to the end of 1945.
2 State and international statistics correct as of 1939.
3 Coaching statistics correct as of 1949.
Career highlights

Club

  • 3× Port Adelaide premiership player (1936, 1937, 1939)
  • Port Adelaide best and fairest (1939)

Honours

  • Port Adelaide life member (1944)
  • SANFL life member
  • SANFL Hall of Fame inductee (2004)
  • Port Adelaide Hall of Fame 1998
  • Port Adelaide "Greatest Team of the Greatest Club" member 2000
Source: AustralianFootball.com

Allan "Bull" Reval (29 March 1913 – 3 April 2005) was an Australian rules footballer who played for the Port Adelaide Football Club in the South Australian National Football League (SANFL). He also coached Port Adelaide and fellow SANFL club Glenelg Football Club. He worked as a journalist for the Sunday Mail in Adelaide.[1]

Haydn Bunton Sr., triple Brownlow and Sandover medalist, said of Allan Reval that "Of the South Australians played against, two stand out. As far as I am concerned— 'Bull' Reval and Bob Quinn. I never saw Reval play anything but well against Victoria. He was a beauty."[2]

References

  1. ^ "SA FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME: A R V(Bull) Reval". sanfl.com.au. Retrieved 19 March 2016.
  2. ^ "Quinn and Reval among "really great players"". The Mail (Adelaide). Vol. 40, no. 1, 992. South Australia. 5 August 1950. p. 2 (SUNDAY MAGAZINE). Retrieved 12 December 2016 – via National Library of Australia.

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Allan Reval.
  • Allan Reval at AustralianFootball.com
  • v
  • t
  • e
Port Adelaide Football Club: Greatest Team 1870–2000
Full-back
  • Richard Russell
  • John Abley
  • Edward Whelan
Half-back
  • Neville Hayes
  • Greg Phillips
  • Geof Motley
Centre
  • Craig Bradley
  • Russell Ebert
  • John Cahill
Half-forward
  • Dave Boyd
  • Les Dayman
  • Harold Oliver
Full-forward
  • Scott Hodges
  • Tim Evans
  • Bob Quinn
Ruck
InterchangeCoach
  • v
  • t
  • e
Port Adelaide Football Club1936 SANFL premiers
Port Adelaide 13.19 (97) defeated Sturt 14.10 (94), at Adelaide Oval
Coach: Hosking
  • v
  • t
  • e
Port Adelaide Football Club1937 SANFL premiers
Port Adelaide 13.16 (94) defeated South Adelaide 9.16 (70), at Adelaide Oval
Coach: Hosking
  • v
  • t
  • e
Port Adelaide Football Club1939 SANFL premiers
Port Adelaide 16.28 (124) defeated West Torrens 11.11 (77), at Adelaide Oval
  • 1. Quinn (c)
  • 2. Rudd (vc)
  • 4. Johnson
  • 5. McLean
  • 6. Reval
  • 7. Roberts
  • 8. Brock
  • 9. Abbott
  • 10. Bampton
  • 11. Kellaway
  • 12. R. Dangerfield
  • 13. Hender
  • 15. Skelley
  • 16. Schumann
  • 18. Obst
  • 19. Hollingworth
  • 20. Greening
  • 21. Martyn
  • 24. I. Dangerfield
  • 25. Carmichael
Coach: Quinn
  • v
  • t
  • e
Port AdelaideWest Torrens1942 SANFL premiers
Port Adelaide/West Torrens 18.12 (120) defeated West Adelaide/Glenelg 16.13 (109), at Adelaide Oval
  • L. Martyn
  • K. Obst
  • Johnstone
  • L. McLean
  • J. Thiele
  • W. McFarlane
  • M. Nicholls
  • Roberts (c)
  • Glastonbury
  • C. Dayman
  • I. Dangerfield
  • A. Franklin
  • G. Scott
  • Kellaway
  • M. Shaw
  • R. McLean
  • Reval
  • Skelley
  • Tonkin
Coach: Hosking
  • v
  • t
  • e
John Cahill Medal • Port Adelaide Football Club best and fairest winners
  • v
  • t
  • e
Coaches of the Glenelg Football Club
  • 1921: Hanley
  • 1922-1923: Head
  • 1924: Pincombe/Smith
  • 1925: Hoft
  • 1926–1927: Handby
  • 1928-1929: Brown
  • 1930–1932: Handby
  • 1933-1935: McGregor
  • 1936-1937: Scott
  • 1938-1939: Brown
  • 1940: Steele
  • 1941: Curnow
  • 1942-1944: WWII
  • 1945: Curnow
  • 1946: Betson/Curnow
  • 1947-1948: Curnow
  • 1949: Reval
  • 1950–1952: Taylor
  • 1953–1954: Hall
  • 1955-1957: May
  • 1958–1959: Davies
  • 1960: Boyall
  • 1961: Wickham
  • 1962–1963: Long
  • 1964-1966: Fitzgerald
  • 1967–1976: Kerley
  • 1977-1978: Nicholls
  • 1979-1982: Halbert
  • 1983-1984: Campbell
  • 1985-1990: Cornes
  • 1991-1992: Hodgeman
  • 1993-1994: Williams
  • 1995-1996: Symonds
  • 1997: Stringer
  • 1998-2000: McGuinness
  • 2001-2002: Honor
  • 2003-2004: Noble
  • 2005: Simmons/Burgess
  • 2006-2011: Mickan
  • 2011-2013: Massie
  • 2014: Stevens
  • 2015-2017: Lokan
  • 2018—2020: Stone
  • 2021—2022: Hand
  • 2023— : Reaves
  • v
  • t
  • e
1940 SANFL Patriotic Match - Country v City
Metropolitan Team 23.14 (152) d Country Team 17.23 (125) at Adelaide Oval, 3 August 1940, crowd: 5,592
Country Team
Metropolitan Team
  • v
  • t
  • e
Captains of the Port Adelaide Football Club
SANFL
(seniors)
AFL
AFLW
SANFL
(reserves)
  • 1997: Ginever
  • 1998: Borlase
  • 1999: D. Brown
  • 2000–2003: Poole
  • 2004–2005: T. Brown
  • 2006–2007: Clayton
  • 2008–2009: Ah Chee
  • 2010–2013: Meiklejohn
  • 2014–2018: Summerton
  • 2019–: Sutcliffe
Port Adelaide joined the AFL as a separate entity to the SANFL side. The two clubs merged in 2014, and the SANFL side now functions as Port Adelaide's AFL reserves team.
  • v
  • t
  • e
Coaches of the Port Adelaide Football Club
Men's
  • 1870: Wald
  • 1871: Stone
  • 1872: Middleton
  • 1873: Sparnon
  • 1874: Rann
  • 1875: R. Sandilands
  • 1876–1879: Fletcher
  • 1880: Atkins
  • 1881: J. Sandilands
  • 1882: Kellett
  • 1883–1885: Turpenny
  • 1886–1908: McGargill
  • 1909–1910: Hosie
  • 1911: Donaghy
  • 1911: Woollard
  • 1913–1914: Londrigan
  • 1915: McFarlane
  • 1919–1920: Hansen
  • 1921: Hosking
  • 1922: Howie
  • 1923: Dayman
  • 1924–1925: Hosie
  • 1927–1931: Hosking
  • 1932: Ween
  • 1933: Dewar
  • 1934–1935: Ashby
  • 1936–1938: Hosking
  • 1939–1940: Quinn
  • 1940–1941: Reval
  • 1942–1944: Hosking
  • 1945–1947: Quinn
  • 1948: Roberts
  • 1949: McCarthy
  • 1950–1958: F. Williams
  • 1959–1966: Motley
  • 1962–1973: F. Williams
  • 1974–1982: Cahill
  • 1983–1987: Ebert
  • 1988–1996: Cahill
  • 1996: S. Williams
  • 1997–1998: Cahill
  • 1999–2010: M. Williams
  • 2010–2012: Primus
  • 2012: Hocking
  • 2013–: Hinkley
Women's
Italics denote caretaker coach


Stub icon

This Australian rules football biography of a person born in 1913 is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e