When a new Gordon cricketer from Green Shield through to First Grade celebrates a win for the team, they are faced with singing the “Gordon Song”. Often with the help of a sheet of paper they stumble through the verses and chorus with no idea of the history or relevance of the strange words they are singing.
The song itself was actually ‘put together’ by a prominent Gordon cricketer of the day, Gerry Elkan, who played for the club for eighteen seasons between 1957-58 and 1976-77 taking 402 wickets as a brisk medium pace bowler across all grades at an exceptional average of 14.40.
During a practice in the 1967 season, Dick Guy made a comment that he thought the club should have a song and Gerry, being in hearing distance, thought this was an opportunity for him. Having played rugby for Gordon and knowing their version of “A Gordon for me” he put together a number of verses and a chorus. The song caught on and has been song ever since to celebrate a win for any Gordon team.
Four Gordon First Grade cricketers who were playing at the time the song was written were included in the second verse and repeated throughout that first season as the ‘star’ players of the day. Over the years those names changed on a match by match basis based on the performance of the players in those teams.
The verse written for the first season included the line: “There’s Roley and Hedley, Brother L and PJ”. Those nicknames in fact were for Dick Guy (Roley), Brian Taber (Hedley), Lloyd Wilson (Brother L) and Peter Johnson (PJ).
With Dick Guy passing away in 2016, Brian Taber in 2023 and Peter Johnson in 2025, Lloyd Wilson is now holding the torch for the ‘gang of four”. Lloyd played First Grade for Gordon from 1967 to 1970 scoring 1,715 runs and one season in third grade in 1973 scoring 398 runs.