Soup at Fifty: The Bendigo Boy Who Never Left
20 Jun 2026
1
min read


On 20 June 2026, Mat Campbell turns fifty. Thirty of those years have been spent in Hawks colours, and it is no exaggeration to say there might not be a Hawks without him.
He was still a teenager the first time he pulled on the singlet, just the 85th Hawk to do so.
Picture it: 13 April 1996, the Snakepit, that gloriously cramped old fortress at Beaton Park where the lights had a habit of failing and the upstairs bar regulars bellowed "reeeebound!" as if their lungs alone could turn a game. A kid out of Bendigo, two months shy of his twentieth birthday, gets eighteen minutes against the Brisbane Bullets. He buries a three in the first quarter and finishes with five points. The Hawks lose by seven. Nothing about the box score says legend. Nothing really ever does, on day one.

Thirty years later, that same kid is turning fifty, and he still hasn't left Wollongong.
They called him Soup, and the nickname fit a man who was always going to be part of the furniture. By the time he hung up the boots on 25 March 2012, Campbell had played 524 games for the club, second only to his old Bendigo running mate Glen Saville, who edged him by a grand total of three. Think about that. The two most-capped players in the entire history of the Illawarra Hawks came from the same regional Victorian town, found their way to the same patch of the New South Wales coast, and spent the better part of two decades wearing each other out in training and propping each other up on game night. Where Saville soared and slashed, Campbell patrolled the perimeter, knocking down the big ones, smothering the other team's best guard, doing the quiet, unglamorous work that wins you nothing in the stat sheet and everything in the dressing room.
He was a "3-and-D" player a decade or more before it was popular. He retired shooting 40.2 per cent from beyond the arc and walked away as the franchise's all-time leader in three-pointers made, 1,049 of them, a record that still stands at the top of the club's books. Eleven-point-seven points a game across seventeen seasons. Steady. Composed. Relentless. The numbers are honest, and they are good, but the man was always more than his numbers, and everyone who watched him knew it.
Every now and then, mind you, he'd remind you he had another gear. His career-best night came in December 2005, deep in enemy territory in Townsville, when Campbell went off for 36 points in a Hawks win: nine triples from fourteen attempts, with four rebounds and three assists for good measure. Nine threes in a single game: in the club's entire history, only one Hawk has ever made more. It was the kind of performance that made you forget, for one electric evening, that this was supposed to be the role player. And then there was the dunk, the poster over Sydney's Acie Earl that froze itself into Illawarra folklore, the rare occasion the WIN Entertainment Centre rose not for a defensive stop or a clutch corner three. He didn't do it often. He didn't have to.

His rookie year, back in '96, he'd quietly closed out the season with a then career-high 22 in Perth, a promise of what was coming. From 1998 onward he wore the captaincy or co-captaincy almost without interruption, leading or co-leading the club through fourteen seasons of feast and famine. He was co-captain in 2000/01, the greatest season the franchise has ever known, when a Hawks side built not on superstar egos but on collective grit went all the way and brought home the club's first NBL Championship. Vintage Campbell, that title: no fuss, no theatre, just a group of blokes who refused to lose and a captain who set the temperature.

But here's the thing about Mat Campbell. For all the threes, all the games, all the silverware, his single most important contribution to this club came with no basketball in his hands at all.
In 2009, the Hawks were dead. Not struggling, not rebuilding: gone, in the literal, lights-had-gone-out sense. The money had run out, the league's restructured financial requirements loomed like a death sentence, and after more than thirty years the Hawks would simply cease to have a team. A final game was had; he and Saville had their jerseys raised to the rafters as everyone exited the WIN Entertainment Centre for a final time.

But it was Campbell, the captain, who refused to let it happen. He fronted the "Save the Hawks" campaign and did everything short of selling tickets door-to-door: rallying sponsors, leaning on the community, putting his name and his face and his reputation on the line for a club that, by any cold accounting, owed him nothing. It worked. The fans pledged. The businesses dug in. The Hawks survived to play another season, and then a great many more.
Interview from 2010
So when people say the Hawks wouldn't be here without Mat Campbell, that isn't sentiment talking. It's history. Pull that one thread out of the tapestry and there is no Gordie McLeod returning in 2009/10 to lead the fairytale run to the Grand Final, no Gary Ervin MVP, no Rotnei Clarke MVP, no Kevin Lisch MVP, no run-and-gun Rob Beveridge era, no LaMelo Ball, no Brian Goorjian, and no banner raised in 2024/25. The whole modern era of this club rests, in part, on a guard from Bendigo who decided his town was going to keep its team.
Which brings us, fittingly, to that second banner.
Campbell never really stopped being a Hawk; he just changed seats. He slid into the front office and applied the same principles he'd carried onto the floor (integrity, work, no shortcuts) and as General Manager of Basketball Operations, he helped recruit, build and steer the side that recaptured the NBL Championship in 2024/25. The kid who debuted in front of a few thousand at the Snakepit watched his fingerprints turn up on a title twenty-four years after the first one, this time from the boardroom rather than the backcourt. A new generation of fans fell for a new group of players, and most of them will never know that the man quietly orchestrating it was the one who kept the doors open over a decade earlier.
And he is not done giving back. In his spare time, Campbell can be found on a sideline coaching the Illawarra Hawks under-18 girls's JPL side. The old defensive nous clearly travels: at the time of writing his young charges are sitting pretty at 6-1.
His jersey, the No. 32, hangs in the rafters now, one of only five the club has ever retired. It is the right place for it. But the truer monument to Mat Campbell isn't the banner with his number on it. It's the club itself, still standing, still loud, still flying. He is woven into the culture, the resilience, the very soul of the Illawarra Hawks in a way no statistic could ever measure.
Mat Campbell didn't just play for the Hawks. Across thirty years, as a teenager, as a captain, as a saviour, as an architect, he became them.
Happy fiftieth, Soup.
---
Mat "Soup" Campbell
- Hawks ID No. 85
- Jersey No. 32 (retired)
- Debut 13 April 1996 · 524 games (2nd all-time)
- Stats: 11.7 ppg · 40.2% from three · 1,049 career three-pointers (club record)
- NBL Champion (2000/01).
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