Stumpy
Allen Oxlade (6)
Based on what?
Uni has won more 1st Grade Premierships, Colts Premierships & more club championships both in the past decade & the century before it.
You could also consider representatives players. Brothers has more representative players than any other Queensland club - 76 Australian players (75 Wallabies, 1 Kangaroo) and 230 Queensland players. Brothers has also had the most players selected to play for Australia (eight in 1914 and 1919, and seven in 1968) and Queensland (17 out of 22 players in 1974).
With all due respect, I would disagree with the argument that UQ were stronger in the 'century before it'. From a first grade point of view, both clubs were relatively tied and had their respective periods of success. UQ were dominant in the 1950s and '60s - winning eleven premierships. Brothers came to the fore in the 1970s and '80s winning eleven premierships from 14 grand finals. Souths surfaced in the 1990s being the only club in Australian history to win a grand slam - all four grade premierships - in 1992. They also won five straight premierships in first grade and reserve grade (1991-95).
There's no denying Brothers fell away as a club, which significantly halted progression in the history books (not appearing in any grand finals from 1991-2005). In the 1990s, the primary focus for Brothers members was keeping the club alive. The club was weeks away from collapsing, but old boys rallied together, and to their credit this outcome was avoided. Other grassroots clubs across other codes - such as Valley Diehards, Wests and Brothers RL - were also in the precarious state of trying to keep their licence clubs afloat in conjunction with continuing the football side of things. Changes to drink driving and licencing laws make it very difficult for sporting clubs to compete with other vendors.
It has obviously taken years for Brothers to become competitive again with other clubs, an example being 22 years since last Club Championships (1996-2018), 22 years between Hospital Cup drinks (1987-2009) and 14 years between Colts 1 premierships (2004-2018). Success seems to be cyclical for all clubs - highs and lows.
Anyway, it's an interesting discussion, I won't bore you any further, but Brisbane clubs (not just Sydney ones) have impressive histories and this reaffirms why club rugby is crucial to the prosperity of our great game.