1898 VFL Grand Final
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The 1898 VFL Grand Final was the first time the Victorian Football League (VFL) premiership was decided by a grand finale match.
It was played between teams from the Essendon Football Club and the Fitzroy Football Club on Saturday September 24, 1898, under atrocious ground conditions, in front of 16,538 people, at the St Kilda Cricket Ground.
Essendon, exercising the season's minor premier team's right of "challenge", had challenged Fitzroy, the winner of the previous Saturday's "Sectional Final" match against Collingwood, 5.8 (38) to 3.5 (23).
Fitzroy won the "Grand Final", scoring 5.8 (38) to Essendon's 3.5 (23). Neither side scored a goal in the last quarter of the match.
Contents |
[edit] The Season
During the 1898 home-and-away season, all teams played each other twice. The final end-of season ladder was:
| Team | Won | Lost | Draw | Points | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Essendon | 11 | 3 | 0 | 44 |
| 2 | Collingwood | 10 | 4 | 0 | 40 |
| 3 | Fitzroy | 10 | 4 | 0 | 40 |
| 4 | Geelong | 9 | 5 | 0 | 36 |
| 5 | South Melbourne | 7 | 7 | 0 | 28 |
| 6 | Melbourne | 5 | 8 | 1 | 22 |
| 7 | Carlton | 3 | 10 | 1 | 14 |
| 8 | St Kilda | 0 | 14 | 0 | 0 |
[edit] The Premiership Sectional Finals
According to the 1898 premiership system the eight teams in the VFL competition were divided into two sections based on their positions on the ladder: the first group were the teams that finished first, third, fifth, and seventh, and the second group were the teams that finished second, fourth, sixth, and eighth.
The teams in the two sections played three rounds of four round-robin matches on three consecutive Saturdays:
- Round One: (1) v (3), (2) v (4), (5) v (7), and (6) v (8).
- Round Two: (1) v (5), (2) v (6), (3) v (7), and (4) v (8).
- Round Three: (1) v (7), (2) v (8), (3) v (5), and (4) v (6).
The winners of the two sections were Fitzroy and Collingwood respectively (for results of all of the round-robin matches[1] and, a week later (17 September 1898), the two teams played each other at the Brunswick Street Oval,[2] with Fitzroy winning the match 2.10 (22) to 1.5 (11).[3]
[edit] The "Grand Final"
The "1898 rules" stipulated that, if the team at the top of the ladder at the end of the home-and-away season (the "minor premiers") had not won the "Sectional Final" match between the two sectional winners,[4] the "minor premier" had the right to "challenge" the winner; and, having done so, the winner of that grand finale match was declared the season's premiership team.
[edit] Venue selection
In 1898 the "minor premier" simply had the right to "challenge"; rather than the case from 1901 to 1930, when such "challenge" matches could be considered to be far more "obligatory" and "compulsory" than just being a simple matter of choice (as was the case from 1898 to 1900).[5]
Unlike ensuing seasons, the VFL had not taken into account the possibility of such circumstances arising in 1898 — viz., the "minor premier" neither winning nor participating in the "Sectional Final" match — and, as a consequence, such a "challenge" match being necessary.
The VFL had neither anticipated such an event in the schedule of match fixtures that it had determined before the home-and-away season began, nor had it made any sort of a tentative venue booking to provide for such a possible eventuality.[6]
Although Essendon and Fitzroy could not agree on the choice of a single venue, they suggested three mutually acceptable venues for the match:[7]
- The Brunswick Street Oval, the home ground of Fitzroy.
- The East Melbourne Cricket Ground, the home ground of Essendon.
- The neutral South Melbourne Cricket Ground on the verge of Albert Park Lake, close to the city and well served by rail and a number of tram routes.
They referred the decision to the VFL's Match Arrangement Committee;[7] and upon the express instructions of that Committee, the suggestions of the two teams were rejected outright, and the match was controversially scheduled to be played at the St Kilda Cricket Ground.[8]
The St Kilda Cricket Ground was in an appalling and atrocious condition.[7]
The ground had not been used since the second Saturday of the Sectional round-robin match three weeks earlier (3 September) and, since then, it had been thoroughly topdressed and "cultivated" in anticipation of the coming cricket season.[7]
Also, the cricket ground's asphalt cycling track that lay between the boundary line and the fence presented a considerable danger to the footballers.[7]
Despite being the "challenger", the Essendon Football Club flatly refused to play in the scheduled match, declaring that it would rather forfeit the match and the premiership than play on such a dangerous surface.[7] This view was also strongly supported by the Fitzroy Football Club, whose captain had taken the extraordinary step of signing a declaration to the effect that, in his opinion, the ground was entirely unfit to play upon.[7]
Essendon lodged an appeal with the VFL against the Match Arrangement Committee's decision, partly on the basis of the condition of the ground, and partly because the Committee, asked to decide on one of three mutually acceptable venues, had chosen a fourth that was acceptable to neither participant.[7]
The VFL, perhaps somewhat driven by the fact that the attraction of a finals system was one of the major reasons that the eight teams left the VFA and formed the VFL in the first place, had a special meeting to hear Essendon's appeal. It chose to endorse the Committee's decision, and did everything it could to coerce the Essendon Club into playing the match.[7]
Essendon did not actually agree to play the match until the night before the game;[7] and, ultimately, this "in doubt until the last minute match" was still attended by 16,538 paying spectators (it certainly would have been a much larger crowd otherwise).
The ground had been in such a dreadful condition that in the week prior to the match over 40 dray-loads of rubbish, soil and street-sweepings had been taken from the ground.[7]
Despite all this last minute work, the condition of the playing surface at the St Kilda Cricket Ground was still atrocious on the day of the final. Players kept skating over the grass-less slippery ground for want of some sort of grip,[9] and play was often obscured from the spectators by clouds of dust from the patched areas where the topsoil had not bound.[7]
[edit] Teams
In 1898, all VFL teams had 20 on-the-field players, and no "reserves".[10]
Yet, although there were no "reserves", any player who had left the playing field for any reason at all could resume his place on the field at any time.
Fitzroy selected two sets of brothers in its "Grand Final" team: Bill and Jack Dalton; and Jim and Mick Grace.[11]
The Fitzroy[12][13] and the Essendon teams[14][15] teams were:
| Fitzroy | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Backs | Stan Reid[16] | Johnny Power | Jerry Nolan |
| H/Backs | Alec Sloan (c) | Pat Hickey | Jack Dalton |
| Centre Line | Eddie Drohan | Harry Clarke | Kelly Robinson |
| H/Forwards | Chris Kiernan | Bert Sharpe | Bill Dalton |
| Forwards | Fred Fontaine | Jim Grace | Alf McDougall |
| Followers | Mick Grace | Bill McSpeerin | Bill Potter |
| Followers | Pat Descrimes | Paddy Noonan | — |
- Fitzroy Team Captain: Alec Sloan
| Essendon | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Backs | Ted Kinnear | Ned Officer | Hugh Gavin |
| H/Backs | George Stuckey (c) | Jim Anderson | George Vautin |
| Centre Line | Joe Groves | Harry Wright | Alf Gray |
| H/Forwards | Tod Collins | Colin Campbell | George Hastings |
| Forwards | Conrad Tenbrink | Charlie Moore[16] | Gus Kearney |
| Followers | Charlie Forbes | Arthur Cleghorn | Pat O'Loughlin |
| Followers | Bill Jackson | Son Barry | — |
- Essendon Team Captain: George Stuckey
Umpire - Henry "Ivo" Crapp[17]
[edit] The Match
Essendon had beaten Fitzroy in their round 1 and round 8 matches by 53 and 43 points respectively. Fitzroy had beaten Essendon by 29 points in the third match of their round-robin Sectional matches.[18]
Both teams had great difficulty playing football in the appalling ground conditions — as can be seen by the low scores — and the tough, bustling Fitzroy team handled the conditions far better than the Essendon team that had hoped to spread the game out as far as possible.[9] Fitzroy took the lead in the first few minutes of the match, and Essendon were never able to catch up.[19]
Essendon were further demoralized when Fitzroy champion forward and follower, Mick Grace, renowned for his marking skill and kicking prowess, flew high over a pack to take a spectacular high mark and kicked a long range goal.[9]
In a very tight, defensive second half, as the playing conditions deteriorated even further, only one goal was scored.[9] Fitzroy went on to beat Essendon 5.8 (38) to 3.5 (23).
[edit] Statistics
[edit] Score
| Team | First Quarter |
Second Quarter |
Third Quarter |
Last Quarter |
Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fitzroy | 2.5 | 4.5 | 5.6 | 5.8 | 5.8 (38) |
| Essendon | 1.0 | 3.1 | 3.2 | 3.5 | 3.5 (23) |
[edit] Goals
[edit] Best Players
- Fitzroy: M. Grace, Reid, Hickey, Drohan, Potter, Sloan, Descrimes, McSpeerin, J. Grace.[12]
- Essendon: Forbes, Stuckey, Jackson, Cleghorn, Hastings, Gavin, Officer, Kearney.[15]
[edit] See also
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ 1898 Rounds. stats league.com. Retrieved on 2008-04-16.
- ^ The match's venue had been decided by lot (Ross, (1996), p.42.)
- ^ 1898 Semi-Final - AFL Tables. stats league.com. Retrieved on 2008-04-16.
- ^ And, most significantly, according to these rules, this condition still obtained if the "minor premier" team had been eliminated from the contest before the "Sectional Final" stage (see Early VFL Final systems),
- ^ From 1898 to 1900, the premiership was decided according to the 1898 premiership system; in 1901 the premiership was decided according to the original "Argus system"; and from 1902 to 1930 the premiership was decided according to the amended "Argus system" (the exception being the 1924 VFL season, when the VFL experimented with a reinstatement of the 1898 premiership system).
- ^ With 20/20 hindsight, it was certainly a significant omission, given that each of the grounds were to be top-dressed and otherwise "cultivated" in preparation for the oncoming cricket season, immediately the scheduled football season was over.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Maplestone, (1996), p.53.
- ^ One of the VFL's Match Arrangement Committee was a member of the St Kilda Club (Maplestone, (1996), p.53).
- ^ a b c d Ross, (1966), p.42.
- ^ Fitzroy selected two sets of brothers in its "Grand Final" team: Bill and Jack Dalton; and Jim and Mick Grace (see Fitzroy Firsts: Etched in History. Brisbane Lions (1 May 2006). Retrieved on 2008-04-16.)
- ^ See "Fitzroy Firsts: Etched in History" (Brisbane Lions Website, 1 May, 2006).
- ^ a b "1898" (Brisbane Lions Website, 1 May, 2006)
- ^ a b AFL Player Statistics (Round by Round): Fitzroy Football Club 1898.
- ^ a b AFL Player Statistics (Round by Round): Essendon Football Club 1898
- ^ a b Maplestone, (1996), p.54.
- ^ a b Both the Fitzroy back-pocket Stan Reid and the Essendon full-forward Charlie Moore would later die in active service during the Anglo-Boer War in 1901; see Main, & Allen, "Moore, Charles", and "Reid, Stanley", pp.3-6 and pp.7-10 in Main & Allen, (2002).
- ^ Australian Football League Umpires Association: VFL Grand Finals 1898-1909.
- ^ Sectional Round 3 - AFL Tables. stats league.com. Retrieved on 2008-04-16.
- ^ Maplestone, (1966), p.53-54.
[edit] References
- Main, J. & Allen, D., Fallen — The Ultimate Heroes: Footballers Who Never Returned From War, Crown Content, (Melbourne), 2002. ISBN 1-740-95010-0
- Maplestone, M., Flying Higher: History of the Essendon Football Club 1872-1996, Essendon Football Club, (Melbourne), 1996. ISBN 0-959-17402-8
- Rogers, S. & Brown, A., Every Game Ever Played: VFL/AFL Results 1897-1997 (Sixth Edition), Viking Books, (Ringwood), 1998. ISBN 0-670-90809-6
- Ross, J. (ed), 100 Years of Australian Football 1897-1996: The Complete Story of the AFL, All the Big Stories, All the Great Pictures, All the Champions, Every AFL Season Reported, Viking, (Ringwood), 1996. ISBN 0-670-86814-0
[edit] External links
- 1898 Finals - AFL Tables
- AFL Player Statistics (Round by Round): Essendon Football Club 1898
- AFL Player Statistics (Round by Round): Fitzroy Football Club 1898
- "1898" (Brisbane Lions Website, 1 May, 2006)
- "Fitzroy Firsts: Etched in History" (Brisbane Lions Website, 1 May, 2006)
- Australian Football League Umpires Association: VFL Grand Finals 1898-1909
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