1919 VFA season

1919 Premiership season
Teams 10
Premiers Footscray
(6th premiership)
Minor premiers North Melbourne
(6th minor premiership)
1918
1920

The 1919 Victorian Football Association season was the 41st season of the Australian rules football competition. The season was the first to be played after hostilities ended in World War I, and saw a return to a full-length season featuring all ten clubs for the first time since 1914.

The premiership was won by the Footscray Football Club, after it defeated North Melbourne by 22 points in the Grand Final on 27 September. It was the club's sixth VFA premiership. Footscray's premiership came after minor premier North Melbourne was undefeated through the home-and-home matches – and, in fact, undefeated since 1914 – before losing both finals matches it played.

Association membership

The four clubs which opted not to play during 1918 due to World War IBrighton, Essendon, Hawthorn and Williamstown – returned to senior competition for the 1919 season. As a result, the Association returned to ten competing clubs, as it had been prior to the war.[1]

Rule changes

After having played with each team fielding sixteen-a-side since 1912, the Association opted to return to fielding eighteen players on each team.[2]

After a war-time agreement between the League and Association regarding player transfers between the two competitions expired in 1918, the Association introduced a rule which would see a player disqualified from the Association for two years if he transferred to a League club without a permit from the Association; but, as there was no longer a formal arrangement between the two competitions, such players remained free to play in the League during this period of disqualification.[2]

Premiership

The home-and-home season was played over eighteen rounds, with each club playing the others twice; then, the top four clubs contested a finals series under the amended Argus system to determine the premiers for the season.

Ladder

1919 VFA Ladder
TEAM P W L D PF PA Pct PTS
1 North Melbourne 18 18 0 0 1401 609 43.5 72
2 Footscray (P) 18 14 4 0 1385 700 50.5 58
3 Brunswick 18 12 6 0 1216 975 79.8 48
4 Northcote 18 12 6 0 1031 900 87.3 48
5 Williamstown 18 9 9 0 916 937 102.3 36
6 Hawthorn 18 8 10 0 974 1161 119.2 32
7 Prahran 18 6 12 0 941 1234 131.1 24
8 Port Melbourne 18 5 13 0 923 1309 141.8 20
9 Brighton 18 3 15 0 921 1421 154.2 12
10 Essendon 18 3 15 0 793 1251 157.8 12
Key: P = Played, W = Won, L = Lost, D = Drawn, PF = Points For, PA = Points Against, Pct = Percentage; (P) = Premiers, PTS = Premiership points Source[1][3]

Finals

Semi Finals
Saturday, 6 September Footscray 12.8 (80) def. Northcote 4.9 (33) East Melbourne Cricket Ground (crowd: 9,000) [4]
Saturday, 13 September North Melbourne 8.4 (52) def. by Brunswick 7.19 (61) East Melbourne Cricket Ground (crowd: 9,000) [5]
Preliminary Final
Saturday, 20 September Footscray 8.11 (59) def. Brunswick 7.4 (46) East Melbourne Cricket Ground (crowd: 17,000) [6]
1919 VFA Grand Final
Saturday, 27 September North Melbourne def. by Footscray East Melbourne Cricket Ground (Crowd: 20,000) [7][8]
1.1 (7)
4.6 (30)
4.7 (31)
6.7 (43)
Q1
Q2
Q3
Final
4.5 (29)
4.8 (32)
6.16 (52)
8.17 (65)
Umpires: Hurley
Barker, Forbes, Hawkins, Irwin, Rawle, Stevens Goals Craddock 4, Howell, Martin, Morgan, Samson

Notable events

North Melbourne's record winning streak

From 1914 until 1919, North Melbourne dominated the Association to compile a record winning streak. Between its two-point loss against Footscray on 17 July 1914[9] and its nine-point loss against Brunswick in the semi-final on 13 September 1919, North Melbourne won a total of 58 consecutive matches – including 49 premiership matches and nine other matches, such as patriotic fund-raisers during the war.[10] During this time, North Melbourne won three premierships (1914, 1915 and 1918), and completed two (shortened) unbeaten seasons: 15–0 in 1915 and 12–0 in 1918 – it was the last time a team won every match in a season until Geelong West in 1972 (Division 2), and the last time a team achieved it in the top division until Port Melbourne in 2011.

After losing the semi-final against Brunswick, North Melbourne also lost its next match – the Grand Final against Footscray – to finish second for the season.

External links

References

  1. 1 2 Old Boy (1 September 1919). "The Association Clubs – first round ended". The Argus (Melbourne, VIC). p. 3.
  2. 1 2 J.W. (3 May 1919). "Football – the opening day". The Australasian CVI (2770) (Melbourne, VIC). p. 807.
  3. The for-against records are published as in the Argus; there are some small differences (totalling only a few points) between the Australasian and the Argus. J.W. (6 September 1919). "Premiership list for 1919". The Australasian CVII (2788) (Melbourne, VIC). p. 489.
  4. J.W. (13 September 1919). "Association – first semi-final". The Australasian CVII (2789) (Melbourne, VIC). p. 543.
  5. Pivot (15 September 1919). "Association semi-final". The Age (Melbourne, VIC). p. 9.
  6. J.W. (27 September 1919). "The Association – Brunswick beaten by Footscray". The Australasian CVII (2791) (Melbourne, VIC). pp. 663–4.
  7. Old Boy (29 September 1919). "The Association – Footscray premiers". The Argus (Melbourne, VIC). p. 9.
  8. J.W. (4 October 1919). "Association – the final". The Australasian CVII (2792) (Melbourne, VIC). p. 718.
  9. Old Boy (19 July 1915). "The Association – North Melbourne's year". The Argus (Melbourne, VIC). p. 4.
  10. Old Boy (15 September 1919). "Association Semi-Final – North Melbourne's Waterloo". The Argus (Melbourne, VIC). p. 3.
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