1929 VFL premiership season
Brownlow Medal winner Albert Collier
Teams12
PremiersCollingwood
8th premiership
Minor premiersCollingwood
11th minor premiership
Brownlow MedallistAlbert Collier (Collingwood)
Leading Goalkicker MedallistGordon Coventry (Collingwood)
Matches played112
Highest63,336

The 1929 VFL season was the 33rd season of the Victorian Football League (VFL), the highest level senior Australian rules football competition in Victoria. The season featured twelve clubs, ran from 27 April until 28 September, and comprised an 18-game home-and-away season followed by a finals series featuring the top four clubs.

The premiership was won by the Collingwood Football Club for the eighth time and third time consecutively. Collingwood became the first and only club to record an undefeated home-and-away season in the league's history, with an 18–0 record; and although it lost its semi-final, it won the premiership by defeating Richmond by 29 points in the 1929 VFL Grand Final.

Background

In 1929, the VFL competition consisted of twelve teams of 18 on-the-field players each, with no "reserves", although any of the 18 players who had left the playing field for any reason could later resume their place on the field at any time during the match.

Teams played each other in a home-and-away season of 18 rounds; matches 12 to 18 were the "home-and-away reverse" of matches 1 to 7.

Once the 18 round home-and-away season had finished, the 1929 VFL Premiers were determined by the specific format and conventions of the amended "Argus system".

Home-and-away season

Round 1

Round 2

Round 3

Round 4

Round 5

Round 6

Round 7

Round 8

Round 9

Round 10

Round 11

Round 12

Round 13

Round 14

Round 15

Round 16

Round 17

Round 18

Ladder

(P)Premiers
Qualified for finals
# Team P W L D PF PA  % Pts
1Collingwood (P)18180019181117171.772
2Carlton18153015891161136.960
3Richmond18125117031399121.750
4St Kilda18126014931146130.348
5Melbourne18116112281164105.546
6Essendon189811349140596.038
7Geelong18810011751082108.632
8South Melbourne1871101338157884.828
9Footscray1861111268146486.626
10Hawthorn1841401170152276.916
11Fitzroy1831501340182773.312
12North Melbourne1811701070177660.24

Rules for classification: 1. premiership points; 2. percentage; 3. points for
Average score: 77.0
Source: AFL Tables

Finals series

All of the 1929 finals were played at the MCG so the home team in the semi-finals and Preliminary Final is purely the higher ranked team from the ladder but in the Grand Final the home team was the team that won the Preliminary Final.

Semi-finals

Preliminary final

Grand final

Season notes

  • Collingwood set many records during the 1929 season, including:
    • First team to remain undefeated through an entire home-and away season (never matched, although Essendon came close – with just one loss – in 2000). However, given that they lost the second semi-final to Richmond, they were not undefeated for the entire season.
    • In three seasons, 1927, 1928, and 1929, the team had played 61 matches, for 53 wins, 1 draw, and 7 losses.
    • First team to score more than 2,000 points in a single season.
    • First team to have a full-forward scoring more than 100 goals in a single season.
    • First team to have a player kick 16 goals in a single match.
    • First team to be VFL premiers on eight occasions.
  • On 18 June 1929 the VFL was incorporated as a public company, and it purchased a three-storey building (later named Harrison House after Henry Harrison who died later that year, on 2 September) on the corner of Spring Street and Flinders Lane.
  • Clarrie Hearn of Essendon won the 1929 130-yard Stawell Gift in eleven and fifteen sixteenths of a second (approx. 11.94 seconds), off a handicap of 10 yards.
  • Footscray's 23 effective scoring shots (7 goals and 16 behinds) against Hawthorn in the third quarter of their Round 6 match remains the most scoring shots by a team in one quarter.
    • Footscray's 16 behinds in that quarter has been equalled only by Collingwood against North Melbourne in the third quarter in Round 6, 1970.

Awards

References

  1. "League Second Eighteens". The Argus. Melbourne. 27 September 1929. p. 15.
  • Maplestone, M., Flying Higher: History of the Essendon Football Club 1872–1996, Essendon Football Club, (Melbourne), 1996. ISBN 0-9591740-2-8
  • 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

Sources

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.