1960 VFA season explained

Competition:VFA Premiership season
Year:1960 VFA
Teams:17
Premiers:Oakleigh
Count:5
Minor Premiers:Sandringham
Mpcount:1
Prevseason:1959
Nextseason:1961

The 1960 Victorian Football Association season was the 79th season of the Australian rules football competition. The premiership was won by the Oakleigh Football Club, after it defeated Sandringham in the Grand Final on 1 October by 60 points. It was Oakleigh's fifth premiership.

The season was the first in which Association premiership matches were played on Sunday afternoons, a change which dramatically increased the Association's popularity over the following decades.

Association membership

The Prahran Football Club was re-admitted to the Association in 1960, bringing the number of teams to seventeen. Prahran had been expelled in 1959 when the Prahran Council leased Toorak Park to the Victorian Rugby Union on alternate Saturdays, leaving the football club unable to meet the Association's minimum home ground requirements, but the club was re-admitted once it had secured a winter-long lease for the ground.[1]

It was speculated that the Association would admit an eighteenth team to avoid the need for a bye in the fixture, and because it had previously announced its strategic intention to expand to twenty teams.[2] Several groups interested in applying for the Association were mentioned in the press during 1959, including the North Geelong Football Club,[3] the Altona City Council[4] and a group of locals from Broadmeadows;[5] but, ultimately the Association did not find a club with suitable facilities, so the membership remained at seventeen clubs.[6]

Sunday football

On 1 April 1960, the Association approved for the first time the playing of VFA premiership matches on Sunday afternoons.[7] Amateur football and charity and practice matches had been played on Sundays in Melbourne before, but top level commercial senior football had not. Playing on Sunday had long been seen as a strong opportunity for the Association to improve its popularity, as it would not be competing for gate takings with the Victorian Football League, which was played entirely on Saturdays; however, Sunday trading was still decades away from being legal, and neither councils nor communities widely approved of playing professional and commercial sport on Sundays. The Association had formally considered and rejected playing on Sundays twice before, most recently in 1957 (when night football was introduced as an alternative timeslot in which the Association would not be competing with League matches).[8]

Although the Association approved Sunday matches, it did not formally schedule any to be played. Instead, clubs were given free rein to move any Saturday game to Sunday, provided there was mutual agreement between the clubs involved, and it was approved by the grounds management committee and the local council; additionally, the Association committed to donating 25% of Sunday gates to charity.[9] The number of games on any given Sunday in 1960 varied from none to as many as three.[10]

The first Sunday game was played on 24 April between Brunswick and Coburg; the match, which also happened to the Brunswick's first match back at Brunswick Oval after its redevelopment in 1959, drew a crowd of 17,000, Brunswick's highest home crowd since the 1930s; Coburg 12.17 (89) defeated Brunswick 9.17 (71).[11] Other Sunday matches drew huge crowds: on 15 May, Northcote drew a larger crowd to a rain-affected Sunday match than it had drawn to any dry weather Saturday match for more than five years;[12] and on 17 July, a Sunday game between ladder-leaders Oakleigh and winless Prahran, which would normally have roused little interest due to its one-sided nature, drew a gate of £310, compared with the combined gate of £391 for all seven of that weekend's Saturday games.[13]

Despite the successful crowds, the matches were not universally accepted in 1960. Nine of the seventeen councils had approved Sunday matches within six weeks of the VFA announcing them,[14] but some councils were slower to move – the Box Hill council, for example, did not approve Sunday matches until 1969. The Sandringham Football Club committee voted not to play any matches on Sundays during 1960.[15] Yarraville played before large Sunday crowds early in the season, but refused requests and opted for smaller Saturday crowds later in the year because one of its star players, Geoff Williams, was unavailable to play on Sundays and it didn't want to jeopardise its premiership chances by playing without him.[16] Another consequence of the Association playing on Sundays was a significant reduction in attendances at amateur games, which had previously been the highest level of football played on Sunday.

Sunday football went on to provide the most significant and lasting popularity boost to the Association since the throw-pass era in the 1930s and 1940s. By the early 1970s, almost all Association matches were played on Sunday, and the State Government refused to allow the League to play its matches on Sunday, meaning that the two competitions were no longer competing for the same gate. This fixturing segregation between the competitions continued until 1979, when the VFL began playing occasional televised matches in Sydney on Sundays; this was followed by the South Melbourne Football Club moving permanently Sydney in 1982 and playing all home games on Sunday, followed by progressively introducing Sunday VFL matches in Victoria through the mid-1980s.[17]

Premiership

With seventeen teams, the format of the season changed from previous years. The home-and-home season lasted for twenty weeks, arranged as nineteen rounds with one of those rounds split across two weekends. Each team played eighteen home-and-home matches with one bye – except for Prahran and Brighton, who each had two byes, but played an extra match (against each other) during the split round.[18]

The top six teams then qualified for the finals series; in all previous years since the introduction of finals in 1903, four teams had played finals. Under the new final six system, used only in this season:

Ladder

1960 VFA ladder
TEAM P W L D PF PA Pct PTS
1Sandringham1815302133942226.460
2Oakleigh (P)18153018261088167.860
3Yarraville18143115841085145.958
4Williamstown18144019451066154.356
5Coburg18135017521218143.852
6Moorabbin18126017161270134.950
7Mordialloc18117013771254109.844
8Port Melbourne1898114811300113.938
9Brunswick189901246127298036
10Box Hill189901381143096.636
11Dandenong1881001326144391.932
12Northcote1861111295166577.026
13Sunshine1841311171162072.318
14Preston1841401112155771.416
15Camberwell1841401163174366.716
16Brighton183150977213145.812
17Prahran181170871194844.74
Key: P = Played, W = Won, L = Lost, D = Drawn, PF = Points For, PA = Points Against, Pct = Percentage; (P) = Premiers, PTS = Premiership pointsSource[19] [20]

Finals

Awards

Notable events

1960 Minor States Carnival

As a result of finishing last in the 1958 Melbourne Carnival, the Association was relegated to Division 2 of the ANFC championships. The 1960 Minor States Carnival was held in Sydney during 1960, with the winner then playing off a month later against the Australian Amateurs, winners of the Division 2 competition in 1958, in Canberra for promotion to Division 1. Matches were played with the national standard eighteen players per team, rather than the sixteen players used under Association rules. Brunswick's Jim Whiley captained the VFA team.[23]

The Association team dominated the Sydney Carnival, winning all three games by more than 100 points; it then defeated the Amateurs by 26 points in the playoff match.

Other notable events

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Prahran gets Toorak Oval. 52. 6 October 1959. Melbourne, VIC.
  2. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Ballarat, Bendigo in V.F.A. plan to expand. Noel Carrick. 29. 2 July 1956. Melbourne, VIC.
  3. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. VFA move by North Geelong. Scot Palmer. 33. 6 July 1959. Melbourne, VIC.
  4. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Altona plans bid to join the VFA. Scot Palmer. 46. 12 May 1959. Melbourne, VIC.
  5. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. VFA moves at Broadmeadows. 59. 30 October 1959. Melbourne, VIC.
  6. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. VFA postpones its two-division plan. Scot Palmer. 62. 21 October 1959. Melbourne, VIC.
  7. News: The Age. Melbourne, VIC. 16. 2 April 1960. V.F.A. approves Sunday games.
  8. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Few councils want Sunday VFA games. Scot Palmer. 47. 18 August 1959. Melbourne, VIC.
  9. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. 60. 3 May 1960. VFA "only using charity...".
  10. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. 1 July 1960. Week-end's Association sides. 39. Melbourne, VIC.
  11. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. 30. Scot Palmer. 23 April 1960. One Sunday game draws 17,000.
  12. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. 53. Scot Palmer. 16 May 1960. Northcote scores with gate.
  13. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. 41. 18 July 1960. £310 gate on Sunday.
  14. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. 61. Scot Palmer. 18 March 1960. More VFA clubs get Sunday 'OK'.
  15. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. 51. 6 May 1960. Sandy. will not play on Sunday.
  16. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. 52. Scot Palmer. 3 August 1960. Coburg angry: VFA Sunday game put off.
  17. The VFA and the search for an identity. Paul Bartrop. Sporting Traditions. 74–87. 1986. The Australian Society for Sports History. 2. 2.
  18. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. 5 December 1959. Melbourne, VIC. VFA draw, 1960. 59.
  19. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. 29 August 1960. Two VFA finals on same day. 47. Melbourne, VIC. Scot Palmer.
  20. News: The Age. Melbourne, VIC. 20. 29 August 1960. Association details.
  21. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. 31 August 1960. Box Hill star wins Liston. 60. Melbourne, VIC. Scot Palmer.
  22. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. 10 September 1959. Dand'nong winner in Liston. 40. Melbourne, VIC. Scot Palmer.
  23. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. 47. Scot Palmer. 7 June 1961. Town's Smith to lead VFA.
  24. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. 54. Scot Palmer. 10 March 1960. Oakleigh football's new home.
  25. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. 61. Scot Palmer. 24 August 1960. Oakleigh loses use of ground.
  26. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. 54. 2 September 1960. Oakleigh will train at Albert Park.
  27. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. 64. 17 August 1960. VFA player is out till 1962.
  28. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. 50. 23 August 1960. VFA stands to lose £1200.
  29. News: The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. 55. 30 August 1960. VFA protest is upheld.