1979 VFA season explained

Above:1979 VFA Premiership Season
Label1:Teams
Data1:20
Header2:Division 1
Label3:Teams
Data3:10
Label4:Premiers
Data4:Coburg
(4th premiership)
Label5:Minor premiers
Data5:Geelong West
(2nd minor premiership)
Header6:Division 2
Label7:Teams
Data7:10
Label8:Premiers
Data8:Camberwell
(1st D2 premiership)
Label9:Minor premiers
Data9:Camberwell
(1st D2 minor premiership)

The 1979 Victorian Football Association season was the 98th season of the top division of the Australian rules football competition, and the 19th season of second division competition. The Division 1 premiership was won by the Coburg Football Club, after it defeated Geelong West in the Grand Final on 23 September by eight points; it was Coburg's fourth Division 1 premiership, and its first since 1928, ending a 51-year Division 1 premiership drought. The Division 2 premiership was won by Camberwell; it was the first premiership in either division ever won by the club since its admission to the Association in 1926, 53 years earlier.

Division 1

The Division 1 home-and-away season was played over 18 rounds; the top four then contested the finals under the Page–McIntyre system. The finals were played at the Junction Oval.

Awards

Division 2

The Division 2 home-and-away season was played over eighteen rounds; the top four then contested the finals under the Page–McIntyre system; all finals were played on Sundays at Toorak Park.

Awards

Notable events

NFL Night Series

The top two Association clubs from 1977 – Prahran and Preston – were invited to participate in the NFL Night Series, known this year as the Escort Cup. Neither club progressed to the night portion of the series, both eliminated in the first round by their SANFL opponents in a double-header played at Preston City Oval on Anzac Day:[2]

It was the final NFL Night series, as it was entirely superseded by the rival AFC Night Series in 1980, in which the Association clubs were not invited to compete.

Interleague matches

The Association played an interleague representative match against Queensland for the third consecutive season; it was the Association's first home representative match on an Association ground since 1965.[3] The team was coached by Mick Erwin (Prahran).

After having lost away matches against Queensland in both 1977 and 1978, the Association won this year's match easily. Queensland did not register its first score until the second quarter, by which stage the Association had already scored 9.13 (67), and the final margin was 154 points.

Other notable events

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: The Age. Melbourne. Marc Fiddian. 32, 29. 30 August 1979. Aanensen's Liston ends Port drought.
  2. Web site: NFL Night Series – 1977–79. David Eastman. 5 June 2014. https://web.archive.org/web/20140315214511/http://www.hardballget.net/nfl-night-series-1977-79.html. 15 March 2014. dead. dmy-all.
  3. News: The Age. Melbourne. Marc Fiddian. 38. 16 June 1979. VFA homes in on its image.
  4. News: The Age. Melbourne. Marc Fiddian. 29. 4 June 1979. Two-Blues charge in.
  5. News: The Age. Melbourne. Marc Fiddian. 27. 25 June 1979. Bears in on last growl.
  6. News: The Age. Melbourne. Marc Fiddian. 28. 5 July 1979. Preston loses points.
  7. News: The Age. Melbourne. Marc Fiddian. 26. 20 July 1979. Bendigo 'no' to VFA.
  8. News: The Age. Melbourne. Marc Fiddian. 30. 15 August 1979. Bottoms down – 10.
  9. Fiddian, Marc (2004); The VFA; A History of the Victorian Football Association 1877–1995; p. 41
  10. News: The Age. Melbourne. VFA player out for life. 29 August 1979. 30. Marc Fiddian.