From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| 1924 VFL season |

Essendon's premiership captain-coach Syd Barker |
| Clubs |
9 |
| Home-and-Away Season |
18 rounds (two byes per club) |
| Premiership Team |
Essendon (6th
premiership) |
| Minor Premiers |
Essendon
(4th) |
| Brownlow Medalist |
Edward Greeves (Geelong) |
| VFL Leading Goalkicker |
Jack
Moriarty (82) |
Results and statistics for the Victorian Football League
season of 1924.
Premiership
season
In 1924, the VFL competition consisted of nine 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.
Each team played each other twice in a home-and-away season of
18 rounds (i.e., 16 matches and 2 byes).
Once the 18 round home-and-away season had finished, the 1924
VFL Premiers were determined by the specific format and
conventions of the 1897 round-robin format which
the VFL had experimentally reinstated for the 1924 season
alone.
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
League
Ladder
1924 Round-Robin
Premiership Competition
In 1924, there was no "Grand Final" match, because the VFL
experimented with the reinstatement of the round-robin format it had used in
its inaugural 1897 season to determine the premiership. The
format did not live up to expectations, and the VFL reverted to the
"amended Argus system"
format for the 1925 season.
Essendon finished on top of the ladder at the conclusion of the
round-robin final
series on the basis of its greater percentage; and, as a
consequence, Essendon was awarded the 1924 premiership.
Round-Robin
Premiership Competition Ladder
Round-Robin
Premiership Competition Team Squads
The experiment with the 1897 round-robin format, with no "Grand
Final", also meant that there were no "Grand Final" teams in
1924;[1])
instead there was an "Essendon Finals Squad", a "Fitzroy Finals
Squad", a "Richmond Finals Squad", and a "South Melbourne Finals
Squad". Listed in alphabetical order the four squads were:
- Essendon Squad: Fred Baring, Syd Barker, Sr. (captain), Norm Beckton, Clyde
Donaldson, Charlie Farrell, Tom
Fitzmaurice, Jack
Garden, Harry
Gregory, Charlie
Hardy, Harry
Hunter, Tommy
Jenkins, Roy Laing,
Frank Maher, Charlie May, Justin McCarthy, George Rawle, George Shorten,
Greg
Stockdale, Jimmy Sullivan, and Rowley Watt.
- Fitzroy Squad: Bill Adams, Jim Atkinson
(captain), Arthur Batchelor, Les Bryant, Charlie
Chapman, Goldie
Collins, Tommy
Corrigan, Arch Dickens, Steve Donnellan, Ern Elliott, Clive
Fergie, Jimmy
Freake, Len Gale, Tom Hickey, Horrie Jenkin, Gordon
McCracken, Stan Molan, Jack Moriarty, Gordon Rattray, Jim Tarbolton, Len Wigraft, and Fred
Williams.
- Richmond Squad: Jack Barnett, Ted
Bourke, Ralph Empey, Clarrie Hall, Joe Harrison, Doug Hayes,
Gordon Hislop, Max
Hislop, Jim Karthaus, Bob McCaskill, Norm McIntosh, Angus MacIsaac, Keith Millar, Dan Minogue (captain),
Mel Morris, Reuben
Reid, George
Rudolph, James Smith,
Jim Spain, Ernie
Taylor, Vic Thorp,
and George
Valentine.
- South Melbourne Squad: Harry Alexander, Bobby
Allison, Phil Brooks, Martin Brown, Roy Cazaly (captain), Bill Condon, Fred Fleiter, Arthur
Hando, Jacky Harris, Ted Johnson, Tom Joyce, Frank
Laird, Harold Mahony, Herb Matthews, Bob McDonald, Charles
McDonald, Gil Miller, Charlie Nicholls, Jack O'Connell, Ted
O'Meara, Frank Ross, Joe
Scanlan, Paddy
Scanlan, Mark Tandy,
and Les Woodfield.
Awards
Notable
events
- Charles Brownlow dies on 23 January 1924;
the Charles Brownlow Trophy, more commonly known
as the "Brownlow
Medal", is instituted in his memory. The trophy is to be
awarded to "the fairest and best player" in the VFL as determined
by the votes of each field umpire at the end of each home-and-away
match. In 1924, there was a single vote cast per match (Greeves won
the inaugural medal with a total of 7 votes).
- Bill
Twomey, Sr. who played for Collingwood (1918-1922) and
would play for Hawthorn (1933-1934) — the
father of Collingwood's Bill Twomey (1945-1958), Pat Twomey (1947-1949;
1952-1953), and Mick
Twomey (1951-1961), and the grandfather of Collingwood's David
Twomey (1987-1995) — wins the 1924, 130-yard Stawell Gift in 12.1
seconds, off a handicap of 8½ yards.
- The VFL adopts the convention of "home" teams wearing black
shorts and "away" teams wearing white shorts.
- The 1924 Premiership was determined by a round-robin system for
the first time since the 1897 VF Premiership. This
meant that Essendon, who were easily beaten by Richmond 9.13 (67)
to 6.11 (47) in the last of their three matches, went on to become
premiers because their percentage (142.7%) was higher than that of
Richmond (115.5%). This system was never used again.
- Many of the Essendon players had been far from happy at the
poor performances of some of their team-mates against Richmond and
there were heated arguments and fist-fights in the rooms after the
match, as well as after a post-match function later that evening,
related to accusations of "tanking" and receiving bribes.
- The following Saturday, Essendon (in its role as 1924 VFL
Premiers) was challenged by 1924 VFA Premiers Footscray
Football Club to a match in aid of Dame Nellie Melba's
Disabled Soldiers' Fund, purportedly (but not officially) for
the championship of Victoria. Footscray unexpectedly thrashed
Essendon 9.10 (64) to 4.12 (36). Again there were accusations of
"tanking" and bribery and fist-fights in the change-rooms. The
Essendon team almost did not take the field for the second half of
the match. Champion centre half-back Tom Fitzmaurice was so disgusted with
many of his team-mates having, in his view, deliberately lost the
match, he never played again for Essendon.
References
- ^
because one of the last pair of round-robin matches that were
played on Saturday 27 September 1924 — Richmond vs. Essendon, at
the Lake Oval, and South
Melbourne vs. Fitzroy, at the Melbourne Cricket Ground — was
between Essendon and Richmond, the eventual premiers and runners up
respectively, the Richmond-Essendon match is sometimes mistakenly
(and anachronistically) spoken of as being a "Grand Final"
- Hogan P: The Tigers Of Old, Richmond FC, (Melbourne),
1996. ISBN 0-646-18748-1
- 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
External
links