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The 1930 VFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football
game contested between the Collingwood Football Club and
Geelong Football Club, held at
the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Melbourne on 11 October
1930. It was the 34th annual Grand Final of the
Victorian Football League,
staged to determine the premiers for
the 1930 VFL
season.
|
1st |
2nd |
3rd |
Final |
| Collingwood |
3.2 |
3.7 |
11.13 |
14.16 (100) |
| Geelong |
2.5 |
6.10 |
6.11 |
9.16 (70) |
Background
The Great
Depression had taken hold by the 1930 VFL season, and, for many, sport
was a rare diversion from dire circumstances. While Don Bradman and
Phar Lap enthralled the cricket and racing worlds
respectively, the residents of Collingwood, many of whom were
made virtually destitute, were inspired by the Collingwood Football
Club, who had won the previous three flags and were now to contend
for their fourth.
Stan Judkins (Richmond), Allan Hopkins (Footscray) and Harry Collier (Collingwood) all finished
with an equal number of votes in the Brownlow Medal. The Umpires Board (which
administered the award) recommended that no medal be awarded as
there was no provision for a tied result. However, the VFL
administration over-ruled the umpires board and created a criterion
that the medal should be awarded to the player who played the least
number of games. Judkins' banishment to the seconds had won him the
award. Adding to the controversy, one vote for a Collingwood game
was simply labeled "Collier", but as there were two Collier
brothers playing in the game, the vote wasn't counted. To avoid
situations like this in the future the rules were altered to a
3-2-1 system in 1931. In 1989, Hopkins and Collier, while both
still living, were awarded a Brownlow Medal retrospectively for
their performances in the 1930 VFL season.
The Magpies finished on top of the ladder with 15 wins and 3
losses. Carlton was highly fancied to
finish on top after winning 13 of their first 14 home-and-away
games, but in losing 2 of their last 4 games, they finished second.
Richmond , Geelong and Melbourne filled the next 3
spots, all on 11 wins. Geelong beat a woefully inaccurate Carlton
in the First Semi-Final, while in the Second Semi-Final Collingwood
beat their old rival in Richmond in a thriller by 3 points.
Collingwood met Geelong in the Final, and, as minor premiers, they
had a right to another game if defeated. They were required to
exercise this right after Geelong won by 26 points.
Teams
Match
summary
Collingwood’s famous coach, Jock McHale, could not attend the 1930
Grand Final, being confined to bed with the flu. Veteran administrator and former
premiership player Bob Rush took charge
in his place.
The Magpies started the match aggressively, and seemed too intent
on playing the man. The Cats, however, focused on the ball and
kicked the goals. Their pace and work in the air saw them leading
by 21 points at half time.
At half time, Rush delivered what Harry Collier recalled was one of
the most inspirational speeches that he had ever heard, and the
team produced one of the most dominant and important quarters in
the club’s history, coming from a 27-point deficit to lead by 32 at
3-quarter time. Goals came from ‘Nuts’ Coventry, Makeham, H Collier
and Beveridge. Geelong had become “listless and ragged whereas
Collingwood were tearing along in their best style”. The Sun described the
club’s third term as “one of the finest ever seen in football… it
was an object lesson to every team in rising to the occasion after
being apparently beaten, and by sheer grit and magnificent
teamwork, sweeping down every obstacle in their way of finals
success.”
Both teams kicked 3 goals in the final quarter, the Magpies winning
their 4th premiership in a row by 30 points.
The
Machine
The 1930 flag was Collingwood’s ninth premiership victory. In
winning 4 premierships in a row from 1927-1930 they set a record
that has not been equaled to date. The teams from this era became
known as “The Machine” for the teamwork, efficiency and
effectiveness with which they played.
- Umpire - Bob Scott
- Attendance - 45,022
- Gate - ₤2,061
| Best |
Collingwood |
Makeham, G Coventry, Murphy, Clayden, Andrew, H Collier, S Coventry, Chesswas |
|
Geelong |
Troughton,
Llewellyn, Evans, Mockridge, Carney, Todd, P Hardiman |
| Goals |
Collingwood |
G
Coventry (7), Makeham (2), H Collier, Beveridge, Edmonds, Froude |
|
Geelong |
Troughton (3), Llewellyn (2), Kuhlken, Rayson, Williams, L Hardiman |
See also
References
- 1930 VFL Grand Final
statistics
- The Official statistical history of the AFL 2004
- 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
- Atkinson, Graeme: The Complete Book of AFL Finals,
1996. ISBN 1875971475
- McFarlane, Glenn and Roberts, Michael: The Machine - The
Inside Story of Football's Greatest Team, 2005. ISBN
0958641234