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1987 VFA season

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
106th season of the Victorian Football Association

VFA season
1987 VFA season
Date12 April – 20 September 1987
Teams22
Division 1
Teams10
PremiersSpringvale
1st D1 premiership
Minor premiersPort Melbourne
14th D1 minor premiership
RelegatedGeelong West
J. J. Liston TrophyBarry Round
(Williamstown – 19 votes)
Leading goalkickerBen Weatherald
(Coburg – 73 goals)
Division 2
Teams12
PremiersPrahran
2nd D2 premiership
Minor premiersWerribee
1st D2 minor premiership
J. Field MedalPeter Rogerson
(Waverley – 19 votes)
Leading goalkickerRino Pretto
(Oakleigh – 96 goals)
Attendance
Matches played186 (D1: 91;D2: 95)
Highest (finals)19,620 (D1 Grand Final,Springvale vsPort Melbourne)
← 1986
1988 →

The1987 VFA season was the 106th season of the top division of theVictorian Football Association (VFA), and the 27th season of second division competition.

The Division 1 premiership was won by theSpringvale Football Club, after it defeatedPort Melbourne in the Grand Final on 20 September by 38 points; it was Springvale's first Division 1 premiership, won in just its fourth season in the first division. The Division 2 premiership was won byPrahran; it was the club's second Division 2 premiership, and the last premiership ever won by the club in either division.

The 1987 season was tumultuous on and off the field, with three separate clubs –Moorabbin,Geelong West andCaulfield – suspended from the Association at different times during the year.

FORT review

[edit]

In mid-1986, the Association organised the Football Organisation Review Team (FORT), which was tasked with reviewing the medium and long term structure of the Association and how it would fit within the wider Victorian football landscape.[1] The FORT comprised: Association president and formerBrunswick president Brook Andersen; former Association and Brunswick presidentAlex Gillon;North MelbourneCEO and formerNational Football League consultant John Adams; with consultation from state minister for sports and recreation and formerGeelong playerNeil Trezise.[2] The FORT was givencarte blanche to review how best to structure the Association into the future.

Context

[edit]

The Association, particularly its weakest clubs, had been in decline for about a decade, struggling with theVictorian Football League (VFL) entering the Sunday football market, rising costs, loss of television coverage, reduced access to former League players, and demographic shifts in former heartland municipalities.[3][4] The Association had been working since 1980 to improve its overall viability, having discussed various affiliation models with the League in1980,[5] and undergone restructures of the divisional system in both1982[6] and 1984, but about half of the Association's clubs were still struggling and long-term viability was a concern to the Association executive.

The VFL was also going through dramatic changes which were altering the wider football landscape in Victoria. In October 1986, the League admitted newly established clubs based in Perth (theWest Coast Eagles) and south-eastern Queensland (theBrisbane Bears).[7] At the same time, as many as half of the League's eleven Victorian-based clubs were in severe or impending financial trouble:South Melbourne had moved to Sydney in 1982 due to its financial troubles,[8]Fitzroy had fielded offers from Brisbane- and Canberra-based consortiums for a potential relocation in 1987,[9] andSt Kilda,Richmond andFootscray were all struggling off the field – in some cases, the clubs were solvent only because of the dividend they received from the multimillion-dollar licence fees charged to the new clubs, and from the proceeds earned when the Sydney Swans club was sold toDr Geoffrey Edelsten in 1985.[7] Thereafter followed wide speculation about further national expansion of the VFL, with expressions of interest from private consortiums, leagues and clubs in Adelaide, Canberra, Fremantle and Tasmania, and speculation that the struggling Victorian clubs would relocate, merge or fold.[10] As such, the future composition of the League was very uncertain at the time, but it was considered realistic that within only a few years, the League could have expanded to a fully national competition, with a reduction in the number of Victorian-based clubs competing.

FORT recommendations

[edit]
Map of clubs at the time of the FORT review. Teams shown with blue dots or arrows were included in the FORT's new Division 1; teams shown with red dots were excluded.
Note: the backdrop of this map is greater Melbourne ca. 2011; it includes roads and local government boundaries which did not exist until well after 1987

The FORT concluded that with the potential rapid nationalisation of the League, the Association would be well placed to take the position as the top state-based competition in Victoria, sitting underneath the League and serving as a development ground and reserves competition for its Victorian clubs – similar to how theWest Australian Football League was organised underneath the West Coast Eagles. To do this effectively, the Association would be best structured as a single division of twelve strong, viable clubs, withpromotion and relegation abandoned permanently. The FORT named its twelve clubs, based upon a number of off-field criteria including tradition, location, quality of facilities, and level of support from locals, councils and sponsors. The twelve clubs named were: from Division 1,Box Hill,Coburg,Frankston,Geelong West,Port Melbourne,Preston,Sandringham andWilliamstown; from Division 2,Dandenong,Oakleigh andPrahran; and a new club based in Ringwood. Under the proposal, the second division would continue, but it would now be a suburban league operating under the auspices of the Victorian Metropolitan Football League, with no prospects of promotion to Division 1. The eleven clubs who were excluded from the FORT's vision were: Division 1 clubsBrunswick andSpringvale; and Division 2 clubsBerwick,Camberwell,Caulfield,Moorabbin,Mordialloc,Northcote,Sunshine,Waverley andWerribee.[2]

The FORT sought to implement this change by 1988, but needed a three-quarters majority from a vote of the Board of Management to achieve a formal mandate, which would have required several of the excluded clubs to vote in favour of their own exclusion.[11]Springvale, which was undergoing a strong recruiting campaign which ultimately delivered it the 1987 premiership, andSunshine, which had enjoyed a resurgence in recent years and was in the process of securing $350,000 from the council to upgradeSkinner Reserve, were both worried that the uncertainty generated by the FORT recommendations might jeopardise those ventures, so those clubs led the public campaign against the changes;[12] within a fortnight, they claimed to have thirteen clubs onside to oppose the changes.[11] By April 1987, Andersen recognised that he did not have enough support to get the changes through, and it was never formally put to the vote.[13]

The FORT also recommended that the Association's Board of Management, which was the primary decision-making body within the Association, be restructured. Since the Association's foundation, the Board had been formed from club delegates, the consequence being that the Association could pass changes only if a majority of clubs voted for them. The FORT recommended an independent board comprising five delegates: three elected by Division 1 clubs, one elected by Division 2 clubs, and one from theVFL Commission. This would allow the Board to make more difficult decisions in the interest of the Association as a whole, rather than rely on clubs who could vote down changes on self-interest.[2] The motion for an independent board was put to the vote on 5 May 1987, and fell one vote short of the three-quarters majority it required, with 17–7 in favour.[14] A second vote was held in July, with the size of the proposed board expanded to six,[15] but it this time it was comfortably voted down by a 10–14 margin.[16] The independent board of management was eventually approved in March 1988.[17]

Aftermath

[edit]

Although the FORT's structural recommendations were never formally mandated, eight clubs left or were forced out of the Association within only 2½ years of the review, with most of those clubs placing part of the blame on the fall-out from the FORT review. Andersen and the rest of the Association executive made it clear that they were still strategically in favour of the FORT's vision, which created uncertainty about whether the second division had a future:Berwick andMordialloc both saw this uncertainty as reason to withdraw from the Association and return to suburban football;[18][19] and players and sponsors saw this uncertainty as a reason to abandon weaker clubs, severely affecting clubs likeCaulfield.[20] Many clubs also expressed bitterness upon their departures that they felt that the Association executive became more willing to allow weaker clubs to decline and fail without intervening, in order to allow the Association to progress naturally towards the FORT's vision.[21]

Within only six years, the Association had contracted to the point where it almost matched the FORT's vision. The second division was abandoned at the start of 1989, and by 1991 there were only twelve teams remaining in the Association: ten were among the twelve clubs named by the FORT, with excluded clubsSpringvale andWerribee surviving in place ofGeelong West and the proposed Ringwood club. However, the VFL's national expansion and rationalisation of its Victorian clubs did not progress as far or as quickly as FORT had speculated: by 1994, all eleven Victorian clubs were still competing in the League, and only one new interstate club, theAdelaide Crows, had joined; and even as late as 2010 there were still ten Victorian clubs and only six interstate clubs. The Association ended up becoming the top Victorian state-level competition following an administrative change in1995, but it was not until 2000, a full thirteen years after the review, that the Association finally fulfilled the FORT's vision ofmerging with the League reserves.[22]

Club suspensions

[edit]

Three clubs were suspended from the Association at different stages during the year:Moorabbin,Geelong West andCaulfield.

Moorabbin

[edit]

On Thursday 23 April, three days before Round 3,Moorabbin coach Graham Stewart resigned from the club over a number of disagreements with the board. The exact nature of the disagreements was not widely publicised, but they covered a range of areas in the management of the club and team, including player payments.[23] Ten senior players immediately walked out in support of Stewart.[24]

Lacking players willing to play, the club forfeited its Round 3 games againstOakleigh in all three grades.[25] The Association issued an ultimatum to Moorabbin that if it could not field a team in all three grades, it would be suspended from the competition.[24] Former Oakleigh premiership player Tom Quinn was appointed coach on 29 April,[26] but the club was unable to coax enough players back, and it forfeited its Round 4 matches againstSunshine.[27] As such, on 6 May, the Association executive committee suspended Moorabbin from the firsts and Seconds competitions for the remainder of the season; the rest of Moorabbin's games were treated as forfeitures.[28] The club ultimately never sought readmission to the competition in 1988, and folded, bringing to an end a brief tenure of just over four seasons in the Association.

Geelong West

[edit]

Although it was identified as one of the future Division 1 clubs under the FORT's proposal, Geelong West had been in decline throughout the 1980s. By 1987, the three local Corio District football leagues – theGFL,GDFL andBFL – were held in higher regard within Geelong than the Association was, meaning that local clubs attracted larger crowds and better sponsorship and could offer higher player payments than Geelong West. Additionally, many Geelong-based players preferred to play a Saturday afternoon game locally, rather than play a Sunday afternoon game and be required to travel to Melbourne every second week. Geelong West's minor grades had been suffering the consequences of this for many years – the thirds in particular had been routinely thrashed by more than 300 points since the early 1980s – but by 1987 the senior team was also suffering.[29] After six weeks, the club was sitting winless in last place, was struggling to draw crowds and was in a poor financial position.

On Friday 29 May, the Geelong West playing group forfeited its Round 7 games in all three grades, seeking to make a highly public gesture to call attention to the club's ailing viability and lack of players. It was also speculated and reported that the players were striking over $15,000 in match payments collectively owed to the group at the time; it was confirmed that this money was owing, but the players denied this was the motivation for the forfeiture.[30] The players had reportedly been planning the boycott for about a month before enacting it. The following week, a public appeal began to raise money for and encourage local players to play for the club, using the club's position as one of the city's most historically successful local clubs over a period of more than 100 years to gain support.[31] On 10 June, the Association intervened: it gave the club until 30 June to prove that it was financially viable and could reliably field teams in all three grades, or it would face suspension for the rest of the year; and, the club was provisionally suspended until it could prove those two things.[32]

The club's public appeal was successful in raising funds, and players including former Geelong West champions Joe Radojevic,Warwick Yates and Sylvester Kranjc were willing to play with the club to help it survive, even if it meant playing games on consecutive days: for their local clubs on Saturday and for Geelong West on Sunday. The final impediment was that a special transfer agreement needed to be signed between the Association and the local leagues to enable those players to make the weekly transfer between clubs beyond the normaltransfer deadline of 30 June; this was agreed to, Geelong West's suspension was lifted, and the club returned to competition in Round 10.[33][34]

Geelong West drew with second-placedFrankston in its first game back to gain its first points for the year,[35] but it went on to win only one more game and was relegated at the end of the year. The club lasted one more season in the Association, before withdrawing after the 1988 season.

Caulfield

[edit]

In the final round of the home-and-away season,Sunshine was scheduled to playCaulfield in the Association's first ever Friday night game at the newly upgradedSkinner Reserve. At the same time, as a result of its financial difficulties, Caulfield had fallen behind on its affiliation levies, owing the Association $8,125 (including fines) after missing payments in July and August; the club had no cash reserves with which to pay, and the Association indicated in the week leading up to the match that the club faced suspension as a result.[36] The Association Board of Management determined that the Friday night match would go ahead, and that it would meet the following week to determine whether or not to suspend Caulfield; but, that it would reserve the right to apply a suspensionretroactively, potentially stripping Caulfield of any points it might earn against Sunshine.[37] Caulfield responded that it would not play the game unless the Association guaranteed that it would not apply a retroactive suspension; the Association did not give this assurance, so Caulfield forfeited the game, and was fined $1,500 as a result. Sunshine, which was angry with Caulfield after having invested money promoting the game, staged a match between the firsts and Seconds on the Friday night instead.[38] Caulfield never played another Association game, as it was later suspended for the 1988 season, which ultimately ended the club's time in the Association.[39]

Division 1

[edit]

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

Home-and-away season

[edit]

Round 1

[edit]
Round 1
Sunday, 12 April (2:10 pm)Preston 16.20 (116)def.Brunswick 15.21 (111)Preston City Oval
Sunday, 12 April (2:10 pm)Box Hill 15.14 (104)def. byPort Melbourne 20.23 (143)Box Hill City Oval
Sunday, 12 April (2:10 pm)Sandringham 11.11 (77)def. bySpringvale 22.21 (153)Beach Road Oval
Sunday, 12 April (2:10 pm)Geelong West 9.17 (71)def. byFrankston 21.19 (145)West Oval
Sunday, 12 April (2:10 pm)Williamstown 13.21 (99)def. byCoburg 16.17 (113)Williamstown Cricket Ground

Round 2

[edit]
Round 2
Sunday, 19 April (2:10 pm)Coburg 14.17 (101)def.Box Hill 8.9 (57)Coburg City Oval
Sunday, 19 April (2:10 pm)Frankston 10.15 (75)def.Preston 8.14 (62)Frankston Park
Sunday, 19 April (2:10 pm)Springvale 20.14 (134)def.Geelong West 4.6 (30)Springvale Reserve
Sunday, 19 April (2:10 pm)Port Melbourne 20.14 (134)def.Sandringham 11.14 (80)North Port Oval
Sunday, 19 April (2:10 pm)Brunswick 14.12 (96)def.Williamstown 5.18 (48)Gillon Oval

Round 3

[edit]
Round 3
Sunday, 26 April (2:10 pm)Preston 15.13 (103)def. bySpringvale 24.13 (157)Preston City Oval
Sunday, 26 April (2:10 pm)Geelong West 6.20 (56)def. byPort Melbourne 23.21 (159)West Oval
Sunday, 26 April (2:10 pm)Box Hill 10.10 (70)def. byWilliamstown 17.17 (119)Box Hill City Oval
Sunday, 26 April (2:10 pm)Sandringham 18.15 (123)def.Coburg 18.14 (122)Beach Road Oval
Sunday, 26 April (2:10 pm)Frankston 26.28 (184)def.Brunswick 15.17 (107)Frankston Park

Round 4

[edit]
Round 4
Sunday, 3 May (2:10 pm)Williamstown 21.16 (142)def.Sandringham 10.10 (70)Williamstown Cricket Ground
Sunday, 3 May (2:10 pm)Springvale 12.17 (89)def. byFrankston 21.16 (142)Springvale Reserve
Sunday, 3 May (2:10 pm)Port Melbourne 18.14 (122)def.Preston 11.23 (89)North Port Oval
Sunday, 3 May (2:10 pm)Coburg 24.13 (157)def.Geelong West 13.12 (90)Coburg City Oval
Sunday, 3 May (2:10 pm)Brunswick 15.16 (106)def.Box Hill 10.15 (75)Gillon Oval

Round 5

[edit]
Round 5
Sunday, 17 May (2:10 pm)Preston 14.10 (94)def.Coburg 8.21 (69)Preston City Oval
Sunday, 17 May (2:10 pm)Frankston 23.24 (162)def.Port Melbourne 9.12 (66)Frankston Park
Sunday, 17 May (2:10 pm)Sandringham 17.17 (119)def.Box Hill 12.17 (89)Beach Road Oval
Sunday, 17 May (2:10 pm)Geelong West 12.7 (79)def. byWilliamstown 27.18 (180)West Oval
Sunday, 17 May (2:10 pm)Brunswick 15.7 (97)def.Springvale 12.18 (90)Gillon Oval

Ladder

[edit]

Clubs who won on forfeit were awarded a win and four premiership points, credited with the round's average winning score as 'points for', and debited the round's average losing score as 'points against'. The ladder as it is shown here distinguishes wins by forfeiture from wins in completed matches, but not all sources make this distinction.

PosTeamPldWWFDLPFPA%PtsQualification
1Port Melbourne181400424141854130.256Finals series
2Springvale(P)181200620241511134.048
3Williamstown181100721411833116.844
4Frankston181001720331810112.342
5Coburg181000821831852117.940
6Brunswick1881091894204192.836
7Sandringham1881091875204791.636
8Preston1871191878206590.934
9Box Hill18401131672196885.018
10Geelong West15101131547252961.26Relegated toDivision 2
Source:[40][41]
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) percentage; 3) number of points for.
(P) Premiers

Finals

[edit]

Semi-finals

[edit]
Semi-finals
Sunday, 30 August (2:10 pm)Williamstown 19.15 (129)def.Frankston 14.14 (98)Junction Oval (crowd: 7,814)[42]
Sunday, 6 September (2:10 pm)Port Melbourne 12.9 (81)def. bySpringvale 15.12 (102)Junction Oval (crowd: 6,310)[43]

Preliminary final

[edit]
Preliminary final
Sunday, 13 September (2:10 pm)Port Melbourne 16.20 (116)def.Williamstown 14.12 (96)Junction Oval (crowd: 9,282)[44]

Grand Final

[edit]
1987 VFA Division 1 Grand Final
Sunday, 20 September (2:10 pm)Springvaledef.Port MelbourneJunction Oval (crowd: 19,620)[45]
3.3 (21)
9.8 (62)
10.10 (70)
14.16 (100)
Q1
Q2
Q3
Final
2.5 (17)
4.8 (32)
7.15 (57)
7.20 (62)
Umpires: Casey, Morrow
Norm Goss Memorial Medal:Daryl Vernon (Springvale)
Dudley 3,Vernon 3, Mende 2,Nicol 2,Prosser 2, Anderson,DunneGoalsHicks 2, Sneddon 2, Cooper, Harkins, Multimer
Vernon, for striking Coottee in the first quarter (ordered off)
Mende, for striking McCormack in the second quarter
ReportsCoottee, for strikingProsser in the third quarter
Harkins, for striking Anderson in the third quarter

Awards

[edit]

Division 2

[edit]

The Division 2 home-and-away season was played over eighteen rounds; the top four then contested the finals under thePage–McIntyre system. The finals were played atJunction Oval.

Home-and-away season

[edit]

Round 1

[edit]
Round 1
Sunday, 12 April (2:10 pm)Camberwell 16.11 (107)def. byWerribee 19.18 (132)Camberwell Sports Ground
Sunday, 12 April (2:10 pm)Waverley 29.20 (194)def.Berwick 9.13 (67)Central Reserve
Sunday, 12 April (2:10 pm)Caulfield 20.25 (145)def. byMordialloc 22.14 (146)Princes Park
Sunday, 12 April (2:10 pm)Sunshine 22.11 (143)def.Northcote 16.8 (104)Skinner Reserve
Sunday, 12 April (2:10 pm)Oakleigh 16.14 (110)def.Prahran 11.19 (85)Warrawee Park
Sunday, 12 April (2:10 pm)Moorabbin 17.6 (108)def. byDandenong 25.22 (172)Bentleigh Reserve

Round 2

[edit]
Round 2
Sunday, 19 April (2:10 pm)Dandenong 17.9 (111)def.Oakleigh 9.13 (67)Shepley Oval
Sunday, 19 April (2:10 pm)Prahran 7.14 (56)def. bySunshine 13.12 (90)Toorak Park
Sunday, 19 April (2:10 pm)Northcote 13.18 (96)def.Caulfield 4.16 (40)Northcote Park
Sunday, 19 April (2:10 pm)Mordialloc 6.2 (38)def. byWaverley 17.21 (123)Ben Kavanagh Reserve
Sunday, 19 April (2:10 pm)Caulfield 17.7 (109)def. byCamberwell 22.11 (143)Berwick Reserve
Sunday, 19 April (2:10 pm)Werribee 17.14 (116)def.Moorabbin 5.11 (41)Chirnside Park

Round 3

[edit]
Round 3
Sunday, 26 April (2:10 pm)Caulfield 13.11 (89)def. byPrahran 39.10 (244)Princes Park
Sunday, 26 April (2:10 pm)Sunshine 20.16 (136)def.Dandenong 14.19 (103)Skinner Reserve
Sunday, 26 April (2:10 pm)Berwick 10.13 (73)def. byWerribee 25.22 (172)Berwick Reserve
Sunday, 26 April (2:10 pm)Camberwell 37.23 (245)def.Mordialloc 7.15 (57)Camberwell Sports Ground
Sunday, 26 April (2:10 pm)Waverley 32.23 (215)def.Northcote 13.9 (87)Central Reserve
Sunday, 26 April (walkover)Oakleighdef.Moorabbin

Round 4

[edit]
Round 4
Sunday, 3 May (2:10 pm)Dandenong 22.30 (162)def.Caulfield 3.4 (22)Shepley Oval
Sunday, 3 May (2:10 pm)Northcote 13.16 (94)def. byCamberwell 27.19 (181)Northcote Park
Sunday, 10 May (2:10 pm)Prahran 18.12 (120)def. byWaverley 20.13 (133)Toorak Park
Sunday, 10 May (2:10 pm)Werribee 18.17 (125)def.Oakleigh 18.10 (118)Chirnside Park
Sunday, 10 May (2:10 pm)Mordialloc 25.10 (160)def. byBerwick 25.11 (161)Ben Kavanagh Reserve
Sunday, 10 May (walkover)Sunshinedef.Moorabbin

Round 5

[edit]
Round 5
Saturday, 16 May (2:10 pm)Mordialloc 9.14 (68)def. byWerribee 18.20 (128)Ben Kavanagh Reserve
Sunday, 17 May (2:10 pm)Camberwell 15.10 (100)def. byPrahran 16.17 (113)Camberwell Sports Ground
Sunday, 17 May (2:10 pm)Waverley 9.17 (71)def. byDandenong 19.18 (132)Central Reserve
Sunday, 17 May (2:10 pm)Sunshine 13.16 (94)def.Oakleigh 13.10 (88)Skinner Reserve
Sunday, 17 May (2:10 pm)Berwick 11.13 (79)def. byNorthcote 14.10 (94)Berwick Reserve
Sunday, 17 May (walkover)Caulfielddef.Moorabbin

Ladder

[edit]

Clubs who won on forfeit were awarded a win and four premiership points, credited with the round's average winning score as 'points for', and debited the round's average losing score as 'points against'. The ladder as it is shown here distinguishes wins by forfeiture from wins in completed matches, but not all sources make this distinction.

PosTeamPldWWFDLPFPA%PtsQualification
1Werribee181410323511513155.460Finals series
2Waverley181220423801464162.656
3Prahran(P)181310425101556161.356
4Sunshine181130424301690143.856
5Oakleigh181020623691497158.248
6Dandenong181110624861688147.348
7Camberwell18920725502073123.044
8Berwick18410131672255665.420
9Caulfield17220131531252460.716
10Mordialloc18310141582288954.816
11Northcote18210151578266659.212
Moorabbin2000214928851.70Club suspended
Source:[25][40][48]
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) percentage; 3) number of points for.
(P) Premiers

Finals

[edit]

Semi-finals

[edit]
Semi-finals
Sunday, 30 August (11:10 am)Prahran 19.18 (132)def.Sunshine 15.14 (104)Junction Oval (crowd: 7,814(C-R))[42]
Sunday, 6 September (11:10 am)Werribee 16.12 (108)def. byWaverley 19.11 (125)Junction Oval (crowd: 6,310(C-R))[43]

Preliminary final

[edit]
Preliminary final
Sunday, 13 September (11:10 am)Werribee 14.10 (94)def. byPrahran 19.11 (125)Junction Oval (crowd: 9,282(C-R))[44]

Grand Final

[edit]
1987 VFA Division 2 Grand Final
Sunday, 20 September (11:10 am)Waverleydef. byPrahranJunction Oval (crowd: 19,620(C-R))[45]
2.0 (12)
7.4 (46)
9.7 (61)
14.14 (98)
Q1
Q2
Q3
Final
7.5 (47)
8.6 (54)
15.8 (98)
18.9 (117)
Umpires: Marshall,Vergona
ANA Best Player Award: Dale Tapping (Prahran)
Brewer 3, Brookes 3, Castillo 3, Burns, Hunt, Pearson, Rogerson, VearGoalsGiles 3, Bingham 2, Cutler 2, Hutchison 2, Reynolds 2, Soulos 2, Ellett, Hamilton, Tapping, Taylor, Walder

Awards

[edit]
  • The leading goalkicker for Division 2 wasRino Pretto (Oakleigh), who kicked 96 goals in the home-and-away season and did not participate in finals.[40]
  • TheJ. Field Medal was won by Peter Rogerson (Waverley), who polled 19 votes. Rogerson finished ahead of Luke Soulos (Prahran), who polled 16 votes.[47] Votes won in the matches played againstMoorabbin were excluded from the count.[49]
  • Werribee won the seconds premiership. Werribee 17.14 (116) defeatedDandenong 13.11 (89) in the Grand Final, played on Sunday 20 September.[44]

Notable events

[edit]

Interleague matches

[edit]

In 1987, the Association competed in and won the NFL Shield, theNFL's interstate competition among the minor states. It was the first time the Association had contested an NFL-sanctioned interstate event since its expulsion from theANFC/NFL in 1970;[50] the Association held a competition membership, but not a full membership, of the NFL at this time.[51]Terry Wheeler (Williamstown) was coach of the team;[50]Jeff Sarau (Frankston) was the captain, withBarry Round (Williamstown) stepping up in Sarau's absence against Queensland.[52]

The Grand final against Tasmania was delayed for 35 minutes, because heavy fog prevented the Tasmanian team's flight from landing in Melbourne.[53]

1987 NFL Shield
Sunday, 10 MayA.C.T. 12.14 (86)def. byV.F.A. 13.16 (94)Football Park, A.C.T.[50]
Wednesday, 13 May (night)N.S.W. 10.12 (72)def.V.F.A. 8.5 (53)Lavington Sports Ground (crowd: 700)[54]
Sunday, 24 MayQueensland 14.14 (98)def. byV.F.A. 25.16 (166)Caloundra[52]
1987 NFL Shield Grand Final
Saturday, 6 JuneV.F.A. 19.18 (132)def.Tasmania 16.7 (103)Junction Oval (crowd: 1,500)[53]

Other notable events

[edit]
  • Mitsubishi Motors withdrew as the major sponsor of the Association at the beginning of the year,[2] and was replaced byANA Friendly Society.[15]
  • Network Ten permanently ended its coverage of Association football at the end of the previous season. TheABC signed a deal to televise the Division 1 second semi-final, preliminary final and Grand Final in 1987.[55]
  • By 1987, the VFL was staging Sunday matches in Victoria on an increasingly regular basis, and some smaller Association clubs had suffered over previous years by losing fans to local Saturday competitions. As a result, Association clubs were given the option of playing games on Saturdays instead of Sundays from 1987:Berwick andWerribee both experimented with Saturday games during the season. This heralded the beginning of the end of the Association's time as a dedicated Sunday competition.[56]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^Hugo Kelly (28 June 1986). "Council changes would force club mergers".The Age. Melbourne. p. 35.
  2. ^abcdLen Johnson (6 December 1986). "Radical plan to cut VFA to 12 teams".The Age. Melbourne. p. 39.
  3. ^Marc Fiddian (18 June 1981). "Association drifts as options run out".The Age. Melbourne. p. 32.
  4. ^Marc Fiddian (6 February 1982). "Channel 10 axes VFA".The Age. Melbourne. p. 38.
  5. ^"League nearer Sunday games".The Age. Melbourne. 12 June 1980. p. 24.
  6. ^Corrie Parkin (30 May 1981). "VFA to admit extra clubs".The Age. Melbourne. p. 40.
  7. ^abRon Carter (2 October 1986). "Perth, Brisbane join League".The Age. Melbourne. p. 38.
  8. ^Mike Coward (15 October 1981). "VFL 'no' sends South to Sydney".The Age. Melbourne. p. 32.
  9. ^Martin Flanagan (2 October 1986). "Survival the object in Lions' year of trial".The Age. Melbourne. p. 36.
  10. ^Peter Simunovich (27 July 1987). "Top WAFL clubs eye VFL spot".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 78.
  11. ^abHugo Kelly (18 December 1986). "Clubs rally to fight plans for elite VFA".The Age. Melbourne. p. 26.
  12. ^Hugo Kelly (9 December 1986). "Anger mounts over VFA report".The Age. Melbourne. p. 57.
  13. ^"Eagles reject call for new WA club".The Age. Melbourne. 7 April 1987. p. 56.
  14. ^"Cooper clear, but Vernon out one week".The Age. Melbourne. 6 May 1987. p. 36.
  15. ^abPaul Cunningham (9 July 1987). "VFA plots its survival".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 95.
  16. ^Paul Cunningham (14 July 1987). "VFA clubs reject independent board".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 69.
  17. ^Toby Darvall; Fiona Athersmith (25 August 1988). "Preston ruling threat to VFA".The Age. Melbourne. p. 36.
  18. ^"Berwick votes to quit VFA".The Age. Melbourne. 13 November 1987. p. 32.
  19. ^Linda Pearce (4 May 1988). "VFA Bloods on the ropes".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 82.
  20. ^Paul Cunningham (11 September 1987). "VFA Bears running on numbers".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 83.
  21. ^Daryl Timms (6 November 1987). "Caulfield will battle on – president".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 78.
  22. ^Olle, Sarah (3 December 2015)."AFL 2015: A stand-alone reserves league is being considered by the AFL to improve talent pathway".Herald Sun. Retrieved17 March 2020.
  23. ^Paul Cunningham (25 April 1987). "Players out after coach quits".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 76.
  24. ^abCathy Gowdie (25 April 1987). "VFA issues ultimatum to Moorabbin".The Age. Melbourne. p. 39.
  25. ^abSam Prenesti (27 April 1987). "Preston's fans groan as Springvale coasts home".The Age. Melbourne. p. 35.
  26. ^Sam Prenesti (30 April 1987). "Moorabbin decides to keep battling on".The Age. Melbourne. p. 30.
  27. ^Sam Prenesti (1 May 1987). "VFA club forfeits again".The Age. Melbourne. p. 27.
  28. ^Sam Prenesti (7 May 1987). "Moorabbin suspended for remainder of the season".The Age. Melbourne. p. 30.
  29. ^Sam Prenesti (16 April 1987). "Juniors the hope for club on the outer".The Age. Melbourne. p. 26.
  30. ^Paul Cunningham (1 June 1987). "West future doubt".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 91.
  31. ^Paul Cunningham (2 June 1987). "Historic club fights back".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 78.
  32. ^Paul Cunningham (11 June 1987). "Roosters out – but not gone".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 95.
  33. ^Paul Cunningham (25 June 1987). "Battle becomes Rooster revival".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 70.
  34. ^Paul Cunningham (26 June 1987). "Roosters are back".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 76.
  35. ^Paul Cunningham (29 June 1987). "Gutsy Roosters draw".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 89.
  36. ^Paul Cunningham (18 August 1987). "Caulfield faces ban over levy".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 70.
  37. ^Paul Cunningham (19 August 1987). "Miracle we have survived, says VFA Bears boss".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 84.
  38. ^Paul Cunningham (22 August 1987). "PM lends Coburg his support".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 81.
  39. ^Linda Pearce (6 November 1987). "Two clubs expelled from VFA next year".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 78.
  40. ^abcd"VFA details".The Age. Melbourne. 24 August 1987. p. 40.
  41. ^"1987 VFA Premiership Season - Division 1". Australian Football. Archived fromthe original on 8 April 2025. Retrieved8 April 2025.
  42. ^abPaul Cunningham (31 August 1987). "Seagulls swoop".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 76.
  43. ^abPaul Cunningham (7 September 1987). "Vales win fierce struggle".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 78.
  44. ^abcPaul Cunningham (14 September 1987). "Historic rivals produce classic performance".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 74.
  45. ^abcPaul Cunningham (21 September 1987). "Springvale grabs historic first flag".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 90.
  46. ^Paul Cunningham (3 September 1987). "Talented Jennings the toast of Port".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 85.
  47. ^abPaul Cunningham (27 August 1987). "Triumph second time Round".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. pp. 87–88.
  48. ^"1987 VFA Premiership Season - Division 2". Australian Football. Archived fromthe original on 8 April 2025. Retrieved8 April 2025.
  49. ^Paul Cunningham (26 August 1987). "Round favourite for Liston Trophy".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 84.
  50. ^abcSam Prenesti (11 May 1987). "Association win encouraging".The Age. Melbourne. p. 33.
  51. ^Linda Pearce (10 June 1988). "VFA-VFL link move".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 68.
  52. ^abSam Prenesti (25 May 1987). "Queensland runs into Association brick wall".The Age. Melbourne. p. 31.
  53. ^abPaul Cunningham (8 June 1987). "VFA in Shield triumph over gallant Tasmania".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 68.
  54. ^"VFA loses by 19 points to inexperienced NSW".The Age. Melbourne. 14 May 1987. p. 32.
  55. ^Paul Cunningham (13 August 1987). "ABC to cover VFA finals games".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 82.
  56. ^Paul Cunningham (31 October 1987). "VFA draw rethink".The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne. p. 79.
VFA/VFL seasons
Pre-VFA
VFA seasons
VFA seasons
(post-VFL
formation)
VFL seasons
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