Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

1980 Escort Championships

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from1980 AFC Night Series)

1980 AFC Night Series
AFC Escort Championships
Tournament details
Dates2 March – 15 July 1980
Teams34
Venue(s)10 (in 7 host cities)
Final positions
ChampionsNorth Melbourne (1st title)
Runners-upCollingwood
Tournament statistics
Matches played33
Attendance223,562 (6,775 per match)
1979
1981
International football competition

The1980Escort Championships was an Australian rules footballknock-out tournament held between March and July 1980. The tournament was organised by Australian Football Championships, and was contested by teams from theVictorian Football League,South Australian National Football League andWest Australian Football League, and the representative teams from New South Wales, Tasmania, Queensland and the Australian Capital Territory. The tournament was won byNorth Melbourne, who defeatedCollingwood in the grand final.[1]

Background

[edit]

The 1980 Escort Championships was the fourth season of thenational night premiership competition. The size of the competition consisted 34 teams. The competing teams were all VFL, SANFL and WAFL teams, and the representative teams from New South Wales, Tasmania, Queensland and the Australian Capital Territory.[2]

The format for the competition was a simple knock-out tournament. Round one featured the VFL teams that finished 7th to 12th in 1979; the SANFL teams that finished 3rd to 10th in 1979; the WAFL teams that finished 3rd to 8th in 1979; plus a playoff between the four minor states.

Round two involved the teams that survived round one.

In round three, the winners of round two were joined by the VFL's top six of 1979, the SANFL's top two of 1979, and the WAFL's top two of 1979.

Matches in Rounds 1 and 2 were played in various venues across Australia. With the exception of one Round 3 match, all matches from Round 3 onwards were played atVFL Park on Tuesday nights. Matches were televised directly to Melbourne, Adelaide and Perth.[2] The tournament was mostly played concurrently with the premiership season, although some matches in the first three rounds were played during the pre-season.

Qualified teams

[edit]
TeamNicknameLeagueQualificationParticipation (bold indicates winners)1
Enter inRound 3
CarltonBluesVFLWinners of the1979 Victorian Football League9th(Previous:1907,1908,1914,1968,1970,1972,1976,1979)
CollingwoodMagpiesVFLRunners-up in the1979 Victorian Football League4th(Previous:1896,1910,1979)
North MelbourneKangaroosVFLThird Place in the1979 Victorian Football League4th(Previous:1975,1976,1979)
FitzroyLionsVFLFourth Place in the1979 Victorian Football League3rd(Previous:1913,1979)
EssendonBombersVFLFifth Place in the1979 Victorian Football League4th(Previous:1893,1911,1979)
GeelongCatsVFLSixth Place in the1979 Victorian Football League2nd(Previous:1979)
Port AdelaideMagpiesSANFLWinners of the1979 South Australian National Football League9th(Previous:1890,1910,1913,1914,1976,1977,1978,1979)
South AdelaidePanthersSANFLRunners-up in the1979 South Australian National Football League6th(Previous:1893,1896,1977,1978,1979)
East FremantleSharksWAFLWinners of the1979 West Australian Football League5th(Previous:1974,1977,1978,1979)
South FremantleBulldogsWAFLRunners-up in the1979 West Australian Football League4th(Previous:1976,1977,1979)
Enter inRound 1
HawthornHawksVFLSeventh Place in the1979 Victorian Football League4th(Previous:1971,1976,1979)
RichmondTigersVFLEighth Place in the1979 Victorian Football League6th(Previous:1969,1973,1974,1976,1979)
FootscrayBulldogsVFLNinth Place in the1979 Victorian Football League3rd(Previous:1976,1979)
South MelbourneSwansVFLTenth Place in the1979 Victorian Football League5th(Previous:1888,1890,1909,1979)
MelbourneDemonsVFLEleventh Place in the1979 Victorian Football League2nd(Previous:1979)
St KildaSaintsVFLTwelfth Place in the1979 Victorian Football League2nd(Previous:1979)
Central DistrictBulldogsSANFLThird Place in the1979 South Australian National Football League3rd(Previous:1977,1979)
NorwoodRedlegsSANFLFourth Place in the1979 South Australian National Football League8th(Previous:1888,1907,1975,1976,1977,1978,1979)
WoodvilleWoodpeckersSANFLFifth Place in the1979 South Australian National Football League2nd(Previous:1979)
North AdelaideRoostersSANFLSixth Place in the1979 South Australian National Football League5th(Previous:1971,1972,1977,1979)
GlenelgTigersSANFLSeventh Place in the1979 South Australian National Football League6th(Previous:1973,1976,1977,1978,1979)
West TorrensEaglesSANFLEighth Place in the1979 South Australian National Football League2nd(Previous:1979)
SturtDouble BluesSANFLNinth Place in the1979 South Australian National Football League8th(Previous:1968,1969,1970,1974,1976,1977,1979)
West AdelaideBloodsSANFLTenth Place in the1979 South Australian National Football League7th(Previous:1908,1909,1911,1977,1978,1979)
ClaremontTigersWAFLThird Place in the1979 West Australian Football League3rd(Previous:1977,1979)
East PerthRoyalsWAFLFourth Place in the1979 West Australian Football League4th(Previous:1972,1977,1978,1979)
Swan DistrictsSwansWAFLFifth Place in the1979 West Australian Football League3rd(Previous:1976,1979)
PerthDemonsWAFLSixth Place in the1979 West Australian Football League4th(Previous:1977,1978,1979)
West PerthFalconsWAFLSeventh Place in the1979 West Australian Football League6th(Previous:1975,1976,1977,1978,1979)
SubiacoLionsWAFLEighth Place in the1979 West Australian Football League3rd(Previous:1973,1979)
Australian Capital TerritoryRamsACTAFLState Representative Team4th(Previous:1977,1978,1979)
New South WalesBluesNSWAFLState Representative Team4th(Previous:1977,1978,1979)
QueenslandMaroonsQAFLState Representative Team3rd(Previous:1977,1978)
TasmaniaDevilsTANFLState Representative Team5th(Previous:1974,1977,1978,1979)
1 Includes previous appearances in theChampionship of Australia andNFL Night Series.

Venues

[edit]
MelbourneAdelaidePerth
Waverley ParkNorwood OvalRichmond OvalPerth OvalEast Fremantle OvalLeederville Oval
Capacity:72,000Capacity:22,000Capacity:16,500Capacity:27,000Capacity:22,000Capacity:25,000
SydneyWagga WaggaUlverstoneBrisbane
Sydney Cricket GroundMcPherson OvalUlverstone Recreation GroundWindsor Park
Capacity:45,000Capacity:10,000Capacity:15,000Capacity:10,000

Games

[edit]

Round 1

[edit]
Home teamHome team scoreAway teamAway team scoreGroundCrowdDate
West Perth11.15 (81)Hawthorn18.13 (121)Perth OvalSunday, 2 March
Claremont22.10 (142)East Perth4.16 (40)Leederville Oval, PerthMonday, 3 March
Subiaco15.9 (99)Perth11.14 (80)Perth OvalMonday, 3 March
Melbourne22.16 (148)Swan Districts8.18 (66)VFL Park3,040Tuesday, 4 March
St Kilda19.6 (120)Sturt8.11 (59)VFL Park6,436Saturday, 8 March
South Melbourne10.16 (76)West Adelaide7.18 (60)Richmond Oval, AdelaideSaturday, 8 March
West Torrens12.3 (75)Footscray17.10 (112)VFL Park2,108Tuesday, 11 March
North Adelaide14.11 (95)Norwood13.13 (91)Norwood OvalTuesday, 11 March
Glenelg11.13 (79)Central District6.8 (44)Norwood OvalFriday, 14 March
Richmond20.17 (137)Woodville9.3 (57)VFL Park5,031Saturday, 15 March
Tasmania9.15 (69)Queensland15.17 (107)Ulverstone, Tasmania2,174Sunday, 16 March
New South Wales17.10 (112)Australian Capital Territory10.11 (71)McPherson Oval,North Wagga Wagga3,500Sunday, 16 March

Round 2

[edit]
Home teamHome team scoreAway teamAway team scoreGroundCrowdDate
Claremont16.20 (116)Subiaco12.9 (81)Leederville Oval, PerthSaturday, 15 March
Hawthorn17.17 (119)Melbourne14.4 (88)VFL Park6,005Tuesday, 18 March
North Adelaide13.12 (90)Glenelg22.11 (143)Norwood OvalFriday, 21 March
St Kilda17.15 (117)South Melbourne10.6 (66)VFL Park10,308Saturday, 22 March
Footscray18.14 (122)Queensland10.8 (68)Windsor Park, MayneSunday, 23 March
Richmond17.19 (121)New South Wales14.16 (100)Sydney Cricket GroundSunday, 23 March

Round 3

[edit]
Home teamHome team scoreAway teamAway team scoreGroundCrowdDate
Port Adelaide12.14 (86)Essendon18.10 (118)VFL Park5,261Friday, 14 March
South Fremantle23.19 (157)Carlton9.12 (66)East Fremantle Oval, Perth6,000Sunday, 16 March
Claremont10.13 (73)Geelong9.14 (68)VFL Park3,783Tuesday, 25 March
Hawthorn20.20 (140)East Fremantle4.11 (35)VFL Park2,919Tuesday, 1 April
Glenelg9.11 (65)North Melbourne9.16 (70)VFL Park4,419Tuesday, 15 April
St Kilda16.11 (107)South Adelaide13.11 (89)VFL Park3,594Tuesday, 29 April
Footscray11.9 (75)Collingwood18.13 (121)VFL Park9,995Tuesday, 6 May
Richmond16.13 (109)Fitzroy13.12 (90)VFL Park10,626Tuesday, 13 May

Quarter-finals

[edit]
Home teamHome team scoreAway teamAway team scoreGroundCrowdDate
Claremont12.12 (84)Hawthorn7.10 (52)VFL Park5,326Tuesday, 20 May
North Melbourne18.11 (119)St Kilda13.11 (89)VFL Park6,223Tuesday, 27 May
Collingwood10.14 (74)Richmond5.13 (43)VFL Park17,950Tuesday, 3 June
Essendon12.14 (86)South Fremantle6.11 (47)VFL Park4,060Tuesday, 10 June

Semi-finals

[edit]
Home teamHome team scoreAway teamAway team scoreGroundCrowdDate
North Melbourne15.10 (100)Claremont9.9 (63)VFL Park4,299Tuesday, 24 June
Collingwood15.10 (100)Essendon12.9 (81)VFL Park16,527Tuesday, 1 July

Grand final

[edit]
Home teamHome team scoreAway teamAway team scoreGroundCrowdDate
North Melbourne8.9 (57)Collingwood7.12 (54)VFL Park50,478[2]Tuesday, 15 July

Notable events

[edit]
  • The competition sponsor at the time was the cigarette manufacturer W.D. & H.O. Wills – "Escort" was a brand name used by the company at the time.[2]
  • The total prizemoney was $400,000, with the winners North Melbourne winning $64,000.[2]
  • The grand final ended in controversy. Collingwood led by three points when the final siren sounded, but field umpire Ian Robinson was unable to hear it, and allowed play to continue for several seconds; indeed, many players were unable to hear the siren, although many could and some Collingwood players were already celebrating the victory. In the ensuing play, North Melbourne'sMalcolm Blight passed the ball forward toKerry Good, who marked and thenkicked a goal after the final siren to secure victory for North Melbourne.[2] To minimize the risk of a repeated incident, VFL umpires wore portable electronic beepers during the finals of thepremiership season.[3]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"1980 AFC ESCORT CHAMPIONSHIPS".Hard Ball Get.Archived from the original on 14 November 2018.
  2. ^abcdefMain, Jim (1981), "A national series - at last",Hutton's 1981 Footy Book, Melbourne, VIC: The Market Place Marketing Group, pp. 1, 2, 3
  3. ^Trevor Grant (14 August 1980). "Beepers".The Age. Melbourne, VIC. p. 26.

External links

[edit]


VFL Night Series
AFC Night Series
VFL/AFL pre-season competition
AFL pre-season series
AFLX competitions
VFL/AFL Lightning Premierships
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=1980_Escort_Championships&oldid=1195612117"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp