1985 VFL premiership season
Teams12
PremiersEssendon
14th premiership
Minor premiersEssendon
12th minor premiership
Night seriesHawthorn
2nd Night series win
Brownlow MedallistBrad Hardie (Footscray)
Coleman MedallistSimon Beasley (Footscray)
Attendance
Matches played138
Total attendance3,113,173 (22,559 per match)
Highest100,042

The 1985 VFL season was the 89th season of the Victorian Football League (VFL), the highest level senior Australian rules football competition in Victoria.

The season featured twelve clubs, ran from 23 March until 28 September, and comprised a 22-game home-and-away season followed by a finals series featuring the top five clubs. The season was the first to feature premiership matches on Friday nights.

The premiership was won by the Essendon Football Club for the 14th time and second time consecutively, after it defeated Hawthorn by 78 points in the 1985 VFL Grand Final.

Night series

Hawthorn defeated Essendon 11.11 (77) to 10.8 (68) in the final.

Home-and-away season

Round 1

Round 2

Round 3

  • The average score by each team this round was 134.8, which stands as the VFL/AFL record.[1]

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 15[2]
Saturday, 6 July (2:10 pm) Geelong 16.8 (104) def. by Carlton 19.16 (130) Kardinia Park (crowd: 19,813) Report
Saturday, 6 July (2:10 pm) Collingwood 11.12 (78) def. by Essendon 13.11 (89) Victoria Park (crowd: 26,014) Report
Saturday, 6 July (2:10 pm) Richmond 21.16 (142) def. Fitzroy 17.16 (118) MCG (crowd: 19,794) Report
Saturday, 6 July (2:10 pm) Footscray 26.13 (169) def. Melbourne 6.13 (49) Western Oval (crowd: 15,328) Report
Saturday, 6 July (2:10 pm) Hawthorn 23.18 (156) def. Sydney 12.11 (83) Princes Park (crowd: 8,694) Report
Saturday, 6 July (2:10 pm) St Kilda 11.9 (75) def. by North Melbourne 21.13 (139) VFL Park (crowd: 11,829) Report
  • Footscray won their sixth consecutive game and recorded the biggest win in the club's history to date, in the 120-point thrashing of Melbourne. Full-forward Simon Beasley registered 10 or more goals for the third time in his career, ending up with 12 goals 3 behinds. The Bulldogs' record winning margin would stand until the 2021 AFL season.

Round 16

Round 17

Round 18

Round 19

Round 20

Round 21

Round 22

Ladder

(P)Premiers
Qualified for finals
# Team P W L D PF PA  % Pts
1Essendon (P)22193027551991138.476
2Footscray22166024172000120.964
3Hawthorn22156126472024130.862
4Carlton22157024302104115.560
5North Melbourne2213812379243197.954
6Geelong221210022772263100.648
7Collingwood221012021972180100.840
8Richmond2291302362259091.236
9Fitzroy2271502301245293.828
10Sydney2261602219234994.524
11Melbourne2261601965252777.824
12St Kilda2231901899293764.712

Rules for classification: 1. premiership points; 2. percentage; 3. points for
Average score: 105.5
Source: AFL Tables

Finals series

Finals week 1

Elimination final
Saturday, 7 September (2:30 pm) Carlton 16.11 (107) def. by North Melbourne 20.6 (126) VFL Park (crowd: 49,126) Report
Qualifying final
Sunday, 8 September (2:30 pm) Footscray 8.14 (62) def. by Hawthorn 22.23 (155) MCG (crowd: 58,367) Report

Finals week 2

Semi-finals
SF1: Sunday, 15 September (2:30 pm) Footscray 19.23 (137) def. North Melbourne 16.11 (107) MCG (crowd: 56,112) Report
SF2: Saturday, 14 September (2:30 pm) Essendon 14.18 (102) def. Hawthorn 9.8 (62) VFL Park (crowd: 67,063) Report

Preliminary final

Preliminary final
Saturday, 21 September (2:30 pm) Hawthorn 16.13 (109) def. Footscray 15.9 (99) VFL Park (crowd: 55,246) Report

Grand final

Grand final
Saturday, 28 September (2:50 pm) Essendon 26.14 (170) def. Hawthorn 14.8 (92) MCG (crowd: 100,042) Report
  • Essendon won its 14th VFL/AFL Premiership
  • This marked the third consecutive Grand final contested by Essendon and Hawthorn.
  • Essendon's last quarter score of 11 goals 3 behinds (69 points) beat the previous year's record last quarter score.
  • Kevin Sheedy won his second Jock McHale Medal.

Season notes

  • In the first three rounds, St Kilda set an unwanted record of three consecutive losses by 100 points (110, 140 and 113 points). Their percentage at the end of the round was only 34.7.
  • In a televised reserves match between Collingwood and the Sydney Swans at the Lake Oval in South Melbourne on Sunday, 28 April, Collingwood reserves full-back John Bourke kicked Swans ruckman Patrick Foy in the groin in response to Foy tagging him throughout the game. As field umpire Phil Waight went to report Bourke for the incident, Bourke kicked and pushed Waight, then made contact with the Collingwood runner and jumped into the stands to attack a Swans fan before being escorted off the field. Bourke was found guilty at the Tribunal of kicking an umpire, kicking and assault, and was given the longest suspension in VFL/AFL history - 10 years plus 16 matches (239 matches), which was commuted in 1992 to six years plus 16 matches (151 matches). He was later charged with two counts of assault by Victoria Police, convicted on both counts in the Prahran Magistrates Court, and fined $2000 plus costs.[3]
  • In round 10, Geelong trailed at each change by 1, 10 and 13 points, but then kicked 11.7 (73) to 1.2 (8) in the last quarter to beat Richmond by 50 points. Their 50-point margin is the largest by a team outscored for each of the first three quarters.
  • A violent brawl in the round 12 match between Hawthorn and Geelong led to veteran Hawthorn champion Leigh Matthews being charged with assaulting Geelong's Neville Bruns by Victoria Police.
  • On the week of round 18, the Sydney Swans club was bought by Geoffrey Edelsten and became the first privately owned VFL club. Earlier in the season, Perth businessmen Alan Delany and John Watts had attempted to buy lowly St. Kilda and relocate them to Perth.[4]
  • In round 18, Essendon led North Melbourne 18.8 (116) to 2.4 (16) at half-time. This was the largest half-time lead since round 2 of 1931, when led by Richmond 17.9 (111) to North Melbourne's 0.5 (5).
  • Collingwood player Andrew Witts wore jumper No. 65 during his seven games with the Magpies – the highest regular jumper number in VFL/AFL history.[5] It was the highest number of all time until 2017 when a number of Indigenous players wore once-off jumper number No. 67 during Indigenous Round to recognise 50 years since the passage of the 1967 referendum on Aboriginals.
  • In round 20, the Arden Street Oval hosted its last senior VFL match. The venue had been used by North Melbourne throughout its time in the VFL, except for 1965 when the club was based in Coburg. A total of 529 VFL senior matches were played at the ground that was formerly overshadowed by a massive gasometer on Macaulay Road.

Awards

References

  1. "Round Records". AFL Tables.
  2. "1985 Season Scores and Results Round 15".
  3. The Age, 19 November 1985
  4. Christian, Geoff; "WAFL to Monitor Move on Saints"; in The West Australian, 20 May 1985
  5. Fine, Mark (2011). The Book of Footy Lists. Australia: Slattery Media Group. p. 300. ISBN 9781921778308.
  6. "VFL details". The Age Sport Extra. Melbourne. 30 September 1985. p. 2.
  • Stephen Rodgers: Every Game Ever Played VFL/AFL Results 1897–1991 3rd Edition 1992. Penguin Books Australia ISBN 0-670-90526-7.

Sources

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