Trisha Shetty (Editor)

1899 VFL season

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Highest attendance
  
4,823

Start date
  
1899

Matches played
  
69

Leading Goalkicker Medallist
  
Eddy James (Geelong)

Teams
  
8

Premiers
  
Fitzroy (2nd premiership)

Minor premiers
  
Fitzroy (1st minor premiership)

Similar
  
1904 VFL season, 1923 VFL season, 1912 VFL season, 1911 VFL season

The 1899 Victorian Football League season was the third season of the elite Australian rules football competition.

Contents

Premiership season

In 1899, the VFL competition consisted of eight 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 14 rounds.

Once the 14 round home-and-away season had finished, the 1899 VFL Premiers were determined by the specific format and conventions of the 1898 VFL Premiership System.

Win/Loss table

Bold – Home game
Opponent for round listed above margin

Ladder progression

  • No Ladder for Finals in 1899.
  • Awards

  • The 1899 VFL Premiership team was Fitzroy.
  • The VFL's leading goalkicker was Eddy James of Geelong with 31 goals.
  • The Argus newspaper's "Player of the Year" was Fitzroy's Pat Hickey.
  • Notable events

  • The VFL reduced the size of its teams from 20 to 18 on-the-field players, with no "reserves". In doing this, the number of followers was reduced from five (four rucks and a rover) to three (two rucks and a rover).
  • The third round, Queen's Birthday holiday match, between Collingwood and St Kilda at Victoria Park was held in the morning of Wednesday 24 May 1899.
  • Norman "Hackenschmidt" Clark, a footballer with the North Adelaide Football Club in the South Australian Football Association, won the 1899, 130-yard Stawell Gift in eleven and four-fifths seconds, off a handicap of 14 and a half yards. Clark would later play 125 senior games for Carlton (1905–1912), captain-coach VFA team Brighton (1913), and coach Carlton (1914–1918; 1920–1922), Richmond (1919), North Melbourne (1924 and 1931) and St Kilda (1925–1926).
  • In the third sectional round, Geelong set records for the highest score in a game, scoring 23.24 (162), and the highest winning margin of 161 points, against St Kilda. These records would both stand for twelve years and twenty years respectively.
  • St Kilda's score of 0.1 (1) in the same match set the record for the lowest score in a VFL/AFL game, which has neither been matched nor broken since. Notably, the solitary behind was actually the first score of the match.
  • Geelong's Jim McShane kicked 11 goals in the same match against St Kilda, a VFL record that was not equalled until Collingwood's Dick Lee's 11 goals in 1914 and not broken until 1922; this is more impressive considering that McShane was usually a ruckman.
  • Warwick Armstrong (6'3", 190 cm), later captain of the Australian Test Cricket team, played in the ruck for the South Melbourne team that lost the 1899 "Grand Final".
  • References

    1899 VFL season Wikipedia