- 1958 VFL season
Infobox VFL Premiership Season
year = 1958
imagesize =
caption =
teams = 12
premiers = AFL Col
count =
minor premiers = AFL Mel
mpcount =
matches =
top goal scorer =Ian Brewer (AFL Col)
brownlow medalist =Neil Roberts (AFL StK)Results and statistics for theVFL/AFL season of 1958.Premiership season
In 1958, the VFL competition consisted of twelve teams of 18 on-the-field players each, plus two substitute players, known as the 19th man and the 20th man. A player could be substituted for any reason; however, once substituted, a player could not return to the field of play under any circumstances.
Teams played each other in a home-and-away season of 18 rounds; matches 12 to 18 were the "home-and-way reverse" of matches 1 to 7.
Once the 18 round home-and-away season had finished, the 1958 VFL "Premiers" were determined by the specific format and conventions of the "Page-McIntyre system".
Round 1
Round 2
Round 3
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 16
Round 17
Round 18
Ladder
Preliminary Final
Umpire -
Allan Nash Awards
* The 1958 VFL Premiership team was Collingwood.
* The VFL's leading goalkicker wasIan Brewer of Collingwood who kicked 97 goals (including 6 goals in the finals).
* The winner of the 1958Brownlow Medal was to Neil Roberts of St Kilda with 20 votes.
* Geelong took the "wooden spoon" in 1958.Notable Events
* On Monday 2 June 1958, following his superb performance in Footscray's unexpected round 8 fifteen point victory over Essendon, "Sun News Pictorial" journalist Rex Pullen christens
Ted Whitten "Mr. Football".
* The 16 match 1958Australian National Football Council (ANFC) Carnival is held in Melbourne during a two-week break in the VFL competition between rounds 12 and 13. ANFC President,Pat Rodriguez , remarks that the total attendance of 90,261 spectators at the 16 matches was an insult to the rest of Australia from the Victorian football community.
**Given that the VFL competition was suspended for the duration of the Carnival. and given that a total of 99,346 spectators had attended the round 10 match, three weeks earlier, between Collingwood and Melbourne at theMelbourne Cricket Ground , it seems that his remarks were well justified.
* In the last moments of the third quarter of the round 16 match between South Melbourne and St Kilda, South Melbourne wingerIan Tampion received a free kick. The siren went and Tampion, thinking that he was far too far away from the goals, gave the ball the field umpireBill Barbour and went to join the three-quarter time South Melbourne team huddle. South Melbourne captain-coachRon Clegg insisted that he "have a go" and not waste the chance. Tampion retrieved the ball from the umpire and kicked a beautiful 80-yard (73.2m) drop-kick that travelled over the heads of the St Kilda defenders, who had moved up the field towards him, not expecting him to be able to kick such a distance, and scored a goal.
* Immediately the round 18 matches were over, the (23 August) Saturday evening "Sporting Globe" announces that Neil Roberts of St Kilda is the winner of its "Hadyn Bunton Memorial Medal". The medal came with a cash prize of ₤100-0-0. By accepting the prize, Roberts (who, up to that time had played as an amateur) turned professional.
**Therefore, whilst he played the entire 1958 season as an amateur, the same asDon Cordner in 1946 andJohn Schultz in 1960, unlike both Cordner and Schultz he was a professional at the time theBrownlow Medal winner was announced (Tuesday 26 August).
* Collingwood caused a Grand Final upset by unexpectedly stopping Melbourne's attempt to equal Collingwood's record of four premierships in a row (1927-1930) (see [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Early_VFL_Final_systems#Collingwood.27s_four_VFL_Premierships_.281927-1930.29] )
* In order to increase the sales of the VFL's Football Record which, in addition to the selected player lists, also listed the number that each player would carry on the back of their club guernsey, the Grand Final teams (Collingwood and Melbourne) were ordered to change the "regular" (i.e., that registered with the VFL) playing numbers for each player for that specific match, and only for that specific match on that specific day — and, unless one is aware of this fact (i.e., that the numbers on the back of guernseys on that one particular day did not signify the individual players that they routinely signified in every other match in each player's career), one is either confused or misinformed when viewing photographs, motion pictures, and when perusing other references such as the day's "Football Record", relating to this particular match in 2008.
**By the established VFL convention (and, thus, the established tradition) that existed before and after this particular Grand Final match, and unlike most other football codes that display playing-position-indicating-numbers on a team's kit/strip/uniform — e.g.,Rugby Union ,Rugby League , Gridiron Football,etc. — the number on the back of an Australian Rules footballer's guernsey:
***(a) has no connection with the position the individual occupies in any particular match,
***(b) is issued by the player's football club prior to their first match with that club (and is then registered against that player's name, by the VFL),
***(c) usually remains unchanged throughout a player's career with that club, and
***(d) is often, as was the case ofRon Barassi 's 31, retained by a player, when he transfers from one team to another.
***(a) to (d) is also the current AFL convention.
* The reason for this last-minute aggressively pro-active move by the VFL was to halt, counter-act and nullify an attempt by university students to significantly destabilize the VFL's income stream by issuing free team sheets — containing the Grand Final players' names, their (regular) guernsey numbers, and their official selected team positions (as announced on the Thursday evening prior to the match) — outside theMelbourne Cricket Ground on the day of the match.References
* Rogers, S. & Brown, A., "Every Game Ever Played: VFL/AFL Results 1897-1997 (Sixth Edition)", Viking Books, (Ringwood), 1998. ISBN 0-670-90809-6
* 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 0-670-86814-0External links
* [http://stats.rleague.com/afl/seas/1958.html 1958 Season - AFL Tables]
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