词条 | 1984 VFA season | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
释义 |
| above = 1984 VFA Premiership Season | label1 = Teams | data1= 23 | header2 = Division 1 | label3 = Teams | data3 = 12 | label4= Premiers | data4 = Preston (4th premiership) | label5 = Minor premiers | data5 = Preston (6th minor premiership) | header6 = Division 2 | label7 = Teams | data7 = 11 | label8= Premiers | data8 = Box Hill (1st D2 premiership) | label9 = Minor premiers | data9 = Box Hill (1st D2 minor premiership) |below = {{align|left|← 1983}} {{align|right|1985 →}} }} The 1984 Victorian Football Association season was the 103rd season of the top division of the Australian rules football competition, and the 24th season of second division competition. The Division 1 premiership was won by the Preston Football Club, after it defeated Frankston in the Grand Final on 23 September by 54 points; it was Preston's fourth Division 1 premiership, and its second in a row. The Division 2 premiership was won by Box Hill; it was the club's first premiership in either division since joining the Association in 1951. Association membershipOn 25 January, the Association's board of directors declined to renew Yarraville's membership; this decision was made unilaterally by the board of directors, and did not require a vote of club delegates. The decision followed a review of Yarraville's on-field and off-field position which concluded that the club had no prospects of long-term viability. The club had been in decline since its relegation from Division 1 in 1970, and had almost folded in 1976; it could not attract sufficient fans or sponsors from the Yarraville area, which had a declining population and an increasing ethnic demographic, and consequently struggled to finance a competitive team – in 1983, the club had won one senior game and been winless in both minor grades.[1] The decision ended Yarraville's 57-year affiliation with the Association, which had yielded two top division premierships (1935 and 1961). The club initially sought to compete in another competition, but ultimately disbanded.[1] Yarraville's departure resulted in Division 2 being reduced to eleven clubs, and the Association as a whole to twenty-three clubs. Yarraville was the first of fifteen clubs to leave the Association during its period of decline between 1984 and 1996. Division 1The Division 1 home-and-away season was played over eighteen rounds; the top four then contested the finals under the Page–McIntyre system. The finals were played at the Junction Oval. Ladder
Finals{{AFLGameHeader|title=Semi Finals}}{{AFLGame|Sunday, 2 September|Frankston|18.16 (124)|H|Camberwell|9.16 (70)|Junction Oval|3,751|[3]}}{{AFLGame|Sunday, 9 September|Preston|17.19 (131)|H|Geelong West|10.26 (86)|Junction Oval|4,090|[4]}}{{AFLGameFooter}}{{AFLGameHeader|title=Preliminary Final}}{{AFLGame|Sunday, 16 September|Geelong West|9.18 (72)|A|Frankston|16.11 (107)|Junction Oval|2,645|[5]}}{{AFLGameFooter}}{{AFLGameDetailed|title = 1984 VFA Division 1 Grand Final |date = Sunday, 23 September |home team = Preston |home Q1= 6.7 (43) |home Q2= 9.15 (69) |home Q3= 14.15 (99) |home final= 19.21 (135) |home goals= Bourke 5, Salvador 3, Atkin 2, Brine 2, Hackney 2, Halas 2, Jordan 2, Fyffe |home injuries = |home reports = Plowman, for striking Bardoel |winner = H |away team = Frankston |away Q1= 5.0 (30) |away Q2= 5.2 (32) |away Q3= 9.7 (61) |away final= 12.9 (81) |away goals= Boyd 5, Baldwin 2, Thomas 2, Walsh 2, Membrey |away injuries = |away reports = |venue = Junction Oval |crowd = 8,664 |report = [6] |umpires = Graeme Marcy, Phillips |BOG award = Norm Goss Memorial Medal |BOG winner = Neil Jordan (Preston) |broadcast = |anthem = |notes= }} Awards
Division 2The Division 2 home-and-away season was played over eighteen rounds; the top four then contested the finals under the Page–McIntyre system. The finals were played at Toorak Park. The home-and-away fixture had already been released when Yarraville's membership was revoked. Rather than redraft the fixture, the club drawn to play Yarraville each week instead had a bye; because the fixture was unbalanced, this meant that seven clubs had two byes and four clubs had one bye. In the ladder, a bye was treated as though it were a Yarraville forfeiture: the club was awarded a win and four premiership points, was credited with the round's average winning score as 'points for', and debited the round's average losing score as 'points against'.[8] The ladder as it is shown here distinguishes byes from wins in completed matches, but not all sources make this distinction. Ladder
Finals{{AFLGameHeader|title=Semi Finals}}{{AFLGame|Sunday, 26 August|Oakleigh|15.14 (104)|H|Caulfield|15.12 (102)|Toorak Park||[2]}}{{AFLGame|Sunday, 2 September|Box Hill|19.19 (133)|H|Brunswick|13.6 (84)|Toorak Park|6,200|[3]}}{{AFLGameFooter}}{{AFLGameHeader|title=Preliminary Final}}{{AFLGame|Sunday, 9 September|Brunswick|16.18 (114)|A|Oakleigh|26.15 (171)|Toorak Park|3,520|[4]}}{{AFLGameFooter}}{{AFLGameDetailed|title = 1984 VFA Division 2 Grand Final |date = Sunday, 16 September |home team = Box Hill |home Q1 = 6.9 (45) |home Q2 = 12.11 (83) |home Q3 = 21.18 (144) |home final = 32.23 (215) |home goals= Carroll 10, Nicholson 5, Bolton 3, A. Dickinson 3, Brown 2, Stark 2, Withers 2, R. Witnish 2, Gleeson, O'Shea, Teakel |home best = |home injuries = |home reports = |winner = H ||away team = Oakleigh |away Q1 = 3.2 (20) |away Q2 = 3.7 (25) |away Q3 = 10.11 (71) |away final = 11.14 (80) |away goals= Pretto 3, M. Roach 2, S. Roach 2, Dyrden, Harper, McDonald, Sutherland |away best= |away injuries = |away reports = |venue = Toorak Park |crowd = 10,735 |report = [5] |umpires = Vergona, Casey |BOG award = |BOG winner = |broadcast = |anthem = |notes= }} Awards
Notable eventsInterleague matchesThe Association's Division 1 and Division 2 teams each played one interleague match during the season. Gary Brice was coach of the Division 1 team for the fourth consecutive season, despite the fact that he was no longer an Association coach: he had left Port Melbourne and was now serving as a specialist coach at League club {{AFL Ess}};[21] Ray Shaw (Preston) was captain.[12] Geoff Rosenow (Mordialloc) was coach of the Division 2 team,[13] and Peter Allen (Berwick) was captain.[14] {{AFLGameHeader|title=1984 Interleague Matches}}{{AFLGame|Sunday, 13 May|S.A.F.A.|15.14 (104)|A|V.F.A. Second Division|17.14 (116)|Thebarton Oval||[15]}}{{AFLGame|Sunday, 17 June|V.A.F.A.|14.11 (95)|A|V.F.A. First Division|22.14 (146)|Elsternwick Park|5,000|[16]}}{{AFLGameFooter}}Other notable events
External links
References1. ^1 {{cite news|newspaper=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne|author=Marc Fiddian|page=30|date=26 January 1984|title=Yarraville axed}} {{VFA/VFL seasons}}{{VFL}}{{Aussie Rules in Victoria}}{{DEFAULTSORT:1984 Vfa Season}}2. ^1 2 {{cite news|newspaper=The Age|date=27 August 1984|title=Frankston pushes out Sandringham|page=25|publication-place=Melbourne|author=Dennis Jose}} 3. ^1 {{cite news|newspaper=The Age|page=23|author=Dennis Jose|title=Windfall helps Dolphins crush Cobras|date=3 September 1984|publication-place=Melbourne}} 4. ^1 {{cite news|newspaper=The Age|page=23|author=Dennis Jose|date=10 September 1984|title=Russell's 10 goals seal Preston win|publication-place=Melbourne}} 5. ^1 2 3 {{cite news|newspaper=The Age|page=25|author=Dennis Jose|title=Box Hill the best – by 135 points|date=17 September 1984|publication-place=Melbourne}} 6. ^1 {{cite news|title=Bullants win flag double|author=Michael Reid|date=24 September 1984|newspaper=The Sun News-Pictorial|page=75|publication-place=Melbourne}} 7. ^1 {{cite news|newspaper=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne|author=Dennis Jose|page=24|date=30 August 1984|title=Geddes walks away with Liston}} 8. ^{{cite news|newspaper=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne|author=Marc Fiddian|page=25|date=16 April 1984|title=Zebras' twin spearhead rocks Vales}} 9. ^{{cite news|newspaper=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne|author=Dennis Jose|page=25|date=20 August 1984|title=Sandy proves pathetic on every count}} 10. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.boxhillhawks.com.au/pdf/BHH%20Business%20Directory%202011.pdf |title=Box Hill Hawks 2011 Business Directory |publisher=Box Hill Hawks Football Club |year=2011 |accessdate=19 September 2014 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20150310205346/http://boxhillhawks.com.au/pdf/BHH%20Business%20Directory%202011.pdf |archivedate=10 March 2015 |df= }} 11. ^{{cite news|newspaper=The Sun News-Pictorial|page=83|author=Amanda Buivids|date=21 September 1989|title=Champs rewarded at last|publication-place=Melbourne}} 12. ^{{cite news|newspaper=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne|author=Dennis Jose|page=26|date=15 June 1984|title=Shaw leads revenge bid}} 13. ^1 {{cite news|newspaper=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne|author=Marc Fiddian|page=35|date=28 April 1984|title=Time for an appeals board}} 14. ^{{cite news|newspaper=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne|author=|page=24|date=11 May 1984|title=VFA teams}} 15. ^{{cite news|newspaper=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne|author=Dennis Jose|page=31|date=14 May 1984|title=VFA beats SA by two goals}} 16. ^{{cite news|newspaper=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne|author=Dennis Jose|page=28|date=18 June 1984|title=VFA makes amends in first Vic Cup win}} 17. ^{{cite news|newspaper=The Sun News-Pictorial|publication-place=Melbourne|author=Peter Martin|page=71|date=27 July 1983|title=VFA plan to even up comp}} 18. ^{{citation|first=Marc|last=Fiddian|year=2004|title=The VFA: a history of the Victorian Football Association, 1877–1995|page=302}} 19. ^{{citation|author1=Santo Caruso|author2=Marc Fiddian|author3=Jim Main|title=Football Grounds of Melbourne|publisher=Pennon Publishing|year=2002|publication-place=Essendon North, VIC|page=}} 20. ^{{cite news|newspaper=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne|author=Marc Fiddian|page=30|date=20 May 1983|title=Shaw in charge of VFA team}} 21. ^1 {{cite news|newspaper=The Age|publication-place=Melbourne|author=Dennis Jose|page=39|date=18 August 1984|title=VFA back in the ratings game}} 22. ^{{cite news|newspaper=The Sun News-Pictorial|publication-place=Melbourne|author=VFA hits Sunday finals|date=13 December 1984|page=83|title=John Hine}} 2 : Victorian Football League seasons|1984 in Australian rules football |
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