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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Qualification  





2 Matches  



2.1  Week one (qualifying and elimination finals)  



2.1.1  Elimination final (Carlton vs North Melbourne)  





2.1.2  Qualifying final (Footscray vs Hawthorn)  



2.1.2.1  Teams  





2.1.2.2  Match Summary  









2.2  Week two (semi-finals)  



2.2.1  First semi-final (Footscray vs North Melbourne)  



2.2.1.1  Teams  





2.2.1.2  Match Summary  







2.2.2  Second semi-final (Essendon vs Hawthorn)  







2.3  Week three (preliminary finals)  



2.3.1  Preliminary final (Footscray vs Hawthorn)  







2.4  Week four (Grand Final)  







3 References  





4 Bibliography  





5 External links  














1985 VFL finals series







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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 


1985 premiership season
Date7–28 September 1985
Teams5
PremiersEssendon (14th premiership)
Runners-upHawthorn (9th grand final)
Minor premiersEssendon (12th minor premiership)
Attendance
Matches played6
Total attendance385,589 (64,265 per match)
Highest100,042 (Grand Final, Essendon vs. Hawthorn)
← 1984
1986 →

The 1985 Victorian Football League finals series was the 89th annual edition of the VFL/AFL final series, the Australian rules football tournament staged to determine the winner of the 1985 VFL Premiership season. The series ran over four weekends in September 1985, culminating with the 1985 VFL Grand Final at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 28 September 1985.

The top five teams from the 1985 VFL Premiership season qualified for the finals series, which was played using the McIntyre final five system.

Qualification[edit]

Matches[edit]

The system used for the 1985 VFL finals series was the McIntyre final five system, which had been used continuously by the VFL since 1972.

Week one (qualifying and elimination finals)[edit]

Elimination final (Carlton vs North Melbourne)[edit]

The opening match of the 1985 VFL finals series saw fourth-placed Carlton host fifth-placed North Melbourne in the elimination final at VFL Park. This marked the sixth final between the two sides, having previously met in the second semi-final in 1979.

Scorecard
Elimination final
Saturday, 7 September (8:10pm) Carlton def. by North Melbourne VFL Park (crowd: 49,126) Report
3.6 (24)
10.10 (70)
14.10 (94)
 16.11 (107)
Q1
Q2
Q3
 Final
2.3 (15)
6.3 (39)
12.5 (77)
 20.6 (126)
Umpires: Cameron, Robinson
Television broadcast: Seven Network
Maclure 3
Harmes 2
Madden 1
Goals 4 McCann
3 Glendinning
2 Schimmelbusch, Demetriou
1 Jonas
Madden, Maclure, Marcou, Johnston Best Holt, Larkin, Schimmelbusch
Blackwell (bruised ankle) Injuries P Krakouer (bruised thigh), Ramsey (bruised thigh), Demetriou (bruised jaw)
Nil Reports Demetriou (striking), McDonald (striking)

Qualifying final (Footscray vs Hawthorn)[edit]

The Qualifying final saw second-placed Footscray host Hawthorn at the MCG. This marked the second VFL final between the two sides - having previously met in the 1961 VFL Grand Final, which was won by Hawthorn. The Bulldogs were playing in their first VFL finals series since 1976.

Teams[edit]

The line-ups below were as published in The Football Record.[1]

Footscray
B: 03Mark Kellett 08Rick Kennedy 45Michael Ford
HB: 49Brian Cordy 32Peter Foster 04Brad Hardie
C: 51Michael McLean 24Stephen Wallis 07Doug Hawkins
HF: 20Jim Edmond (c) 37Neil Peart 27Stephen MacPherson
F: 21Tony Buhagiar 18Simon Beasley 09Les Bamblett
Foll: 01Andrew Purser 17Phil Maylin 33Brian Royal
Int: 02Jim Sewell 11Allen Daniels 43Rod MacPherson
14Robert Groenewegen 29Neil Cordy
Coach: Michael Malthouse
Hawthorn
B: 07Gary Ayres 02Chris Mew 29Russell Greene
HB: 15Russell Morris 06Rod Lester-Smith 30Peter Schwab
C: 09Robert DiPierdomenico 16Terry Wallace 04Peter Russo
HF: 34John Kennedy 23Dermott Brereton 11Gary Buckenara
F: 28Chris Langford 19Jason Dunstall 03Leigh Matthews(c)
Foll: 21Michael Byrne 37Robert Handley 22Richard Loveridge
Int: 25Peter Curran 39Paul Abbott
Coach: Allan Jeans

Footscray made no late changes to the starting line-up, selecting Allen Daniels and Jim Sewell as the interchange players. Hawthorn also made no changes to the starting line-up, but replaced the named interchange players - Paul Abbott and Peter Curran- with emergencies Rodney Eade and Colin Robertson.

Match Summary[edit]
Scorecard
Qualifying final
Sunday, 8 September (2:30pm) Footscray def. by Hawthorn MCG (crowd: 58,367) Report
2.3 (15)
3.5 (23)
6.11 (47)
 8.14 (62)
Q1
Q2
Q3
 Final
6.5 (41)
11.11 (77)
15.16 (106)
 22.23 (155)
Umpires: Sawers, Howlett
Television broadcast: Seven Network
Bamblett, Beasley 2
Edmond, S MacPherson, Royal, Peart 1
Goals 5 Dunstall
3 Byrne, Brereton
2 Matthews
1 Buckenara
Hardie, Bamblett, Hawkins, Wallis, Royal Best Wallace, Lester-Smith, Morris, Greene, Mew, Langford, Dunstall
Daniels (strained ankle) Injuries DiPierdomenico (calf)
Nil Reports Nil

Week two (semi-finals)[edit]

First semi-final (Footscray vs North Melbourne)[edit]

The first semi-final saw Footscray host North Melbourne at the MCG. This was the first meeting between the two clubs in a VFL final.

Teams[edit]

The line-ups below were as published in The Football Record.[2]

Footscray
B: 04Brad Hardie 08Rick Kennedy 45Michael Ford
HB: 49Brian Cordy 32Peter Foster 03Mark Kellett
C: 17Phil Maylin 24Stephen Wallis 07Doug Hawkins
HF: 51Michael McLean 37Neil Peart 09Les Bamblett
F: 21Tony Buhagiar 18Simon Beasley 20Jim Edmond (c)
Foll: 01Andrew Purser 11Allen Daniels 33Brian Royal
Int: 02Jim Sewell 27Stephen MacPherson 43Rod MacPherson
14Robert Groenewegen 29Neil Cordy
Coach: Michael Malthouse
North Melbourne
B: 30Roy Ramsay 16Stephen McCann 49Darren Crocker
HB: 27Keith Greig 13John Law 15Ross Smith
C: 28Andrew Demetriou 07Darren Steele 02John Holt
HF: 45Peter Jonas 04Ross Glendinning 20Wayne Schimmelbusch (c)
F: 48Mark Arceri 06Ian Fairley 08Phil Krakouer
Foll: 25Donald McDonald 09Matthew Larkin 03Jim Krakouer
Int: 56Paul Spargo 37Michael Passmore 29Peter German
17Kym Hodgeman 32David Dwyer
Coach: John Kennedy

North suffered a major blow before the game when captain Wayne Schimmelbusch was omitted after failing to recover from a torn thigh muscle in time,[3] and ended up being replaced by Kym Hodgeman, with Paul Spargo and David Dwyer being confirmed as the interchange players. Footscray also made one change to its line-up, omitting Neil Peart and replacing him with Jim Sewell. Robert Groenewegen and Stephen MacPherson were the confirmed interchange players.

Match Summary[edit]

Under pressure against a North Melbourne team buzzing from its come-from-behind win against Carlton in the elimination final, the Bulldogs responded after their previous week's Qualifying final thrashing to end the Kangaroos' season and record their first VFL final victory since 1961.

The loss of Schimmelbusch was somewhat mitigated by the return of suspended rover Jim Krakouer, who ended up being among North's best players. The first half was filled with free-flowing and vigorous play, as both sides traded goals. By mid-way through the first quarter, Footscray were down two players when Ford and Kellett came off injured within minutes of each other; the former when he was met solidly by Larkin and was stretchered off with concussion, and the latter when he came off the ground with suspected cruciate ligament damage.[4] Despite this, the Bulldogs managed to go into half-time with a three-point lead. The game up to this point had been characterized by swings of momentum as one team would kick a string of goals in a few minutes, then the other would do the same.

The critical period of the game occurred early in the third quarter, starting at the five-minute mark when Beasley, who had comprehensively outplayed his opponent Fairley, took a superb pack mark. From the set shot, he slotted his fifth to bring up his 100th goal of the season, to the delight of fans and teammates. Then a minute later Daniels, a much-improved player from the previous week, smothered an attempted clearing kick from North defender Law and snapped his second goal.[5] Further goals from Bamblett, Beasley and Royal capped off a ten-minute purple patch for Footscray that pushed the lead out beyond 30 points[6]

After the game Bulldogs coach Michael Malthouse expressed his delight with his team's turnaround in form:

Last week the guys were genuinely embarrassed and they were out today to make amends. We don't want to over emphasise revenge but we will be thinking about Hawthorn and just try to do the right things. [... The players] realise that finals are more intense. The sides that win finals are played by guys who want to do it together. Next week will be a different game at a different venue. We have six days to analyse what we will do.[4]

Scorecard
First semi-final
Sunday, 15 September (2:30pm) Footscray def. North Melbourne MCG (crowd: 56,112) Report
3.1 (19)
9.8 (62)
14.16 (100)
 19.23 (137)
Q1
Q2
Q3
 Final
4.3 (27)
9.5 (59)
11.9 (75)
 16.11 (107)
Umpires: James, Robinson
Television broadcast: Seven Network
Beasley 7
Royal 5
Daniels, Edmond 2
Hawkins, Bamblett, Buhagiar 1
Goals 3 J Krakouer
2 Glendinning, Larkin, Holt
1 P Krakouer, McCann, Demetriou, Jonas, Arceri, Spargo, Fairley
Hawkins, Wallis, Royal, Maylin, Foster, B Cordy, Daniels Best Larkin, Holt, McDonald, J Krakouer, Steele
Nil Injuries Nil
Nil Reports Nil

Second semi-final (Essendon vs Hawthorn)[edit]

The second semi-final saw minor premiers Essendon host HawthornatVFL Park. The match was the fourth time the clubs had played in a final having contested the 1983 grand final as well as the second semi-final and grand final of 1984.

Scorecard
Second semi-final
Saturday, 14 September (7:25pm) Essendon def. Hawthorn VFL Park (crowd: 67,063) Report
4.4 (28)
4.8 (32)
11.14 (80)
 14.18 (102)
Q1
Q2
Q3
 Final
3.2 (20)
6.2 (38)
6.3 (39)
 9.8 (62)
Umpires: Cameron, Ryan
Television broadcast: Seven Network
Foulds 3
Merrett, Thompson 2
Baker 1
Goals 2 Brereton, Kennedy
1 Buckenara
Watson Best Mew
Nil Injuries Nil
Nil Reports Nil

Week three (preliminary finals)[edit]

Preliminary final (Footscray vs Hawthorn)[edit]

The Preliminary final saw Footscray host HawthornatVFL Park on Saturday, 21 September. This marked the third final between the two sides and second in this series, having previously met in the Qualifying final two weeks earlier.

Scorecard
Preliminary final
Saturday, 21 September (2:30pm) Footscray def. by Hawthorn VFL Park (crowd: 55,246) Report
4.4 (28)
6.6 (42)
10.7 (67)
 15.9 (99)
Q1
Q2
Q3
 Final
3.2 (20)
7.4 (46)
10.8 (68)
 16.13 (109)
Umpires: James, Sawers
Television broadcast: Seven Network
Beasley 3
Edmond 2
Royal, Buhagiar 1
Goals 4 Judge, Dunstall
2 Matthews
1 Brereton
Hardie, Hawkins, Purser Best Loveridge, Judge, Ayres, Wallace
Nil Injuries Nil
Nil Reports Nil

Week four (Grand Final)[edit]

This was the third consecutive VFL Grand Final contested between Hawthorn and Essendon.

Grand final
28 September (2:30 pm) Essendon def. Hawthorn MCG (crowd: 100,042) Report
6.4 (40)
11.9 (75)
15.11 (101)
 26.14 (170)
Q1
Q2
Q3
 Final
5.1 (31)
9.3 (57)
11.5 (71)
 14.8 (92)
Umpires: Cameron, Robinson
Norm Smith Medal: Simon Madden
Television broadcast: Seven Network
Salmon 6
Merrett 5
Harvey 4
Watson 3
Baker, Ezard, Williams 2
Thompson, Duckworth 1
Goals 8 Brereton
1 Matthews, McCarthy, Loveridge, Judge, Lester-Smith, DiPierdomenico
Madden, Merrett, Watson, Salmon, Baker, Thompson, Williams Best Brereton, Lester-Smith, Kennedy, Morris, O'Halloran
Nil Injuries Nil
Nil Reports Nil
  • Essendon won its 14th VFL premiership and achieved back-to-back VFL premierships for the fourth time.
  • The Bombers broke their Grand final record last quarter score from the previous season, kicking 11 goals 3 behinds.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Teams As Selected on Thursday Night". Football Record. Vol. 74, no. 24. 7–8 September 1985. p. 15 – via State Library of Victoria.
  • ^ "Teams As Selected on Thursday Night". Football Record. 14–15 September 1985. p. 15 – via State Library of Victoria.
  • ^ Silver, Harvey (16 September 1985). "From the losers, a tune of glory". The Age. No. 40, 657. p. 34.
  • ^ a b "'Guys that want to do it together' – Footscray humbles Roos". The Canberra Times. Vol. 60, no. 18, 248. Australian Capital Territory, Australia. 16 September 1985. p. 21. Retrieved 14 September 2021 – via National Library of Australia.
  • ^ Atkinson & Atkinson (2009), p.382
  • ^ Smithers, Patrick (16 September 1985). "Beasley tops 100, Dogs top North". The Age. p. 34.
  • Bibliography[edit]

    External links[edit]


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