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1927 VFL grand final

The 1927 VFL grand final was an Australian rules football match contested between the Collingwood Football Club and Richmond Football Club, held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Melbourne on 1 October 1927. It was the grand final of the Victorian Football League, staged to determine the premiers for the 1927 VFL season.

1927 VFL Grand Final

Collingwood

Richmond
2.13 (25) 1.7 (13)
1 2 3 4
COLL 0.1 (1) 2.6 (18) 2.9 (21) 2.13 (25)
RICH 0.4 (4) 0.4 (4) 0.7 (7) 1.7 (13)
Date1 October 1927
StadiumMelbourne Cricket Ground
Attendance34,551

In a historically low scoring match marred by persistent heavy rain, Collingwood defeated Richmond by twelve points, to win its sixth VFL premiership.

Background edit

Before the 1927 season, Collingwood had last won a premiership in 1919, and had suffered grand finals losses in 1920, 1922, 1925 and 1926. After pre-season training, the Collingwood committee caused a sensation by sacking three-year captain Charlie Tyson as both captain and player – he was cleared to North Melbourne. Syd Coventry was appointed captain,[1] and went on to win the 1927 Brownlow Medal and the inaugural Copeland Trophy. Collingwood led the ladder for most of the year, and won its second consecutive minor premiership with a 15–3 record. It comfortably defeated third-placed Geelong by 66 points in the semi-final to qualify for the final.

Richmond, having finished seventh in 1925 and 1926, had a strong improvement in form with the development of number of young players who formed the core of its team over the next decade. In 1927, Richmond finished second on the ladder with 14–4, in what would ultimately be the first of nine consecutive finals appearances. In its semi-final, Richmond defeated fourth-placed Carlton by six points.

The clubs had faced each other twice during the year: Richmond 7.13 (55) defeated Collingwood 6.13 (49) at Victoria Park on 14 May and Collingwood 12.12 (84) defeated Richmond 9.7 (61) at the Richmond Cricket Ground on 30 July. Collingwood was a more experienced and bigger-bodied team, while Richmond was known as a more speedy, skilful and youthful side,[2] and an even match was expected.[3]

This match was originally the final under the amended Argus system, and Collingwood as minor premier still had its double chance. If Collingwood were to win the match, it would be premiers; if Richmond were to win, a challenge final would have been played the following week between the same two clubs to determine the premiers.[4]

Match summary edit

The reserves final was played as a curtain raiser, in which South Melbourne 10.11 (71) defeated minor premiers Carlton 9.10 (64) to set up a challenge final for the following week.[5]

Weather conditions edit

The 1927 grand final was played in infamously awful weather conditions. It had been a relatively dry and warm week,[3] before central Melbourne received 83pts (21mm) of rain during the night before the match. The rain had stopped by morning, and conditions were windy but fine; and when the league committee gathered at 12pm – which was the deadline a decision on postponement of the match – reasonable conditions were expected for the afternoon.[6] However, heavier rain returned starting between 1pm and 2pm, and a further 64pts (16mm) of rain fell continuously during the match.[5] Altogether, central Melbourne saw 147pts (37mm) of rain in the 24hrs of the match, as part of flooding rains across the state which saw parts of Gippsland receive more than double that amount.

Consequently, ground conditions were appalling, with some areas reduced to quagmire and other areas covered with inches-deep sheets of standing water, particularly on the southern wing where the practice wickets were grown.[2] This had a significant impact on gameplay, and on the players' ability to maintain a footing or handle the ball. Kicking off the ground was at least as frequent as attempting to possess and punt the ball.[5] Conditions were also very windy: during the first half of the curtain-raiser (before the rain began), fourteen of fifteen goals had been scored with the aid of the strong south-westerly wind.[5] The ambient temperature was cold, with a maximum of only 55.2°F (12.9°C).[7][8]

A crowd of only 34,551 attended the match.[5] The small gate of only £1778/12/9, coupled with Collingwood's win and subsequent lack of a challenge match, meant that the clubs' dividend from the finals gate was much lower than usual.[3]

First quarter edit

Richmond won the toss and kicked to the Punt Road end with the favour of the south-westerly wind.[5][3] Richmond attacked first and most often in the first ten minutes of play without score, its best chance a shot by Frank O'Brien which went between the goal posts but was called back for a free kick to Collingwood.[5] After ten minutes, the first score was a behind to Collingwood's Percy Rowe who tipped ball through from close range.[5][9] There was some rough handling and retaliation among the players, with some lingering bitterness from the teams' previous encounters; and several players came to blows early in the match.[5][2]

George Rudolph secured Richmond's first behind with a long kick which hit the goal post low down.[5] Jack McCormack, at the end of a long off-the-ground bust through the middle, won a free kick against Joe Poulter, his long free kick missing for the second behind.[2][10] Richmond small Fincher injured his knee around this time, and he played forward for the rest of the match; he was inconvenienced throughout, and took a shot for goal at this stage from a good position, but his knee couldn't cope.[5] Another strong attempt was stopped by Syd Coventry,[2] before Richmond managed two more behinds: one by Allan Geddes in the rush,[5][10] Geddes.[9] and the other by Jack McCormack from a long range free kick.

When the bell sounded, Richmond 0.4 (4) led Collingwood 0.1 (1). Play was overall balanced, Richmond having more of the play and the speedier play,[10] but Collingwood having higher quality play against the wind,[10][5] and Richmond making many mistakes.[5] The match was a gruelling scramble through the rain and slush, and Collingwood's defence led by Syd Coventry had done its best to keep Richmond goalless.[2] Collingwood largely kept the ball on the northern wing to mitigate the south-westerly breeze.[3]

Second quarter edit

Richmond attacked first, having a couple of good attempts turned away by Collingwood full back Charlie Dibbs;[5][2] but thereafter, the quarter was dominated by Collingwood. Rowe kicked his second behind after Collingwood rebounded from Richmond's attack,[5] and Gordon Coventry had a shot from a sharp angle but put it out of bounds.[5][10] After 35 minutes play across the two quarters, Gordon Coventry kicked the match's first goal,[11] capitalising on sustained pressure to secure a long set shot with the wind from the southern flank.[10][11] Four more behinds in quick succession – to John Harris, Harry Collier, George Clayden and Bob Makeham – extended Collingwood's lead to eight points.[5][10] Then, shortly before half time, Gordon Coventry received a pass from Harry Collier and snapped his second goal, extending the margin to 14 points.[5][2]

With seven scoring shots to none, Collingwood 2.6 (18) had opened up a healthy lead against Richmond 0.4 (4). Richmond continued to play the faster football, but it was not translating to scores in the conditions.[2]

Third quarter edit

Half-time entertainment was provided by the Geelong, Collingwood and St Kilda pipe bands.[12] The players, who were mud sodden,[11] changed into fresh uniforms, with second guernseys underneath for warmth; many of the Richmond players' partially visible under-guernseys were in an assortment of non-Richmond colours, giving the team an unusual multi-coloured appearance, while Collingwood remained in uniform black and white.[13]

It was a tight opening to the third quarter, again with rugged play seeing several players put down.[2] Collingwood held territory for the first good set of chances in the quarter,[2] Gordon Coventry scoring a behind from a free kick,[2] and Frank Murphy soon after kicking a behind with a missed shot from 15m.[5] Fincher scored next, a behind for Richmond. [5] Harry Chesswas was involved in a rushed behind for Collingwood.[5][2] Richmond had the best remaining chances to close the quarter, Doug Hayes kicking a behind from an out of bounds free kick,[9][2] and a shot by Thomas O'Halloran kicking a behind after a mark.[5] Another good chance by Hayes and O'Halloran was turned away by Charlie Dibbs with a mark on the goal-line to end the quarter.[5]

With both teams kicking three behinds in the quarter, Collingwood retained its advantage of 14 points, Collingwood 2.9 (21) leading Richmond 0.7 (7).

Final quarter edit

Richmond attacked first in the final quarter, and kicked its first goal inside the first minute of play: Rudolph and Bob O'Neill had advancing the ball with a chain of kicks along the ground, ending with Fincher behind the forward pack who kicked 30yds along the ground for Richmond's first goal, narrowing the margin to eight points.[11][6] Richmond had another couple of quick opportunities, with one attack stopped by a free kick, and a long run by Geddes in which he touched the ball to the ground three times ending with a spilled pass to a Richmond forward.[2][11]

Collingwood crowded the match to defend its lead, before advancing the ball and kicking three quick behinds, the third to Harris coming particularly close to goal.[2] Richmond attacked, but continued to miss chances, including Fincher kicking into an opponent with twelve minute remaining,[2] and O'Halloran kicking out of bounds from a mark. Late in the match, Collingwood's Harold Rumney kicked out of bounds from a shot from right in front which would have put the result beyond doubt.[2] Frank Murphy kicked a late behind.

Despite Richmond's attacking, it managed only 1.0 (6) to 0.4 (4) for the quarter. Collingwood won the match by twelve points, 2.13 (25) def. 1.7 (13).

Overall edit

Collingwood was the better team on the day, playing better to the conditions. In particular, Collingwood was more inclined to kick off the ground than Richmond, kicked the ball longer when it did opt to possess the ball, and tended to wait at ground level around the packs to win the ball after Richmond spilled marks in the wet weather;[2] while Richmond tried harder to play with its natural possession and dash game, attempted and failed at more aerial marking. Collingwood managed its two goals from the southern wing with the breeze at their backs,[6] while Richmond often lost possession trying to attack through the submerged wing of the ground.[5] Long kicking, long runs, and kicks off the ground were the standard, and passing between players was minimal in the conditions.[2] Collingwood had an overall edge in the ruck and stoppages.[2] Richmond won the free kick count 72–57; a total of 45 of the free kicks were for out of bounds.[11]

Collingwood captain Syd Coventry, playing reliably in defence for Collingwood, was generally considered best on ground, named as such by sportswriters in the Sporting Globe,[2] the Advertiser,[9] the Weekly Times,[6] Labor Call[14] and the Australasian.[3] Fellow Collingwood defender Ernie Wilson was named best in the the Age, and it was Collingwood's defence overall which was considered its biggest strength in the match. Albert Collier, Charlie Dibbs, Leo Wescott, Frank Murphy, Percy Rowe and Bob Makeham (who was widely lauded for his strong marking) also figured among Collingwood's best.[2]

Richmond captain and wingman Allan Geddes, doing the best among all players at handling the ball despite the conditions and advancing with dash, was named best in the Argus and was widely considered Richmond's best.[5] Frank O'Brien, who also handled the ball well, forward/followers Jack Fincher and Doug Hayes, and defenders Cyril Lilburne and Don Harris were also among the best.[5]

Gordon Coventry kicked both of Collingwood's goals, to finish the season with 97 goals. Entering the match with 95 goals, many had hoped Coventry would become the first player to kicked 100 goals in a VFL season, but with the season ending after the match this did not occur.[5]

The match set several marks and records in low scoring. The match's aggregate score of 3.20 (38) is the lowest-scoring match in the VFL since round 6, 1900, making it the lowest-scoring match (grand final or otherwise) in the 20th century; there has been no lower scoring match in the 21st century as of 2023, and there were only ten lower-scoring matches in the 19th century.[15] Collingwood's score of 2.13 (25) is the lowest winning score in a grand final, and Richmond's 1.7 (13) is the lowest score overall in a grand final.[16]

Aftermath edit

A charity rematch for the Lord Mayor's fund was considered for the following Saturday to make up for the lack of spectacle and takings,[11] but Collingwood declined to play against Richmond at risk that its premiership would be diminished in the event of defeat.[17] Other attempts were made to stage a match, with Geelong challenging Richmond and Fitzroy offering to play, but by the time those offers were made it was no longer possible to secure a venue.[18] Collingwood travelled to Adelaide to play SANFL premiers West Adelaide on 15 October, Collingwood 14.10 (94) defeating West Adelaide 9.12 (66) at the Adelaide Showground before a crowd of 10,200.[19]

Teams edit

Neither team made any changes to its initially selected semi-final eighteens for the match, but Richmond made one late change: George Robinson coming in for Jack Baggott – the club's leading goalkicker in his first senior season – who suffered a side injury after falling heavily from a high mark in Thursday's training session.[5][20] Richmond was also still missing champion full back Donald Don, who was out with influenza.[21]

 
 
 
 
Collingwood
 
 
 
 
 
Richmond

Scorecard edit

1927 VFL final
Saturday, 1 October Collingwood def. Richmond Melbourne Cricket Ground (crowd: 34,551)
0.1 (1)
2.6 (18)
2.9 (21)
 2.13 (25)
Q1
Q2
Q3
 Final
0.4 (4)
0.4 (4)
0.7 (7)
 1.7 (13)
Umpires: Jack McMurray
G. Coventry 2 Goals Fincher
Chesswas (rib)[22] Wilson (cut eye).[5] Injuries Fincher (knee), O'Neill (corked thigh)[23]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ W. S. Sharland (29 April 1927). "Notes from Collingwood". Geelong Advertiser. p. 8.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w "Collingwood beat Richmond for 1927 premiership". The Sporting Globe. Melbourne, VIC. 1 October 1927. p. 1.
  3. ^ a b c d e f J.W. (8 October 1927). "Collingwood wins premiership". The Australasian. Melbourne, VIC. p. 34.
  4. ^ Rodgers, Stephen (1992), Every Game Ever Played: VFL/AFL Results, 1897–1991 (3rd ed.), Ringwood, VIC: Viking O'Neil
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Onlooker (3 October 1927). "Collingwood premiers". The Argus. Melbourne, VIC. p. 6.
  6. ^ a b c d G. K. Miller (8 October 1927). "Collingwood win league football premiership". Weekly Times. Melbourne, VIC. p. 80.
  7. ^ "Friday's weather chart". The Argus. Melbourne, VIC. 1 October 1927. p. 39.
  8. ^ "Saturday's weather chart". The Argus. Melbourne, VIC. 3 October 1927. p. 21.
  9. ^ a b c d "Collingwood premiers". Geelong Advertiser. 3 October 1927. p. 7.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Kickero (3 October 1927). "The final a real washout". The Herald. Melbourne, VIC. p. 3.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Follower (3 October 1927). "League final played in lake". The Age. Melbourne, VIC. p. 6.
  12. ^ "Football - League - Collingwood premiers". Geelong Advertiser. Geelong, VIC. 3 October 1927. p. 7.
  13. ^ Jumbo Sharland (1 October 1927). "Jumbo Sharland's sidelights on match". The Sporting Globe. Melbourne, VIC. p. 1.
  14. ^ "Football". Labor Call. Melbourne, VIC. 6 October 1927. pp. 3, 7.
  15. ^ "Game Records". AFL Tables. Retrieved 6 April 2024.
  16. ^ "Grand Final Records*". AFL Tables. Retrieved 6 April 2024.
  17. ^ "Football - proposed charity match". The Age. Melbourne, VIC. 5 October 1927. p. 14.
  18. ^ "Football - Proposed charity match". The Age. Melbourne, VIC. 6 October 1927. p. 6.
  19. ^ "Collingwood in Adelaide". The Argus. Melbourne, VIC. 17 October 1927. p. 8.
  20. ^ "Richmond will field the same eighteen that won first semi-final". Richmond Guardian. Richmond, VIC. 1 October 1927. p. 3.
  21. ^ Forward (30 September 1927). "League final". The Age. Melbourne, VIC. p. 5.
  22. ^ "Chesswas injured". The Argus. Melbourne, VIC. 4 October 1927. p. 11.
  23. ^ P. H. Maybury (8 October 1927). "Bad weather ruins Tigers' chance". Richmond Guardian. Richmond, VIC. p. 3.
  • Atkinson, Graeme: The Complete Book of AFL Finals, 1996. ISBN 1-875971-47-5
  • McFarlane, Glenn and Roberts, Michael: The Machine – The Inside Story of Football's Greatest Team, 2005. ISBN 0-9586412-3-4

1927, grand, final, australian, rules, football, match, contested, between, collingwood, football, club, richmond, football, club, held, melbourne, cricket, ground, melbourne, october, 1927, grand, final, victorian, football, league, staged, determine, premier. The 1927 VFL grand final was an Australian rules football match contested between the Collingwood Football Club and Richmond Football Club held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Melbourne on 1 October 1927 It was the grand final of the Victorian Football League staged to determine the premiers for the 1927 VFL season 1927 VFL Grand FinalCollingwood Richmond2 13 25 1 7 13 1 2 3 4COLL 0 1 1 2 6 18 2 9 21 2 13 25 RICH 0 4 4 0 4 4 0 7 7 1 7 13 Date1 October 1927StadiumMelbourne Cricket GroundAttendance34 551 1926 VFL Grand Final 1928 In a historically low scoring match marred by persistent heavy rain Collingwood defeated Richmond by twelve points to win its sixth VFL premiership Contents 1 Background 2 Match summary 2 1 Weather conditions 2 2 First quarter 2 3 Second quarter 2 4 Third quarter 2 5 Final quarter 2 6 Overall 2 7 Aftermath 3 Teams 4 Scorecard 5 See also 6 ReferencesBackground editBefore the 1927 season Collingwood had last won a premiership in 1919 and had suffered grand finals losses in 1920 1922 1925 and 1926 After pre season training the Collingwood committee caused a sensation by sacking three year captain Charlie Tyson as both captain and player he was cleared to North Melbourne Syd Coventry was appointed captain 1 and went on to win the 1927 Brownlow Medal and the inaugural Copeland Trophy Collingwood led the ladder for most of the year and won its second consecutive minor premiership with a 15 3 record It comfortably defeated third placed Geelong by 66 points in the semi final to qualify for the final Richmond having finished seventh in 1925 and 1926 had a strong improvement in form with the development of number of young players who formed the core of its team over the next decade In 1927 Richmond finished second on the ladder with 14 4 in what would ultimately be the first of nine consecutive finals appearances In its semi final Richmond defeated fourth placed Carlton by six points The clubs had faced each other twice during the year Richmond 7 13 55 defeated Collingwood 6 13 49 at Victoria Park on 14 May and Collingwood 12 12 84 defeated Richmond 9 7 61 at the Richmond Cricket Ground on 30 July Collingwood was a more experienced and bigger bodied team while Richmond was known as a more speedy skilful and youthful side 2 and an even match was expected 3 This match was originally the final under the amended Argus system and Collingwood as minor premier still had its double chance If Collingwood were to win the match it would be premiers if Richmond were to win a challenge final would have been played the following week between the same two clubs to determine the premiers 4 Match summary editThe reserves final was played as a curtain raiser in which South Melbourne 10 11 71 defeated minor premiers Carlton 9 10 64 to set up a challenge final for the following week 5 Weather conditions edit The 1927 grand final was played in infamously awful weather conditions It had been a relatively dry and warm week 3 before central Melbourne received 83pts 21mm of rain during the night before the match The rain had stopped by morning and conditions were windy but fine and when the league committee gathered at 12pm which was the deadline a decision on postponement of the match reasonable conditions were expected for the afternoon 6 However heavier rain returned starting between 1pm and 2pm and a further 64pts 16mm of rain fell continuously during the match 5 Altogether central Melbourne saw 147pts 37mm of rain in the 24hrs of the match as part of flooding rains across the state which saw parts of Gippsland receive more than double that amount Consequently ground conditions were appalling with some areas reduced to quagmire and other areas covered with inches deep sheets of standing water particularly on the southern wing where the practice wickets were grown 2 This had a significant impact on gameplay and on the players ability to maintain a footing or handle the ball Kicking off the ground was at least as frequent as attempting to possess and punt the ball 5 Conditions were also very windy during the first half of the curtain raiser before the rain began fourteen of fifteen goals had been scored with the aid of the strong south westerly wind 5 The ambient temperature was cold with a maximum of only 55 2 F 12 9 C 7 8 A crowd of only 34 551 attended the match 5 The small gate of only 1778 12 9 coupled with Collingwood s win and subsequent lack of a challenge match meant that the clubs dividend from the finals gate was much lower than usual 3 First quarter edit Richmond won the toss and kicked to the Punt Road end with the favour of the south westerly wind 5 3 Richmond attacked first and most often in the first ten minutes of play without score its best chance a shot by Frank O Brien which went between the goal posts but was called back for a free kick to Collingwood 5 After ten minutes the first score was a behind to Collingwood s Percy Rowe who tipped ball through from close range 5 9 There was some rough handling and retaliation among the players with some lingering bitterness from the teams previous encounters and several players came to blows early in the match 5 2 George Rudolph secured Richmond s first behind with a long kick which hit the goal post low down 5 Jack McCormack at the end of a long off the ground bust through the middle won a free kick against Joe Poulter his long free kick missing for the second behind 2 10 Richmond small Fincher injured his knee around this time and he played forward for the rest of the match he was inconvenienced throughout and took a shot for goal at this stage from a good position but his knee couldn t cope 5 Another strong attempt was stopped by Syd Coventry 2 before Richmond managed two more behinds one by Allan Geddes in the rush 5 10 Geddes 9 and the other by Jack McCormack from a long range free kick When the bell sounded Richmond 0 4 4 led Collingwood 0 1 1 Play was overall balanced Richmond having more of the play and the speedier play 10 but Collingwood having higher quality play against the wind 10 5 and Richmond making many mistakes 5 The match was a gruelling scramble through the rain and slush and Collingwood s defence led by Syd Coventry had done its best to keep Richmond goalless 2 Collingwood largely kept the ball on the northern wing to mitigate the south westerly breeze 3 Second quarter edit Richmond attacked first having a couple of good attempts turned away by Collingwood full back Charlie Dibbs 5 2 but thereafter the quarter was dominated by Collingwood Rowe kicked his second behind after Collingwood rebounded from Richmond s attack 5 and Gordon Coventry had a shot from a sharp angle but put it out of bounds 5 10 After 35 minutes play across the two quarters Gordon Coventry kicked the match s first goal 11 capitalising on sustained pressure to secure a long set shot with the wind from the southern flank 10 11 Four more behinds in quick succession to John Harris Harry Collier George Clayden and Bob Makeham extended Collingwood s lead to eight points 5 10 Then shortly before half time Gordon Coventry received a pass from Harry Collier and snapped his second goal extending the margin to 14 points 5 2 With seven scoring shots to none Collingwood 2 6 18 had opened up a healthy lead against Richmond 0 4 4 Richmond continued to play the faster football but it was not translating to scores in the conditions 2 Third quarter edit Half time entertainment was provided by the Geelong Collingwood and St Kilda pipe bands 12 The players who were mud sodden 11 changed into fresh uniforms with second guernseys underneath for warmth many of the Richmond players partially visible under guernseys were in an assortment of non Richmond colours giving the team an unusual multi coloured appearance while Collingwood remained in uniform black and white 13 It was a tight opening to the third quarter again with rugged play seeing several players put down 2 Collingwood held territory for the first good set of chances in the quarter 2 Gordon Coventry scoring a behind from a free kick 2 and Frank Murphy soon after kicking a behind with a missed shot from 15m 5 Fincher scored next a behind for Richmond 5 Harry Chesswas was involved in a rushed behind for Collingwood 5 2 Richmond had the best remaining chances to close the quarter Doug Hayes kicking a behind from an out of bounds free kick 9 2 and a shot by Thomas O Halloran kicking a behind after a mark 5 Another good chance by Hayes and O Halloran was turned away by Charlie Dibbs with a mark on the goal line to end the quarter 5 With both teams kicking three behinds in the quarter Collingwood retained its advantage of 14 points Collingwood 2 9 21 leading Richmond 0 7 7 Final quarter edit Richmond attacked first in the final quarter and kicked its first goal inside the first minute of play Rudolph and Bob O Neill had advancing the ball with a chain of kicks along the ground ending with Fincher behind the forward pack who kicked 30yds along the ground for Richmond s first goal narrowing the margin to eight points 11 6 Richmond had another couple of quick opportunities with one attack stopped by a free kick and a long run by Geddes in which he touched the ball to the ground three times ending with a spilled pass to a Richmond forward 2 11 Collingwood crowded the match to defend its lead before advancing the ball and kicking three quick behinds the third to Harris coming particularly close to goal 2 Richmond attacked but continued to miss chances including Fincher kicking into an opponent with twelve minute remaining 2 and O Halloran kicking out of bounds from a mark Late in the match Collingwood s Harold Rumney kicked out of bounds from a shot from right in front which would have put the result beyond doubt 2 Frank Murphy kicked a late behind Despite Richmond s attacking it managed only 1 0 6 to 0 4 4 for the quarter Collingwood won the match by twelve points 2 13 25 def 1 7 13 Overall edit Collingwood was the better team on the day playing better to the conditions In particular Collingwood was more inclined to kick off the ground than Richmond kicked the ball longer when it did opt to possess the ball and tended to wait at ground level around the packs to win the ball after Richmond spilled marks in the wet weather 2 while Richmond tried harder to play with its natural possession and dash game attempted and failed at more aerial marking Collingwood managed its two goals from the southern wing with the breeze at their backs 6 while Richmond often lost possession trying to attack through the submerged wing of the ground 5 Long kicking long runs and kicks off the ground were the standard and passing between players was minimal in the conditions 2 Collingwood had an overall edge in the ruck and stoppages 2 Richmond won the free kick count 72 57 a total of 45 of the free kicks were for out of bounds 11 Collingwood captain Syd Coventry playing reliably in defence for Collingwood was generally considered best on ground named as such by sportswriters in the Sporting Globe 2 the Advertiser 9 the Weekly Times 6 Labor Call 14 and the Australasian 3 Fellow Collingwood defender Ernie Wilson was named best in the the Age and it was Collingwood s defence overall which was considered its biggest strength in the match Albert Collier Charlie Dibbs Leo Wescott Frank Murphy Percy Rowe and Bob Makeham who was widely lauded for his strong marking also figured among Collingwood s best 2 Richmond captain and wingman Allan Geddes doing the best among all players at handling the ball despite the conditions and advancing with dash was named best in the Argus and was widely considered Richmond s best 5 Frank O Brien who also handled the ball well forward followers Jack Fincher and Doug Hayes and defenders Cyril Lilburne and Don Harris were also among the best 5 Gordon Coventry kicked both of Collingwood s goals to finish the season with 97 goals Entering the match with 95 goals many had hoped Coventry would become the first player to kicked 100 goals in a VFL season but with the season ending after the match this did not occur 5 The match set several marks and records in low scoring The match s aggregate score of 3 20 38 is the lowest scoring match in the VFL since round 6 1900 making it the lowest scoring match grand final or otherwise in the 20th century there has been no lower scoring match in the 21st century as of 2023 and there were only ten lower scoring matches in the 19th century 15 Collingwood s score of 2 13 25 is the lowest winning score in a grand final and Richmond s 1 7 13 is the lowest score overall in a grand final 16 Aftermath edit A charity rematch for the Lord Mayor s fund was considered for the following Saturday to make up for the lack of spectacle and takings 11 but Collingwood declined to play against Richmond at risk that its premiership would be diminished in the event of defeat 17 Other attempts were made to stage a match with Geelong challenging Richmond and Fitzroy offering to play but by the time those offers were made it was no longer possible to secure a venue 18 Collingwood travelled to Adelaide to play SANFL premiers West Adelaide on 15 October Collingwood 14 10 94 defeating West Adelaide 9 12 66 at the Adelaide Showground before a crowd of 10 200 19 Teams editNeither team made any changes to its initially selected semi final eighteens for the match but Richmond made one late change George Robinson coming in for Jack Baggott the club s leading goalkicker in his first senior season who suffered a side injury after falling heavily from a high mark in Thursday s training session 5 20 Richmond was also still missing champion full back Donald Don who was out with influenza 21 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Collingwood nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Richmond Collingwood B Leo Wescott Charlie Dibbs Joe Poulter HB Ernie Wilson George Clayden Albert Collier C Harry Chesswas Jack Beveridge Charlie Milburn HF Frank Murphy Bob Makeham John Harris F Harold Rumney Gordon Coventry Harry Collier Foll Syd Coventry c Percy Rowe Billy Libbis Res Coach Jock McHale Richmond B Don Harris Cyril Powell Angus MacIsaac HB Cyril Lilburne Percy Bentley Basil McCormack C Frank O Brien Les Gallagher Allan Geddes c HF Harry Weidner George Rudolph Sam Jamison F George Robinson Jack McCormack Jack Fincher Foll Thomas O Halloran Bob O Neill Doug Hayes Res Coach Checker HughesScorecard edit1927 VFL final Saturday 1 October Collingwood def Richmond Melbourne Cricket Ground crowd 34 551 0 1 1 2 6 18 2 9 21 2 13 25 Q1Q2Q3 Final 0 4 4 0 4 4 0 7 7 1 7 13 Umpires Jack McMurray G Coventry 2 Goals Fincher Chesswas rib 22 Wilson cut eye 5 Injuries Fincher knee O Neill corked thigh 23 See also edit1927 VFL seasonReferences edit W S Sharland 29 April 1927 Notes from Collingwood Geelong Advertiser p 8 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Collingwood beat Richmond for 1927 premiership The Sporting Globe Melbourne VIC 1 October 1927 p 1 a b c d e f J W 8 October 1927 Collingwood wins premiership The Australasian Melbourne VIC p 34 Rodgers Stephen 1992 Every Game Ever Played VFL AFL Results 1897 1991 3rd ed Ringwood VIC Viking O Neil a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Onlooker 3 October 1927 Collingwood premiers The Argus Melbourne VIC p 6 a b c d G K Miller 8 October 1927 Collingwood win league football premiership Weekly Times Melbourne VIC p 80 Friday s weather chart The Argus Melbourne VIC 1 October 1927 p 39 Saturday s weather chart The Argus Melbourne VIC 3 October 1927 p 21 a b c d Collingwood premiers Geelong Advertiser 3 October 1927 p 7 a b c d e f g Kickero 3 October 1927 The final a real washout The Herald Melbourne VIC p 3 a b c d e f g Follower 3 October 1927 League final played in lake The Age Melbourne VIC p 6 Football League Collingwood premiers Geelong Advertiser Geelong VIC 3 October 1927 p 7 Jumbo Sharland 1 October 1927 Jumbo Sharland s sidelights on match The Sporting Globe Melbourne VIC p 1 Football Labor Call Melbourne VIC 6 October 1927 pp 3 7 Game Records AFL Tables Retrieved 6 April 2024 Grand Final Records AFL Tables Retrieved 6 April 2024 Football proposed charity match The Age Melbourne VIC 5 October 1927 p 14 Football Proposed charity match The Age Melbourne VIC 6 October 1927 p 6 Collingwood in Adelaide The Argus Melbourne VIC 17 October 1927 p 8 Richmond will field the same eighteen that won first semi final Richmond Guardian Richmond VIC 1 October 1927 p 3 Forward 30 September 1927 League final The Age Melbourne VIC p 5 Chesswas injured The Argus Melbourne VIC 4 October 1927 p 11 P H Maybury 8 October 1927 Bad weather ruins Tigers chance Richmond Guardian Richmond VIC p 3 Atkinson Graeme The Complete Book of AFL Finals 1996 ISBN 1 875971 47 5 McFarlane Glenn and Roberts Michael The Machine The Inside Story of Football s Greatest Team 2005 ISBN 0 9586412 3 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1927 VFL grand final amp oldid 1220806038, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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