The Victorian Football League's 1897 finals series determined the top four final positions of the 1897 VFL season. It began on the weekend of August 21, 1897 and ended on the weekend of September 3, 1897. Essendon were crowned the 1897 VFL premiers, finishing the finals series on top of the mini-ladder.
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| Team | Played | Won | Draw | Lost | For | Against | % | Points | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Geelong | 14 | 11 | 0 | 3 | 704 | 382 | 184.3 | 44 |
| 2 | Essendon | 14 | 11 | 0 | 3 | 706 | 444 | 159.0 | 44 |
| 3 | Melbourne | 14 | 10 | 0 | 4 | 685 | 473 | 144.8 | 40 |
| 4 | Collingwood | 14 | 9 | 0 | 5 | 508 | 446 | 113.9 | 36 |
| 5 | South Melbourne | 14 | 8 | 1 | 5 | 594 | 430 | 138.1 | 34 |
| 6 | Fitzroy | 14 | 4 | 1 | 9 | 508 | 485 | 104.7 | 18 |
| 7 | Carlton | 14 | 2 | 0 | 12 | 377 | 737 | 51.2 | 8 |
| 8 | St Kilda | 14 | 0 | 0 | 14 | 281 | 966 | 29.1 | 0 |
The VFL had several proposed finals systems leading up to the 1897 finals series. The system which was ultimately used was not decided until 17 August 1897 – three days after the finals were scheduled to have begun under another system. The change was possible only because the first week of finals, scheduled for 14 August 1897, had been postponed due to inclement weather.
Ultimately, the clubs agreed to a system comprising a round-robin amongst the top four, with the provision for a play-off match for the premiership depending on the results of that round-robin.[3] The finals system was as follows:
The takings for the first week of the finals were donated to charity; the remaining takings were divided amongst the entire league.
A point of contention was the venue for the finals matches. Venues were originally to be drawn by lot, but in early August, the league decided to fix the venues in advance, and scheduled no final at Geelong's Corio Oval, which offered much lower gate takings than the venues within Melbourne. This drew considerable protest from Geelong, which had finished as minor premiers.[4] This decision was later reversed, and when the finals system was determined on August 17th, Geelong was scheduled to host its match in the first week.
| First Round Final | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Saturday, 21 August (2:30 PM) | Geelong | def. by | Essendon | Kardinia Park, Geelong (Crowd: 5,000) | |
| 1.5 (11) 1.6 (12) 2.10 (22) 3.11 (29) |
Q1 Q2 Q3 Final |
0.2 (2) 1.4 (10) 1.4 (10) 5.5 (35) |
Umpires: Henry 'Ivo' Crapp |
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| James, Quinn, White | Goals | T. Collins 2, Campbell, Cleghorn, Wright | |||
| McGuire, Burns, McCallum, Conway, Pontin, Brockwell | Best | Forbes, Kearney, Vautin, Barry, Croft, T. Collins | |||
| Unknown | Injuries | Unknown | |||
| Unknown | Reports | Unknown | |||
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Essendon staged a tremendous last quarter fightback to beat Geelong by a goal. Geelong were unable to stop an Essendon comeback in which Collins and Cleghorn reduced the deficit to a goal, before an error by Geelong player Henry Young let Colin Campbell in for the equalising goal. Essendon scored again soon after and the game was sealed.[5][6] |
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| Collingwood vs Melbourne | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Team | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Final |
| Collingwood | 1.4 (10) | 5.5 (35) | 6.8 (44) | 7.9 (51) |
| Melbourne | 1.1 (7) | 2.2 (14) | 4.5 (29) | 7.5 (47) |
| Venue: | Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne | |||
| Date and time: | 21 August 1897 | |||
| Attendance: | 7,000 | |||
| Umpires: | T. H. McCoy | |||
| Goal scorers: | Collingwood | 2: Dowell 1: Condon, Kay, J.F. Leach, T. Lee, McDonald |
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| Melbourne | 4: Leith 1: Young, Geddes, McGinis |
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| Best: | Collingwood | Sime, Pannam, Smith, Strickland, Leach, Gregory, Hailwood | ||
| Melbourne | McGinis, Wardill, Robinson, Moysey, Herring, Lewis, Leith | |||
| Reports: | unknown | |||
| Injuries: | unknown | |||
| Australian television broadcaster: | none | |||
Collingwood narrowly defeated Melbourne in probably the finest game of the season. Collingwood's formed had vastly improved, although the Melbourne side was sadly depleted through injuries.[5]
| Essendon vs Collingwood | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Team | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Final |
| Essendon | 1.1 (7) | 2.8 (20) | 4.11 (35) | 9.16 (70) |
| Collingwood | 1.2 (8) | 2.2 (14) | 4.3 (27) | 4.6 (30) |
| Venue: | Melbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne | |||
| Date and time: | 21 August 1897 | |||
| Attendance: | 5,000 | |||
| Umpires: | T. H. McCoy | |||
| Goal scorers: | Essendon | 4: Waugh 2: Gavin 1: Croft, Cochrane, Cleghorn |
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| Collingwood | 2: Calleson 1: Pannam, Tulloch |
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| Best: | Essendon | Forbes, Cleghorn, Barry, Kearney, O'Loughlin | ||
| Collingwood | Calleson, Smith, Dowdell, Strickland, Sime | |||
| Reports: | unknown | |||
| Injuries: | unknown | |||
| Australian television broadcaster: | none | |||
Essendon played brilliantly to account for Collingwood, kicking five goals five to three points in the final term. Essendon became the only unbeaten team after round two. [5]
| Geelong vs Melbourne | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Team | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Final |
| Geelong | 0.3 (3) | 2.8 (20) | 4.9 (33) | 5.16 (46) |
| Melbourne | 3.2 (20) | 4.4 (28) | 5.6 (36) | 5.7 (37) |
| Venue: | Brunswick Street Oval, Fitzroy | |||
| Date and time: | 28 August 1897 | |||
| Attendance: | 4,000 | |||
| Umpires: | Henry 'Ivo' Crapp | |||
| Goal scorers: | Geelong | 2: James 1: Parkin, White, Young |
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| Melbourne | 2: Moysey 1: McGinis, Steele, Young |
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| Best: | Geelong | Rankin, J. McShane, Young, Flynn, Burns, Pontin | ||
| Melbourne | Moysey, Herring, McLeod, Healing, Sutton, F. Sheahan | |||
| Reports: | unknown | |||
| Injuries: | unknown | |||
| Australian television broadcaster: | none | |||
Geelong finished the stronger to down Melbourne; a goal by James near the end winning the game for them.[5] The loss eliminated Melbourne from premiership contention.
| Essendon vs Melbourne | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Team | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Final |
| Essendon | 0.1 (1) | 0.4 (4) | 1.6 (12) | 1.8 (14) |
| Melbourne | 0.3 (3) | 0.4 (4) | 0.6 (6) | 0.8 (8) |
| Venue: | Lake Oval, South Melbourne | |||
| Date and time: | 4 September 1897 | |||
| Attendance: | 3,800 | |||
| Umpires: | S. Hood | |||
| Goal scorers: | Essendon | 1: Croft | ||
| Melbourne | nil | |||
| Best: | Essendon | Forbes, Sykes, Cleghorn, Officer, Anderson, Barry, Wright | ||
| Melbourne | McGinis, Lewis, Strachan, Wood, Herring, Wardill, Moodie, Hughes | |||
| Reports: | unknown | |||
| Injuries: | unknown | |||
| Australian television broadcaster: | none | |||
Entering this game, Essendon could clinch the premiership with a victory, while Melbourne was already eliminated from premiership contention. In the low-scoring encounter, Melbourne hit the post three times and a goal by Essendon player Waugh was disallowed after the bell. Edgar Croft scored the only goal of the match after marking a skewed kick in the forward pocket. [5][8] The match set, and still holds, the record as the lowest-scoring in the history of the VFL/AFL, with only 22 points scored between the two teams; and, Essendon's 1.8 (14) also remains the lowest winning score in league history.[9]
| Geelong vs Collingwood | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Team | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Final |
| Geelong | 5.2 (32) | 7.2 (44) | 8.4 (52) | 8.4 (52) |
| Collingwood | 0.0 (0) | 2.6 (18) | 3.7 (25) | 6.12 (48) |
| Venue: | East Melbourne Cricket Ground, East Melbourne | |||
| Date and time: | 4 September 1897 | |||
| Attendance: | 3,000 | |||
| Umpires: | T. H. McCoy | |||
| Goal scorers: | Geelong | 2: James, Quinn, White 1: Jim McShane, Thompson |
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| Collingwood | 2: Condon 1: Kay, Leach, Smith, Stranger |
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| Best: | Geelong | Rankin, Parkin, J. McShane, Young, McCallum, Conway, Flynn, Burns | ||
| Collingwood | Condon, Hailwood, Gregory, O'Brien, Calleson, Sime, Strickland | |||
| Reports: | unknown | |||
| Injuries: | unknown | |||
| Australian television broadcaster: | none | |||
Entering this game, it was known that if Essendon lost to Melbourne in the other match (played at the same time), then the winner of this match would face Essendon in a playoff the following week to decide the premiership. Geelong's brilliant first-quarter burst meant Collingwood's chances of making it back into the match were near impossible. However in a thrilling match, Geelong ran out winners by less than a goal.[5]
| Team | Played | Won | Draw | Lost | For | Against | % | Points | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Essendon | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 119 | 67 | 177.6 | 12 |
| 2 | Geelong | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 127 | 120 | 105.8 | 8 |
| 3 | Collingwood | 3 | 1 | 0 | 2 | 129 | 169 | 76.3 | 4 |
| 4 | Melbourne | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 92 | 111 | 82.9 | 0 |
These are the finals teams for the top two teams in the round robin series; and, rather than being "Grand Finalists" (because there was no Grand Finale match in 1897), they played to decide the premiership. The players that are listed are players used in any one of the three round robin finals played.
The players listed below are in no particular order, however the captain and vice-captain appear first.
| Essendon | ||
|---|---|---|
| George Stuckey (c) | Jim Anderson (vc) | Gus Kearney |
| Ned Officer | Tod Collins | Hugh Gavin |
| Colin Campbell | George Cochrane | Harry Wright |
| Arthur Cleghorn | George Vautin | Ted Kinnear |
| Charlie Forbes | Norman Waugh | Edgar Croft |
| Pat O'Loughlin | Son Barry | George Martin |
| Archie Sykes | Joe Groves | George Hastings |
| Dave Ferguson | - | - |
The players listed below are in no particular order, however the captain appears first.
| Geelong | ||
|---|---|---|
| Jack Conway (c) | Peter Burns | Charles Coles |
| Jim Flynn | Teddy Holligan | Eddy James |
| Jim McShane | Joe McShane | Jack Parkin |
| Alfred Pontin | Jack Quinn | Teddy Rankin |
| Arch Thompson | Fred Wright | Henry Young |
| Samuel Brockwell | Edward Greeves, Sr. | Firth McCallum |
| Henry McShane | Thomas Maguire | Arthur Pincott |
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