1915 VFA Season
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The 1915
Victorian Football Association The Victorian Football League (VFL) is an Australian rules football league in Australia serving as one of the second-tier regional semi-professional competitions which sit underneath the fully professional Australian Football League (AFL). It ...
season was the 39th season of the
Australian rules football Australian football, also called Australian rules football or Aussie rules, or more simply football or footy, is a contact sport played between two teams of 18 players on an oval field, often a modified cricket ground. Points are scored by k ...
competition. The season was the first to be played while Australia was fighting in World War I, so the playing stocks of many teams were reduced by enlistments. The season itself was cut five weeks short to encourage more young men to enlist in the war effort. It was the last season played before the Association went into recess for two seasons during the peak of the war. The premiership was won by the
North Melbourne Football Club The North Melbourne Football Club, nicknamed the Kangaroos, is a professional Australian rules football club. The men's team competes in the Australian Football League (AFL), and the women's team in the AFL Women's (AFLW). The Kangaroos also ...
, after it defeated Brunswick by 48 points in the final on August 7. It was the club's fifth VFA premiership, and its second in a sequence of three premierships won consecutively between 1914 and 1918. North Melbourne won all fifteen premiership matches it played during 1915, becoming the first team to go undefeated through a season since Essendon (L.) in
1893 Events January–March * January 2 – Webb C. Ball introduces railroad chronometers, which become the general railroad timepiece standards in North America. * Mark Twain started writing Puddn'head Wilson. * January 6 – Th ...
; the season was part of a 58-match winning streak for North Melbourne which lasted from 1914–1919.


Premiership

The home-and-home season was to have been played over eighteen rounds, with each club playing the others twice. However, fighting was intensifying in Europe in World War I, and football was serving as a distraction which was dissuading men from enlisting to fight; as a result, the Association decided on 14 July to end the home-and-home season early after 13 matches, and proceed directly to the finals. The top four clubs contested a finals series under the amended ''Argus'' system to determine the premiers for the season.


Ladder


Finals


Notable events

* Following the 1914 season, a faction of the Northcote and Preston Football Club's committee advised the Association that the club would move its home venue from
Croxton Park Croxton Park is a biological Site of Special Scientific Interest south-west of Croxton Kerrial Croxton Kerrial (pronounced ˆkroÊŠsÉ™n ˈkÉ›rɨl is a village and civil parish in the Melton borough of Leicestershire, England, south-west of ...
to
Northcote Park Bill Lawry Oval, formerly known as Northcote Park, is a cricket and Australian rules football stadium located on Westgarth St, Northcote, Victoria. It is most notable as the home ground of the Northcote Cricket Club in the Victorian Premier Cric ...
, where a new grandstand had been opened; the club's executive, on the other hand, wanted to remain at Croxton Park. Amid the dispute, the Association voted by an 11–1 majority to recognise the Northcote Park faction, in large part because of improvements to Northcote Park and because Croxton Park had been notorious for more than a decade for the unruly conduct of its patrons, something which was generally blamed on the influence of the Croxton Park Hotel which adjoined the ground. The Association assisted to appoint a new committee, including members of the old committee who had favoured the move and members of the
Northcote Cricket Club Northcote Cricket Club, nicknamed the Dragons, is an Australian cricket team competing in the Victorian Premier Cricket competition. The club was formed in the mid-1870s and joined the Premier Cricket competition in 1907. They have won 5 1st X ...
which also played at Northcote Park, and recognised the legitimacy of the new committee. Members of the ousted faction, including many players, established a new rival club called the City of Northcote Football Club, which played at Croxton Park in the Victorian Junior Football Association for the next four years. * organised to play a match on August 14 against League team , which had a bye in its premiership schedule that week, at the
St Kilda Cricket Ground Junction Oval (also known as the St Kilda Cricket Ground, or the CitiPower Centre due to sponsorship reasons) is a historic sports ground in the suburb of St Kilda in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. The oval's location near the St Kilda Junc ...
to raise money for Lady Stanley's Fund for Australian Wounded Soldiers. It was only the second time that a match had been played between the League and the Association since the breakaway of the League in 1897. Between 9,000–10,000 spectators attended, and £254/3/3 was raised. The football was played in bad spirit, and North Melbourne won 8.9 (57) to 4.7 (31) by 26 points.


External links

*
List of VFA premiers This page is a complete chronological listing of the premiers of the Australian rules football competition known as the Victorian Football Association until 1995 and as the Victorian Football League since 1996. The Victorian Football Association ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:1915 Vfa Season Victorian Football League seasons VFL