1964 VFL Grand Final

The 1964 VFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between the Collingwood Football Club and Melbourne Football Club, held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Melbourne on 19 September 1964. It was the 68th annual Grand Final of the Victorian Football League, staged to determine the premiers for the 1964 VFL season. The match, attended by 102,471 spectators, was won by Melbourne by a margin of 4 points, marking that club's 12th (and to date, most recent) premiership victory.

1964 VFL Grand Final

Melbourne

Collingwood
8.16 (64) 8.12 (60)
1 2 3 4
MEL 2.6 (18) 5.7 (37) 7.10 (52) 8.16 (64)
COL 2.5 (17) 5.9 (39) 5.11 (41) 8.12 (60)
Date19 September 1964
StadiumMelbourne Cricket Ground
Attendance102,471
 1963 VFL Grand Final 1965 

Background

Melbourne were competing in the finals for the 11th consecutive season. They were also playing in their eighth Grand Final in 11 seasons and fighting for their sixth Premiership in that time.

Match summary

With Melbourne leading by 11 points at the final break the match is remembered for its thrilling last quarter. In the early stages Melbourne had plenty of opportunities to kick goals but could only manage behinds and it was Collingwood's Des Tuddenham who kicked the first goal of the term.

17 minutes into the quarter Collingwood trailed by 9 points but were within a kick when Ray Gabelich kicked goal from a boundary throw in. Gabelich kicked another to put them in front soon afterwards, a goal that is now regarded as one of the most famous in grand final history. He had received the ball near centre half forward and due to Melbourne having spent the previous minutes in their own forwardline and Collingwood moving the ball upfield quickly, there were no defenders ahead of Gabelich. A 109 kg ruckman, Gabelich ran towards the goal, bounced the ball four times, nearly losing it on each occasion, and with Melbourne players gaining on him put it through the big sticks.

Collingwood were now 3 points up and time on was nearing. After the restart Melbourne's Barry Bourke kicked the ball into their 50 and it was marked by rover Hassa Mann. He was directly in front and only 20 metres out but his shot for goal came off the side of his boot and he could only manage a behind. Melbourne had another chance to win the game however when they kicked the ball towards the goalsquare. A big pack of players went for the ball but it spilled to the ground where Melbourne defender Neil Crompton gathered the ball and kicked a goal. It was his only goal of the season and he had only been forward because he'd followed his opponent upfield.

In the final minutes, Collingwood had the ball in their forward line. Collingwood's Ian Graham had a chance to goal with a difficult snap from the boundary but missed. Melbourne held on against intense pressure from Collingwood until the siren sounded leaving Melbourne winners by 4 points.[1]

Teams

Melbourne
Collingwood
Melbourne
B: 5 Neil Crompton 37 Bernie Massey 8 Tassie Johnson
HB: 11 Tony Anderson 18 Brian Roet 40 Frank Davis
C: 9 Brian Dixon 35 Don Williams 6 Frank Adams
HF: 22 Bryan Kenneally 20 Graeme Jacobs 32 Barrie Vagg
F: 4 John Lord 14 Barry Bourke 16 John Townsend
Foll: 23 Graham Wise 31 Ron Barassi (c) 29 Hassa Mann
Res: 36 Peter McLean 10 Ken Emselle
Coach: Norm Smith
Collingwood
B: 16 Ron Reeves 15 Ted Potter 9 Trevor Steer
HB: 13 Laurie Hill 8 John Mahon 33 Duncan Wright
C: 23 Ricky Watt 2 John Henderson (vc) 25 Bert Chapman
HF: 30 Des Tuddenham 21 Kevin McLean 26 David Norman
F: 5 Terry Waters 7 Ian Graham 27 Denis Dalton
Foll: 1 Ray Gabelich (c) 29 Kevin Rose 24 Mick Bone
Res: 19 Max Urquhart 3 Ken Turner (dvc)
Coach: Bob Rose

Umpire - Ron Brophy

Statistics

Score

Team123Final
Melbourne2.6 (18)5.7 (37)7.10 (52)8.16 (64)
Collingwood2.5 (17)5.9 (39)5.11 (41)8.12 (60)

Goal kickers

Melbourne:

  • Townsend 3
  • Lord 2
  • Bourke 1
  • Crompton 1
  • Mann 1

Collingwood:

  • Gabelich 2
  • Bone 1
  • Dalton 1
  • Graham 1
  • Steer 1
  • Tuddenham 1
  • Waters 1

For a long time, Terry Waters was credited with two goals in the grand final. In January 2020, historians reviewed the game and determined that one of Waters goals had been scored by Ian Graham instead, and the scorecard was amended. Waters admitted that he did not remember kicking one of his goals. Prior to the change, Waters was recognised as the outright leading Collingwood goal kicker for the year with 43 goals; but the change brought a tie between the Waters and Graham on 42 apiece.

See also

References

  1. Ross, John (ed.). 100 Years of Australian Football. Penguin Books. p. 228. ISBN 0-14-026969-X.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.