AFL finals series
The Australian Football League finals series, more generally known as the AFL finals, and known from 1897 until 1989 as the Victorian Football League finals series or VFL finals, is a tournament held at the end of each AFL season to determine the premier. The top eight teams qualify for the finals based on the home-and-away season results, and finals matches are played over four weeks under the conventions of the AFL final eight system, culminating in the AFL Grand Final. The finals series is traditionally held throughout September.
The playing of a finals series at the end of the season dates back to the establishment of the Victorian Football League in 1897. After experimenting with different systems in the early years, the league utilised variations of the four-team Argus finals system from 1901 until 1930, then different variations of the McIntyre System from 1931 until 1999, beginning with four teams and expanding gradually to eight. Since 2000, the finals have been conducted under the eponymous AFL final eight system. The systems in use have typically been combinations of single- and double elimination tournaments designed to give higher ranked teams an easier path to the premiership.
Inception
The Victorian Football League was established at the end of 1896 by eight clubs which seceded from the Victorian Football Association, which had previously been the peak competition and administrative body for football in Victoria. As part of its arrangements, the league introduced a system of finals in its inaugural season, to be contested after the home-and-away matches by the top four teams. The new system meant that the premiership could not be decided until the final match had been played, generating greater public interest at the end of the season; by comparison, the VFA system awarded the premiership to the team with the best win-loss record across the season, with the provision for a single playoff match only if two teams were tied for first place. Additionally, it was arranged that the gate from finals matches be shared amongst all teams, guaranteeing a better dividend to the league's weaker clubs.[1]
Systems
The VFL/AFL has used a total of twelve different finals tournament systems in its history:
- 1897 (top four) – the top four played a three-week round-robin series; the premiership was won by either the undefeated winner of the round-robin, or by the winner of a grand final between the top two if no team was undefeated
- 1898–1900 (full participation) – the eight teams were split into two pools, each playing a three-week round-robin. The two pool winners played off in a preliminary final, and the winner of that game played off against the minor premier (if required)
- 1901 (top four) – First Argus system
- 1902–1907 (top four) – First amended Argus system
- 1908–1923 (top four) – Second amended Argus system
- 1924 (top four) – Round-robin Argus system
- 1925–1930 (top four) – Second amended Argus system
- 1931–1971 (top four) – Page-McIntyre system
- 1972–1990 (top five) – McIntyre final five system
- 1991 (top six) – First McIntyre final six system
- 1992–1993 (top six) – Second McIntyre final six system
- 1994–1999 (top eight) – McIntyre final eight system
- 2000–present (top eight) – AFL final eight system
Venues
Current system
With the exception of the AFL Grand Final (which is always staged at the Melbourne Cricket Ground), finals matches are played in the state of the home team, giving a home state advantage to the higher placed team. Venue contracts for finals matches are held by the AFL and are not related to the clubs' home venue contracts; consequently, the home team is not necessarily entitled to play at its usual home venue if the AFL's finals contracts are held with a different venue in its state.
Under the current arrangement, all Victorian finals matches are scheduled at the MCG – except in cases when two finals are to be held in Victoria on the same day, in which case Docklands Stadium or (in the event of Geelong being the home team) Kardinia Park may be used for the match expected to draw the lower crowd.
The current contract requires that at least ten finals matches (plus all Grand Finals) be played at the MCG during every rolling five-year period. This stipulation could require the AFL to schedule a non-Victorian team's home match at the MCG to meet the quota, in the event that non-Victorian teams dominate the competition for an extended period.[2]
The Grand Final will be played at the MCG every year until at least 2037, regardless of the state of origin of the teams involved.
History
In the early years of the VFL finals, matches were generally played at neutral suburban venues. Starting from 1902, the Melbourne Cricket Ground became the primary venue for finals including Grand Finals; and from 1908, after which year all finals were played on different days, it became the sole venue for finals (except from 1942 until 1945, when it was commandeered for military use during World War II). Long term contracts were signed between the Melbourne Cricket Club and the VFL for use of the venue in finals, including a ten-year deal running from 1932 to 1941,[3] followed by a deal running until 1956,[4] and a subsequent deal ending in 1971. The VFL always resented the arrangement, as the MCC held most of the negotiating leverage and ended up with the more favourable deal in the contract, and the VFL sought actively to break its reliance on the deal.[5]
The opening in 1970 of the VFL-owned VFL Park, with a capacity for almost 80,000 spectators, gave the league a viable new finals venue. In November 1971, the VFL signed a new three-year deal for finals to be played at the MCG;[6] but shortly afterwards it announced the expansion of the finals to the McIntyre Final Five system, providing two new finals matches which could be staged at VFL Park while still fulfilling the requirement for four finals at the MCG. It became standard to stage the Elimination Final and Second Semi-Final at VFL Park;[7] and in 1975 (after the three-year contract signed in November 1971 had ended), a new agreement shifted the Preliminary Final to VFL Park also, resulting in three matches at each venue during the finals.[8] This arrangement persisted from 1975 until 1990. Attempts were made during the early 1980s to shift the Grand Final to VFL Park, but a bitter political struggle which included the Cain State Government ultimately blocked this move at the end of 1983.[9]
As the Melbourne Cricket Ground was the home of Melbourne and, from 1965 onwards, Richmond, those teams automatically held a home ground advantage in the finals. Prior to the nationalisation of the league, it was considered philosophically desirable that the finals be played on neutral ground, and one club delegate went as far as proposing in 1961 – after Melbourne had won five premierships in six years – that the MCG's goal posts should be moved prior to each Melbourne finals match to nullify its home ground advantage (the idea was overwhelmingly voted down and the delegate was roundly laughed at for his suggestion).[10] The desire for neutral venues persisted, and from 1977 until the late 1980s, a rule existed requiring that any finals featuring Melbourne or Richmond, other than the Grand Final, would be scheduled at VFL Park instead of the MCG.[7]
Two events in the late 1980s changed the nature of finals scheduling. Firstly, the VFL expanded interstate to become the Australian Football League, introducing the desire to allow non-Victorian clubs to host finals in their home states and reversing the traditional notion that finals should be held in neutral locations. Secondly, the AFL and the MCC agreed to terms to jointly fund the replacement of the MCG's ageing Southern Stand, reducing the AFL's commercial desire to stage finals at VFL Park.[11] The changes began to be seen in 1991: West Coast had won the minor premiership and the Southern Stand had halved the MCG's capacity, so all finals were played at VFL Park except for West Coast's home qualifying final at Perth's Subiaco Oval, which was the first final played outside Victoria.[12] The use of VFL Park for finals declined thereafter, and the venue's last finals match was staged in 1997.
Under the new finals contract beginning in 1992, non-Victorian clubs could host their home finals in their own states, subject to the stipulation that at least one final be played at the MCG each week during the finals. This became increasingly controversial in the early 2000s, a period of time when non-Victorian clubs dominated the competition, after several non-Victorian clubs were forced to host their home finals in Victoria. This led to a renegotiation of the contract in 2005, which introduced the current requirement for ten finals matches (plus all Grand Finals) to be staged at the MCG every rolling five-year period. The AFL was forced to make some concessions to secure this renegotiation on finals matches, which included giving up the exclusivity it held over MCG access on weekends in winter, allowing the MCG new rights to schedule other major sporting events.[2] Non-Victorian clubs were forced to play their home finals at the MCG on five occasions: 1993 (Preliminary Final, Adelaide vs Essendon), 1996 (First Semi-Final, West Coast vs Essendon), 1999 (First Semi-Final, West Coast vs Carlton), 2002 (Second Semi-Final, Adelaide vs Melbourne) and 2004 (Second Preliminary Final, Brisbane vs Geelong).
Drawn games
Until the 1990 season, it was standard practice to that if a finals match was drawn, it would be replayed in full the following weekend. All subsequent finals were delayed by one week to accommodate the replay.
Due to various logistical issues that arose following the drawn 1990 Qualifying Final, replays in finals matches (with the exception of the Grand Final) were abolished in 1991, and replaced with the provision to play extra time to determine a result. The provision to play a replay after a drawn Grand Final was retained until the 2015 season, and replaced with the provision for extra time from the 2016 season.
Extra time consists of two periods of play, each lasting five minutes plus time on, with a change of ends between periods; these periods are played in full (not under sudden death rules), and the team leading at the end of the second period of extra time wins the game.
In the event of scores being level at the end of extra time, the timekeepers will not blow the final siren and play continues under golden point rules, with the next team to score winning the game. This provision was introduced in 2016; between 1991 and 2015, there was a provision for further pairs of extra time periods to be played until a result, but this was never required.
As of 2016, extra time has been played twice: in the 1994 Second Qualifying Final between North Melbourne and Hawthorn (won by North Melbourne), and the 2007 Second Semi-Final between West Coast and Collingwood (won by Collingwood). Grand Final replays have been played on three occasions: in 1948 between Melbourne and Essendon (won by Melbourne), 1977 between Collingwood and North Melbourne (won by North Melbourne) and 2010 between Collingwood and St Kilda (won by Collingwood).[13]
See also
References
- ↑ "The new football league". The Argus. Melbourne, VIC. 4 February 1897. p. 6.
- 1 2 Caroline Wilson (15 August 2014). "Fairer finals clause comes back to bite AFL". The Age. Melbourne, VIC. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
- ↑ "Victorian League Funds". The Age. Melbourne, VIC. 18 September 1931. p. 6.
- ↑ Ben Kerville (2 September 1953). "I'm pulling no punches". The Sporting Globe. Melbourne, VIC. p. 3.
- ↑ Percy Taylor (8 May 1956). "League plans to leave the MCG". The Argus. Melbourne, VIC. p. 18.
- ↑ "VFL finals". The Canberra Times. Canberra, ACT. 5 November 1971. p. 18.
- 1 2 Davis, Michael (6 May 1982). "A final 'no' for Tigers at MCG". The Sun News-Pictorial. p. 76.
- ↑ "MCG to get facelift". The Canberra Times. Canberra, ACT. 4 November 1988. p. 18.
- ↑ Dr Alf Andrews, PhD. "A History of the AFL Membership" (PDF). Retrieved 30 August 2015.
- ↑ Scot Palmer (30 March 1961). "Shift the posts and stop the Demons". The Sun News-Pictorial. Melbourne, VIC. p. 36.
- ↑ "The MCG". Retrieved 24 September 2016.
- ↑ Gary Stocks (30 March 2016). "30 year classics: Hawks overpower young Eagles in first final outside of Victoria". West Coast Eagles. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
- ↑ AFL consigns Grand Final Replays to the history books