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1956 VFL grand final

Grand final of the 1956 Victorian Football League season


Grand final of the 1956 Victorian Football League season

FieldValue
year1956
competitionVFL
home[[File:Melbourne Football Club Colours.svg50px]]
home_score17.19 (121)
away[[File:Collingwood icon.svg50px]]
away_score6.12 (48)
home_abbrMEL
away_abbrCOL
home_qtr12.4 (16)
home_qtr26.11 (47)
home_qtr310.16 (76)
home_qtr417.19 (121)
away_qtr13.3 (21)
away_qtr24.3 (27)
away_qtr35.6 (36)
away_qtr46.12 (48)
date15 September 1956
attendance115,902
stadiumMelbourne Cricket Ground
last1955
next1957

The 1956 VFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between the Melbourne Football Club and Collingwood Football Club, held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 15 September 1956. It was the 59th annual Grand Final of the Victorian Football League, staged to determine the premiers for the 1956 VFL season. The match was won by Melbourne by 73 points, marking that club's eighth premiership victory.

It was the second successive year in which the two teams met in a premiership decider, with Melbourne having won the 1955 VFL Grand Final.

The Grand Final was attended by 115,902 spectators, easily setting a new record as the largest crowd to have witnessed a premiership decider in VFL Grand Final history, breaking the record of 96,486 spectators who witnessed the 1938 VFL Grand Final. The capacity of the ground had recently been expanded with a new grandstand for the upcoming 1956 Summer Olympics, but the ground was still not large enough to comfortably or safely accommodate such a large crowd; stairwells and aisles were full of people, meaning that many people were unable to leave their positions to use restrooms during the game; and many people had restricted views of the game due to the crowding, resulting in some spectators climbing onto the roofs or back walls of the grandstand and other structures for a better view. The gates were shut for safety reasons when the venue reached capacity, resulting in riots outside the ground in which an estimated 2,500 further spectators broke into the ground. More than 20,000 spectators were turned away at the gate. Pre-sale ticketing for finals was introduced from the following season to prevent a repeat of these events, and the crowd record stood until the 1968 VFL Grand Final – after the opening of the Western Stand.

A scene from the game is captured in Jamie Cooper's painting The Game That Made Australia, commissioned by the AFL in 2008 to celebrate the 150th anniversary of the sport: Collingwood's Neil Mann and Melbourne's Ian Ridley fighting amongst the spectators who were sitting on the arena (but behind the boundary line).

Teams

{{Australian rules football kitpattern_b = _red_v_toppattern_sh =pattern_so =body = 061A33shorts =socks = ff0000title = Melbourne{{Australian rules football kitpattern_b = _blackstripespattern_sh =pattern_so =body = ffffffshorts = 000000socks = 000000title = Collingwood
#CC2031Melbournelink=Melbourne Football Club}}color = #061A33John Beckwith]]fullback = Peter MarquisTrevor Johnson]]Don Williams]]centrehalfback = Noel McMahen (c)halfbackflank2 = Keith Carrollwing1 = Frank 'Bluey' Adamscentre = Ken MelvilleBrian Dixon]]halfforwardflank1 = Jim Sandralcentrehalfforward = Clyde Laidlawhalfforwardflank2 = Laurie MithenBob Johnson]]fullforward = Athol Webbforwardpocket2 = Ian Ridleyruck = Denis Cordnerruckrover = Ron BarassiStuart Spencer]]reserve1 = Terry GleesonRalph Lane]]coach = Norm Smith}}#FFFFFFCollingwoodlink=Collingwood Football Club}}color = #000000backpocket1 = Lerrel SharpHarry Sullivan]]backpocket2 = Neville WallerPeter Lucas]]centrehalfback = Frank Tuckhalfbackflank2 = Ron Kingstonwing1 = Ken Hedtcentre = Bill Twomey, Jr.wing2 = Thorold MerrettKen Turner]]centrehalfforward = Murray Weidemanhalfforwardflank2 = Bill SerongNeil Mann]] (c)fullforward = Ken Smaleforwardpocket2 = Bob Greveruck = Ray Gabelichruckrover = Laurie RymerBill Jones]]Jack Hamilton]]reserve2 = Bob Kupschcoach = Phonse Kyne}}
  • Umpire: Allan Nash

Statistics

Goalkickers

References

Bibliography

  • The Official statistical history of the AFL 2004
  • Ross, J. (ed), 100 Years of Australian Football 1897–1996: The Complete Story of the AFL, All the Big Stories, All the Great Pictures, All the Champions, Every AFL Season Reported, Viking, (Ringwood), 1996.

References

  1. "Attendance alterations from 1908". Australian Football League.
  2. Ken Moses. "This must never happen again – rioting M.C.G. mob alarms Games men". The Argus.
  3. Australian Football League, [https://web.archive.org/web/20080925200339/http://150years.com.au/150Moments/150MomentsArticle/tabid/11382/Default.aspx?newsId=55972 The Game That Made Australia], Retrieved 19 September 2010
Info: Wikipedia Source

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