Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
sports

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

1958 Melbourne Carnival


FieldValue
name1958 Melbourne Carnival
image[[Image:1958 Melbourne Carnival Plaque.jpgright350px]]
captionThe stone laid at the Melbourne Cricket Ground to commemorate the Centenary Carnival
sportAustralian football
locationMelbourne, Australia
start_date2 July 1958
end_date12 July 1958
teams9
commissionerAustralian National Football Council
formatRound Robin
current_champion
final_championSECTION A: Victoria
SECTION B: Australia Amateurs
previous[1956](1956-perth-carnival)
next[1961](1961-brisbane-carnival)

SECTION B: Australia Amateurs

The 1958 Melbourne Carnival was the 14th edition of the Australian National Football Carnival, an Australian football interstate competition. It was the last carnival to be hosted by the state of Victoria and was also known as the Centenary Carnival as it celebrated 100 years since the creation of the sport.

For the first time since the 1950 Brisbane Carnival, all nine eligible teams in both Section 1 and Section 2 competed at the carnival. Section 1 consisted of two Victorian teams from the (VFL and VFA), South Australia, Western Australia and Tasmania; Section 2 consisted of New South Wales, Canberra, Queensland and the Australian Amateurs. In 1953 and 1956, only the Section 1 teams had travelled for the carnival, but the ANFC decided to bring all nine teams to mark the centenary celebration.

Prior to the carnival, the ANFC announced that Section 1 was to be reduced from five teams to four teams for the following carnival (held Brisbane in 1961); the team which finished last in Section 1 was to be relegated to Section 2 for 1961.

The Carnival was held between 2 July and 12 July. Day matches were held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground, and night matches were held at the South Melbourne Cricket Ground. Overall, the ANFC made a loss of more than £11,000 on the carnival, similar in magnitude to the loss made on the previous nine-team carnival in 1950.

Results

In Section 1, the Victoria (VFL) was the only undefeated team; forward John Dugdale was the carnival's leading goalkicker with 18. Western Australia and Tasmania each finished with records of 2–2; it was the most successful carnival result in Tasmania's history, with wins against both South Australia and Western Australia. Last place was decided in the match on 11 July, when South Australia's large win over the VFA saw the clubs equal on 1–3, and saw South Australia overtake the VFA on percentage.

In Section 2, the Australian Amateurs were undefeated. Canberra, which had contested the carnivals since 1933, recorded its first and second carnival wins of all time. New South Wales was the only winless team for the carnival.

CR: indicates that this match was a curtain-raiser; the crowd figure given is for the main match.

Squads

Section 1

Victorian Football League - 1st
Owen AbrahamsGraham ArthurAllen AylettRon BarassiReg BurgessJack ClarkeBruce CombenLen CraneBob Davis (captain)Paul DoddJohn DugdaleBrendan EdwardsRay GabelichFred GoldsmithJohn JamesBob JohnsonGeoff LeekRon McDonaldLaurie MithenKevin MurrayNeil RobertsJohn SchultzBob SkiltonHarry SullivanNoel TeasdaleTed Whitten (vice-captain)Don WilliamsNorm Smith (coach)
Western Australia - 2nd
Don ByfieldJohn ColganJack Clarke (captain)Graham Farmer (vice-captain)Brian FoleyJohn GerovichKeith HarperCliff HillierPercy JohnsonRoss KellyLaurie KettlewellBill MoseLes MummeTony ParentichRoy PorterAlan PreenRay RichardsNorm RogersPaul SealRay SorrellJohn ToddJohn WattsBarry WhiteBarry WilsonGeorge Moloney (coach)
Tasmania - 3rd
Len AdamsRoy AptedDarrel BaldockRoger ChapmanNeil ConlanBrian EadeJohn FitzallenDon FraserDon GaleRex GarwoodMax GriffithsGeoff HillArthur HodgsonJohn Leedham (captain)Trevor LeoGeoff LongBrian LoringGeorge MasonColin MooreJoe MurphyDerek ParremoreJeff PattersonB. PierceJim Ross (vice-captain)Terry ShadboltStuart SpencerBill Williams
South Australia - 4th
John AbleyBarry BarbaryDave BoydHaydn Bunton, Jr.Graham ChristieStan CostelloNeil Davies (vice-captain)Don GilbourneIan HannafordNeville HayesLindsay HeadMax HewittNeil KerleyRon KitchenDon LindnerKen McGregorGeof MotleyDennis RattiganRalph RogersonBrian SawleyKen TierneyTed WhelanFos Williams (captain)Glyn Williams
Victorian Football Association
Bob AtkinsonReg BackmanFrank BourkeBob BonnettPeter BoxJack BrennanAlan CareyJohn CoughlanLen CraneTerry DeveryJack EvansDick EvansLen Gilder (vice-captain)Alan GoochDoug HayesLin HuntingtonReg LewisColin LoveBrian ManieBarry MetcalfeKen Ross (captain)Kevin SymonsJack WhileyKevin WhiteBob WithersCol Austen (coach)

Section 2

Australian Amateurs
A. Blechynden (WA)R. Bray (SA)R. Burt (Vic)A. Capes (Vic)B. Dickson (SA)R. Drew (WA)L. Eborall (WA)L. Eldering (Vic)R. Featherby (WA)D. Goldsmith (Tas)L. Grant (Vic)R. Hewitt (vice-captain, SA)Geoff Hibbins (captain, Vic)Ian Law (Vic)K. Miles (WA)J. Nelson (Vic)R. Omond (Tas)A. Pinkus (Vic)R. Powell (SA)R. Price (WA)B. Rundle (SA)B. Seppelt (SA)N. Stokes (Vic)K. Taylor (Tas)J. Winneke (Vic)Ray Martin (coach)
Canberra
Duncan AndersonWarren BarnesAlex BradleyBarry BrowningPeter CurtisPat GalvinMick GaughwinIan Grigg (vice-captain)Alan HawkeHarry HeinrichRay HincksmanTony IrvineJohn MoodyAlan MuirJim MuirRon PatonAlan RayDavid ReidNeil RobsonAlan RogersGerry Walsh (captain)Graham WernerJohn WheelerMal WheelerKen WilliamsRoy WilliamsRay Donellan (coach)
Queensland
B. BakerT. BroadbentJ. ConlonR J. CrosthwaiteR. DrabbleE. EllisonB. FallisT. A. Gear (vice-captain)B.G. GreinkeK.J. GrimleyK. HandleyR.E. HughsonK.T. HurleyL. D. JewellP.J. KellyK. LeachA. McGillN.B. McGuinnessD.J. MclvorNorm Reidy (captain and coach)I. RichardsonA. StewartS. ThompsonG. TottonR. Verdon
New South Wales
Kev BatchelorLionel ByrnesPhil CampbellJack ChesterDonald ClisbyJerry DavidsonJack DeanNeil DunnBilly FreeBrian GroundwaterJohn Harding (vice-captain)Doug HoareNeville KeatingAllan KellyJack KuschertPeter KuschertKev LittleAlf Penno (captain)Noel RickardBrian RontaunayKeith SchowGreg SchroderAlison TerrellMalcom ThomsonBrian Wells

All-Australian team

In 1958 the All-Australian team was picked based on the Melbourne Carnival.

1958 All-Australian TeamNameState/LeagueClub
John AbleySouth AustraliaPort Adelaide
Donald GaleTasmaniaWynyard
Jim RossTasmaniaNorth Launceston
Stuart SpencerTasmaniaClarence
Barry MetcalfeVictoria (VFA)Mordialloc
Owen AbrahamsVictoriaFitzroy
Allen AylettVictoriaNorth Melbourne
Ron BarassiVictoriaMelbourne
Reg BurgessVictoriaEssendon
Jack ClarkeVictoriaEssendon
Bob DavisVictoriaGeelong (captain)
John DugdaleVictoriaNorth Melbourne
Kevin MurrayVictoriaFitzroy
Neil RobertsVictoriaSt Kilda
Ted WhittenVictoriaFootscray
Jack ClarkeWestern AustraliaEast Fremantle
Graham FarmerWestern AustraliaEast Perth
Alan PreenWestern AustraliaEast Fremantle
Norm RogersWestern AustraliaEast Fremantle
Ray SorrellWestern AustraliaEast Fremantle

Tassie Medal

Both Allen Aylett and Ted Whitten polled seven votes but Aylett was awarded the medal after a countback. Whitten was declared joint winner retrospectively in 1995.

References

References

  1. Rex Pullen. (11 July 1958). "Unfit, but he'll try to save side". The Sun News-Pictorial.
  2. Kevin Hogan. (14 July 1958). "Carnival shows heavy loss". The Sun News-Pictorial.
  3. (3 July 1958). "Victorian win opens football carnival". The Sun News-Pictorial.
  4. Bernie Bretland. (3 July 1958). "Big men pave way for WA". The Sun News-Pictorial.
  5. (7 July 1958). "Carnival details". The Sun News-Pictorial.
  6. Rex Pullen. (8 July 1958). "Tasmanians add a new 'scalp'". The Sun News-Pictorial.
  7. Alan Auldrige. (8 July 1958). "It was so easy for the VFL". The Sun News-Pictorial.
  8. Noel Carrick. (10 July 1958). "Only 2 VFA players up to WA class". The Sun News-Pictorial.
  9. (10 July 1958). "102-point victory to Victoria". The Sun News-Pictorial.
  10. (12 July 1958). "Down goes VFA". The Sun News-Pictorial.
  11. Alan Auldrige. (4 July 1958). "Stars weren't so amateurish". The Sun News-Pictorial.
  12. Michael Courtney. (12 July 1958). "How to lose friends, amateur style". The Sun News-Pictorial.
  13. (14 July 1958). "Saturday's details". The Sun News-Pictorial.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about 1958 Melbourne Carnival — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report