Grand Final 1934
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- | == Match | + | === Dazzling Football and Determination === |
+ | {| width=75% align=center border="1" | ||
+ | || | ||
+ | <blockquote><center>'''FACTORS THAT GAVE SUCCESS TO GLENELG'''</center> | ||
+ | |||
+ | <center>'''(by Percy Fuller)'''</center> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Glenelg well won the 1934 premiership today by a display of dazzling football intermixed with bulldog determination. | ||
+ | |||
+ | (lots more to transcribe into here) | ||
+ | </blockquote> | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Credit Due To Bruce McGregor === | ||
+ | {| width=75% align=center border="1" | ||
+ | ||<blockquote>Much credit for Glenelg's dashing victory today must be given to their coach (B. McGregor). McGregor came from West Broken Hill, the same club which gave Glenelg their leader, Jack Owens, and he quickly earned a reputation as a player of outstanding ability. His strong and scrupulously fair methods twice earned for him the Magarey Medal. | ||
+ | |||
+ | It must have been particularly pleasing for McGregor to see Johnston annex the same honor in the season that Glenelg won the premiership. In his second season as coach of the Bay side McGregor's efforts with his young charges have reared their just reward and there was no prouder man at the conclusion of the match than the former State skipper. | ||
+ | </blockquote> | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Stars Of Big Game === | ||
+ | {| width=75% align=center border="1" | ||
+ | || <blockquote> | ||
+ | * Johnston gave a sound ruck display. His towering mark on the goal line in the last quarter was the turning point in a game which threatened to slip away from Glenelg. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Great credit was due to Sallis for his sterling game at centre. He used every opportunity to best advantage, his clever ground play contributing much towards Glenelg's victory. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Tigerish determination and speed by Link and Colyer found them leading many Bay attacks. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Goldsworthy was a match-winner for Glenelg. He was at his top right from the outset and gave Glenelg definite strength at centre half-forward by brilliant marking. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * James showed perfect judgement in goal. His strong play and safe marking repeatedly barred Port's progress. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Leak sparkled at half-forward in the opening stages. His fast dashes resulted in the Port backmen often being found out of position. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Eden carried out his many duties in characteristic style. Strong kicking and determination found him fighting out the issue on many occasions. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * McFarlane, the Port recruit, showed strong marking ability. When he becomes accustomed to league ranks he should be a valuable unit to the magpies. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Ween played serviceably without ever being an outstanding success | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Reval bore the brunt of the ruck work for Port. He tried to do too much, however, and consequently nullified much of his good work. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Quinn roved with brilliant dash. He went into the packs with determination, and was responsible for a fine exhibition. | ||
+ | |||
+ | * Dermody showed flashes of brilliance, but was never outstanding in a Port team below top form. | ||
+ | </blockquote> | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | === Players Reported === | ||
+ | {| width=75% align=center border="1" | ||
+ | ||<blockquote>Three Port players were reported by umpires following incidents in the last quarter in the league grand final. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Reval was reported by central umpire Thomas for having allegedly hacked Bergin and Hale of Glenelg. The goal umpire, Monten, and boundary umpire, Hill, reported the same player for having allegedly hacked Hale. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Central umpire Thomas, Boundary Umpires Russ and Hill, and Goal Umpire Monten reported Wightman for having allegedly thrown the ball away in the last quarter. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Obst was reported by Central Umpire Thomas, Boundary Umpires Russ and Hill, and Goal Umpire Monten for having allegedly thrown the ball at the central umpire in the last quarter. | ||
+ | </blockquote> | ||
+ | |- | ||
+ | |} | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Match Reports from ''The Advertiser'' == | ||
{| width=75% align=center border="1" | {| width=75% align=center border="1" | ||
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BY ROVER | BY ROVER | ||
- | Setting the pace from the start, giving Port Adelaide little chance to drop into the machine-like system which had established is as firm favorite for the 1934 title, and beating off a strong challenge in the last few minutes, Glenelg brilliantly won by nine points the League | + | Setting the pace from the start, giving Port Adelaide little chance to drop into the machine-like system which had established is as firm favorite for the 1934 title, and beating off a strong challenge in the last few minutes, Glenelg brilliantly won by nine points the League Grand Final and the premiership, at the Adelaide Oval on Saturday. |
- | It was one of the most thrilling matches in the memory of any of the 30,045 people who witnessed it. Fought at a killing pace, the players were forced to endure a more | + | It was one of the most thrilling matches in the memory of any of the 30,045 people who witnessed it. Fought at a killing pace, the players were forced to endure a more gruelling contest than they had probably ever experienced. Having set the speed, Glenelg maintained it in astonishing fashion, clapping on even greater pace when challenged by Port Adelaide, whose efforts to produce the cool, systematic football which had been a feature of its play in earlier matches, were obviously upset by the dash and verve of the opposition. |
A remarkable feature of the match, and indicative of the determination of the winning team, any Port goal would immediately be answered by a similar score by Glenelg. By this means not only did Glenelg hold a slender lead practically throughout the game, but it caused Port Adelaide's early sang-froid to give way to concern, and finally to panic in the closing stages, when with the last few minutes ticking away its fiercest efforts could not bring the goal which would give it the lead. The teams were level a few minutes before the finish, and for a few seconds Port seemed to have the grip of the game for which it had striven for more than three quarters, but before freak marking by Johnstone and another surge of fierce determination by the Glenelg team generally, Port quailed, and was beaten. | A remarkable feature of the match, and indicative of the determination of the winning team, any Port goal would immediately be answered by a similar score by Glenelg. By this means not only did Glenelg hold a slender lead practically throughout the game, but it caused Port Adelaide's early sang-froid to give way to concern, and finally to panic in the closing stages, when with the last few minutes ticking away its fiercest efforts could not bring the goal which would give it the lead. The teams were level a few minutes before the finish, and for a few seconds Port seemed to have the grip of the game for which it had striven for more than three quarters, but before freak marking by Johnstone and another surge of fierce determination by the Glenelg team generally, Port quailed, and was beaten. | ||
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Immediately the bell rang. Players all but collapsed in several parts of the ground. Dermody was "all in," and so were many players of both sides as they limped painfully off the ground. The gateman found difficulty in, restraining the crowd from rushing on to ground to lionise the Glenelg players. Bruce McGregor (coach of Glenelg) was beside himself with excitement, and, pouncing upon Colyer (Glenelg rover), carried him in his arms, delightfully hugging him. Other players, as much for the additional support, as felicitation, walked with arms about each other from the ground. | Immediately the bell rang. Players all but collapsed in several parts of the ground. Dermody was "all in," and so were many players of both sides as they limped painfully off the ground. The gateman found difficulty in, restraining the crowd from rushing on to ground to lionise the Glenelg players. Bruce McGregor (coach of Glenelg) was beside himself with excitement, and, pouncing upon Colyer (Glenelg rover), carried him in his arms, delightfully hugging him. Other players, as much for the additional support, as felicitation, walked with arms about each other from the ground. | ||
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+ | <center>'''First Quarter''' </center> | ||
- | + | Glenelg. 5 goals 4 behinds (34 points). | |
- | + | ||
- | + | ||
- | + | ||
- | + | Port Adelaide. 3 goals 4 behinds (22 points). | |
- | |||
- | + | <center>'''Half-time'''</center> | |
- | < | + | |
- | + | ||
- | + | ||
- | + | Glenelg. 10 goals 8 behinds (68 points). | |
- | + | ||
- | + | Port Adelaide. 6 goals 13 behinds (49 points). | |
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | <center>'''Third Quarter'''</center> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Glenelg. 15 goals 10 behinds (100 points). | ||
+ | |||
+ | Port Adelaide. 11 goals 17 behinds (83 points). | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | <center>'''Final''' </center> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Glenelg. 18 coals 15 behinds (123 points). | ||
+ | |||
+ | Port Adelaide. 16 goals 18 behinds (114 points). | ||
+ | |||
+ | <center>'''Scorers of goals and behinds'''</center> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Glenelg Goldsworthy, 4 goals 2 behinds; Owens, 3.3; Colyer and Johnston, each 3.0; Bergin, 2.1; Percy. 1.5; Link, 1.3; Leak, 1.0; and one behind was knocked. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Port Adelaide Quinn, 5.2; Hollingworth, 4.7; Prideaux, 4.2; Hender, 2.1; Reval, 1.1; Yates and Ween, each 0.2; Hooper 0.1. One of Prideaux's kicks hit a goal post.' | ||
+ | |||
+ | <center>'''Goldsworthy's Marking'''</center> | ||
+ | |||
+ | When it entered the major round Glenelg was not generally regarded as a high-marking team, but it has not been definitely beaten in the air in any of its three matches. On Saturday Goldsworthy was one of the principal match-winning factors at centre half-forward. His marking and kicking were always a source of danger to Port Adelaide. Colyer and Link were amazingly fast rovers, and their dashes with the ball were probably more demoralising to Port than anything else. Sallis, while not so completely in command as in the previous match, was almost unbeatable in centre, and Leak, Shakes, and Hill supplemented the pace and dash of the two rovers already mentioned. Johnston reserved his best efforts for the critical stance in the last quarter. His freak one-handed mark at half-back stopped a threatened breakaway by Port Adelaide and he clinched the game for his side with his mark in the goalmouth at the other end a few minutes later. Whittaker, Brock, James and Birrell were stout defenders, and Bergin a brilliant half-forward flanker. Percy and Hale marked strongly and rucked vigorously respectively. | ||
+ | |||
+ | <center>'''Great Wing Play'''</center> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Every ounce of Dermody's strength and stamina was spent in his effort, particularly in the last quarter, to bring victory to side. His brilliant marking, and remarkable speed and cleverness in finding openings through which to launch virile attacks, made him a particularly painful thorn in Glenelg's side. Quinn capped a good season with his best roving effort. Like his more famous brother, he tempers even the most torrid exchanges with a coolness which enables him to perceive the right thing to do. He kicked accurately when trying for goal — something Hollingsworth could not do. This fine half-forward handled the ball as much as any other placed man on the ground, gaining possession with great brilliance on occasion, but four goals from 11 scoring shots discounted much of his good work. Whicker played one of his best games at centre wing, and Bampton completed a centre line which on the day had at least as much of the play as the opposition. Hender and Hooper were occasionally brilliant and always useful but were not the force they have been in other matches. Revel seemed unable to find a man to whom to send the ball and many of his brilliant runs resulted in disaster. Nevertheless his determination and stamina were commendable. Eden, who in the absence or West through injury, took over the goal keeper's position, and R Johnson were the best of the defence. though McFarlane, playing his first League match, marked brilliantly in the last half. Prideaux marked well at times in the forward lines. | ||
+ | |||
+ | L. C. Thomas umpired well. | ||
- | |||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
|- | |- | ||
|} | |} | ||
- | === | + | |
+ | === GLENELG'S POPULAR WIN === | ||
{| width=75% align=center border="1" | {| width=75% align=center border="1" | ||
|| <blockquote> | || <blockquote> | ||
- | + | <center>'''Premiers After 14 Years | |
- | + | '''ENTHUSIASM IN TOWN''' | |
- | + | '''Footballers Feted''' | |
- | + | By [[Jim Handby|JIM HANDBY]]</center> | |
- | |||
- | + | Unprecedented scenes, both at the Adelaide Oval and in Glenelg itself, followed Glenelg's popular win in the grand final football match on Saturday. In beating Port Adelaide by nine points, the Glenelg side made football history by becoming the first club to win the premiership on the first occasion on which it had contested the finals. When the final bell rang, the crowd of thirty thousand on the Adelaide Oval stood and cheered for some minutes. But this demonstration in favor of the team which had reached the top after fourteen years in League football was small compared with that at Glenelg, where there were scenes which, residents say, could be compared only with those witnessed there during the war. Crowds thronged the streets, and thousands congregated outside the town hall. As the cars containing the players drove into Moseley Square there was an outburst of cheering which continued for some minutes. Then followed speeches, punctuated by loud and frequent calls for various players, and a round of victory celebrations, which were continued at the clubrooms at the Glenelg oval, and lasted through out the night. Many members of other clubs were entertained. | |
- | + | '''Made History''' | |
- | + | Outside the Glenelg town hail the mayor (Mr. W. Fisk), in the presence of 4,000 townspeople, on behalf of the residents of Glenelg and surrounding districts congratulated the team. He said that Glenelg had made football history that day, and the people of Glenelg were proud to acknowledge the team's great display. The chairman of the Glenelg club (Mr. O. G. Tolley) thanked the mayor for his congratulations, and said that the splendid support and encouragement given the team by Glenelg had been an incentive to the side. The unswerving loyalty and support of those who had stood by the team during its long unsuccessful period had enabled it to realise its ambition. | |
- | + | A public committee has been formed to make arrangements for a dinner to the club, and though it has been in existence only two or three days more than £50 has already been subscribed by the Glenelg public. | |
- | + | The match itself was a thrilling one. Even rabid Port Adelaide supporters admitted that the sheer determination of the Bay men deserved success. The first clang of the bell produced a dramatic pause, and then the enthusiasm of the Glenelg followers burst like a storm, while the players carried Owens, the captain, and Sallis, whose performance was outstanding, shoulder high from the arena. Club partisanship was thrown to the winds; it was probably the most popular premiership win in League history. | |
- | + | When Port Adelaide drew level with still a few minutes to go it appeared as though the team would achieve victory. However. Glenelg withstood the challenge, and regained a grip of the game in the face of opposition which only a good team could overcome. Just how slender becomes the margin between self-control and unbridled restraint under the stress of intense excitement was again demonstrated when, momentarily, unseemly conduct threatened to spoil what was one of the most spectacular and exciting games of foot ball ever witnessed in a grand final. | |
- | + | '''Fourteen-Year-Old Ambition''' | |
- | + | ||
- | + | ||
- | + | ||
- | + | In winning the premiership Glenelg achieved a fourteen-year-old ambition. After one year in the B grade association, in which it won only two matches, Glenelg was promoted to the senior ranks fourteen years ago. Handicapped by a limited field from which to draw players, it was not until 1925 that it achieved its first success. The first match in that season brought its first win, defeating West Torrens, the previous year's premiership side. | |
- | + | ||
- | + | ||
- | + | Realising the necessity for building up a team, from experienced players, Glenelg induced several prominent footballers from other clubs to join up with it. After this foundation was firmly laid Glenelg's rise has been mainly through fostering junior talent in the district. It was a tribute to its faith in the juniors that Saturday's premiership team included only two country players. | |
- | + | Great fortitude was shown by G. B. Johnston, this year's Magarey medalist, on Saturday. In the match against Sturt the week before he injured his right knee. Fluid developed, and he played on Saturday under great difficulties. His knee has since swollen tremendously, and he will be forced to rest it for some time. | |
+ | |||
+ | After the match Mr. H. Douglas, a Glenelg supporter, presented Johnston with the first badge struck for the Glenelg club. The colors were then red, black, and yellow. | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Captains' Opinions''' | ||
+ | |||
+ | J. Owens (Glenelg)— It was a great win. All our players pulled their weight, and it was our combined team work that, enabled us to defeat the powerful Port team. It is a great time for the Glenelg club, and I am particularly pleased that we showed our true form. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Vic Johnson (Port Adelaide)— Naturally I am disappointed at not winning the premiership, but we are pleased that it was Glenelg that defeated us. Their win is a very popular one, and will do a lot of good to the game. | ||
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</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
|- | |- | ||
|} | |} | ||
- | + | ||
+ | |||
+ | == Pictures == | ||
See also [[Image Galleries: 1934|1934 Gallery]] | See also [[Image Galleries: 1934|1934 Gallery]] | ||
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3. "The Advertiser" newspaper Monday 8 October 1934 | 3. "The Advertiser" newspaper Monday 8 October 1934 | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Category:Match Reports 1934]] | ||
[[Category:Match Reports]] | [[Category:Match Reports]] |
Current revision as of 16:38, 23 April 2011
|
The Grand Final of 1934 was the first Grand Final contested by Glenelg. Although underdogs, they won a historic victory by 9 points over the more favoured Port Adelaide. The victory was even more memorable considering that Port had thoroughly thrashed Glenelg only a fortnight before in the Second Semi-Final.
Below are details on the Grand Final, including reviews written at the time.
GRAND FINAL Saturday 6 October 1934 | ||||
Glenelg: | 5.4 | 10.8 | 15.10 | 18.15 (123) |
Port: | 3.4 | 6.13 | 11.17 | 16.18 (114) |
Goalkickers
Glenelg - Goldsworthy 4, Owens, Johnston, Colyer 3, Bergin 2, Link, Percy, Leak.
Port - Quinn 5, Hollingsworth, Prideaux 4, Hender 2, Reval.
Best
Glenelg - Sallis, Goldsworthy, Colyer, Link, Johnston, Whittaker, Shakes.
Port - Quinn, Dermody, Reval, Ween, Hooper, Eden, McFarlane.
Crowd: 30,045 at Adelaide Oval.
Match Report from The Sport
|
Match Reports from The Mail
Fast and Hard Bumping Play Delights the Crowd
|
Dazzling Football and Determination
|
Credit Due To Bruce McGregor
Much credit for Glenelg's dashing victory today must be given to their coach (B. McGregor). McGregor came from West Broken Hill, the same club which gave Glenelg their leader, Jack Owens, and he quickly earned a reputation as a player of outstanding ability. His strong and scrupulously fair methods twice earned for him the Magarey Medal. |
Stars Of Big Game
|
Players Reported
Three Port players were reported by umpires following incidents in the last quarter in the league grand final. |
Match Reports from The Advertiser
|
GLENELG'S POPULAR WIN
|
Pictures
See also 1934 Gallery
References
1. The Sport newspaper Thursday 11 October 1934
2. The Mail newspaper Saturday 6 October 1934
3. "The Advertiser" newspaper Monday 8 October 1934