Melbourne University Football Club

Melbourne University Football Club
Melbourne University Football Club
Names
Full name Melbourne University Football Club
Nickname(s) University, The Students, The Blues
Club details
Founded 1859
Colours      Black      Blue
Competition Victorian Amateur Football Association
Chairman John Carmody (MUFC); Justin Gray (University Blacks); Tony McInerney (University Blues)
Coach Marc Woolnough(University Blacks); John Kanis(University Blues)
Captain(s) Mark Bolton(University Blacks); Matthew Torney (University Blues)
Ground(s) East Melbourne Cricket Ground, University of Melbourne

Melbourne University Football Club, often known simply as University is an Australian rules football club.

The club achieved prominence by being a member of the game's most elite competition in the early 20th century, the Victorian Football League (the forerunner of the Australian Football League) between 1908 and 1914.

Although there are no records of its exact formation, University's first recorded match took place in the same month that the Castlemaine Football Club was formed making it likely that University is the second oldest club in Australia after Melbourne.

Contents

History

Early history

University was founded in 1859 by students and graduates of the University of Melbourne. The first report of the university participating in a match was against St Kilda in June 1859. According to ‘Gymnastic’, writing in the sporting newspaper Bell's Life in Victoria, the ‘long pending match’ finally came off between two teams of 15. University was captained by a player called Phillips and St Kilda emerged the winners, under the method where the first team to score two out of three goals was victorious.

That same year it played against teams from Albert Park, Carlton, Melbourne, Royal Park and South Yarra. In 1861, University defeated Melbourne to win the first ever trophy for Australian football, instituted as part of the Calendonian Society's Games.

During the 1870s, the club played in the Second Twenties competition, one level lower than the main competition, the South Yarra Challenge Cup. From 1885 to 1888, University played in the VFA which at the time was the sport's major governing body. Following these years, the club was variously dormant or played in other competitions including the Metropolitan Junior Football Association, the Colleges Football Association and from 1905 to 1907 was a dominant member of the Metropolitan Football Association.

VFL history

Gerald Brosnan, 1911-12 coach of University, pictured here during his Fitzroy playing days
Albert Hartkopf, footballer in the University VFL team 1908-11 & 1914. The club's leading goalkicker, 1909 (17), 1910 (30) & 1911 (19). Hartkopf was also a fine cricketer, playing for Victoria from 1911 to 1928, as well as representing Australia in one Test.

On 4 October 1907 the eight founding clubs of the VFL voted unanimously to include University in the league as its ninth team.[1] Richmond Football Club became the 10th team two weeks later. The club's home ground was originally the East Melbourne Cricket Ground, where it was a tenant of the Essendon Football Club. Later the club relocated to the Melbourne Cricket Ground which it also shared, this time with the Melbourne Football Club.

The club was nicknamed The Students and The Professors and The Shop. The players wore a black guernsey with a blue chevron and blue collars and cuffs (the same design is still used to this day), black and blue socks and an optional black and blue cap. Players had to have matriculated or hold a higher degree to be eligible to play in the team. It is unique among VFL/AFL clubs in never having any professional (paid) players.

The club was not particularly successful: it never finished higher than sixth in the 10 team competition, and never played in a finals series. It finished last in the competition from 1911 to 1914, losing its last 51 games in a row. In total, it lost 97 of its 126 games between the 1908 and 1914 seasons.

When World War I broke out, many young men enlisted to fight, leaving the club with far too few players. It withdrew from the League before the beginning of the 1915 season, and disbanded, with the remaining players joining Melbourne. There was no hope of re-forming it after the War as it suffered the highest rate of casualties of the league.

VFL Honour roll

Year Position Coach Captain Leading goalkicker (goals)
1908 6 Tom Fogarty Martin Ratz (25)
1909 7 Harry Cordner Albert Hartkopf (19)
1910 6 Mick Grace Edgar Kneen Albert Hartkopf (30)
1911 10 Gerald Brosnan George Elliot Albert Hartkopf (19)
1912 10 Gerald Brosnan George Elliot Roy Park (22)
1913 10 Victor Upton-Brown Bert Hurrey Roy Park (53)
1914 10 Gerald Brosnan Jack West Roy Park (36)

University VFL Players

Overall, 112 players played at least one game for University in the Victorian Football League between 1908 and 1914. Bert Hurrey played the most amount of games for the club (101), the only University player to play at least 100 games in the VFL. Roy Park was the club's leading goalscorer, kicking 111 goals between 1912 and 1914, including winning the VFL's Leading Goalkicker Award in 1913, kicking 53 goals for the home-and-away season, a remarkable effort considering the team itself managed only 123 for the whole season! [2]

VFL Coaches

The following is a list of coaches to have coached the club in the VFL.

P = Played
W = Won
L = Lost
D = Drew
W% = Win percentage
No. Coach P W L D W% Years
1 Mick Grace 18 10 8 0 55.55 1910
2 Gerald Brosnan 54 2 52 0 3.70 1911-14
3 Victor Upton-Brown 18 0 18 0 0.00 1913

Return to football

Melbourne University - A grade premiership team of 1946
A Melbourne University Blues player takes a mark in front of a Collegians opponent in a 2008 VAFA A Section Reserves match

In the summer of 1919, after the War, Melbourne University began to rebuild its football involvement. Deciding not to reapply for a position in the VFL, they were instead requested by the VFL to supply two teams to the newly-formed VFL Reserves competition, or the Victorian Junior Football League. These two teams were initially called University A and B, but soon became known as "University Blues" and "University Blacks", respectively (the teams were only officially called the Blues and Blacks in 1930). The Blues contested the 1919 and 1920 VJFL Grand Finals, losing to Collingwood on both occasions; the Blacks moved to the Metropolitan Amateur Football Association in 1920, and the following season, were joined by the Blues. Both contested the 1921 MAFA Grand Final, with the Blacks winning what to date is the only grand final the two teams have contested in the MAFA or VAFA.

Melbourne University students and alumni continue to maintain their involvement in football through the Blues and Blacks. The Melbourne University Football Club is unique in that it only plays as "Melbourne University" in inter-university matches, and its regular weekly competition is provided through its component teams, University Blues and University Blacks. The Blues and Blacks play in the Victorian Amateur Football Association, and have been a perennial power in the highest division of a high-standard amateur competition.

Up until the 1950s, the Blacks were the leading University side as well as one of the dominant sides in the Amateur competition, winning 11 A Section premierships by 1949. However, in the later part of the century the Blues established themselves as the premier University side, and are currently the second longest serving club to play in the top division of the VAFA. Whilst the Blacks have won a total of 13 A section flags (the most in the VAFA) and the Blues three (with their most recent being in 2004), in the years since the 1980s it has been the Blues that have maintained the club's presence in A Section. Throughout their history, the Blues and Blacks have often played together in A section of the MAFA/VAFA, and with the Blacks return to A section in 2008 after a prolonged absence, the teams met again for the first time in 25 years. In head to head matches, the Blues lead the win tally with 43 wins to the Black's 36 and one draw. Regrettably, the Blacks were relegated to B section again at the end of 2008 and further matches will have to wait.

Both teams have consistently been a spawning ground for young players who go on to the AFL. To date 240 MUFC players have played in the VFL/AFL competition. Latest is Daniel Nicholson (Melbourne 2011)

From 1955 until 1996, an additional team was fielded by the club called "University Reds" which competed in the VAFA, with a firsts and reserves team and predominately in the lower sections (the Reds achieved the lofty heights of D Section in 1982, but otherwise played mainly in E or F Section). When the team was discontinued by the club, players and supporters of the team decided to keep the team operating and it continues to this day as Fitzroy Reds. The Fitzroy Reds merged with the Fitzroy Football Club in 2008.

Women's Club

Melbourne University women's team during their 2007 VWFL Grand Final appearance.

In 1996, a women's team was formed, but established under its own club structure rather than being part of the MUFC. Named the Melbourne University Mugars (Melbourne University Girls Aussie Rules Squad), the women's football club wears the same uniform and currently fields 3 senior teams and 2 under-age teams in the Victorian Women's Football League and AFL Victoria's Youth Girls competitions. The MUWFC has won 5 premierships since making its first of ten VWFL grand finals in 2001. The club is Australia's largest women's football club, with 145 players participating in 2007 across the five teams.

See also

External links

References

  • Black & Blue: The Story of Football at the University of Melbourne. J Cordner et al., 2007.
  • Kevin Taylor, The Sydney Swans. Allen & Unwin, 1987.
  • Rodgers, S and A Browne, Every Game Ever Played : VFL/AFL Results 1897-1997, (Ringwood, Vic. : Viking, 1998)
  • University Blues Team History

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