Victoria Mfc

Victoria Mfc




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Victoria Mfc
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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the Australian rules football club. For the association football (soccer) club, see Melbourne City FC .
After promoting the formation of, and captaining an 1858 incarnation of the club, Tom Wills co-wrote Melbourne's first laws.
Wills' cousin H. C. A. Harrison captained Melbourne from 1861 to 1872, and later served as club president.
— Hughes during a speech to his players [18]
This section needs additional citations for verification . Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources . Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. ( September 2021 ) ( Learn how and when to remove this template message )

Sir Henry Bolte (Premier of Victoria)
Rupert Murdoch (businessman)
John So (Lord Mayor of Melbourne) [55]
Anthony Mundine (Boxer and Rugby League player) [55]
Sir Billy Snedden (Politician) [56]
Baz Lurhman (Film Director) [55]
Rod Laver (Tennis player) [57]
Don Lane (Television personality)
Derryn Hinch (Radio Presenter)
Neil Mitchell (Radio Presenter)
Russel Howcroft (Businessman and Radio Presenter)
Ron Walker (Businessman)
Rod Carnegie (Businessman)
Robert Champion de Crespigny (Businessman)
Hamish Blake (Comedian)
Ryan Shelton (Comedian)
Rob Sitch (Comedian)
Christian O'Connell (radio presenter)
Jord. (Singer/Songwriter)
Ella Hooper (musician)
Wilbur Wilde (Musician)
Jim Keays (Musician)
Nazeem Hussain (Comedian) [58]
Shane Bourne (Comedian)
Ian Henderson (newsreader)
Mal Walden (Newsreader)
Temper Trap (Music group)
David Hobson (Singer)
Peter Russell-Clarke (chef, author and illustrator)
Alan Stockdale (Politician)
Tony Staley (Politician)
Brad Hodge (Australian cricketer)
Steve Moneghetti (marathon runner)
Titus O'Reily (Comedian)
Beverley O'Connor (television and radio personality)
James Tomkins (Olympic Rower)
Mack Horton (Olympic Swimmer)
Nicky Buckley (television personality)
Geoff Cox (television presenter)
Rob Gell (television weatherman)
Greg Evans (television host)
Mike Sheahan (sports writer)
Michael Veitch (comedian and writer)
Tim Wilson (Politician)
Clint Stanaway (Channel 9 news reporter)
Archie Thompson (Soccer player)
Andrew Daddo (Television presenter)
Matt Doran (Journalist)
James Frecheville (Actor)
Adam Samuel (Radio personality)

Players listed in bold are inductees in the Australian Football Hall of Fame .
Players listed in bold and italics are legends in the Australian Football Hall of Fame.








^ "Current details for ABN 27 005 686 902" . ABN Lookup . Australian Business Register. November 2014 . Retrieved 4 August 2020 .

^ Bell's Life in Victoria , 10 July 1858

^ The Footballer An annual Record of Football in Victoria , 1875

^ 100 Years of Football, The Story of the Melbourne Football Club , 1958

^ Smith v Australian Football League [2012] ATMO 20 .

^ "Melbourne Football Club becomes an MCC Sporting Section again" . Melbourne Cricket Club . Retrieved 21 February 2012 . ...on April 1, 2009, the Melbourne Football Club once again became a Sporting Section of the Melbourne Cricket Club...

^ "FOOTBALL" . Bell's Life in Victoria and Sporting Chronicle . 14 August 1858 . Retrieved 26 September 2021 .

^ "A NATIVE BURIAL" . Portland Guardian and Normanby General Advertiser . 4 October 1858 . Retrieved 26 September 2021 .

^ "MONDAY, MAY 9, 1859" . Argus . 9 May 1859 . Retrieved 26 September 2021 .

^ "SATURDAY, MAY 14, 1859" . Argus . 14 May 1859 . Retrieved 26 September 2021 .

^ Jump up to: a b "MONDAY, MAY 1[?], 1859. - The Argus (Melbourne, Vic. : 1848 - 1957) - 16 May 1859" . Trove . Retrieved 26 September 2021 .

^ "MONDAY, MAY 23, 1859" . The Argus . Melbourne. 23 May 1859. p. 4 . Retrieved 7 May 2011 – via National Library of Australia.

^ "MONDAY, JULY 11, 1859" . The Argus . Melbourne. 11 July 1859. p. 4 . Retrieved 7 May 2011 – via National Library of Australia.

^ "FOOTBALL.". The South Australian Advertiser (Adelaide) (National Library of Australia). 13 August 1877. p. 7. Retrieved 21 January 2015.

^ Jump up to: a b c d e f Carrol, Lynda (1999). The Grand Old Flag . Hardie Grant. p. 41.

^ 'Old Boy', "Football: Notes and Comments", The Argus , (Friday, 16 May 1919), p.8.

^ Wilson, Caroline (8 June 2014). "Melbourne president's plan to turn the Demons into the Yankees" . The Age . Retrieved 4 June 2015 .

^ "Frank E 'Checker' Hughes" . SAHOF.org.au . Sport Australia Hall of Fame Awards . Retrieved 26 September 2020 .

^ Taylor, Percy, "Melbourne are Proud of their Great War Record", The Australasian , (Saturday, 24 June 1944), p.23.

^ https://books.slatterymedia.com/uploads/store_items/grand-finals-volume-ii-1939-1978/files/look_inside.pdf [ bare URL PDF ]

^ Brodie, Will (1 August 2011). "Demon legends disappointed by coach sacking" . The Age . Retrieved 31 December 2015 .

^ AAP (18 March 2008). "McNamee named Melbourne CEO" . AFL.com.au . Bigpond . Retrieved 1 June 2015 .

^ McFarlane, Glenn (15 June 2008). "Chairman Jim Stynes drops Melbourne bombshell" . Herald Sun . News Corp Australia . Retrieved 1 June 2006 .

^ Stevens, Mark (6 August 2008). "$1.3m raised on Melbourne Demons' most-important night" . Herald Sun . News Corp . Retrieved 1 June 2015 .

^ "Paul McNamee wanted Jonathan Brown" . Herald Sun . News Corp Australia . 24 July 2008 . Retrieved 1 June 2015 .

^ "Funding critical for Dees" . The Courier Mail . News Corp Australia . 18 December 2008 . Retrieved 1 June 2015 .

^ "Demons given $2m funding package" . ABC . 19 December 2008 . Retrieved 1 June 2015 .

^ Niall, Jake (5 August 2010). "Demons wipe out last of their $5m debt" . The Age . Australia . Retrieved 5 August 2010 .

^ Lienert, Sam (17 September 2011). "Neeld aims to toughen up Demons" . The Age . Fairfax Media . Retrieved 1 June 2015 .

^ "Carlton midfielder Brock McLean reveals he left Melbourne Demons because the club was tanking" . Fox Sports . News Corp . 30 July 2012 . Retrieved 20 February 2013 .

^ "Party like it's 1954! Bulldogs stun footy world to book date with Demons: AFL Grand Final guide" . Fox Sports . 11 September 2021 . Retrieved 11 September 2021 .

^ Laughton, Max (25 September 2021). "A Grand New Flag: Demons end 57 years of AFL agony with 17 minutes of magic" . Fox Sports . Retrieved 25 September 2021 .

^ "Saturday night lights: Massive TV audience for Perth Grand Final" . Australian Football League . 26 September 2021 . Retrieved 4 October 2021 .

^ "Melbourne extends New Balance partnership" . melbournefc.com.au . Retrieved 12 June 2018 .

^ VFL Uniforms by season (since 1897) on FootyJumpers.com

^ "Meet Jock, Moz, Bruiser ..." The Age . 12 December 2003 . Retrieved 14 May 2021 .

^ "Daisy the new female mascot" . melbournefc.com.au . Retrieved 6 February 2017 .

^ " 'Flash' mascot to be unveiled" . melbournefc.com.au . Retrieved 22 July 2017 .

^ Carroll, Lynda (11 February 2011). "The second verse returns" . MelbourneFC.com.au . Bigpond .

^ "Melbourne Football Club" . Melbourne Cricket Club .

^ "MCC logo embedded on MFC jumper" . Melbourne Football Club . 11 December 2013.

^ Ashley Browne (7 July 1994). "$500,000 facelift for Junction Oval". The Age . Melbourne. p. 26.

^ Damian Barrett (28 March 2008). "Dees to move department to Casey" . Herald Sun . Melbourne . Retrieved 21 December 2014 .

^ "Dees to move department to Casey" . 27 March 2008 . Retrieved 11 November 2021 .

^ "Era ends: No more footy at Junction Oval" . 21 July 2015 . Retrieved 12 March 2022 .

^ Jump up to: a b Tom Morris (18 August 2021). "Exclusive: Demons hatch plans to FINALLY solve eight-year problem" . Fox Sports .

^ "Demons, Community To Win From Gosch's Paddock Upgrade" . miragenews.com . 2 August 2021.

^ "Gosch's Paddock to undergo redevelopment" . 1 August 2021 . Retrieved 27 March 2022 .

^ "Gosch's Paddock Oval to be upgraded for Melbourne Football Club" . 4 August 2021 . Retrieved 27 March 2022 .

^ "Gosch's Paddock redevelopment commences" . 5 December 2021 . Retrieved 27 March 2022 .

^ "Golly Gosch: Demons eye site for new home" . The Age . 24 July 2019.

^ "Coronavirus protocols: Melbourne move AFL program to Casey" . The Age . 2 March 2020.

^ "Essendon Bombers blitz off-field in Victoria but Sydney Swans Australia's Favourite Team" .

^ afl.com.au

^ Jump up to: a b c Beveridge, Riley (29 January 2016). "Your AFL club's most famous supporters, from Barack Obama to Cam Newton" . Fox Sports . Retrieved 25 September 2021 .

^ Walsh, Kay; Schedvin, Bernie. Snedden, Sir Billy Mackie (1926–1987) . Australian Dictionary of Biography . National Centre of Biography, Australian National University . Retrieved 25 September 2021 .

^ "Dee force is strong with this one! Skywalker's shout-out" . PerthNow . The Sunday Times (Western Australia) . 11 September 2021 . Retrieved 25 September 2021 .

^ "Nazeem Is Fired Up For The Grand Final" . 10 Play . Network 10 . 24 September 2021 . Retrieved 25 September 2021 . It's AFL Grand Final weekend and mad Demons supporter Nazeem Hussain is here to give us a completely unbiased look at the big game.

^ (4 December 2006) "Celebrating the Century" Archived 27 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine . Melbourne FC. Retrieved 11 August 2010.

^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h "Melbourne – Game Records" . AFL Tables . Retrieved 1 June 2015 .

^ Jump up to: a b "Streaks – Melbourne" . AFL Tables . Retrieved 4 June 2015 .

^ Jump up to: a b "Melbourne Attendances" . AFL Tables . Retrieved 1 June 2015 .

^ "Melbourne Goalkicking Records" . AFL Tables . Retrieved 4 June 2015 .

^ "Melbourne – Season and Game Records (1965–2015)" . AFL Tables . Retrieved 4 June 2015 .

^ "FOOTBALL" . The Argus . Melbourne. 1 May 1914. p. 13 . Retrieved 31 July 2011 – via National Library of Australia.

^ VFL Football Record , 2 May 1914 p.15

^ Connolly, Rohan (25 May 2015). "Melbourne Demons Jeremy Howe the greatest 'hanger' of them all" . The Age . Fairfax Media . Retrieved 1 June 2015 .

^ Twomey, Callum (16 October 2016). "First bounce for women's footy at the MCG" . AFL.com.au . Bigpond . Retrieved 16 October 2016 .

^ Lane, Samantha (20 April 2016). "Gold Coast latest out, but AFL awaits 16 women's team bids" . The Age . Retrieved 13 November 2016 .

^ Chalkley-Rhoden, Stephanie (11 July 2016). "AFL Women's league: Collingwood, Carlton among eight clubs in new national competition" . ABC.com.au . Retrieved 13 November 2016 .

^ Matthews, Bruce (27 July 2016). "Sixteen of the best: women's marquees named" . AFL.com.au . Bigpond . Retrieved 16 October 2016 .

^ Dinny Navaratnam; Bruce Matthews; Nathan Schmook; Lee Gaskin (15 September 2016). "Women's league coaches revealed: Dees name coach" . AFL.com,au . Retrieved 13 November 2016 .


Wikimedia Commons has media related to Melbourne Football Club .
Melbourne did not field a team from 1916–18 due to the First World War

1897: Geelong
1898: Essendon
1899: Fitzroy
1900: Fitzroy
1901: Geelong
1902: Collingwood
1903: Collingwood
1904: Fitzroy
1905: Collingwood
1906: Carlton
1907: Carlton
1908: Carlton
1909: South Melbourne
1910: Carlton
1911: Essendon
1912: South Melbourne
1913: Fitzroy
1914: Carlton
1915: Collingwood
1916: Carlton
1917: Collingwood
1918: South Melbourne
1919: Collingwood
1920: Richmond
1921: Carlton
1922: Collingwood
1923: Essendon
1924: Essendon
1925: Geelong
1926: Collingwood
1927: Collingwood
1928: Collingwood
1929: Collingwood
1930: Collingwood
1931: Geelong
1932: Carlton
1933: Richmond
1934: Richmond
1935: South Melbourne
1936: South Melbourne
1937: Geelong
1938: Carlton
1939: Melbourne
1940: Melbourne
1941: Carlton
1942: Essendon
1943: Richmond
1944: Richmond
1945: South Melbourne
1946: Essendon
1947: Carlton
1948: Essendon
1949: North Melbourne
1950: Essendon
1951: Geelong
1952: Geelong
1953: Geelong
1954: Geelong
1955: Melbourne
1956: Melbourne
1957: Melbourne
1958: Melbourne
1959: Melbourne
1960: Melbourne
1961: Hawthorn
1962: Essendon
1963: Hawthorn
1964: Melbourne
1965: St Kilda
1966: Collingwood
1967: Richmond
1968: Essendon
1969: Collingwood
1970: Collingwood
1971: Hawthorn
1972: Carlton
1973: Collingwood
1974: Richmond
1975: Hawthorn
1976: Carlton
1977: Collingwood
1978: North Melbourne
1979: Carlton
1980: Geelong
1981: Carlton
1982: Richmond
1983: North Melbourne
1984: Essendon
1985: Essendon
1986: Hawthorn
1987: Carlton
1988: Hawthorn
1989: Hawthorn
1990: Essendon
1991: West Coast
1992: Geelong
1993: Essendon
1994: West Coast
1995: Carlton
1996: Sydney
1997: St Kilda
1998: North Melbourne
1999: Essendon
2000: Essendon
2001: Essendon
2002: Port Adelaide
2003: Port Adelaide
2004: Port Adelaide
2005: Adelaide
2006: West Coast
2007: Geelong
2008: Geelong
2009: St Kilda
2010: Collingwood
2011: Collingwood
2012: Hawthorn
2013: Hawthorn
2014: Sydney
2015: Fremantle
2016: Sydney
2017: Adelaide
2018: Richmond
2019: Geelong
2020: Port Adelaide
2021: Melbourne


1897: Essendon
1898: Fitzroy
1899: Fitzroy
1900: Melbourne
1901: Essendon
1902: Collingwood
1903: Collingwood
1904: Fitzroy
1905: Fitzroy
1906: Carlton
1907: Carlton
1908: Carlton
1909: South Melbourne
1910: Collingwood
1911: Essendon
1912: Essendon
1913: Fitzroy
1914: Carlton
1915: Carlton
1916: Fitzroy
1917: Collingwood
1918: South Melbourne
1919: Collingwood
1920: Richmond
1921: Richmond
1922: Fitzroy
1923: Essendon
1924: Essendon
1925: Geelong
1926: Melbourne
1927: Collingwood
1928: Collingwood
1929: Collingwood
1930: Collingwood
1931: Geelong
1932: Richmond
1933: South Melbourne
1934: Richmond
1935: Collingwood
1936: Collingwood
1937: Geelong
1938: Carlton
1939: Melbourne
1940: Melbourne
1941: Melbourne
1942: Essendon
1943: Richmond
1944: Fitzroy
1945: Carlton
1946: Essendon
1947: Carlton
1948: Melbourne
1949: Essendon
1950: Essendon
1951: Geelong
1952: Geelong
1953: Collingwood
1954: Footscray
1955: Melbourne
1956: Melbourne
1957: Melbourne
1958: Collingwood
1959: Melbourne
1960: Melbourne
1961: Hawthorn
1962: Essendon
1963: Geelong
1964: Melbourne
1965: Essendon
1966: St Kilda
1967: Richmond
1968: Carlton
1969: Richmond
1970: Carlton
1971: Hawthorn
1972: Carlton
1973: Richmond
1974: Richmond
1975: North Melbourne
1976: Hawthorn
1977: North Melbourne
1978: Hawthorn
1979: Carlton
1980: Richmond
1981: Carlton
1982: Carlton
1983: Hawthorn
1984: Essendon
1985: Essendon
1986: Hawthorn
1987: Carlton
1988: Hawthorn
1989: Hawthorn
1990: Collingwood
1991: Hawthorn
1992: West Coast
1993: Essendon
1994: West Coast
1995: Carlton
1996: North Melbourne
1997: Adelaide
1998: Adelaide
1999: Kangaroos
2000: Essendon
2001: Brisbane Lions
2002: Brisbane Lions
2003: Brisbane Lions
2004: Port Adelaide
2005: Sydney
2006: West Coast
2007: Geelong
2008: Hawthorn
2009: Geelong
2010: Collingwood
2011: Geelong
2012: Sydney
2013: Hawthorn
2014: Hawthorn
2015: Hawthorn
2016: Western Bulldogs
2017: Richmond
2018: West Coast
2019: Richmond
2020: Richmond
2021: Melbourne

Italics denote premiership was decided without a grand final being required
Known as the Victorian Football League from 1897–1989; no grand finals were held in 1897 and 1924
Professional sports teams based in Melbourne

Victorian Vikings (men's division)
Victorian Vipers (women's division)


HC Melbourne (men's and women's divisions)

The Melbourne Football Club , nicknamed the Demons , is a professional Australian rules football club that competes in the Australian Football League (AFL), the sport's elite competition. It is based in Melbourne , Victoria , and plays its home games at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCG). Melbourne are the reigning premiers of the AFL.

Melbourne is the world's oldest professional club of any football code . Its origins can be traced to an 1858 letter in which Tom Wills , captain of the Victoria cricket team , calls for the formation of a "foot-ball club" with its own "code of laws". An informal Melbourne team played that winter and officially formed in May 1859, when Wills and three other members codified " The Rules of the Melbourne Football Club "—the basis of Australian rules football. The club was a dominant force in the early years of the game and a foundation member of the Victorian Football Association (VFA) in 1877 and the Victorian Football League (VFL) in 1896, now the national AFL. Melbourne has won 13 VFL/AFL premierships, the latest in 2021 . The club was a foundation team of the AFL Women's league.

The football club has been a sporting section of the Melbourne Cricket Club (MCC) since 2009, having previously been associated with the MCC between 1889 and 1980. [6]

In the winter and spring of 1858, a loosely organised football team known as 'Melbourne' played in a series of scratch matches in the parklands outside the Melbourne Cricket Ground . This team was captained by Tom Wills , a prominent athlete and captain of the Victoria cricket team , who, on 10 July that year, had a letter of his published by the Melbourne-based Bell's Life in Victoria and Sporting Chronicle , in which he calls for the formation of a "foot-ball club" with a "code of laws" to keep cricketers fit during winter. Other figures associated with this embryonic Melbourne side included Melbourne Cricket Club members Jerry Bryant , William Hammersley and J. B. Thompson , and teacher Thomas H. Smith . It is possible that the first game played involving the Melbourne team took place on or adjacent to the Melbourne Cricket Ground on 14 August following Bryant's call for 'all good kicks' to take part with a subsequent match held among the Melbourne Cricket Club members on 30 August. [7] On 25 September, Melbourne was challenged to a match by the South Yarra Football Club featuring 26 players a side, with Melbourne winning the game. [8] Although the club had not yet been established as a formal entity, the year 1858 has long been recognised as being the foundation year of the Melbour
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