2000 VFL season

Last updated

2000 VFL season
TXU VFL logo.png
Date16 March – 27 August 2000
Teams18
Premiers Sandringham
7th premiership
Runners-up North Ballarat
2nd runners-up result
Minor premiers Sandringham
5th minor premiership
J. J. Liston Trophy David Robbins
(Springvale – 21 votes)
Frosty Miller Medallist Nick Sautner
(Sandringham – 60 goals)
  1999
2001  

The 2000 VFL season was the 119th season of the Victorian Football League (VFL), a second-tier Australian rules football competition played in the state of Victoria. [1] The season began on 16 March and concluded on 27 August, comprising a 19-match home-and-away season, followed by a four-week finals series. [2]

Contents

Sandringham won the premiership for the seventh time, defeating North Ballarat by 31 points in the 2000 VFL Grand Final. [3]

The league underwent significant changes for the 2000 season, being merged with the Australian Football League (AFL) reserves competition. Since this season, the VFL has served as a state-level senior competition in which reserves players and reserves teams from most AFL clubs compete.

Merger with AFL reserves

The Victorian State Football League (VFSL) had operated two open-age senior competitions during the 1990s: the VFL, which it took control of in 1995, and the AFL reserves, which it had operated since 1992. The AFL Reserves competition was contested by the reserves teams of eleven Australian Football League clubs: those of the ten Victorian clubs and that of the Sydney Swans. The VSFL had intended to merge the two into a single competition which would serve as an AFL reserves competition, a state-level senior competition and a development pathway from the 1995 season; however there was such significant opposition from the AFL clubs against abolishing their dedicated reserves competition that they had threatened to use their power to sack the AFL Commission over the changes. [4] Consequently, the two competitions had run in parallel between 1995 and 1999.

Prior to the 1998 season, the AFL again announced plans to amalgamate the VFL and the AFL reserves into a single competition, giving the clubs two years to make arrangements before the combined competition was to begin from the 2000 season. Although most of the AFL clubs were still opposed to the changes, on this occasion they accepted them. [5]

Under the new arrangement, AFL clubs were given two options: they could continue to operate their own reserves teams, fielding them in the VFL; or, they could enter a reserves affiliation with one or more existing VFL clubs. Under the affiliation structure, listed players who were not selected in the senior AFL team would be made available to play for their affiliated VFL club; the VFL club would then make up the balance of the team from its own playing list.

Affiliations and league membership changes

Under the new arrangement, four AFL clubs entered into affiliations with existing VFL clubs. These were: [6] [7]

A fifth affiliation was established with the creation of a new club, the Murray Kangaroos. The Murray Kangaroos was operated in partnership between the North Melbourne Football Club and the Ovens & Murray Football League, and was based at both Coburg City Oval in Melbourne and the Lavington Sports Ground in Albury.[ citation needed ] The Murray Kangaroos were affiliated with the Murray Bushrangers from the TAC Cup under-18s competition, which served to complete the VSFL's original vision that all twelve Victorian TAC Cup clubs would be affiliated with a VFL club. [8]

This left six Victorian AFL clubs, all of which entered their reserves teams directly into the VFL. These were: Carlton, Collingwood, Essendon, Geelong, Richmond and St Kilda.

Other changes

After four years, the merger between Preston Bullants senior club and the Northern Knights TAC Cup club was terminated, and the two clubs returned to being separate entities. The senior club, which had competed as the Preston Knights since 1996, became known as the Northern Bullants, and it returned to the red and white colours that it had worn prior to 1996. [9]

With the increased size of the league, the finals were expanded from five clubs to eight clubs. The VFL adopted the same final eight system which was adopted by the AFL in the same season, replacing the McIntyre Final Five which had been in use since 1989.

The Victorian State Football League was superseded by a newly established body, Football Victoria, which administered the league.

Summary

As a result of this large suite of changes, the size of the VFL grew from eleven to eighteen clubs, the largest it had been since 1987. The size of the competition during the 2000 season set a new record as the largest to contest the premiership in a single division in VFA/VFL history, a mark which stood until 2021. The clubs were:

Ladder

PosTeamPldWLDPFPAPPPtsQualification
1 Sandringham (P)19163021511460147.364 Finals series
2 North Ballarat 19145020791667124.756
3 Carlton (R) 19145020791667124.756
4 St Kilda (R) 19136020941520137.852
5 Geelong (R) 19136020171723117.152
6 Williamstown 19136020061746114.952
7 Box Hill 19136018921647114.952
8 Springvale 19126116481564105.450
9 Werribee 19108120251839110.142
10 Essendon (R) 1910901778178399.740
11 Collingwood (R) 1991001731187192.536
12 Frankston 1981011903191199.634
13 Port Melbourne 1961301787185896.224
14 Murray Kangaroos 1961301632185088.224
15 Coburg-Fitzroy 1941501483174485.016
16 Northern Bullants 1941501495222667.216
17 Richmond (R) 1931511501211970.814
18 Bendigo 1911801316241354.54
Source: [1]
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) percentage; 3) number of points for
(R) Reserves
(P) Premiers

Finals series

Qualifying and elimination finalsSemi-finalsPreliminary finalsGrand final
7 August, Waverley Park
1 Sandringham 9.14 (68)
4St Kilda10.7 (67)13 August, North Port Oval
St Kilda 8.14 (62)
6 August, North Port Oval Geelong 9.13 (67)20 August, North Port Oval
5 Geelong 15.11 (101) Sandringham 22.23 (155)
8 Springvale 8.12 (60) Carlton 12.9 (81)27 August, Waverley Park
Sandringham 15.18 (108)
5 August, North Port Oval 19 August, North Port Oval North Ballarat 11.11 (77)
6 Williamstown 22.17 (149) Geelong 12.7 (79)
7 Box Hill 15.14 (104)12 August, North Port Oval North Ballarat 20.13 (133)
Carlton 19.11 (125)
5 August, North Port Oval Williamstown 7.9 (51)
2 North Ballarat 17.24(126)
3 Carlton 10.6 (66)

Grand Final

2000 VFL Grand Final
Sunday 27 August

(2:10 pm)

Sandringham def. North Ballarat Waverley Park (crowd: 8,652) [10]
4.6 (30)
8.10 (58)
11.14 (80)
15.18 (108)
Q1
Q2
Q3
Final
0.5 (5)
3.5 (23)
5.8 (38)
11.11 (77)
Umpires: Jeffery, Malcolm, Twitt
Norm Goss Memorial Medal: Richard Maloney (Sandringham)
Sautner 6, Beams 2, Pitt 2, Templeton 2, Febey, Haynes, Williams GoalsClarke 2, Peake 2, Power 2, Field, Inkster, Maher, T. Polkinghorne, Snibson

Awards

Notable events

See also

References

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  5. Daryl Timms; Michael Stevens (10 December 1997). "Time's up for twos". Herald Sun. Melbourne, VIC. p. 86.
  6. Fiddian, Marc (2004); The VFA; A History of the Victorian Football Association 1877–1995; p. 188
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