1887 VFA premiership season | |
---|---|
Teams | 18 |
Premiers |
Carlton (2nd premiership) |
← 1886
1888 →
|
The 1887 Victorian Football Association season was the 11th season of the Australian rules football competition.
The premiership was won by the Carlton Football Club. It was the second and last VFA premiership in the club's history.
The metropolitan membership of the Association (including Geelong) remained unchanged from the fifteen clubs which contested the premiership in 1886. The three Ballarat-based clubs (Ballarat, Ballarat Imperial and South Ballarat) also remained senior clubs; however, unlike in previous years, they were included in the premiership lists by all of the major sportswriters.
The premiership was won by the Carlton Football Club, which played eighteen matches for the season, winning fifteen and drawing two. The runner-up was Geelong, which won sixteen and drew three matches from twenty-one played. South Melbourne was ranked third. Although no official system for deciding the premiership existed, it was conventional for the club which suffered the fewest defeats during the season to be named premier.
On July 2, a weakened Geelong which was missing eight of its best twenty due to unavailability, suffered one of its two losses for the season; Ballarat Imperial 3.4 defeated Geelong 0.2 at the Eastern Oval in Ballarat. Geelong lodged a protest with the Association that the match should not be counted toward the premiership, contending that the match was arranged informally as part of a country trip, which occurred only because a planned tour of Adelaide was cancelled, that it was not included in the Association fixture at the beginning of the season, that the club had not expected the match to be counted, and that there were some other procedural irregularities with such details and the appointment of umpire. However, the Association had in place a stringent rule in place that any match played on a Saturday between two Association clubs would count to the premiership; and the Geelong's protest was rejected by a large majority of delegates. Had Geelong been successful in having the match discounted from the premiership, ceteris paribus, it and Carlton would each have finished with only one defeat for the season – and a playoff match would likely have been arranged to decide the premiership.