1950 Brisbane Carnival

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1950 Brisbane Carnival
Tournament information
SportAustralian football
LocationBrisbane, Australia
FormatRound Robin
Teams9
Final champion
SECTION A: Victoria
SECTION B: Australian Amateurs
← 1947
1953 →

The 1950 Brisbane Carnival was the 11th edition of the Australian National Football Carnival, an Australian football interstate competition. It was the first carnival to be hosted in Queensland and with the ANFC spending more than £15,000 as part of a major effort to promote the code in the state.

Rain was a constant throughout the carnival and as a result most games were held on a soggy Brisbane Exhibition Ground. Several of the matches were played at night using a white ball.

Section A consisted of the usual big three teams, Victoria, South Australia and Western Australia. The Tasmanian team joined them, having qualified through winning Section B of the 1947 Carnival and a team representing the VFA competed in the top section for the first time, as they were now full members of the Australian National Football Council. The VFA defeated South Australia by eight points in what was the biggest upset of the tournament. The VFA finished last in Section A, and as a result played Section B winners the Australian Amateurs in a play-off on 15 July 1951 to qualify for Section A at the next carnival in 1953.[1]

Victoria finished the carnival unbeaten to claim the Championship.

The official total attendance was 52,000 with the highest crowds being 15,000 for the VFL vs Western Australia and 8,980 for the VFL vs South Australia match.[2] However the ANFC's gate takings were well below expected, resulting in a massive £10,000 loss.

Results[edit]

Tassie Medal[edit]

Ranking Player Votes Team
1 Terry Cashion 8 Tasmania
2 Don Fraser 6 Victoria
3 Bob Hank 5 South Australia
4 Bill Hutchsion 4 Victoria
Les McClements 4 Western Australia

Goal-kickers[edit]

Ranking Player Goals Team
1 Bob Parsons 14 Tasmania
2 Bill Hutchsion 12 Victoria
3 Allan Ruthven 11 Victoria
4 Jim Conway 10 Western Australia
Les McClements 10 Western Australia

References[edit]

  1. ^ Eastman, David. "Victoria (VFA)". Hard Ball Get. Archived from the original on 2 April 2016. Retrieved 6 March 2016.
  2. ^ "NATIONAL CODE COUNCILS LOSS". Sunday Mail. No. 1057. Queensland, Australia. 30 July 1950. p. 24. Retrieved 11 May 2022 – via National Library of Australia.