The Challenge Cup was the name of several football trophies contested in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1860s and 1870s under the Melbourne Football Club rules and the Victorian rules (which were early versions of Australian rules football).
Football in Victoria was played under an informal administrative structure prior to the formation of the Victorian Football Association in 1877. As such, any trophies or competitions were unofficial, and were arranged entirely at the agreement of the participating clubs. Trophies were either purchased by the clubs or donated by a third party.
There were three Challenge Cups which were contested among the top senior metropolitan clubs between 1861 and 1871:
The Challenge Cup, which was won and held based on the results of specific games, was separate from the premiership (which is considered to have officially existed from 1870), which was based on a club's results in all games during a season.
The inaugural football Challenge Cup was a silver cup donated by the Royal Caledonian Society of Melbourne. It was initially put up as the prize for a football match between University and a team of challengers which was to have been played during the Society's Caledonian games on 28 December 1861. [1]
The game was attempted, but abandoned well short of its full length as there was inadequate space among the other Caledonian games events to accommodate a football game. The cup itself was nevertheless presented to University. [2]
In May 1862, the same cup was put up as a prize in a scheduled match between University and the Melbourne Football Club, but the game was twice postponed due to University having insufficient players to field a team. Melbourne claimed that University had forfeited the match and that it should take ownership of the cup, but University rejected this and remained in possession. [3] The matter was finally resolved on-field in 1863, when Melbourne defeated University 2–1 over three afternoons' play in July and August – at that time, matches were untimed and won by the first team to score two goals: the first day's play on 18 July was scoreless, [4] the second day's play on 8 August resulted in one goal to each team, [5] and the winning goal was scored after half an hour's play on 22 August. [6]
Thereafter, the cup was put up by Melbourne as a perpetual prize to be contested in all matches between the holder and a challenger. As was commonplace with trophies in many sports at the time, the cup would remain a perpetual prize until won three times consecutively by the same team, at which point permanent possession would pass to that team.
Only three more matches were played for the Caledonian Society Cup, all won by Geelong:
Thus, Geelong became the permanent owner of the Calendonian Society Challenge Cup.
In 1865, the Athletic Sports Committee put up a new Challenge Cup trophy, valued at ten guineas. As with the previous trophy, any match between the holder of the trophy and a challenger would be played for the trophy, matches would be played on the ground of the holder, and the first club to win the cup three times consecutively (with an unlimited number of drawn matches in that streak) would become its permanent owner. The Athletic Sports Committee could be called upon to resolve disputes. [10]
Matches played during 1865 for the cup were as follows:
Prior to the 1866 season, the Athletic Sports Committee made adjustments to the rules relating to Cup matches:
While another rule had called for matches to start promptly at 2 pm, to prevent the holder of the cup from delaying the start of a match to reduce the time available for the challenger to score two goals, [21] this rule was repeatedly broken over the following year by South Yarra, which was often up to an hour late, drawing considerable bad will towards the club. [22] Matches played during 1866 were:
This gave South Yarra its third consecutive win (with five drawn matches in between), thus giving it permanent possession of the cup. No cup was contested between 1867 and 1869.
The trophy itself – a 20 cm high silver cup inscribed with the words "Champion Football Cup – Presented by the Athletic Sports Committee 1865" – was long thought to have been lost. It resurfaced unexpectedly in 2007, having been inherited by a man in Bristol, England with no obvious connection to 1860s football. It was subsequently loaned to be put on display at the National Sports Museum. [30]
The South Yarra Football Club decided to purchase and donate a new trophy for competition in 1870. As with the previous cups, it was contested in all matches between the holder and a challenger, but this time a club would be required to win it four times consecutively without defeat (still with no limit on the number of drawn matches) to claim it permanently. [31]
In 1869, the rules of football had been changed so that matches were won by the team which secured the most goals in two halves of 50 minutes, rather than by the first team to score twice.
Five clubs contested the Cup during the 1870 season: Melbourne, Carlton, South Yarra, Albert-park and Railway. Albert-park took possession of the trophy from South Yarra in the first game it was contested, and then claimed three wins and five draws from its next eight games to claim permanent ownership of the cup, but South Yarra and other clubs disputed the claim, arguing that the club's second victory, a walk-over after Railway forfeited when only fourteen of its players arrived, [32] should have counted as a cancellation and not a forfeiture. [33] Albert-park ultimately gave the Cup back to South Yarra at the end of the year, but maintained its position that it had won it outright and was making the gift in its capacity as the trophy's owner. [34]
1870 South Yarra Challenge Cup games | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 28 May | South Yarra 1 | def. by | Albert-park 3 | St Kilda Cricket Ground | [35] |
Saturday, 4 June | Albert-park 0 | drew with | Melbourne 0 | Emerald Hill Ground (crowd: 1,500) | [36] |
Saturday, 11 June ( walk-over, disputed) | Albert-park | def. | Hobson's Bay Railway | Emerald Hill Ground | [37] |
Saturday, 18 June | Carlton 0 | drew with | Albert-park 0 | Royal Park | [38] |
Saturday, 9 July | Albert-park 2 | def. | South Yarra 1 | Emerald Hill Ground (crowd: 450) | [39] |
Saturday, 16 July | Melbourne 0 | drew with | Albert-park 0 | Melbourne Ground (crowd: 2,500) | [40] |
Saturday, 23 July | Albert-park 0 | drew with | Carlton 0 | Emerald Hill Ground (crowd: 3,000) | [41] |
Saturday, 13 August | Albert-park 1 | drew with | Carlton 1 | Emerald Hill Ground | [42] |
Saturday, 20 August | South Yarra 0 | def. by | Albert-park 2 | Melbourne Ground (crowd: 2,500) | [43] |
The South Yarra Challenge Cup was again put up for competition again in 1871. While Albert-park declined to contest it, it continued to play senior games against the other clubs. The remaining three clubs – Carlton, Melbourne and South Yarra – decided that each club would play the others three times during the season, and the top two would play a single playoff match for the cup. This meant that the cup was being contested in a league-type competition, and by traditional definitions was no longer a challenge cup with a perpetual holder. [44]
Carlton and Melbourne were clear qualifiers for the final ahead of South Yarra, who were winless: two Carlton-Melbourne matches were postponed by four weeks due to rain, while two unplayed Carlton-South Yarra matches were scratched as they would have no effect on the outcome.
Carlton won the Grand Final (the first of its kind in history) 2–0 to claim undisputed and permanent ownership of the South Yarra Challenge Cup. [45]
Playoff match for the South Yarra Challenge Cup | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 7 October 1871 (3:00 pm) | Carlton | def. | Melbourne | Emerald Hill Ground | [46] |
2 2 |
Half Final |
0 0 |
|||
Clarke, Dedman | Goals | ||||
There were no further Challenge Cups contested among the senior metropolitan clubs, with the bitterness arising from repeated disputes over ownership of each cup being a significant factor in this.
There were several other challenge cups presented in provincial and junior football. Among them were:
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cite journal}}
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The Challenge Cup was the name of several football trophies contested in Melbourne, Australia, during the 1860s and 1870s under the Melbourne Football Club rules and the Victorian rules (which were early versions of Australian rules football).
Football in Victoria was played under an informal administrative structure prior to the formation of the Victorian Football Association in 1877. As such, any trophies or competitions were unofficial, and were arranged entirely at the agreement of the participating clubs. Trophies were either purchased by the clubs or donated by a third party.
There were three Challenge Cups which were contested among the top senior metropolitan clubs between 1861 and 1871:
The Challenge Cup, which was won and held based on the results of specific games, was separate from the premiership (which is considered to have officially existed from 1870), which was based on a club's results in all games during a season.
The inaugural football Challenge Cup was a silver cup donated by the Royal Caledonian Society of Melbourne. It was initially put up as the prize for a football match between University and a team of challengers which was to have been played during the Society's Caledonian games on 28 December 1861. [1]
The game was attempted, but abandoned well short of its full length as there was inadequate space among the other Caledonian games events to accommodate a football game. The cup itself was nevertheless presented to University. [2]
In May 1862, the same cup was put up as a prize in a scheduled match between University and the Melbourne Football Club, but the game was twice postponed due to University having insufficient players to field a team. Melbourne claimed that University had forfeited the match and that it should take ownership of the cup, but University rejected this and remained in possession. [3] The matter was finally resolved on-field in 1863, when Melbourne defeated University 2–1 over three afternoons' play in July and August – at that time, matches were untimed and won by the first team to score two goals: the first day's play on 18 July was scoreless, [4] the second day's play on 8 August resulted in one goal to each team, [5] and the winning goal was scored after half an hour's play on 22 August. [6]
Thereafter, the cup was put up by Melbourne as a perpetual prize to be contested in all matches between the holder and a challenger. As was commonplace with trophies in many sports at the time, the cup would remain a perpetual prize until won three times consecutively by the same team, at which point permanent possession would pass to that team.
Only three more matches were played for the Caledonian Society Cup, all won by Geelong:
Thus, Geelong became the permanent owner of the Calendonian Society Challenge Cup.
In 1865, the Athletic Sports Committee put up a new Challenge Cup trophy, valued at ten guineas. As with the previous trophy, any match between the holder of the trophy and a challenger would be played for the trophy, matches would be played on the ground of the holder, and the first club to win the cup three times consecutively (with an unlimited number of drawn matches in that streak) would become its permanent owner. The Athletic Sports Committee could be called upon to resolve disputes. [10]
Matches played during 1865 for the cup were as follows:
Prior to the 1866 season, the Athletic Sports Committee made adjustments to the rules relating to Cup matches:
While another rule had called for matches to start promptly at 2 pm, to prevent the holder of the cup from delaying the start of a match to reduce the time available for the challenger to score two goals, [21] this rule was repeatedly broken over the following year by South Yarra, which was often up to an hour late, drawing considerable bad will towards the club. [22] Matches played during 1866 were:
This gave South Yarra its third consecutive win (with five drawn matches in between), thus giving it permanent possession of the cup. No cup was contested between 1867 and 1869.
The trophy itself – a 20 cm high silver cup inscribed with the words "Champion Football Cup – Presented by the Athletic Sports Committee 1865" – was long thought to have been lost. It resurfaced unexpectedly in 2007, having been inherited by a man in Bristol, England with no obvious connection to 1860s football. It was subsequently loaned to be put on display at the National Sports Museum. [30]
The South Yarra Football Club decided to purchase and donate a new trophy for competition in 1870. As with the previous cups, it was contested in all matches between the holder and a challenger, but this time a club would be required to win it four times consecutively without defeat (still with no limit on the number of drawn matches) to claim it permanently. [31]
In 1869, the rules of football had been changed so that matches were won by the team which secured the most goals in two halves of 50 minutes, rather than by the first team to score twice.
Five clubs contested the Cup during the 1870 season: Melbourne, Carlton, South Yarra, Albert-park and Railway. Albert-park took possession of the trophy from South Yarra in the first game it was contested, and then claimed three wins and five draws from its next eight games to claim permanent ownership of the cup, but South Yarra and other clubs disputed the claim, arguing that the club's second victory, a walk-over after Railway forfeited when only fourteen of its players arrived, [32] should have counted as a cancellation and not a forfeiture. [33] Albert-park ultimately gave the Cup back to South Yarra at the end of the year, but maintained its position that it had won it outright and was making the gift in its capacity as the trophy's owner. [34]
1870 South Yarra Challenge Cup games | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 28 May | South Yarra 1 | def. by | Albert-park 3 | St Kilda Cricket Ground | [35] |
Saturday, 4 June | Albert-park 0 | drew with | Melbourne 0 | Emerald Hill Ground (crowd: 1,500) | [36] |
Saturday, 11 June ( walk-over, disputed) | Albert-park | def. | Hobson's Bay Railway | Emerald Hill Ground | [37] |
Saturday, 18 June | Carlton 0 | drew with | Albert-park 0 | Royal Park | [38] |
Saturday, 9 July | Albert-park 2 | def. | South Yarra 1 | Emerald Hill Ground (crowd: 450) | [39] |
Saturday, 16 July | Melbourne 0 | drew with | Albert-park 0 | Melbourne Ground (crowd: 2,500) | [40] |
Saturday, 23 July | Albert-park 0 | drew with | Carlton 0 | Emerald Hill Ground (crowd: 3,000) | [41] |
Saturday, 13 August | Albert-park 1 | drew with | Carlton 1 | Emerald Hill Ground | [42] |
Saturday, 20 August | South Yarra 0 | def. by | Albert-park 2 | Melbourne Ground (crowd: 2,500) | [43] |
The South Yarra Challenge Cup was again put up for competition again in 1871. While Albert-park declined to contest it, it continued to play senior games against the other clubs. The remaining three clubs – Carlton, Melbourne and South Yarra – decided that each club would play the others three times during the season, and the top two would play a single playoff match for the cup. This meant that the cup was being contested in a league-type competition, and by traditional definitions was no longer a challenge cup with a perpetual holder. [44]
Carlton and Melbourne were clear qualifiers for the final ahead of South Yarra, who were winless: two Carlton-Melbourne matches were postponed by four weeks due to rain, while two unplayed Carlton-South Yarra matches were scratched as they would have no effect on the outcome.
Carlton won the Grand Final (the first of its kind in history) 2–0 to claim undisputed and permanent ownership of the South Yarra Challenge Cup. [45]
Playoff match for the South Yarra Challenge Cup | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 7 October 1871 (3:00 pm) | Carlton | def. | Melbourne | Emerald Hill Ground | [46] |
2 2 |
Half Final |
0 0 |
|||
Clarke, Dedman | Goals | ||||
There were no further Challenge Cups contested among the senior metropolitan clubs, with the bitterness arising from repeated disputes over ownership of each cup being a significant factor in this.
There were several other challenge cups presented in provincial and junior football. Among them were:
{{
cite journal}}
: Missing or empty |title=
(
help)