1910 VFL Grand Final

The 1910 VFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between the Collingwood Football Club and Carlton Football Club, held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Melbourne on 1 October 1910. It was the 13th annual Grand Final of the Victorian Football League, staged to determine the premiers for the 1910 VFL season. The match, attended by 42,790 spectators, was won by Collingwood by a margin of 14 points, marking that club's third premiership victory.

1910 VFL Grand Final

Collingwood

Carlton
9.7 (61) 6.11 (47)
1 2 3 4
COLL 4.3 (27) 5.3 (33) 8.5 (53) 9.7 (61)
CAR 1.2 (8) 2.6 (18) 4.9 (33) 6.11 (47)
Date1 October 1910
StadiumMelbourne Cricket Ground
Attendance42,790
 1909 VFL Grand Final 1911 

Teams

Collingwood
Carlton
Collingwood
B: Jim Sadler Ted Rowell Charlie Norris
HB: Joe Scaddan Jack Shorten Duncan McIvor
C: Percy Gibb Jock McHale Norm Oliver
HF: George Angus (c) Les Hughes Dick Vernon
F: Paddy Gilchrist Dick Lee Percy Wilson
Foll: Dave Ryan Richard Daykin Tom Baxter
Res:
Coach: George Angus
Carlton
B: Dick Harris Doug Gillespie Bill Goddard
HB: Tom McCluskey Billy Payne Norm Clark
C: Ernie Jamieson Rod McGregor Tom Clancy
HF: Percy Sheehan Jim Marchbank Jack Baquie
F: Andy McDonald Vin Gardiner Archie Wilson
Foll: Jack Wells Martin Gotz Fred Elliott (c)
Res:
Coach: Fred Elliott

Statistics

Colligwood players

Goalkickers

Collingwood:

  • D Lee 4
  • G Angus 1
  • R Daykin 1
  • P Gibb 1
  • P Gilchrist 1
  • D Vernon 1

Carlton:

  • R McGregor 2
  • J Baguie 1
  • V Gardiner 1
  • J Marchbank 1
  • J Wells 1
gollark: And my idea for how the buying/selling would work is that you'd create a "sell order" if you wanted to sell it, and set a price, and your share would be sold as soon as anyone created a "buy order" with that price or a higher one.
gollark: The auctioning could be done with a Vickrey auction, which apparently "gives bidders an incentive to bid their true value", which seems like a good property.
gollark: My suggested way for it to work has always been having meme shares pay dividends (based on upvotes, maybe every hour or after a fixed time or something), giving the creator some of the shares, and selling the others to "the market" (maybe via some sort of short auction mechanism?), then just letting everyone trade them freely until they pay out.
gollark: Investing is a losing proposition, or at least a breaking-even-usually one, sooo...
gollark: Yep!

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.