1982 VFL Grand Final

The 1982 VFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between the Carlton Football Club and Richmond Football Club, held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Melbourne on 25 September 1982. It was the 86th annual Grand Final of the Victorian Football League, staged to determine the premiers for the 1982 VFL season. The match, attended by 107,536 spectators, was won by Carlton.

1982 VFL Grand Final

Carlton

Richmond
14.19 (103) 12.13 (85)
1 2 3 4
CARL 4.7 (31) 6.11 (47) 11.15 (81) 14.19 (103)
RICH 4.3 (27) 9.4 (58) 9.10 (64) 12.13 (85)
Date25 September 1982
StadiumMelbourne Cricket Ground, Melbourne, Australia
Broadcast in Australia
NetworkSeven Network
 1981 VFL Grand Final 1983 

Background

The previous three premierships had been won by either team, Richmond in 1980 and Carlton in 1979 and 1981, all against Collingwood.

The Tigers won eleven successive matches early in the 1982 VFL season and, after a slump as injuries took toll late on the home-and-away rounds, returned to their most devastating form in the finals. At the conclusion of the home and away season, Richmond had finished first on the VFL ladder with 18 wins and 4 losses. Carlton had finished third (behind Hawthorn), with 16 wins 5 losses and a draw.

In the finals series leading up to the Grand Final, Carlton defeated Hawthorn by 58 points in the Qualifying Final before losing to Richmond by 40 points in the Second Semi-Final. They advanced to the Grand Final after beating Hawthorn, this time by 31 points in the Preliminary Final. Richmond advanced straight to the Grand Final on the back of their Second Semi-Final victory.

Match summary

It was a tight game throughout. Carlton started strongly, leading by 18 points just five minutes into the game, before Richmond hit back, and at quarter time the two teams were separated by just four points in Carlton's favour.

A five-goal second quarter by the Tigers saw them go into the half time break with an 11-point lead. However, after half time Carlton began to break away, kicking five goals in the third quarter whilst keeping the Tigers goalless to be 17 points up at three-quarter time.

Richmond tried hard at the beginning of the final quarter, with Kevin Bartlett and Jim Jess scoring to close the margin, but the Blues held out to win, marking the first time since the 1915 VFL Grand Final that they had won back-to-back flags.

The Norm Smith Medal was awarded to Richmond's Maurice Rioli for being judged the best player afield, despite the fact that he finished on the losing side. It was the first time that a player from the losing side had won the medal (there have since been three more instances in which a Grand Final player has won a Norm Smith Medal without being on the winning premiership side). It was also the third consecutive season that Rioli had been best afield in a Grand Final; he had won the West Australian Football League's equivalent medal, the Simpson Medal, in the 1980 and 1981 Grand Finals playing for South Fremantle. Wayne Johnston and captain Mike Fitzpatrick were the best for Carlton.

This Grand Final is also remembered for the naked female streaker, Helen D'Amico, who ran onto the field in the third quarter. D'Amico, a 17-year-old stripper from Adelaide, ran onto the field with a Blues scarf and attempted to embrace Carlton player Bruce Doull. She is the first streaker to disrupt a VFL/AFL Grand Final (there would be streakers in the 1983 VFL Grand Final 1988 Grand Final [1] and 1989 Grand Final).

With its 14th premiership, Carlton overtook Collingwood to have won the most premierships in VFL history; this was the first time that Carlton has held this record outright, having previously been tied with Collingwood on 13 flags after 1981, and with Fitzroy on 5 flags after 1915. Carlton has held the record, either outright or jointly with Essendon ever since. Carlton's next premiership success came five years later, when it won the 1987 VFL Grand Final against Hawthorn. Richmond would not appear in another grand final until 2017, 35 years later.

Teams

Carlton
Richmond
Carlton
B: 27 Des English 11 Bruce Doull 15 Val Perovic
HB: 6 Mario Bortolotto 9 Ken Hunter 5 Ken Sheldon
C: 32 David Glascott 16 Jim Buckley 37 Wayne Harmes
HF: 4 Peter Bosustow 36 Mark Maclure 7 Wayne Johnston
F: 33 Peter McConville 8 Ross Ditchburn 34 Alex Marcou
Foll: 3 Mike Fitzpatrick (c) 13 Phil Maylin 14 Rod Ashman
Int: 2 Warren Jones 22 Robbert Klomp
Coach: David Parkin
Richmond
B: 34 Graeme Landy 15 Alan Martello 5 Emmett Dunne
HB: 18 Mervyn Keane 20 Jim Jess 19 Greg Strachan
C: 9 Shane Williams 4 Geoff Raines 16 Bryan Wood
HF: 29 Kevin Bartlett 33 David Cloke (c) 17 Maurice Rioli
F: 8 Michael Roach 25 Ian Sartori 3 Dale Weightman
Foll: 1 Mark Lee 2 Robert Wiley 22 Barry Rowlings
Int: 14 Bruce Tempany 31 Peter Welsh
Coach: Francis Bourke

Goal kickers

Carlton

  • Ashman 2
  • Johnston 2
  • Fitzpatrick 2
  • McConville 2
  • Bosustow 1
  • Harmes 1
  • Hunter 1
  • Maclure 1
  • Marcou 1
  • Maylin 1

Richmond

  • Bartlett 3
  • Cloke 3
  • Rioli 3
  • Jess 1
  • Raines 1
  • Weightman 1

See also

References

  • The Official statistical history of the AFL 2004
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