1938 Australia season: Difference between revisions

From International Hockey Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "This was the '''1938 ice hockey season in Australia''': ==Overview== The Victorian Championship series in Melbourne was held for the 24th time. The title was won by H...")
 
No edit summary
 
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown)
Line 2: Line 2:


==Overview==
==Overview==
The [[Victorian Championship]] series in Melbourne was held for the 24th time. The title was won by Hawthorn.  
The [[Victorian Championship]] series in Melbourne was held for the 24th time. The participating clubs were Brighton, Essendon, and Hawthorn. The title was won by Hawthorn.  


The 23rd [[1938 Goodall Cup|Goodall Cup]] Inter-State Series between Victoria and New South Wales was staged from August 6-10, 1938. It was won by New South Wales.
The 23rd [[1938 Goodall Cup|Goodall Cup]] Inter-State Series between Victoria and New South Wales was staged from August 6-10, 1938. It was won by New South Wales.
Line 9: Line 9:


==Results==
==Results==
;Victorian Championship


;New South Wales Championship
;New South Wales Championship

Latest revision as of 14:25, 19 May 2017

This was the 1938 ice hockey season in Australia:

Overview

The Victorian Championship series in Melbourne was held for the 24th time. The participating clubs were Brighton, Essendon, and Hawthorn. The title was won by Hawthorn.

The 23rd Goodall Cup Inter-State Series between Victoria and New South Wales was staged from August 6-10, 1938. It was won by New South Wales.

The 17th New South Wales Championship took place in Sydney. St. George, Monarchs, Panthers, and the Glebe Lions competed. St. George won the championship.

Results

New South Wales Championship
  • 6/22: Monarchs - Panthers 0:0[1]
  • 6/23: St. George - Glebe Lions 8:3 - goals: J. McLauchlain (3), G. Went (3), J. Brown (2)/W. Johnson (2), J. Wiseman[2]
  • 6/29: Monarchs - St. George 4:1 - goals: Tory, Ridgeway, Dunnett (2)/Cochrane[3]
  • 6/30: Panthers - Glebe Lions 5:1 - goals: Balork (2), Moller, R. Jones, Dawes/Wiseman (2)[4]
  • 7/6: Monarchs - Glebe Lions 5:0 - goals: N. Dunett (2), Ridgeway (2), Hiort[5]
  • 7/14: St. George - Panthers 4:1 (2:0, 2:1)[6]
  • 7/20: Monarchs - Panthers 5:3 - goals: Hiort (2), Jackson (2), Tory/Moller, Payne, A. Dawes[7]
  • 7/21: St. George - Glebe Lions 6:3 - goals: Went (3), Brown (2), McLaughlain/Wiseman (2), Johnstone[8]
  • 7/28: St. George - Monarchs 5:1 - goals: Went (3), McLaughlain, Coulter[9]
  • 8/25: Monarchs - Glebe Lions 8:3 (1:2, 7:1) - goals: Hiort (4), Harvey (2), Griffiths, Hudson/Wiseman, Miller, Johnstone[10]
  • 8/30: Glebe Lions - Panthers 8:3 (4:0, 4:3) - goals: W. Johnstone (4), Wiseman (4)/Payne, Billingham, McCabe[11]
  • 9/5: St. George - Panthers 4:0 (2:0, 2:0) - goals: Coulter (2), Went (2)[12]
  • 9/8: St. George - Glebe Lions 10:2 - goals: Coulter (6), Went (2), McLaughlain, Jeffries/Johnston (2)[13]
  • 9/12: Monarchs - Panthers 7:0[14]
  • 9/15: St. George - Panthers 9:0 (6:0, 3:0) - goals: Coulter (5), Went (2), McLaughlain, Jeffries[15]
  • 10/20: St. George - Glebe Lions 4:3 - goals: James, Langley, West, Rowe/Wells (3)[16]
Sydney Inter-Rink competition
  • 7/7: Glaciarium - Ice Palais 2:0 - goals: Johnstone, Went[17]
  • 7/13: Ice Palais - Glaciarium 2:1 (0:0, 2:1)[18]
  • 9/1: Glaciarium - Ice Palais 7:4 (3:0, 4:4) - goals: Johnston (2), Coulter (2), Brown, McLaughlain, Went/Hudson (2), Tory, Payne[19]

Glaciarium won the series, 2-games-to-one.

F.C. Brown Memorial Shield
  • 9/24: New South Wales - Victoria 5:1 - goals: J. Wiseman (2), T. Coulter, J. McLauchlain, H. Miller/C. Mitchell[20]
  • 9/26: New South Wales - Victoria 7:1 - goals: J. Wiseman (3), T. Coulter (2), J. McLauchlain, S. Hiort/J. White[21]
  • 9/28: New South Wales - Victoria 6:3 (2:3, 4:0) - goals: T. Coulter (2), J. Brown (2), J. McLauchlain, F. Harvey/R. Sullivan, A. Massins, E. Kelly[22]

The Brown Shield was an inter-state tournament for reserve players.

Other games
  • 8/24: Bears - Panthers 3:2[23]
  • 8/31: Bears - Glebe Lions 8:3 (5:2, 3:1)[24]
  • 9/7: Bears - Monarchs 11:0 (5:0, 6:0) - goals: D. Robertson (6), S. Fielder (3), V. Freeman, F. Clifton[25]
  • 9/14: Bears - St. George 1:0 (0:0, 1:0) - goals: Robertson[26]
  • 9/21: Bears - New South Wales All-Stars 4:2 - goals: Fielder, Robertson, Childs, Hayes/Went (2)[27]
  • 9/28: Bears - New South Wales All-Stars 6:6 (4:1, 2:5) - goals: K. Tory (2), S. Fielder (2), F. Clifton, D. Robertson/S. Hudson (2), F. Went (2), B. Moller, W. Johnston[28]
  • 10/5: Bears - New South Wales All-Stars 9:4 - goals: Clifton (4), Fielder (2), Robertson (2), Balork/Johnson, Went, Ridgway[29]

The Bears were a team featuring four imported Canadians who played challenge matches against the other Sydney-based clubs. They created a lot of controversy with their rough style of play, leading to a scheduled match against Glaciarium being cancelled by the New South Wales Association. Many players and enthusiasts did not approve of how the situation was handled, and a new Australian Amateur Ice Hockey Association was created in opposition. The NSW Association then responded by suspending the Bears.

  • 9/22: St. George - Glebe Lions 4:2 - goals: Cochrane (2), Coulter, Jeffries/Harvey, Wiseman[30]
  • 10/6: Glebe Lions - Glaciarium 9:8 (3:5, 6:3)[31]
  • 10/12: Tigers - Lions 10:6 - goals: Fielder (5), Johnson (4), Went/Clifton (3), Tory, Hudson, Lincoln[32]
  • 11/2: W. Johnson's team - K. Tory's team 3:2 - goals: Johnson (2), Robertson/Tory, Balork[33]

There was a series contested between the Bears and Australian selection composed of players from New South Wales and Victoria. The matches were described as "Canada vs. Australia". The series was organized by the breakaway Australian Ice Athletics Association.[34]

  • 10/15: Canada - Australia 4:1 - goals: Clifton (3), Fielder/Kelly[35]
  • 10/19: Canada - Australia 5:4 - goals: Robertson (2), Fielder (2), Clifton/Johnson (2), Mitchell, Lloyd[36]
  • 10/22: Canada - Australia 8:3 - goals: Fielder (5), Tony (2), Robertson/Johnstone (2), Kelly[37]

Contemporary accounts

References

  1. Referee, 1938-06-23
  2. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-06-24
  3. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-06-30
  4. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-07-01
  5. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-07-07
  6. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-07-15
  7. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-07-21
  8. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-07-22
  9. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-07-29
  10. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-08-26
  11. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-08-31
  12. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-09-06
  13. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-09-09
  14. The Labor Daily, 1938-09-13
  15. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-09-16
  16. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-10-21
  17. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-07-08
  18. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-07-14
  19. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-09-02
  20. The Sun, 1938-09-25
  21. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-09-27
  22. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-09-29
  23. The Sun, 1938-08-25
  24. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-09-01
  25. Referee, 1938-09-08
  26. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-09-15
  27. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-09-22
  28. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-09-29
  29. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-10-06
  30. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-09-23
  31. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-10-07
  32. The Labor Daily, 1938-10-13
  33. The Sydney Morning Herald, 1938-11-03
  34. The Labor Daily, 1938-10-15
  35. Truth, 1938-10-16
  36. The Sun, 1938-10-20
  37. Truth, 1938-10-23


Early Australian seasons
1907 - 1908 - 1909 - 1910 - 1911 - 1912 - 1913 - 1914 - 1915 - 1917 - 1918 - 1920 - 1921 - 1922 - 1923 - 1924 - 1925 - 1926 - 1927 - 1928 - 1929 - 1930 - 1931 - 1932 - 1933 - 1934 - 1935 - 1936 - 1937 - 1938 - 1939 - 1940 - 1941 - 1945 - 1946 - 1947 - 1948 - 1949 - 1950 - 1951 - 1952 - 1953 - 1954 - 1955 - 1956 - 1957 - 1958 - 1959 - 1960 - 1961 - 1962 - 1963 - 1964 - 1965 - 1966 - 1967 - 1968 - 1969 - 1970 - 1971 - 1972 - 1973 - 1978 - 1979