Miracle Match (Australian rules football)
| 1963 VFL Round 10 | ||||||||||||||||
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| Date | 6 July 1963 | |||||||||||||||
| Stadium | Brunswick Street Oval | |||||||||||||||
| Attendance | 16,221 | |||||||||||||||
| Umpires | Charles Gaudion | |||||||||||||||
| Coin toss won by | Fitzroy | |||||||||||||||
| Kicked toward | The railway end (with the breeze) | |||||||||||||||
The "Miracle Match" is the unofficial title given to the Round 10, 1963 Victorian Football League (VFL) home-and-away match played between Fitzroy and Geelong at Brunswick Street Oval in North Fitzroy on 6 July 1963. The game is most notable for winless Fitzroy defeating eventual premiers Geelong in an unfathomable upset, highlighting what would be Wally Clark's only game as coach. The performance remains held in such fondness that a book commemorating the win was released in 2014, shortly after the match's fiftieth anniversary.
Attended by 16,221 spectators at Fitzroy's home ground, the match was one of the major highlights of the 1960s, wherein the young, inexperienced (and, for the 1963 season, winless) Fitzroy team unexpectedly, comprehensively — and, for some, "miraculously" — beat the experienced and powerful Geelong team, 9.13 (67) to 3.13 (31). The Cats were a team that had finished second on the 1962 VFL ladder, had already won six, and drawn one, of its nine home-and-away matches, and would eventually go on to win the 1963 VFL grand final and premiership.
The game was remarkable for the extensive, detailed, and well-structured team strategies and player-against-player tactics devised by Clark (the stand-in coach-for-the-day), such that, in addition to Fitzroy playing an ideal game on a very muddy and waterlogged Brunswick Street Oval, the Fitzroy players played an inspired and tenacious game that completely nullified the experienced Geelong champions Polly Farmer and Bill Goggin, preventing them from combining their skills with one another and, in addition, kept Geelong's full-forward John Sharrock goalless for the match.
Today's League game at Fitzroy will see a battle between
two acting coaches — Wally Clark for the Maroons and
Geelong's Neil Tresize. . . .
Everything points to a win for Tresize and the Geelong
team, which is after its seventh victory for the season.
Fitzroy has yet to win a game this season, and it would
be expecting too much of the young players to break
through for their first win against a side as high on the
ladder as Geelong.
The Home side has lost its two most damaging players
to the inter-State side, [Kevin] Murray and rover Graham
Campbell.
The Cats will be without key players in full-forward Doug
Wade, and centreman Alistair Lord [both absent with the
inter-State side], but they have players capable of filling
the gaps adequately.
Good Stand-ins
New full-forward John Sharrock, in particular, should hold
down the full-forward post adequately. He kicked five goals
in the last [VFL] match against Richmond and six last week
against [a combined Ovens and Murray team at] Albury.
Sharper and more confident ball handling, plus
strength in and around the packs, should be Geelong's
main winning factors.
Geelong’s ruckmen, Graham Farmer, John Watts, John
Yeates and Fred Wooller, should have little trouble winning
the knockouts and holding control in the air.
The Age, Saturday, 6 July 1963 (emphasis in original).