Brisbane Rugby League 1928 Season

University coach Bob Williams (the centre hat-wearer) watches his team in 1928. Williams had won multiple premierships as a player with Easts in Sydney and represented Australia in 1911-12, before coaching Varsity to their first BRL title. He was the first non-playing coach to win significant plaudits in the BRL.

League Table

TeamPlayedWonLostDrewForAgainstDiffPoints
Carlton128401321023016
University127501571273014
Brothers12750108882014
Wests12660140154-1412
Valleys12570139136310
Grammars12570143162-1910
Coorparoo1248083133-508
The round 5 game between Brothers and Grammars was annulled after Brothers were found to have fielded an ineligible player. It was replayed in round 8 and the season extended into round 15 as a result. The right of challenge was back as part of the usual four-team finals series. Carlton held challenge rights and University beat them twice.

Rounds

Round 1Round 2Round 3Round 4Round 5
Round 6Round 7Round 8Round 9Round 10
Round 11Round 12Round 13Round 14Round 15

Finals

StageDateTeamsLink
Semi-Final8 September 1928Brothers vs WestsDetails
Semi-Final8 September 1928University vs CarltonDetails
Premiership Final15 September 1928University vs BrothersDetails
Challenge Final22 September 1928University vs CarltonDetails

Pike Cup

StageDateTeamsLink
Final30 June 1928University vs CarltonDetails

Skip to 1929 season

The ‘Students’ take the highest distinction

University’s premiership triumph in 1928 was not only the Students’ first title, it completed a remarkable sequence in the BRL since the metropolitan clubs took control in 1922. In the space of seven seasons, all seven teams had won a premiership.

University and Carlton who’d propped up the ladder in 1927 finished in the top two places and eventually met in the Grand Challenge Final, while the previous season’s top two (Grammars and Coorparoo) dropped all the way to the bottom. Was all this the product of an admirable, though probably serendipitous, parity within the league, or just maddening inconsistency? As ever, it was probably a bit of both.

University, like many champions before and since, seemed to find a sweet spot between experience and youth, established players and new faces. Their coach Bob Williams received many plaudits in the press for his role in bringing it all together.

Halfback and captain J Hulbert, who’d been with Varsity through a few lean seasons, led them around superbly. The evolution of outside back J Irwin into a more than useful standoff provided an extra dimension. Forward leaders Hickey and Carmichael were joined by young back rower Vidgen and the versatile Jim Broadfoot. Not only did young centre George Lockie emerge as one of the league’s best, Varsity unearthed a pair of speedy young wingers in Nixon-Smith and the splendidly named C Adair.

And in a season where a few teams were plagued by consistently poor goal-kicking, University on any given day boasted multiple sharp-shooters. If young Lockie was a bit off, Hulbert was an able replacement. When fullback Bernie Brown, who they’d pinched from Brothers during the offseason, wasn’t there, his deputy Tomlinson was a very handy marksman. It made a difference.

While the success of the long-downtrodden Students was much celebrated – even by some supporters of other clubs – there was gathering gloom. While University and the young Wests outfit played attractive football, it seems the rest of the league tended toward stodgy, even negative tactics.

Crowds were reportedly well down on the peak of 1926. The strength of rugby league in Brisbane, Ipswich and Toowoomba, while great for Queensland as a whole, meant that the intercity Bulimba Cup was a much bigger draw. A highly competitive interstate series and a home Ashes in 1928 drew further attention away from matters at the local level.

One of the chief gloom-mongers was QRL Secretary Harry Sunderland, by now filling Redcap’s considerable boots at the Brisbane Courier. While Sunderland made some reasonable points – the folly of increasing ticket prices while crowds were down, for example – it was still a tad unseemly seeing him talking down the competition he’d done so much to build-up, especially considering the long-standing dispute between the BRL and QRL.

Things were about to get uglier.

Skip to 1929 season

The great Jimmy Craig finished up in Queensland at the end of the 1928 season. He won three premierships with Ipswich Starlights, including a valedictory title in 1928, and led one of the best Queensland teams of all time. Before he finished, he led Western Suburbs in Sydney to their first premiership in 1930. It was his ninth in total, having won five with Balmain between 1915 and ’20.

Leave a Reply