Brisbane Rugby League (QRL Premiership) 1920 season

The league game was back at the Exhibition Ground after it became a hub during the Spanish Flu pandemic. This photo is from Easter 1920.

League Table: Phase One

TeamPlayedWonLostDrewForAgainstDiffPoints
Wests99001793914018
Valleys971198267215
Coorparoo971191306115
University944184160-769
Brothers94509779188
Carlton93516378-157
Grammars93606998-296
Bulimba92704388-454
West End916258113-554
Railways927040111-714

Rounds (Phase One)

Round 1Round 2Round 3Round 4Round 5
Round 6Round 7Round 8Round 9

League Table: Phase Two

TeamPlayedWonLostDrewForAgainstDiffPoints
Valleys651073274610
Wests44006023378
Brothers6321484537
West End-Grammars52215036145
University42202638-124
Carlton52304866-184
Coorparoo61504570-252
Railways-Bulimba40402267-450
The second phase led into the usual four-team finals series, with Wests holding the right of challenge

Rounds (Phase Two)

Round 1Round 2Round 3Round 4Round 5Round 6Round 7

Finals

StageDateTeamsLink
Semi-Final18 September 1920Brothers vs ValleysDetails
Semi-Final18 September 1920Wests vs West End-GrammarsDetails
Final25 September 1920Wests vs BrothersDetails

Skip to 1921 season

Wests supreme in Sunderland’s strange super league

After Redcap’s untimely passing in 1927, Harry Sunderland took over his column in the Brisbane Courier. Where Redcap was all pith, perspective and incisive analysis, Sunderland’s work read like what you’d hear if you were standing next to him at a game, with plenty of tangents along the way. His passion shone through, but it could be long-winded, messy and confusing. The 1920 season was certainly those things.

In part, it was due to expansion. With the dismal game (rugby union) on its knees, the league welcomed Grammars, University and Christian Brothers-proper. Bulimba was back too, with Valleys once again split.

But rather than let this new ten-team league settle and evolve naturally, Sunderland organised (using the term loosely) a two-phase competition in which four of the teams merged into two after the first phase. After nine games (the first phase), West End and Grammars became one, as did Railways and Bulimba. The remaining teams played a series of games over seven match-days in phase two.

There were a couple of problems with this: First, the results from phase one seemingly meant nothing other than Wests winning the right of challenge; second, phase two was asymmetrical. It was suggested in the press that a further round of fixtures was planned for 18 September, but they never happened. There was also a notice in the papers about an important meeting of the Coorparoo club on the eve of the semi-finals. The ‘Roos would’ve had every right to be furious at their exclusion.

Ultimately, it didn’t matter – Wests were clearly the league’s best team. And Coorparoo did crumble in the second phase. Valleys were their usual solid selves, but not quite on Wests’ level. Norm Potter, Jim Bennett, Bill Dunne and the veteran Charlie Meekin led a formidable forward pack which trampled the rest of the league.

Skip to 1921 season

Queensland vs England at the Ekka in June 1920

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