Brisbane Rugby League (QRL Premiership) 1921 season

League Table
| Team | Played | Won | Lost | Drew | For | Against | Diff | Points |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carlton | 10 | 7 | 2 | 1 | 120 | 115 | 5 | 15 |
| Wests | 10 | 6 | 2 | 2 | 149 | 81 | 68 | 14 |
| Valleys | 10 | 6 | 4 | 0 | 116 | 104 | 12 | 12 |
| Coorparoo | 10 | 4 | 5 | 1 | 160 | 146 | 14 | 9 |
| Brothers | 10 | 3 | 6 | 1 | 99 | 126 | -27 | 7 |
| University | 10 | 1 | 8 | 1 | 82 | 154 | -72 | 3 |
Rounds
| Round 1 | Round 2 | Round 3 | Round 4 | Round 5 | Round 6 | Round 7 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Round 8 | Round 9 | Round 10 | Round 11 | Round 12 | Round 13 | Round 14 |
Finals
| Stage | Date | Teams | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| Semi-Final | 10 September 1921 | Coorparoo vs Wests | Details |
| Semi-Final | 10 September 1921 | Carlton vs Valleys | Details |
| Final | 24 September 1921 | Coorparoo vs Carlton | Details |
| Challenge Final | 1 October 1921 | Carlton vs Coorparoo | Details |
One-Round Cup
In 1921, a playoff between Coorparoo and Wests was needed to settle who would play Valleys in the cup final. Both the playoff and the final were played outside the premiership.
| Stage | Date | Teams | Link |
|---|---|---|---|
| Playoff | 9 July 1921 | Coorparoo vs Wests | Details |
| Final | 16 July 1921 | Coorparoo vs Valleys | Details |
Carlton breaks the duopoly
1921 saw a return to something like normality. Six teams, 10 games each, no phases or mid-season mergers, and a straight four-team finals format with the challenger rule. Bulimba and Railways were done for good. West End had dissolved into the ascendant Carltons. Grammars seem to have been demoted to the lower grades, but would be back in 1924.
There was a cup tournament in the middle of the season, and these were to become a regular and sometimes confusing feature until the early 1950s. The 1921 cup started with a couple of league games which doubled as knockout cup ties, before a couple of stand-alone cup ties on the holiday Monday in early June and then two playoffs for a spot in the final against Valleys. The playoffs were staged alongside the league fixtures and explain the split rounds seven and eight. Coorparoo won both playoffs and beat Valleys 29-8 in the final on 16 July.
In the league, Wests came down from the giddy heights of their unbeaten premiership and scuffled their way through the second half, not helped by lengthy suspensions for Tom Flanagan and Jack Sweeney for ‘unseemly conduct’, but still looked likely when they outclassed Coorparoo in round 12.
Valleys were as usual rock solid, but with many of their premiership teams of years past gone or in decline and the team in transition, the Royal Blues seemed to lack that extra bit of quality and polish.
On their day, Coorparoo were devastating, and for the second time in three years they won the premiership final before losing to the challenger. Trouble was, the ‘Roos struggled to maintain their best form for more than a week or two.
Carlton, led by the Brown brothers, Tom Bath and George Stallard were the story of the season, winning their first title and ending the Valleys-Wests duopoly. After a slow start, the Maroon and Whites put together five straight wins from round nine to finish top and win challenger rights. In round 13, after a tight tussle with Valleys, Carltons blew them away in the latter stages for a 16-6 statement victory. Despite defeat to Coorparoo in the final, they were worthy premiers.

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