Harry Brereton

Harry Brereton
Personal information
Birth 13 June 1887
Height and weight 180 cm / 72 kg
Death 1950,
Playing career¹
Debut 1909, Melbourne v.
Richmond, at Punt Road
Team(s)

Melbourne (1909–12, 1915)

  • 85 games, 187 goals

South Melbourne (1919–22)

  • 17 games, 52 goals

Total 102 Games, 239 Goals

¹ Statistics to end of 1922 season
Career highlights

Harry Brereton (13 June 1887 – 1950) was an Australian rules footballer who played with Melbourne and South Melbourne in the VFL. Originally recruited from Port Melbourne, Brereton made a startling entry into VFL football in 1909. After a slow start, he kicked nine goals against Geelong in only his seventh match. This was the most goals kicked by a player in a match since Jim McShane kicked 11 against St Kilda in 1899, and Brereton continued to top Melbourne's goalkicking for the year with 34 goals.

After a disappointing 1910, Brereton, who was one of the most accurate kicks in the VFL at the time with the long-obsolete place kick, rebounded solidly in 1911 to kick 46 goals and be second in the goalkicking behind Vin Gardiner. He kicked five of his team's six goals on the coldest-ever match day of 7.1 °C (44.8 °F) in the twelfth round against eventual premier Essendon. The following year, he did even better, heading the VFL goalkicking with fifty-six goals, but he did not play at all in 1913 and 1914.

1915, however saw him return to the Redlegs and with Roy Park provide a potent forward line that lifte Melbourne into the finals for the first time since 1902. Owing to the club's amateur tradition, however, Melbourne withdrew from the VFL from 1916 to 1918 – there were also problems with the availability of the MCG which was used mainly for schoolboy matches – and when Melbourne did resume in the VFL Brereton was cleared to join South Melbourne but did not play for them until Round 11. When he did play. however, Brereton shows he had not lost his skill, kicking eleven goals in his first two games in the red and white, including six of their record score of 29 goals 15 against St Kilda. After that, however, injury and work with the Melbourne Cricket Club caused Brereton to fade from the scene, though when South were short of forwards he was recalled from retirement at the age of thirty-five in 1922 and still kicked five goals in each of his last two games with Fitzroy and Geelong.

Later in his life, Brereton served as secretary of the Victorian Cricket Association.[1]

References

External links

Awards and achievements
Preceded by
Vince Coutie
Stan Fairbarn
Melbourne Football Club Leading Goalkicker
1909
1911–1912
Succeeded by
Stan Fairbarn
Mick Maguire