Australian Football

AustralianFootball.com Celebrating the history of the great Australian game

 

Key Facts

Full name
Harold Vivian Cumberland

Known as
Vic Cumberland

Born
4 July 1877

Place of birth
Toorak, VIC (3142)

Died
15 July 1927 (aged 50)

Place of death
Melbourne, VIC (3000)

Age at first & last AFL game
First game: 21y 54d
Last game: 43y 48d

Height and weight
Height: 182 cm
Weight: 82 kg

Senior clubs
Melbourne; St. Kilda; Sturt

Jumper numbers
St. Kilda: 6, 4, 15, 31

Recruited from
Melbourne (1903); St. Kilda (1909); Sturt (1912)

State of origin
VIC

Hall of fame
Australian Football Hall of Fame (1996)

Family links
Cec Cumberland (Brother)

Vic Cumberland

ClubLeagueCareer spanGamesGoalsAvgWin %AKIAHBAMKBV
MelbourneV/AFL1898-190150150.3050%0
St. KildaV/AFL1903-1904, 1907-1908, 1912-1915, 1920126720.5743%0
SturtSAFL1909-191137330.89
V/AFL1898-1901, 1903-1904, 1907-1908, 1912-1915, 1920176870.4945%0
SAFL1909-191137330.89
Total1898-1901, 1903-1904, 1907-1915, 19202131200.56

AFL: 409th player to appear, 910th most games played, 1,247th most goals kickedMelbourne: 59th player to appear, 332nd most games played, 353rd most goals kickedSt. Kilda: 174th player to appear, 91st most games played, 91st most goals kicked

Playing at a time when football, paradoxically, had a much more universalist flavour than has latterly become the case, the recent emergence of a nominally 'national' competition notwithstanding, Harry Vivian 'Vic' Cumberland epitomised the spirit of his era by eking out an auspicious three decade football career in three Australian states plus New Zealand. When he finally retired from top level football in 1920 he was, at forty-three years of age, the oldest player ever to have appeared in the VFL. He was also, arguably, one of the best.

That said, his greatest achievements came not in Victoria but in South Australia where, during a three-season 39-game career with Sturt as one of 'Dempsey's immigrants', he won the 1911 Magarey Medal and was a member that same year of his adopted state's victorious carnival team.

Born in Toorak, Victoria, Cumberland's early senior football was played across the Bass Strait in Tasmania where he soon caught the eye with his skill, endurance and tremendous marking ability. Between 1898 and 1901 he played 50 games for Melbourne before going on to the first of four separate stints with St Kilda, where all told he participated in a total of 126 premiership matches, including the losing 1913 Challenge Final against Fitzroy. Interspersed between his stints at St Kilda were the periods in New Zealand and South Australia previously alluded to plus time spent abroad on military service during World War One.

Just seven years after retiring as a player Cumberland died tragically in a motorcycle accident.

Author - John Devaney

Sources

Full Points Footy's SA Football Companion

Footnotes

* Behinds calculated from the 1965 season on.
+ Score at the end of extra time.