The 1990 Australian Football League season was the 94th season of the elite Australian rules football competition, and the first under the name 'Australian Football League', having switched from 'Victorian Football League' after 1989.
Foster's Cup
defeated 17.10 to 10.16 in the final.
Premiership Season
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
Round 15
Round 16
Round 17
Round 18
Round 19
Round 20
Round 21
Round 22
Ladder
All teams played 22 games during the home and away season, for a total of 154. An additional 7 games were played during the finals series.
Finals Series
Elimination Final
Qualifying Final
Semi Finals
Preliminary Final
Grand final
This was Collingwood's 14th VFL/AFL premiership, ending 32 years of heartbreak as the Magpies had lost each of the eightgrand finals it had contested since it won the 1958 Grand Final.
Team
1 Qtr
2 Qtr
3 Qtr
Final
2.5
8.9
11.10
13.11
2.2
3.5
5.6
5.11
Match attendance
Total match attendance for the home-and-away season was 3,587,595 people. Total attendance for the finals series was 475,790 people.
won the reserves premiership. Carlton 14.14 defeated 11.15 in the grand final, held as a curtain-raiser to the seniors grand final on 6 October at the Melbourne Cricket Ground.
Prior to the season, and – both in serious financial difficulty – announced that they would be merging to form a single club known as the Fitzroy Bulldogs, which was to have taken its place in the AFL from 1990. Less than three weeks after the announcement, a successful grass-roots campaign by Footscray supporters restored their club to a position of financial viability, and the merger was called off.
By the AFL rules at the time, the drawn qualifying final between and was replayed on the following weekend. This meant that minor premier was given a second consecutive bye week, giving them three weeks between games; Essendon ultimately reached the grand final through the preliminary final, but they were soundly beaten in both the second semi-final and grand final, to which many laid partial blame upon the extended layoff. Additionally, the delay caused scheduling chaos for venues and hotels as a large number of league and corporate events related to the finals, and particularly to grand final week, had to be rescheduled: the extent of this was unprecedented, as the number and scale of such events had increased significantly since the last drawn finals match in 1977. The AFL went on to introduce the provision to play extra time in tied finals matches in future years to prevent a repeat of these problems. In 2016, a resolution in extra time was implemented for the grand final as well.