Angus MacIsaac (footballer)
Encyclopedia
Angus MacIsaac was an Australian rules football
Australian rules football
Australian rules football, officially known as Australian football, also called football, Aussie rules or footy is a sport played between two teams of 22 players on either...

er who played in the VFL between 1922 and 1924 and then again in 1926 and 1927 for the Richmond Football Club
Richmond Football Club
The Richmond Football Club, nicknamed The Tigers, is an Australian rules football club which competes in the Australian Football League. Richmond shares healthy rivalries with Carlton, Collingwood and Essendon. After winning five premierships between 1967 and 1980, the club hit the depths in 1990,...

.

Angus MacIsaac was a follower who played 59 games for the Tigers between 1922 and 1927. After commencing with the Tigers midway through the 1922 season, MacIsaac established himself in 1924 as one of the stars of the team playing every game. His efforts won him Richmond’s most improved player trophy. He played in two final series but unfortunately the Tigers finished second in both years (1924 and 1927). MacIsaac had a great leap and a tremendous reach, which made him a very effective ruckman
Ruckman (Australian rules football position)
In Australian rules football, a ruckman is typically a tall and athletic player who contests at centre bounces and stoppages . The ruckman is one of the most important players on the field...

. At 187 cm, MacIsaac was the tallest player on the Richmond list for most of his career. He is believed to be the first Assumption College Kilmore old boy to play league football.

However, MacIsaac is most widely remembered as one of the two players over whom great debate raged in 1924. The debate was about whether one could continue to play football in the VFL and the mid-week country competitions after the VFL introduced a poorly drafted rule midway through that season. Collingwood protested against Richmond including MacIsaac and fellow Goulburn Valley player McCaskill in the team that defeated the Magpies in the second last round. While the protest was dismissed, MacIsaac was ordered to stand out of country football on the eve of the country finals.

After Richmond’s season had finished, MacIsaac was persuaded by his country team to play in the grand final for Mooroopna
Mooroopna Football Club
The Mooroopna Football Club are an Australian rules football club which compete in the Goulburn Valley Football League.-External links:*...

. MacIsaac argued that he was entitled to play as the VFL season had finished and the VFL amended the rule to allow him to play in both competitions before the 1925 season commenced. However, the Permit and Umpire Committee debarred him from playing ‘at the pleasure of the Committee’ for not following their order. Various appeals during the 1925 season were either dismissed or ignored and he was only allowed to play football again midway through the 1926 season after significant pressure was placed on the Committee by the Tigers and the Goulburn Valley League.

MacIsaac played a further 23 games in the 1926 and 1927 seasons. Following the Tigers defeat by the Magpies in the 1927 final, MacIsaac left to become captain–coach of South Bendigo
South Bendigo Football Club
The South Bendigo Football Club are an Australian rules football club which compete in the Bendigo Football League .Since South Bendigo entered the league in 1894, no club have won more premierships...

and subsequently Sale before finishing his playing days back as captain of Mooroopna.
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