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The 1974 VFL season was the 78th season of the Victorian Football League (VFL), the highest level senior Australian rules football competition in Victoria. The season featured twelve clubs, ran from 6 April until 28 September, and comprised a 22-game home-and-away season followed by a finals series featuring the top five clubs.
During the days as Essendon's home ground, Windy Hill had the reputation of being a violent place for players, and was the site of several ugly incidents, The most famous of these was the "Battle of Windy Hill" (aka the Windy Hill Brawl or the Clash of the Sash), where a brawl broke out between players, team officials, trainers, spectators and ...
May 8 – During a spiteful VFL match between Essendon and South Melbourne at Windy Hill, South Melbourne's Jack 'Basher' Williams felled Ted Leehane in retribution for Leehane's similar action against Williams in the previous year's Preliminary Final, starting a wild brawl which involved a dozen players, team officials, trainers, fans, and ...
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Windy Hill, Essendon, an Australian rules football ground in the Melbourne area; Windy Hill Wind Farm, a wind power station near Ravenshoe, Queensland, Australia; Windy Hill (Pennines), a hill on the Pennines which marks the border between Greater Manchester and West Yorkshire, England
The club's training and administrative base remained at Windy Hill until 2013. Following the retirement of Tim Watson and Simon Madden in the early 1990s, the team was built on new players such as Gavin Wanganeen , Joe Misiti , Mark Mercuri , Michael Long , Dustin Fletcher (son of Ken) and James Hird , who was taken at No. 79 in the 1990 draft.