• Having abandoned live telecasts of the last quarters of VFL matches at the end of 1960, and having forbidden Saturday evening replays during the 1961 season, the VFL agreed to allow television stations to broadcast one hour of replays each Saturday evening, provided no more than 30 minutes of any one match was broadcast. A separate arrangement was made to allow a replay of the entire Grand Final match. •
St Kilda won its first match against
Collingwood at
Victoria Park since
round 2, 1919. • On
Anzac Day, a representative match was played at the Melbourne Cricket Ground between the
Victorian team from the
1961 Brisbane Carnival, and a team representing the rest of the league. The Rest 13.7 (85) defeated the Carnival team 10.17 (77) in front of a crowd of 17,068. • In the Round 10 match between and at the
Brunswick Street Oval, scores were level at 51 apiece when the final siren sounded; but, play was at the opposite end of the venue to the grandstand where the siren was located, and the umpire did not hear it. From the ensuing ball-up, Carlton's
Martin Cross punched the ball through for a rushed behind, and Carlton won by that point. Fitzroy did not protest the result; it did request that the
Fitzroy Cricket Club install new sirens at the other end of the field, but the request was rejected. • In September, the VFL purchased land to the east of Melbourne, at
Mulgrave, upon which later built
VFL Park. • The preliminary final replay between
Carlton and
Geelong was by Carlton won by five points. In the final moments of the match, Geelong full forward
Doug Wade took a strong mark directly in front of the Geelong goals, but he was penalised for interfering with Carlton full-back
Peter Barry. • In the grand final, a
badly injured Geoff Leek played one of the best matches in his career to nullify Carlton's
John Nicholls and pave the way for a sound 32 point win by
Essendon. ==Awards==