While the grand final would have ordinarily been held on 20 August (one week after the semi-final), it was delayed by three weeks until students from the University of Melbourne returned from holidays.[18]
^In 1900, the Metropolitan Junior Football Association (MJFA, now VAFA) decided on a change of name to the Metropolitan Football Association (MFA). MJFA president Lawrence Adamson brokered a deal that the existing MFA (of 1899) became the MJFA, giving his MJFA (of 1892) the "Metropolitan Football Association" name.[19][20] Despite this, various newspaper reports from 1900 until 1912 still use the MJFA name when referring to Adamson's competition, most consensus is that "MJFA" in this time period refers to the now-VAFA, and the VAFA's official history continues to use the MJFA name until 1912.[6][21]
^McLellan, Bob. "OBGFC: A Tribute"(PDF). Old Brighton Grammarians Football Club. pp. 1–194. Archived from the original(PDF) on 28 September 2024. Retrieved 28 September 2024.
^ abc"A BRIEF HISTORY"(PDF). Victorian Amateur Football Association. 9 April 2009. Retrieved 9 June 2024.
^"METROPOLITAN AMATEURS". The Argus. 29 April 1930. p. 17. Retrieved 20 October 2024. The Melbourne University Football Club notified the association that the two teams entered should be known as the University Blues and University Blacks instead of University A and University B respectively