1994 WAFL season
1994 WAFL season | |
---|---|
Teams | 8 |
Premiers | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 28th premiership |
Minor premiers | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 11th minor premiership |
Sandover Medallist | Ian Dargie (‹See Tfd›Subiaco) |
Bernie Naylor Medallist | Brenton Cooper (‹See Tfd›Perth) |
Matches played | 90 |
The 1994 WAFL season was the 110th season of the West Australian Football League in its various incarnations.
It was the final season before, to stem fears of dominance by the Eagles of the AFL, a second Western Australian team, the Fremantle Dockers was added to the national competition. Along with financial difficulties faced by perennial stragglers Perth and to a lesser extent West Perth, East Perth,[1] Swan Districts and on-field power club Claremont,[2] this made the league consider substantial measures to deal with the declining popularity of the competition. The 1994 season did see two home-and-away attendances of over ten thousand for the last time in the competition's history.
With president Tom James admitting that if the Falcons remained based in the aging districts of Daglish and Shenton Park, the club would be extinct by 2000,[3] West Perth took the league to the rapidly growing northwestern suburbs of the city by moving to Arena Joondalup in a newly developing region of the city, vacating Leederville Oval for six seasons until the redevelopment of Perth Oval as a rectangular soccer field for the Perth Glory forced the Falcons’ traditional rivals East Perth to move there. The 1994 season also saw the last WAFL games at the WACA Ground until 2022, due to redevelopment of the drainage and grandstands of Subiaco Oval during this and the early part of the 1995 season.
Another notable feature was the first converts to Australian Rules from basketball, Daniel Bandy and Leon Harris, who debuted for Perth and East Perth respectively. Bandy was to be a mainstay for the Dockers during their early years in the AFL.
Home-and-away season
[edit]Round 1 (Easter weekend)
[edit]Round 1 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 2 April | ‹See Tfd›Perth 22.16 (148) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 17.11 (113) | Lathlain Park (crowd: 2735) | |
Saturday, 2 April | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 11.12 (78) | def. | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 9.15 (69) | Claremont Oval (crowd: 3039) | |
Monday, 4 April | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 11.13 (79) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 9.12 (66) | Perth Oval (crowd: 4004) | |
Monday, 4 April | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 17.17 (119) | def. | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 14.15 (99) | East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 5905) | |
With recruit Brenton Cooper kicking seven goals, Perth score a surprise win for new coach David Glascott.[4] |
Round 2
[edit]Round 2 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 9 April | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 9.10 (64) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 16.17 (113) | WACA (crowd: 2802) | |
Saturday, 9 April | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 21.10 (136) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Perth 13.11 (89) | Bassendean Oval (crowd: 2453) | |
Saturday, 9 April | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 6.12 (48) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 17.10 (112) | Subiaco Oval (crowd: 2291) | |
Sunday, 10 April | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 11.7 (73) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 12.19 (91) | Fremantle Oval (crowd: 3597) | |
|
Round 3
[edit]Round 3 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 16 April | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 11.9 (75) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 12.21 (93) | Subiaco Oval (crowd: 2424) | |
Saturday, 16 April | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 19.6 (120) | def. | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 16.8 (104) | East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2805) | |
Saturday, 16 April | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 18.16 (124) | def. | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 9.18 (72) | Claremont Oval (crowd: 2082) | |
Saturday, 16 April (6:45 pm) | ‹See Tfd›Perth 10.11 (71) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 15.15 (105) | WACA (crowd: 3143) | |
Round 4 (Anzac Day)
[edit]Round 4 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 23 April | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 13.11 (89) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 17.11 (113) | Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2430) | |
Saturday, 23 April | ‹See Tfd›Perth 11.16 (82) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 21.13 (139) | Lathlain Park (crowd: 2204) | |
Saturday, 23 April | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 14.15 (99) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 17.15 (117) | Bassendean Oval (crowd: 3230) | |
Monday, 25 April | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 9.7 (61) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 12.10 (82) | Arena Joondalup (crowd: 15082) | |
The Anzac Day match was the first WAFL game at West Perth's new home of Arena Joondalup, and attracted a crowd never equalled at the ground.[7] It also featured a motorcade from old West Perth captains to Joondalup.[3] |
Round 5
[edit]Round 5 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 30 April | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 16.13 (109) | def. | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 12.8 (80) | Bassendean Oval (crowd: 3357) | |
Saturday, 30 April (6:45 pm) | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 19.10 (124) | def. | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 9.10 (64) | WACA (crowd: 2441) | |
Sunday, 1 May | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 14.11 (95) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Perth 9.8 (62) | Perth Oval (crowd: 2714) | |
Sunday, 1 May | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 10.6 (66) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 23.15 (153) | Subiaco Oval (crowd: 3853) | |
West Perth annihilate Subiaco with twelve unanswered goals after an even first half, with ruckman Craig Nelson dominating, and leave the 1993 preliminary finalists last on the ladder.[8] |
Round 6
[edit]Round 6 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 7 May | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 17.11 (113) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Perth 14.9 (93) | Arena Joondalup (crowd: 3531) | |
Saturday, 7 May | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 8.13 (61) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 14.10 (94) | Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2797) | |
Saturday, 7 May | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 15.13 (103) | def. | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 12.6 (78) | Claremont Oval (crowd: 2930) | |
Saturday, 7 May (6:45 pm) | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 12.7 (79) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 23.11 (149) | WACA (crowd: 2534) | |
|
Round 7
[edit]Round 7 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 14 May | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 10.15 (75) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 17.6 (108) | Arena Joondalup (crowd: 5217) | |
Saturday, 14 May | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 14.10 (94) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 21.9 (135) | Perth Oval (crowd: 2367) | |
Saturday, 14 May | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 16.8 (104) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 21.10 (136) | East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2592) | |
Saturday, 14 May | ‹See Tfd›Perth 13.18 (96) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 24.5 (149) | Lathlain Park (crowd: 2133) | |
Claremont's 53-point win is the biggest in WAFL history by a team with fewer scoring shots.[11] |
Round 8
[edit]Round 8 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 21 May | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 21.15 (141) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Perth 8.16 (64) | Bassendean Oval (crowd: 2000) | |
Saturday, 21 May | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 19.9 (123) | def. | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 14.9 (93) | East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1736) | [12] |
Saturday, 21 May | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 16.13 (109) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 10.10 (70) | Claremont Oval (crowd: 2500) | |
Sunday, 22 May | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 14.7 (91) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 16.11 (107) | Arena Joondalup (crowd: 1433) | |
|
Round 9
[edit]Round 9 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 28 May | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 8.14 (62) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 12.7 (79) | Subiaco Oval (crowd: 2506) | |
Saturday, 28 May | ‹See Tfd›Perth 12.15 (87) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 17.14 (116) | Lathlain Park (crowd: 2074) | [15] |
Saturday, 28 May | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 15.13 (103) | def. | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 11.10 (76) | Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2534) | |
Saturday, 28 May | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 8.10 (58) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 21.15 (141) | Perth Oval (crowd: 2228) | |
East Fremantle suffer an amazing second-half collapse kicking only 1.4 (10) to 9.8 (62), including seven goals by the Falcons into the wind in the last quarter, as the previously out-of-sorts Turley and Mildenhall come to dominate when positioned in the centre.[16] |
Round 10 (Foundation Day)
[edit]Round 10 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 4 June | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 19.12 (126) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Perth 19.10 (124) | Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1518) | |
Saturday, 4 June | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 14.12 (96) | def. | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 11.14 (80) | Bassendean Oval (crowd: 2800) | |
Saturday, 4 June | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 11.10 (76) | def. | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 9.10 (64) | Claremont Oval (crowd: 2200) | |
Monday, 6 June | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 12.12 (84) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 18.14 (122) | Fremantle Oval (crowd: 15500) | |
|
Round 11
[edit]Round 11 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 11 June | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 19.15 (129) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 11.12 (78) | Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2442) | |
Saturday, 18 June | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 14.10 (94) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 20.6 (126) | Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2503) | |
Saturday, 18 June | ‹See Tfd›Perth 16.14 (110) | def. | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 11.12 (78) | Lathlain Park (crowd: 2361) | |
Saturday, 18 June | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 16.7 (103) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 18.12 (120) | East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2500) | |
|
Round 12
[edit]Round 12 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 25 June | ‹See Tfd›Perth 12.10 (82) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 16.10 (106) | Lathlain Park (crowd: 2179) | |
Saturday, 25 June | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 22.12 (144) | def. | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 13.13 (91) | Bassendean Oval (crowd: 2800) | |
Saturday, 25 June | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 15.10 (100) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 7.15 (57) | East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2286) | |
Sunday, 26 June | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 12.5 (77) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 19.21 (135) | Perth Oval (crowd: 2200) | |
|
Round 13
[edit]Round 13 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 2 July | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 10.19 (79) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Perth 11.6 (72) | Claremont Oval (crowd: 1850) | [22] |
Saturday, 2 July | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 9.17 (71) | def. | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 8.13 (61) | Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2244) | |
Saturday, 2 July | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 17.11 (113) | def. | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 9.7 (61) | Subiaco Oval (crowd: 2196) | |
Saturday, 2 July | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 13.14 (92) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 10.7 (67) | Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2265) | |
|
Round 14
[edit]Round 14 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 9 July | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 11.8 (74) | def. | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 5.12 (42) | Claremont Oval (crowd: 1638) | |
Saturday, 9 July | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 6.8 (44) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Perth 6.15 (51) | Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1605) | |
Saturday, 9 July | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 10.6 (66) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 15.14 (104) | Bassendean Oval (crowd: 1800) | |
Saturday, 9 July | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 9.12 (66) | def. | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 7.6 (48) | East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2196) | [25] |
|
Round 15
[edit]Round 15 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 16 July | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 13.16 (94) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 19.7 (121) | Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2400) | [29] |
Saturday, 16 July | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 13.15 (93) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 20.11 (131) | Perth Oval (crowd: 1400) | |
Saturday, 16 July | ‹See Tfd›Perth 14.12 (96) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 12.8 (80) | Lathlain Park (crowd: 2500) | [30] |
Saturday, 16 July | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 19.10 (124) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 10.7 (67) | Subiaco Oval (crowd: 2400) | |
Subiaco's dominance of possession from the centre – 144 possessions from six midfielders as against Claremont's 110 amongst eight – allows it to inflict the Tigers’ worst loss for two seasons, despite losing key forwards Jason Heatley and Karl Langdon early on.[31] |
Round 16
[edit]Round 16 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 23 July | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 15.15 (105) | def. | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 7.8 (50) | East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 3909) | |
Saturday, 23 July | ‹See Tfd›Perth 9.10 (64) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 14.14 (98) | Lathlain Park (crowd: 1934) | |
Saturday, 23 July | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 12.11 (83) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 8.12 (60) | Perth Oval (crowd: 1700) | |
Saturday, 23 July | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 11.12 (78) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 8.9 (57) | Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2064) | [32] |
|
Round 17
[edit]Round 17 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 30 July | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 22.10 (142) | def. | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 13.13 (91) | Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2782) | |
Saturday, 30 July | ‹See Tfd›Perth 14.10 (94) | def. | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 14.8 (92) | Lathlain Park (crowd: 2029) | |
Saturday, 30 July | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 14.15 (99) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 17.8 (110) | Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2500) | |
Saturday, 30 July | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 14.14 (98) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 12.15 (87) | Bassendean Oval (crowd: 2500) | |
With a major upset over the eventual premiers, Perth move off the bottom. |
Round 18
[edit]Round 18 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 6 August | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 20.12 (132) | def. | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 14.8 (92) | Claremont Oval (crowd: 1600) | |
Saturday, 6 August | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 17.12 (114) | def. | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 12.11 (83) | Bassendean Oval (crowd: 2116) | |
Sunday, 7 August | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 14.10 (94) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Perth 7.15 (57) | Perth Oval (crowd: 1948) | |
Sunday, 7 August | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 22.11 (143) | def. | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 10.8 (68) | Subiaco Oval (crowd: 4213) | |
Although without Heatley and with Karl Langdon reported, Subiaco overwhelm West Perth for their seventh consecutive victory, kicking 17.8 (110) to 5.4 (34) to three-quarter time.[35] |
Round 19
[edit]Round 19 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 13 August | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 17.14 (116) | def. | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 15.12 (102) | Subiaco Oval (crowd: 2369) | [36] |
Saturday, 13 August | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 18.18 (126) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Perth 11.7 (73) | Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2501) | |
Saturday, 13 August (6:45 pm) | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 17.9 (111) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 12.8 (80) | Fremantle Oval (crowd: 3500) | [37] |
Sunday, 14 August | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 10.11 (71) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 18.14 (122) | Claremont Oval (crowd: 3500) | |
East Fremantle's superb tagging decimate the league-leading Tigers after quarter-time, leaving the Sharks a win from the double chance with two rounds to play – and question marks over the post-Neesham Tigers’ capability of winning the flag.[38] |
Round 20
[edit]Round 20 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 20 August | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 14.15 (99) | def. | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 14.12 (96) | Perth Oval (crowd: 1799) | |
Saturday, 20 August | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 23.6 (144) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 6.12 (48) | East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 3000) | |
Saturday, 20 August | ‹See Tfd›Perth 9.8 (62) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 18.14 (122) | Lathlain Park (crowd: 1896) | |
Saturday, 20 August | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 15.5 (95) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 15.7 (97) | Bassendean Oval (crowd: 4073) | |
|
Round 21
[edit]Round 21 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 27 August | ‹See Tfd›East Perth 9.9 (63) | def. by | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 14.10 (94) | Perth Oval (crowd: 3,800) | |
Saturday, 27 August | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 30.23 (203) | def. | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 12.10 (82) | Subiaco Oval (crowd: 2441) | |
Saturday, 27 August | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 14.11 (95) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 8.8 (56) | Claremont Oval (crowd: 2108) | |
Saturday, 27 August | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 21.19 (145) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Perth 8.7 (55) | East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2045) | |
With Lamb playing his 150th game for the Lions and Heatley kicking 10.1,[42] Subiaco fail by a single point to equal their highest score from ten years beforehand against Perth[43] |
Ladder
[edit]
Pos | Team | Pld | W | L | D | PF | PA | PP | Pts |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | ‹See Tfd›Claremont | 21 | 16 | 5 | 0 | 2100 | 1658 | 126.7 | 64 |
2 | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle (P) | 21 | 13 | 8 | 0 | 2226 | 1840 | 121.0 | 52 |
3 | ‹See Tfd›West Perth | 21 | 13 | 8 | 0 | 2025 | 1788 | 113.3 | 52 |
4 | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco | 21 | 13 | 8 | 0 | 2230 | 2049 | 108.8 | 52 |
5 | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts | 21 | 12 | 9 | 0 | 2001 | 1824 | 109.7 | 48 |
6 | ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle | 21 | 6 | 15 | 0 | 1857 | 2238 | 83.0 | 24 |
7 | ‹See Tfd›East Perth | 21 | 6 | 15 | 0 | 1679 | 2156 | 77.9 | 24 |
8 | ‹See Tfd›Perth | 21 | 5 | 16 | 0 | 1732 | 2297 | 75.4 | 20 |
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) percentage; 3) number of points for.
(P) Premiers
Finals
[edit]Elimination and Qualifying Finals
[edit]Qualifying Final | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 3 September (2:30 pm) | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 14.11 (95) | def. | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 9.13 (67) | WACA (crowd: 11,835) | |
Elimination Final | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 3 September (5:30 pm) | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 13.11 (89) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 11.7 (73) | WACA (crowd: 11,835) | |
|
Semi-finals
[edit]First semi-final | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 10 September (2:30 pm) | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 9.13 (67) | def. | ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 10.4 (64) | Subiaco Oval (crowd: 7,100) | |
West Perth manage to always stay a kick in front during a thrilling finish in sloppy conditions.[45] |
Second semi-final | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 10 September (5:30 pm) | ‹See Tfd›Claremont 17.13 (115) | def. | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 11.2 (68) | Subiaco Oval (crowd: 7,100) | |
|
Preliminary final
[edit]Preliminary final | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 17 September | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 15.11 (101) | def. | ‹See Tfd›West Perth 11.18 (84) | Subiaco Oval (crowd: 8,286) | |
Several major moves by Shark coach Ken Judge, including veteran Malaxos from defence to the ball and Paul Harding to defence, completely break down the system of West Perth, who score only 2.3 (15) to 11.8 (74) in the second half.[47] |
Grand Final
[edit]1994 WAFL Grand Final | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Saturday, 24 September | ‹See Tfd›Claremont | def. by | ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle | Subiaco Oval (crowd: 17,594) | [48] |
1.3 (9) 3.4 (22) 3.7 (25) 10.10 (70) |
Q1 Q2 Q3 Final |
3.2 (20) 10.4 (64) 12.8 (80) 13.13 (91) |
Umpires: Greg Scroop, Sam Kronja Simpson Medal: Mark Amaranti (‹See Tfd›East Fremantle) | ||
Gary Edwards 3, Wardell-Johnson 2, Morgan 2, Green, Sheldrick, Merillo | Goals | Amaranti 4, Lally 2, Bilcich 2, Lockyer, Davidson, Dhurrkay, Pobjoy, Harding | |||
Panizza, Merillo, Leach, Jones, Wira, Scott Edwards | Best | Amaranti, Treleven, Sanders, Condon, Harding, Davies | |||
An opening skirmish between Damien Condon and second semi hero Morgan shows East Fremantle mean business as they completely break down Claremont's attack for three quarters in hot weather. |
References
[edit]- ^ East, Alan (2005); From Redlegs to Demons: A History of the Perth Football Club from 1899, p. 165
- ^ See Casey, Kevin (1995); The Tigers’ Tale: the origins and history of the Claremont Football Club, p. 201. ISBN 0646264982
- ^ a b Casellas, Ken; ‘Falcons Nestled in Promised Land’; The West Australian, 25 April 1994, p. 61
- ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Glascott Savours Demons’ First-Up’; The West Australian, 4 April 1994, p. 51
- ^ Casellas, Ken; ‘Wardell-Johnson Has What It Takes’; The West Australian, 11 April 1994, p. 69
- ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Falcons Far Too Good’; The West Australian, 11 April 1994, p. 69
- ^ "WAFL Footy Facts: Arena Joondalup". Archived from the original on 30 September 2013. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
- ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Falcons Rout Subiaco’; The West Australian, 2 May 1994, p. 68
- ^ ‘Dargie the Spark as Subiaco Crush Royals’; The West Australian 9 May 1994, p. 73
- ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Campbell Out for Year’; The West Australian, 9 May 1994, p. 73
- ^ "WAFL Footy Facts: Biggest Wins with Less Scoring Shots". Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 9 September 2013.
- ^ Reid, Russell; ‘Treleven on Target for Second Shot at AFL’; The West Australian, 23 May 1994, p. 70
- ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Swan Salute for Walker’; The West Australian, 23 May 1994, p. 70
- ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Dogged Fightback Sinks Tame Falcons’; The West Australian, 23 May 1994, p. 70
- ^ Reid, Russell; ‘Pressure Off as Watson Finds Winning Formula’; The West Australian, 30 May 1994, p. 72
- ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Emotion Stirs Falcons’; The West Australian, 30 May 1994, p. 72
- ^ "West Australian Football League: Biggest Home-and-Away Crowds". Archived from the original on 24 December 2013. Retrieved 22 December 2013.
- ^ Stocks, Gary. ‘Neesham Bows Out’; The West Australian, 6 June 1994, p. 64
- ^ a b Tennison, Max; ‘Richardson Strikes Chord with Falcons’; The West Australian, 27 June 1994, p. 76
- ^ Tennison, Max; ‘Glascott's Babes out of Woods’; The West Australian, 20 June 1994, p. 73
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- ^ Perth Metro (Mount Lawley) July 1994 rainfall
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- ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Finals Moved to Avoid Clash with Eagles’; The West Australian, 15 August 1994, p. 69
- ^ ‘Falcons Fight off Subiaco’; in The West Australian, 12 September 1994, p. 75
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- ^ Stocks, Gary; “Condon Gets Tough for Sharks’ Cause”; in The West Australian, 26 September 1994; p. 82