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1993 WAFL season

The 1993 WAFL season was the 109th of the various incarnations of the West Australian Football League. It saw an extraordinarily even competition amongst all the teams except Perth, with only three and a half games separating first and seventh and the smallest dispersion of winning percentages in the WAFL since 1921. West Perth's 13 wins and a percentage marginally under 100 is the fewest wins and lowest percentage to take top position in a major Australian Rules league: indeed no team had headed the ladder with a percentage nearly so low at any stage of a season except Hawthorn during May of 1969[1] and Perth during June and July 1963.

1993 WAFL season
Teams8
PremiersClaremont
9th premiership
Minor premiersWest Perth
9th minor premiership
Sandover MedallistNeil Mildenhall (West Perth)
Bernie Naylor MedallistJason Heatley (Subiaco)
Matches played90
← 1992
1994 →

After early pacesetters Swan Districts and the inconsistent if at times brilliant South Fremantle collapsed in the second half of the season, the bottom two clubs of 1992 in West Perth (already decided on a move to Joondalup[2]) and Claremont emerged as the favourites for the premiership as the home-and-away season and played off in the Grand Final, where the Falcons’ lack of key forwards ensured their defeat. On an individual level, the season was highlighted by Subiaco's Diamond Valley recruit Jason Heatley, discarded by Fitzroy, kicking 111 goals in his first WAFL season and playing for the league after only five matches.[3]

This season saw the WAFL adopt 20-minute quarters with extended time-on, a change to be introduced into the AFL for the following season.[4]

Home-and-away season

Round 1

Round 1
Saturday, 3 April (2:15 pm) Subiaco 8.7 (55) def. by Claremont 14.14 (98) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 2310)
Saturday, 3 April (2:15 pm) West Perth 7.10 (52) def. by Swan Districts 13.6 (84) Leederville Oval (crowd: 2727)
Saturday, 3 April (2:15 pm) South Fremantle 13.11 (89) def. East Perth 5.6 (36) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2591)
Saturday, 3 April (2:15 pm) Perth 10.10 (70) def. East Fremantle 10.6 (66) Lathlain Park (crowd: 3005)
  • East Perth open the season with their lowest score since 1964,[5] kicking only 1.5 to three-quarter time, the lowest in the WAFL since 1980.
  • The Lathlain Park match, at 86 minutes, is the shortest game in a major Australian Rules league.[4]

Round 2 (Easter weekend)

Round 2
Saturday, 10 April (2:15 pm) Swan Districts 17.18 (120) def. South Fremantle 13.11 (89) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 3567)
Saturday, 10 April (2:15 pm) East Fremantle 21.8 (134) def. West Perth 12.13 (85) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2960)
Monday, 12 April (2:15 pm) East Perth 17.4 (106) def. Subiaco 13.12 (90) Perth Oval (crowd: 2631)
Monday, 12 April (2:15 pm) Claremont 13.10 (88) def. by Perth 14.6 (90) Claremont Oval (crowd: 3026)

Round 3

Round 3
Saturday, 17 April (2:15 pm) Swan Districts 16.16 (112) def. Subiaco 14.10 (94) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 3061)
Saturday, 17 April (2:15 pm) West Perth 13.10 (88) def. Perth 11.21 (87) Leederville Oval (crowd: 2951)
Saturday, 17 April (2:15 pm) South Fremantle 15.13 (103) def. East Fremantle 6.14 (50) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 5283)
Saturday, 17 April (6:45 pm) East Perth 10.12 (72) drew with Claremont 11.6 (72) WACA (crowd: 3024)
  • Heatley, recruited from Diamond Valley, kicks seven goals on his Subiaco debut.
  • The draw at the WACA ended what was then (surpassed by East Fremantle during 2014) the longest sequence of matches by a WAFL club without a draw, being East Perth’s first draw since Round 16 of 1969 or a gap of 518 matches.[6]
  • It was the first WAFL (or AFL) draw at the WACA since Round 5, 1923 when Perth drew with East Fremantle.[7]
  • Perth president Barry McGrath went into an outburst after the Demons’ unexpected narrow defeat, saying their performances could not be tolerated and cancelling normal trophy presentations.[8]

Round 4 (Anzac Day)

Round 4
Saturday, 24 April (2:15 pm) Perth 11.15 (81) def. by Swan Districts 13.8 (86) Lathlain Park (crowd: 4873)
Sunday, 25 April (2:15 pm) East Fremantle 13.14 (92) def. Claremont 13.10 (88) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 5300)
Monday, 26 April (2:15 pm) South Fremantle 18.15 (123) def. Subiaco 15.15 (105) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 3961)
Monday, 26 April (2:15 pm) East Perth 6.9 (45) def. by West Perth 7.12 (54) Perth Oval (crowd: 7000)

A watertight defence and impressive running football gives West Perth a surprise win in an extremely low-scoring dry-weather match despite scoring 3.9 (27) in the third quarter.[9]

Round 5

Round 5
Saturday, 1 May (2:15 pm) Claremont 9.12 (66) def. by Swan Districts 11.9 (75) Claremont Oval (crowd: 2166)
Saturday, 1 May (2:15 pm) Perth 13.13 (91) def. Subiaco 7.15 (57) Lathlain Park (crowd: 2246)
Saturday, 1 May (2:15 pm) East Perth 11.8 (74) def. by East Fremantle 18.9 (117) Perth Oval (crowd: 2061)
Saturday, 1 May (6:45 pm) West Perth 5.13 (43) def. by South Fremantle 9.11 (65) WACA (crowd: 2287)
  • On a very wet and thundery Saturday,[10] training lights are used at Perth Oval, where Andrew Lockyer gives a brilliant display at full-forward with eight goals.[11]
  • A blackout prolonged the WACA match by seventeen minutes during which West Perth considered forfeiting as Marty Atkins was unstoppable in South’s defence.[12]

Round 6

Round 6
Saturday, 8 May (2:15 pm) South Fremantle 17.10 (112) def. Perth 14.8 (92) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 3377)
Saturday, 8 May (2:15 pm) West Perth 18.7 (115) def. Claremont 15.11 (101) Leederville Oval (crowd: 2759)
Saturday, 8 May (2:15 pm) Swan Districts 13.21 (99) def. East Perth 5.9 (39) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 3668)
Saturday, 8 May (2:15 pm) Subiaco 20.14 (134) def. East Fremantle 11.12 (78) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 2191)

East Perth’s score was its lowest against Swan Districts until 1998, beating 6.10 (46) from 1974.[5]

Round 7

Round 7
Saturday, 15 May (2:15 pm) West Perth 10.12 (72) def. by Subiaco 19.20 (134) WACA (crowd: 3237)
Saturday, 15 May (2:15 pm) Claremont 12.10 (82) def. South Fremantle 7.10 (52) Claremont Oval (crowd: 2798)
Saturday, 15 May (2:15 pm) Perth 16.13 (109) def. East Perth 10.17 (77) Lathlain Park (crowd: 3608)
Saturday, 15 May (2:15 pm) East Fremantle 13.12 (90) def. by Swan Districts 15.9 (99) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 3126)
  • With Heatley kicking nine goals and making the WAFL team after his fifth match, Subiaco move off the bottom after a horror first five rounds.[13]
  • Veteran Phil Narkle shows he has, despite being moved into defence, not lost his magic touch from the 1980s when after an accidental kick in the groin during the morning before the match, he drives Swans back from 34 points down to maintain their unbeaten record.[14]

Round 8

Round 8
Saturday, 22 May (2:15 pm) Swan Districts 14.10 (94) def. by West Perth 14.14 (98) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 4390)
Saturday, 22 May (2:15 pm) Claremont 13.12 (90) def. by Subiaco 16.12 (108) Claremont Oval (crowd: 2529) [15]
Saturday, 22 May (2:15 pm) East Perth 12.11 (83) def. by South Fremantle 13.20 (98) Perth Oval (crowd: 2516) [16]
Saturday, 22 May (2:15 pm) East Fremantle 24.12 (156) def. Perth 12.7 (79) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 3200)
  • A depleted Falcon side without Mildenhall, Turley, Zempilas, Peter Freeman, Paul Symmons and Dean Brunton is led by injury plagued centreman Darren O‘Brien to an upset over the previously unconquered Swans. O‘Brien kicked the winning goal after Swans stormed to the lead with seven final-quarter majors, but was also dubiously reported.[17]
  • A brilliant ten-goal-to-one final quarter, with former Richmond rover Trent Nichols dominant, lifts East Fremantle to third at a critical time – they were behind for most of the first half and a loss would have seen them two games shy of the double chance.[18]

Round 9

Round 9
Saturday, 29 May (6:45 pm) Perth 14.12 (96) def. by Claremont 16.12 (108) WACA (crowd: 3000)
Sunday, 30 May (2:15 pm) South Fremantle 12.19 (91) def. by Swan Districts 16.5 (101) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 4602)
Sunday, 30 May (2:15 pm) Subiaco 27.9 (171) def. East Perth 7.19 (61) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 2807)
Sunday, 30 May (2:15 pm) West Perth 17.12 (114) def. East Fremantle 13.8 (86) Leederville Oval (crowd: 3654) [19]
  • Jason Heatley kicked twelve goals, a record for a Subiaco player against the Royals,[20] and the first time a player had kicked twelve goals without a behind.[3] It was also the first double-figure goal tally since John Hutton kicked thirteen for Claremont against South Fremantle in Round 19, 1991.
  • An explosive opening with four goals in as many minutes has Swans keeping an edge over their nearest rivals all game – despite the Bulldogs having ten more scoring shots, they never looked like winning.[21]

Round 10 (Foundation Day)

Round 10
Monday, 7 June (2:15 pm) Perth 7.20 (62) def. by West Perth 20.15 (135) Lathlain Park (crowd: 4213)
Monday, 7 June (2:15 pm) Subiaco 26.13 (169) def. Swan Districts 19.16 (130) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 5462)
Monday, 7 June (2:15 pm) East Perth 12.9 (81) def. Claremont 9.13 (67) Perth Oval (crowd: 2472)
Monday, 7 June (2:15 pm) East Fremantle 14.9 (93) def. South Fremantle 15.10 (100) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 10386)

Five goals into a stiff northeasterly during the first quarter and the dominance of Rod Willet at centre half-forward gives Subiaco a fifth straight victory.[22]

Round 11

Round 11
Saturday, 12 June (2:15 pm) Swan Districts 16.24 (120) def. Perth 8.12 (60) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 3227)
Saturday, 12 June (2:15 pm) South Fremantle 29.23 (197) def. Subiaco 10.9 (69) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 3646)
Saturday, 12 June (2:15 pm) West Perth 7.15 (57) def. by East Perth 18.10 (118) Leederville Oval (crowd: 4535)
Saturday, 12 June (2:15 pm) Claremont 26.11 (167) def. East Fremantle 14.13 (97) Claremont Oval (crowd: 2405)

Wally Matera, Brad Collard and Simon Taylor demoralise Subiaco with 31 scoring shots to five in the first half.[23] It was the highest WA(S)FL score for three seasons.[24]

Round 12

Round 12
Saturday, 19 June (2:15 pm) West Perth 12.13 (85) def. South Fremantle 11.8 (74) Leederville Oval (crowd: 3177)
Saturday, 19 June (2:15 pm) Swan Districts 11.9 (75) def. by Claremont 21.13 (139) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 3112)
Saturday, 19 June (2:15 pm) Subiaco 16.23 (119) def. Perth 12.11 (83) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 2296)
Saturday, 19 June (2:15 pm) East Fremantle 15.14 (104) def. East Perth 12.13 (85) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2530)

An emotional three-quarter time address allows West Perth, after being five goals behind midway through the third quarter, to overpower South Fremantle in the last forty minutes.[25]

Round 13

Round 13
Saturday, 26 June (2:15 pm) Claremont 8.6 (54) def. by West Perth 12.11 (83) Claremont Oval (crowd: 1873)
Sunday, 27 June (2:15 pm) Perth 10.13 (73) def. by South Fremantle 20.12 (132) Lathlain Park (crowd: 1813)
Sunday, 27 June (2:15 pm) East Perth 16.10 (106) def. by Swan Districts 9.9 (63) Perth Oval (crowd: 2205)
Sunday, 27 June (2:15 pm) East Fremantle 20.15 (135) def. Subiaco 12.11 (83) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2216)

West Perth win at Claremont for the first time since 1986 as centre half-forward Derek Hall takes twelve marks in very difficult conditions, putting the three-time wooden spooners in line for a top three berth and off the top by percentage.[26]

Round 14

Round 14
Saturday, 3 July (2:15 pm) Subiaco 13.14 (92) def. by West Perth 14.13 (97) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 3765)
Saturday, 3 July (2:15 pm) South Fremantle 18.9 (117) def. by Claremont 24.7 (151) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 3245)
Saturday, 3 July (2:15 pm) East Perth 14.17 (101) def. Perth 8.13 (61) Perth Oval (crowd: 2886)
Saturday, 3 July (2:15 pm) Swan Districts 11.11 (77) def. by East Fremantle 15.9 (99) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 2913)
  • West Perth achieve a second sensational comeback – from thirty-one points behind at the eighteen-minute mark of the final quarter – due to the individual skills of Darren Harris who consistently bullocked his way through at the centre bounces.[27]
  • Despite a heavy dose of influenza, Tiger ruckman Clinton Wolf demolished the Bulldogs and is backed up by forwards Gerreyn and Morgan with six goals apiece.[28]

Round 15

Round 15
Saturday, 10 July (2:15 pm) West Perth 13.12 (90) def. by Swan Districts 16.10 (106) Leederville Oval (crowd: 5024)
Saturday, 10 July (2:15 pm) Subiaco 10.14 (74) def. by Claremont 12.13 (85) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 2871)
Saturday, 10 July (2:15 pm) South Fremantle 14.6 (90) def. by East Perth 17.9 (111) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 3058)
Saturday, 10 July (2:15 pm) Perth 8.13 (61) def. by East Fremantle 21.18 (144) Lathlain Park (crowd: 1896)
  • Swan Districts reconsolidate top position with the first of two come-from-behind victories[29] and South Fremantle’s loss.
  • Eventual Simpson Medallist Dale Kickett shows against the potent Subiaco attack the form that was to make him a mainstay of Fremantle’s defence, in the process making him feel he had been out of place in attack.[30]

Round 16

Round 16
Saturday, 17 July (2:15 pm) Swan Districts 11.15 (81) def. South Fremantle 11.14 (80) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 4248)
Saturday, 17 July (2:15 pm) Claremont 11.16 (82) def. by Perth 17.7 (109) Claremont Oval (crowd: 1974)
Saturday, 17 July (2:15 pm) East Perth 12.14 (86) def. by Subiaco 13.16 (94) Perth Oval (crowd: 3113)
Saturday, 17 July (2:15 pm) East Fremantle 6.12 (48) def. by West Perth 8.6 (54) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 3463)
  • A brilliant 40-possession display by 28-year-old defender Paul Mifka and several easy East Fremantle misses wins a low-scoring game for the Falcons, taking them to clear second.[31]
  • A gamble by Perth coach Ken Armstrong to play out-of-form forward Mick Hastie at centre half-back, along with seven goals from Shane Cable, allows an accurate Perth to win for the first time since Round 7.[32]

Round 17

Round 17
Saturday, 24 July (2:15 pm) West Perth 19.16 (130) def. Perth 13.9 (87) Leederville Oval (crowd: 3695)
Saturday, 24 July (2:15 pm) Swan Districts 20.8 (128) def. Subiaco 20.6 (126) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 3449)
Saturday, 24 July (2:15 pm) Claremont 15.12 (102) def. East Perth 13.11 (89) Claremont Oval (crowd: 2369)
Saturday, 24 July (2:15 pm) South Fremantle 11.4 (70) def. by East Fremantle 19.14 (128) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 6944)

Swan Districts’ Jason Ball proves the difference in a thrilling spectacle with four goals in ten minutes after Subiaco coach Tony Solin reshuffles Georgiades and Langdon away from him.[33]

Round 18

Round 18
Saturday, 31 July (2:15 pm) East Fremantle 11.9 (75) def. by Claremont 15.13 (103) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2283)
Sunday, 1 August (2:15 pm) Subiaco 17.18 (120) def. South Fremantle 8.18 (66) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 2696)
Sunday, 1 August (2:15 pm) Perth 14.18 (102) def. Swan Districts 13.15 (93) Lathlain Park (crowd: 2722)
Sunday, 1 August (2:15 pm) East Perth 17.15 (117) def. West Perth 12.15 (87) Perth Oval (crowd: 4915)
  • On a severely-criticised Subiaco surface, the Lions maintain their slim finals hopes as South Fremantle lose five on end, with four of their eight goals in a six-minute third quarter burst.[34]
  • Perth record an unlikely win as they hold past tormentor Scott Cummings to one goal and namesake Steven dominates the last quarter with two critical goals.[35]

Round 19

Round 19
Saturday, 7 August (2:15 pm) South Fremantle 12.12 (84) def. West Perth 11.7 (73) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2707) [36]
Saturday, 7 August (2:15 pm) Claremont 18.16 (124) def. Swan Districts 8.8 (56) Claremont Oval (crowd: 2475) [37]
Saturday, 7 August (2:15 pm) Perth 8.9 (57) def. by Subiaco 19.21 (135) Lathlain Park (crowd: 1672) [38]
Saturday, 7 August (2:15 pm) East Perth 15.12 (102) def. East Fremantle 13.12 (90) Perth Oval (crowd: 2249) [39]

Chris Gerreyn, moved to the ruck when Clinton Wolf strains a hamstring, makes the most of his opportunity to have more freedom to move as Claremont’s engine room allows Swans’ weakened defence to be severely exploited.

Round 20

Round 20
Saturday, 14 August (2:15 pm) South Fremantle 18.20 (128) def. Perth 9.6 (60) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2337)
Saturday, 14 August (2:15 pm) West Perth 13.6 (84) def. Claremont 12.11 (83) Leederville Oval (crowd: 3546)
Saturday, 14 August (2:15 pm) Swan Districts 18.12 (120) def. East Perth 15.10 (100) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 4000)
Saturday, 14 August (2:15 pm) Subiaco 26.12 (168) def. East Fremantle 9.16 (70) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 2640)

Andrew Donnelly’s work as ruck-rover and later ruckman, along with eight goals from relegated Eagle Metropolis,[40] virtually seals the five with a then-record Subiaco winning margin over the Sharks, beating 78 points from 1980.[41]

Round 21

Round 21
Saturday, 21 August (2:15 pm) Claremont 16.11 (107) def. South Fremantle 7.17 (59) Claremont Oval (crowd: 2475)
Saturday, 21 August (2:15 pm) Perth 7.11 (53) def. by East Perth 20.19 (139) Lathlain Park (crowd: 1760)
Saturday, 21 August (2:15 pm) East Fremantle 23.14 (152) def. Swan Districts 11.15 (81) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2157)
Sunday, 22 August (2:15 pm) West Perth 17.19 (121) def. Subiaco 10.16 (76) Leederville Oval (crowd: 20112)
  • West Perth’s farewell game to Leederville Oval[a] provides a major dividend from the largest WAFL home-and-away attendance since Round 5, 1987.[42]
  • Despite having lost eight matches, West Perth obtain the minor premiership via Swan Districts’ thrashing, which led Shark coach Ken Judge to take a “shot” at his critics[43] and John Todd to criticise his team’s lack of endeavour.

Ladder

1993 ladder
Pos Team Pld W L D PF PA PP Pts
1 West Perth 21 13 8 0 1817 1831 99.2 52
2 Swan Districts 21 13 8 0 2000 2047 97.7 52
3 Claremont (P) 21 11 9 1 2057 1754 117.3 46
4 South Fremantle 21 11 10 0 2019 1863 108.4 44
5 Subiaco 21 10 11 0 2273 2086 109.0 40
6 East Fremantle 21 10 11 0 2104 1997 105.4 40
7 East Perth 21 9 11 1 1828 1887 96.9 38
8 Perth 21 6 15 0 1663 2296 72.4 24
Source: WAFL Footy Facts
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) percentage; 3) number of points for.
(P) Premiers

Finals

Elimination Final

Elimination Final
Saturday, 28 August (2:15 pm) South Fremantle 11.17 (83) def. by Subiaco 16.13 (109) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 6,333)

An unexpected move of forward Andrew Macnish to roving shuts down a South Fremantle comeback when the Bulldogs take the lead for the first time in the match.[44]

Qualifying Final

Qualifying Final
Sunday, 29 August (2:15 pm) Swan Districts 9.7 (61) def. by Claremont 12.12 (84) WACA (crowd: 3,500)
  • It was the first WA(N)FL final at the WACA since the 1926 Grand Final, and the first not at Subiaco since the 1935 Grand Final.
  • Swan Districts’ lack of rovers is severely exposed in wet conditions despite improved commitment vis-à-vis recent weeks.[45]

Semi-finals

First semi-final
Sunday, 5 September (11:45 am) Swan Districts 18.8 (116) def. by Subiaco 20.15 (135) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 13,187)

Subiaco, with Heatley kicking his hundredth goal, kick 16.4 (100) after an inaccurate first half, but need six of the last seven goals to give Swans their sixth consecutive finals defeat.[46]

Second semi-final
Sunday, 5 September (2:15 pm) West Perth 14.7 (91) def. by Claremont 15.12 (102) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 13,187)
  • Since the two semi-finals were played at the same venue on the same day, the attendance figure is the same.
  • Claremont kick four goals in seven minutes early in the last quarter to overcome their West Perth bogey from the home-and-away season against a team lacking 1992 Sandover winner Robbie West.[47]

Preliminary final

Preliminary final
Saturday, 11 September (2:15 pm) West Perth 21.8 (134) def. Subiaco 15.12 (102) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 11,325)

A best-on-ground performance by Robbie West (21 kicks, nine handballs, five goals) plus repeated time-on lapses by Subiaco, places West Perth despite Heatley’s nine goals in its first Grand Final since 1975.

Grand Final

1993 WAFL Grand Final
Sunday, 19 September Claremont def. West Perth Subiaco Oval (crowd: 32,404) [48]
5.4 (34)
10.7 (67)
10.10 (70)
 13.14 (92)
Q1
Q2
Q3
 Final
2.3 (15)
5.8 (38)
7.12 (54)
 8.14 (62)
Umpires: Sam Kronja, Greg Scroop
Simpson Medal: Dale Kickett (Claremont)
Morgan 3, Klemm 3, Smith 2, Gerreyn 2, Mitchell, Kickett, Brendan Green Goals Mifka 2, O‘Brien, Curley, Jones, Hall, Burns, Trevor Green
Kickett (best on ground), Malone, Scott Edwards, Brendan Green, Gary Edwards, Hendry Best Harris, Nelson, Mifka, Jones, West, O‘Brien
Scott Edwards by field umpires Kronja and Scroop and emergency umpire Trevor Garrett for striking Darren Harris in second quarter
Clinton Woolf by field umpire Scroop for striking Robbie West in second quarter
Reports Andrew Nichols by goal umpire John Hauswirth for instigating a wrestle with Paul Morgan in the second quarter

Claremont’s halfback and centrelines were too hard to penetrate for the Falcons, and Jeff Gieschen’s inability to find key forwards ensures a win rated by Neesham as the most satisfying of his four as Tiger coach.[49]

Notes

a Owing to redevelopment of Perth Oval for soccer club Perth Glory, East Perth moved to Leederville after the 1999 season.

References

  1. ^ Rogers, Stephen, The Complete Book of VFL Records; p. 278. ISBN 1862528020
  2. ^ Casellas, Ken; ‘Falcons Nestled in Promised Land’; The West Australian, 25 April 1994, p. 61
  3. ^ a b Lague, Steve; ‘Blow-in Heatley Takes WAFL by Storm’; The West Australian, 1 June 1993, p. 88
  4. ^ a b Wilson, Ray; ‘Coaches Critical of Short Quarters’; Inside Football, 7 April 1993, p. 25
  5. ^ a b East Perth: Lowest Scores
  6. ^ WAFL Footy Facts: Most Consecutive Games Between Successive Draws April 15, 2014, at the Wayback Machine
  7. ^ WAFL Footy Facts: Drawn Matches 2014-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Demons Hold Crisis Talks to Settle Row’; The West Australian, 19 April 1993, p. 91
  9. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘New-Look Falcons Now Play to Plan’; The West Australian, 27 April 1993, p. 94
  10. ^ Perth Metro (Mount Lawley) (009225) May 1993 rainfall
  11. ^ Duffield, Mark; ‘Judge Blast Fires Lockyer’; The West Australian, 3 May 1993, p. 91
  12. ^ Acott, Kent; ‘Blackout on the Agenda’; The West Australian, 3 May 1993, p. 93
  13. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Subi Run Falcons Ragged’; The West Australian, 17 May 1993, p. 93
  14. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Narkle Conjures Swans’ Victory’; The West Australian, 17 May 1993, p. 92
  15. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Connell at Home in Lions’ Den’; The West Australian, 24 May 1993, p. 90
  16. ^ Marsh, David; ‘Spinks Tips Scales’; The West Australian, 24 May 1993, p. 91
  17. ^ Duffield, Mark; ‘O‘Brien All Class in Upset Win’; The West Australian, 24 May 1993, p. 91
  18. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Sharks’ Late Goal Blitz Sinks Perth’; The West Australian, 24 May 1993, p. 91
  19. ^ McGrath, John; ‘Best Still Ahead for Soaring Falcons’; The West Australian, 31 May 1993, p. 91
  20. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 December 2013. Retrieved 23 December 2013.
  21. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Swans at Full Throttle’; The West Australian, 31 May 1993, p. 91
  22. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Subiaco Runners the Key to Victory’; The West Australian, 8 June 1993, p. 102
  23. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Matera Sparks Bulldogs’; The West Australian, 14 June 1993, p. 79
  24. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 December 2013. Retrieved 23 December 2013.
  25. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Gieschen Rallies His Troops’; The West Australian, 21 June 1993, p. 75
  26. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Hall Lifts Flying Falcons to Brink of Finals’; The West Australian, 28 June 1993, p. 75
  27. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Harris Leads Falcons’ Fightback’; The West Australian, 5 July 1993, p. 66
  28. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Wolf Too Tough for Bulldogs’; The West Australian, 5 July 1993, p. 66
  29. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Swans on the Rebound’; The West Australian, 12 July 1993, p. 83
  30. ^ Reid, Russell; ‘Kickett Settles into New Role’; The West Australian, 12 July 1993, p. 83
  31. ^ Reid, Russell; ‘Rejuvenated Mifka Sinks Sharks’; The West Australian, 19 July 1993, p. 75
  32. ^ Duffield, Mark; ‘Hastie Gamble Plays Big Dividends’; The West Australian, 19 July 1993, p. 75
  33. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Ball Makes Lions Pay Dearly for a Shocker’; The West Australian, 26 July 1993, p. 79
  34. ^ McGrath, John; ‘Frustrating Lions at Sunday Best’; The West Australian, 2 August 1993, p. 75
  35. ^ Duffield, Mark; ‘Demon Cummings an Unlikely Hero’; The West Australian, 2 August 1993, p. 75
  36. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Caputi Picks Right Time to Find Form’; The West Australian, 9 August 1993, p. 80
  37. ^ Reid, Russell; ‘Gerreyn the Perfect Substitute’; The West Australian, 9 August 1993, p. 80
  38. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘New Role for Subi Puts Snow Back on Top’; The West Australian, 9 August 1993, p. 80
  39. ^ Duffield, Mark; ‘Johnstone Inspires Royals’; The West Australian, 9 August 1993, p. 80
  40. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Swans Find a Gem in Donnelly’; The West Australian, 16 August 1993, p. 76
  41. ^ Subiaco: Biggest Wins
  42. ^ . Archived from the original on 24 December 2013. Retrieved 23 December 2013.
  43. ^ McGrath, John; ‘Judge Takes a Shot at Critics’; The West Australian, 23 August 1993, p. 74
  44. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Macnish Leads Lions Home’; The West Australian, 30 August 1993, p. 73
  45. ^ Duffield, Mark; ‘Speedy Tigers Expose Swans’; The West Australian, 30 August 1993, p. 72
  46. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Lions Serve Notice with Last-Term Blitz’; The West Australian, 6 September 1993; p. 78
  47. ^ Duffield, Mark; ‘Tigers Turn Tables on West Perth’; The West Australian, 6 September 1993; p. 78
  48. ^ Duffield, Mark; ‘Falcons Run into Claremont Wall’; The West Australian, 20 September 1993, p. 70
  49. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Neesham Victory the Sweetest of All’; The West Australian, 20 September 1993, p. 70

External links

  • Official WAFL website

1993, wafl, season, 109th, various, incarnations, west, australian, football, league, extraordinarily, even, competition, amongst, teams, except, perth, with, only, three, half, games, separating, first, seventh, smallest, dispersion, winning, percentages, waf. The 1993 WAFL season was the 109th of the various incarnations of the West Australian Football League It saw an extraordinarily even competition amongst all the teams except Perth with only three and a half games separating first and seventh and the smallest dispersion of winning percentages in the WAFL since 1921 West Perth s 13 wins and a percentage marginally under 100 is the fewest wins and lowest percentage to take top position in a major Australian Rules league indeed no team had headed the ladder with a percentage nearly so low at any stage of a season except Hawthorn during May of 1969 1 and Perth during June and July 1963 1993 WAFL seasonTeams8PremiersClaremont9th premiershipMinor premiersWest Perth9th minor premiershipSandover MedallistNeil Mildenhall West Perth Bernie Naylor MedallistJason Heatley Subiaco Matches played90 19921994 After early pacesetters Swan Districts and the inconsistent if at times brilliant South Fremantle collapsed in the second half of the season the bottom two clubs of 1992 in West Perth already decided on a move to Joondalup 2 and Claremont emerged as the favourites for the premiership as the home and away season and played off in the Grand Final where the Falcons lack of key forwards ensured their defeat On an individual level the season was highlighted by Subiaco s Diamond Valley recruit Jason Heatley discarded by Fitzroy kicking 111 goals in his first WAFL season and playing for the league after only five matches 3 This season saw the WAFL adopt 20 minute quarters with extended time on a change to be introduced into the AFL for the following season 4 Contents 1 Home and away season 1 1 Round 1 1 2 Round 2 Easter weekend 1 3 Round 3 1 4 Round 4 Anzac Day 1 5 Round 5 1 6 Round 6 1 7 Round 7 1 8 Round 8 1 9 Round 9 1 10 Round 10 Foundation Day 1 11 Round 11 1 12 Round 12 1 13 Round 13 1 14 Round 14 1 15 Round 15 1 16 Round 16 1 17 Round 17 1 18 Round 18 1 19 Round 19 1 20 Round 20 1 21 Round 21 2 Ladder 3 Finals 3 1 Elimination Final 3 2 Qualifying Final 3 3 Semi finals 3 4 Preliminary final 3 5 Grand Final 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksHome and away season EditRound 1 Edit Round 1Saturday 3 April 2 15 pm Subiaco 8 7 55 def by Claremont 14 14 98 Subiaco Oval crowd 2310 Saturday 3 April 2 15 pm West Perth 7 10 52 def by Swan Districts 13 6 84 Leederville Oval crowd 2727 Saturday 3 April 2 15 pm South Fremantle 13 11 89 def East Perth 5 6 36 Fremantle Oval crowd 2591 Saturday 3 April 2 15 pm Perth 10 10 70 def East Fremantle 10 6 66 Lathlain Park crowd 3005 East Perth open the season with their lowest score since 1964 5 kicking only 1 5 to three quarter time the lowest in the WAFL since 1980 The Lathlain Park match at 86 minutes is the shortest game in a major Australian Rules league 4 Round 2 Easter weekend Edit Round 2Saturday 10 April 2 15 pm Swan Districts 17 18 120 def South Fremantle 13 11 89 Bassendean Oval crowd 3567 Saturday 10 April 2 15 pm East Fremantle 21 8 134 def West Perth 12 13 85 East Fremantle Oval crowd 2960 Monday 12 April 2 15 pm East Perth 17 4 106 def Subiaco 13 12 90 Perth Oval crowd 2631 Monday 12 April 2 15 pm Claremont 13 10 88 def by Perth 14 6 90 Claremont Oval crowd 3026 Round 3 Edit Round 3Saturday 17 April 2 15 pm Swan Districts 16 16 112 def Subiaco 14 10 94 Bassendean Oval crowd 3061 Saturday 17 April 2 15 pm West Perth 13 10 88 def Perth 11 21 87 Leederville Oval crowd 2951 Saturday 17 April 2 15 pm South Fremantle 15 13 103 def East Fremantle 6 14 50 Fremantle Oval crowd 5283 Saturday 17 April 6 45 pm East Perth 10 12 72 drew with Claremont 11 6 72 WACA crowd 3024 Heatley recruited from Diamond Valley kicks seven goals on his Subiaco debut The draw at the WACA ended what was then surpassed by East Fremantle during 2014 the longest sequence of matches by a WAFL club without a draw being East Perth s first draw since Round 16 of 1969 or a gap of 518 matches 6 It was the first WAFL or AFL draw at the WACA since Round 5 1923 when Perth drew with East Fremantle 7 Perth president Barry McGrath went into an outburst after the Demons unexpected narrow defeat saying their performances could not be tolerated and cancelling normal trophy presentations 8 Round 4 Anzac Day Edit Round 4Saturday 24 April 2 15 pm Perth 11 15 81 def by Swan Districts 13 8 86 Lathlain Park crowd 4873 Sunday 25 April 2 15 pm East Fremantle 13 14 92 def Claremont 13 10 88 East Fremantle Oval crowd 5300 Monday 26 April 2 15 pm South Fremantle 18 15 123 def Subiaco 15 15 105 Subiaco Oval crowd 3961 Monday 26 April 2 15 pm East Perth 6 9 45 def by West Perth 7 12 54 Perth Oval crowd 7000 A watertight defence and impressive running football gives West Perth a surprise win in an extremely low scoring dry weather match despite scoring 3 9 27 in the third quarter 9 Round 5 Edit Round 5Saturday 1 May 2 15 pm Claremont 9 12 66 def by Swan Districts 11 9 75 Claremont Oval crowd 2166 Saturday 1 May 2 15 pm Perth 13 13 91 def Subiaco 7 15 57 Lathlain Park crowd 2246 Saturday 1 May 2 15 pm East Perth 11 8 74 def by East Fremantle 18 9 117 Perth Oval crowd 2061 Saturday 1 May 6 45 pm West Perth 5 13 43 def by South Fremantle 9 11 65 WACA crowd 2287 On a very wet and thundery Saturday 10 training lights are used at Perth Oval where Andrew Lockyer gives a brilliant display at full forward with eight goals 11 A blackout prolonged the WACA match by seventeen minutes during which West Perth considered forfeiting as Marty Atkins was unstoppable in South s defence 12 Round 6 Edit Round 6Saturday 8 May 2 15 pm South Fremantle 17 10 112 def Perth 14 8 92 Fremantle Oval crowd 3377 Saturday 8 May 2 15 pm West Perth 18 7 115 def Claremont 15 11 101 Leederville Oval crowd 2759 Saturday 8 May 2 15 pm Swan Districts 13 21 99 def East Perth 5 9 39 Bassendean Oval crowd 3668 Saturday 8 May 2 15 pm Subiaco 20 14 134 def East Fremantle 11 12 78 Subiaco Oval crowd 2191 East Perth s score was its lowest against Swan Districts until 1998 beating 6 10 46 from 1974 5 Round 7 Edit Round 7Saturday 15 May 2 15 pm West Perth 10 12 72 def by Subiaco 19 20 134 WACA crowd 3237 Saturday 15 May 2 15 pm Claremont 12 10 82 def South Fremantle 7 10 52 Claremont Oval crowd 2798 Saturday 15 May 2 15 pm Perth 16 13 109 def East Perth 10 17 77 Lathlain Park crowd 3608 Saturday 15 May 2 15 pm East Fremantle 13 12 90 def by Swan Districts 15 9 99 East Fremantle Oval crowd 3126 With Heatley kicking nine goals and making the WAFL team after his fifth match Subiaco move off the bottom after a horror first five rounds 13 Veteran Phil Narkle shows he has despite being moved into defence not lost his magic touch from the 1980s when after an accidental kick in the groin during the morning before the match he drives Swans back from 34 points down to maintain their unbeaten record 14 Round 8 Edit Round 8Saturday 22 May 2 15 pm Swan Districts 14 10 94 def by West Perth 14 14 98 Bassendean Oval crowd 4390 Saturday 22 May 2 15 pm Claremont 13 12 90 def by Subiaco 16 12 108 Claremont Oval crowd 2529 15 Saturday 22 May 2 15 pm East Perth 12 11 83 def by South Fremantle 13 20 98 Perth Oval crowd 2516 16 Saturday 22 May 2 15 pm East Fremantle 24 12 156 def Perth 12 7 79 East Fremantle Oval crowd 3200 A depleted Falcon side without Mildenhall Turley Zempilas Peter Freeman Paul Symmons and Dean Brunton is led by injury plagued centreman Darren O Brien to an upset over the previously unconquered Swans O Brien kicked the winning goal after Swans stormed to the lead with seven final quarter majors but was also dubiously reported 17 A brilliant ten goal to one final quarter with former Richmond rover Trent Nichols dominant lifts East Fremantle to third at a critical time they were behind for most of the first half and a loss would have seen them two games shy of the double chance 18 Round 9 Edit Round 9Saturday 29 May 6 45 pm Perth 14 12 96 def by Claremont 16 12 108 WACA crowd 3000 Sunday 30 May 2 15 pm South Fremantle 12 19 91 def by Swan Districts 16 5 101 Fremantle Oval crowd 4602 Sunday 30 May 2 15 pm Subiaco 27 9 171 def East Perth 7 19 61 Subiaco Oval crowd 2807 Sunday 30 May 2 15 pm West Perth 17 12 114 def East Fremantle 13 8 86 Leederville Oval crowd 3654 19 Jason Heatley kicked twelve goals a record for a Subiaco player against the Royals 20 and the first time a player had kicked twelve goals without a behind 3 It was also the first double figure goal tally since John Hutton kicked thirteen for Claremont against South Fremantle in Round 19 1991 An explosive opening with four goals in as many minutes has Swans keeping an edge over their nearest rivals all game despite the Bulldogs having ten more scoring shots they never looked like winning 21 Round 10 Foundation Day Edit Round 10Monday 7 June 2 15 pm Perth 7 20 62 def by West Perth 20 15 135 Lathlain Park crowd 4213 Monday 7 June 2 15 pm Subiaco 26 13 169 def Swan Districts 19 16 130 Subiaco Oval crowd 5462 Monday 7 June 2 15 pm East Perth 12 9 81 def Claremont 9 13 67 Perth Oval crowd 2472 Monday 7 June 2 15 pm East Fremantle 14 9 93 def South Fremantle 15 10 100 East Fremantle Oval crowd 10386 Five goals into a stiff northeasterly during the first quarter and the dominance of Rod Willet at centre half forward gives Subiaco a fifth straight victory 22 Round 11 Edit Round 11Saturday 12 June 2 15 pm Swan Districts 16 24 120 def Perth 8 12 60 Bassendean Oval crowd 3227 Saturday 12 June 2 15 pm South Fremantle 29 23 197 def Subiaco 10 9 69 Fremantle Oval crowd 3646 Saturday 12 June 2 15 pm West Perth 7 15 57 def by East Perth 18 10 118 Leederville Oval crowd 4535 Saturday 12 June 2 15 pm Claremont 26 11 167 def East Fremantle 14 13 97 Claremont Oval crowd 2405 Wally Matera Brad Collard and Simon Taylor demoralise Subiaco with 31 scoring shots to five in the first half 23 It was the highest WA S FL score for three seasons 24 Round 12 Edit Round 12Saturday 19 June 2 15 pm West Perth 12 13 85 def South Fremantle 11 8 74 Leederville Oval crowd 3177 Saturday 19 June 2 15 pm Swan Districts 11 9 75 def by Claremont 21 13 139 Bassendean Oval crowd 3112 Saturday 19 June 2 15 pm Subiaco 16 23 119 def Perth 12 11 83 Subiaco Oval crowd 2296 Saturday 19 June 2 15 pm East Fremantle 15 14 104 def East Perth 12 13 85 East Fremantle Oval crowd 2530 An emotional three quarter time address allows West Perth after being five goals behind midway through the third quarter to overpower South Fremantle in the last forty minutes 25 Round 13 Edit Round 13Saturday 26 June 2 15 pm Claremont 8 6 54 def by West Perth 12 11 83 Claremont Oval crowd 1873 Sunday 27 June 2 15 pm Perth 10 13 73 def by South Fremantle 20 12 132 Lathlain Park crowd 1813 Sunday 27 June 2 15 pm East Perth 16 10 106 def by Swan Districts 9 9 63 Perth Oval crowd 2205 Sunday 27 June 2 15 pm East Fremantle 20 15 135 def Subiaco 12 11 83 East Fremantle Oval crowd 2216 West Perth win at Claremont for the first time since 1986 as centre half forward Derek Hall takes twelve marks in very difficult conditions putting the three time wooden spooners in line for a top three berth and off the top by percentage 26 Round 14 Edit Round 14Saturday 3 July 2 15 pm Subiaco 13 14 92 def by West Perth 14 13 97 Subiaco Oval crowd 3765 Saturday 3 July 2 15 pm South Fremantle 18 9 117 def by Claremont 24 7 151 Fremantle Oval crowd 3245 Saturday 3 July 2 15 pm East Perth 14 17 101 def Perth 8 13 61 Perth Oval crowd 2886 Saturday 3 July 2 15 pm Swan Districts 11 11 77 def by East Fremantle 15 9 99 Bassendean Oval crowd 2913 West Perth achieve a second sensational comeback from thirty one points behind at the eighteen minute mark of the final quarter due to the individual skills of Darren Harris who consistently bullocked his way through at the centre bounces 27 Despite a heavy dose of influenza Tiger ruckman Clinton Wolf demolished the Bulldogs and is backed up by forwards Gerreyn and Morgan with six goals apiece 28 Round 15 Edit Round 15Saturday 10 July 2 15 pm West Perth 13 12 90 def by Swan Districts 16 10 106 Leederville Oval crowd 5024 Saturday 10 July 2 15 pm Subiaco 10 14 74 def by Claremont 12 13 85 Subiaco Oval crowd 2871 Saturday 10 July 2 15 pm South Fremantle 14 6 90 def by East Perth 17 9 111 Fremantle Oval crowd 3058 Saturday 10 July 2 15 pm Perth 8 13 61 def by East Fremantle 21 18 144 Lathlain Park crowd 1896 Swan Districts reconsolidate top position with the first of two come from behind victories 29 and South Fremantle s loss Eventual Simpson Medallist Dale Kickett shows against the potent Subiaco attack the form that was to make him a mainstay of Fremantle s defence in the process making him feel he had been out of place in attack 30 Round 16 Edit Round 16Saturday 17 July 2 15 pm Swan Districts 11 15 81 def South Fremantle 11 14 80 Bassendean Oval crowd 4248 Saturday 17 July 2 15 pm Claremont 11 16 82 def by Perth 17 7 109 Claremont Oval crowd 1974 Saturday 17 July 2 15 pm East Perth 12 14 86 def by Subiaco 13 16 94 Perth Oval crowd 3113 Saturday 17 July 2 15 pm East Fremantle 6 12 48 def by West Perth 8 6 54 East Fremantle Oval crowd 3463 A brilliant 40 possession display by 28 year old defender Paul Mifka and several easy East Fremantle misses wins a low scoring game for the Falcons taking them to clear second 31 A gamble by Perth coach Ken Armstrong to play out of form forward Mick Hastie at centre half back along with seven goals from Shane Cable allows an accurate Perth to win for the first time since Round 7 32 Round 17 Edit Round 17Saturday 24 July 2 15 pm West Perth 19 16 130 def Perth 13 9 87 Leederville Oval crowd 3695 Saturday 24 July 2 15 pm Swan Districts 20 8 128 def Subiaco 20 6 126 Bassendean Oval crowd 3449 Saturday 24 July 2 15 pm Claremont 15 12 102 def East Perth 13 11 89 Claremont Oval crowd 2369 Saturday 24 July 2 15 pm South Fremantle 11 4 70 def by East Fremantle 19 14 128 Fremantle Oval crowd 6944 Swan Districts Jason Ball proves the difference in a thrilling spectacle with four goals in ten minutes after Subiaco coach Tony Solin reshuffles Georgiades and Langdon away from him 33 Round 18 Edit Round 18Saturday 31 July 2 15 pm East Fremantle 11 9 75 def by Claremont 15 13 103 East Fremantle Oval crowd 2283 Sunday 1 August 2 15 pm Subiaco 17 18 120 def South Fremantle 8 18 66 Subiaco Oval crowd 2696 Sunday 1 August 2 15 pm Perth 14 18 102 def Swan Districts 13 15 93 Lathlain Park crowd 2722 Sunday 1 August 2 15 pm East Perth 17 15 117 def West Perth 12 15 87 Perth Oval crowd 4915 On a severely criticised Subiaco surface the Lions maintain their slim finals hopes as South Fremantle lose five on end with four of their eight goals in a six minute third quarter burst 34 Perth record an unlikely win as they hold past tormentor Scott Cummings to one goal and namesake Steven dominates the last quarter with two critical goals 35 Round 19 Edit Round 19Saturday 7 August 2 15 pm South Fremantle 12 12 84 def West Perth 11 7 73 Fremantle Oval crowd 2707 36 Saturday 7 August 2 15 pm Claremont 18 16 124 def Swan Districts 8 8 56 Claremont Oval crowd 2475 37 Saturday 7 August 2 15 pm Perth 8 9 57 def by Subiaco 19 21 135 Lathlain Park crowd 1672 38 Saturday 7 August 2 15 pm East Perth 15 12 102 def East Fremantle 13 12 90 Perth Oval crowd 2249 39 Chris Gerreyn moved to the ruck when Clinton Wolf strains a hamstring makes the most of his opportunity to have more freedom to move as Claremont s engine room allows Swans weakened defence to be severely exploited Round 20 Edit Round 20Saturday 14 August 2 15 pm South Fremantle 18 20 128 def Perth 9 6 60 Fremantle Oval crowd 2337 Saturday 14 August 2 15 pm West Perth 13 6 84 def Claremont 12 11 83 Leederville Oval crowd 3546 Saturday 14 August 2 15 pm Swan Districts 18 12 120 def East Perth 15 10 100 Bassendean Oval crowd 4000 Saturday 14 August 2 15 pm Subiaco 26 12 168 def East Fremantle 9 16 70 Subiaco Oval crowd 2640 Andrew Donnelly s work as ruck rover and later ruckman along with eight goals from relegated Eagle Metropolis 40 virtually seals the five with a then record Subiaco winning margin over the Sharks beating 78 points from 1980 41 Round 21 Edit Round 21Saturday 21 August 2 15 pm Claremont 16 11 107 def South Fremantle 7 17 59 Claremont Oval crowd 2475 Saturday 21 August 2 15 pm Perth 7 11 53 def by East Perth 20 19 139 Lathlain Park crowd 1760 Saturday 21 August 2 15 pm East Fremantle 23 14 152 def Swan Districts 11 15 81 East Fremantle Oval crowd 2157 Sunday 22 August 2 15 pm West Perth 17 19 121 def Subiaco 10 16 76 Leederville Oval crowd 20112 West Perth s farewell game to Leederville Oval a provides a major dividend from the largest WAFL home and away attendance since Round 5 1987 42 Despite having lost eight matches West Perth obtain the minor premiership via Swan Districts thrashing which led Shark coach Ken Judge to take a shot at his critics 43 and John Todd to criticise his team s lack of endeavour Ladder Edit1993 ladder Pos Team Pld W L D PF PA PP Pts1 West Perth 21 13 8 0 1817 1831 99 2 522 Swan Districts 21 13 8 0 2000 2047 97 7 523 Claremont P 21 11 9 1 2057 1754 117 3 464 South Fremantle 21 11 10 0 2019 1863 108 4 445 Subiaco 21 10 11 0 2273 2086 109 0 406 East Fremantle 21 10 11 0 2104 1997 105 4 407 East Perth 21 9 11 1 1828 1887 96 9 388 Perth 21 6 15 0 1663 2296 72 4 24Source WAFL Footy FactsRules for classification 1 points 2 percentage 3 number of points for P PremiersFinals EditElimination Final Edit Elimination FinalSaturday 28 August 2 15 pm South Fremantle 11 17 83 def by Subiaco 16 13 109 Subiaco Oval crowd 6 333 An unexpected move of forward Andrew Macnish to roving shuts down a South Fremantle comeback when the Bulldogs take the lead for the first time in the match 44 Qualifying Final Edit Qualifying FinalSunday 29 August 2 15 pm Swan Districts 9 7 61 def by Claremont 12 12 84 WACA crowd 3 500 It was the first WA N FL final at the WACA since the 1926 Grand Final and the first not at Subiaco since the 1935 Grand Final Swan Districts lack of rovers is severely exposed in wet conditions despite improved commitment vis a vis recent weeks 45 Semi finals Edit First semi finalSunday 5 September 11 45 am Swan Districts 18 8 116 def by Subiaco 20 15 135 Subiaco Oval crowd 13 187 Subiaco with Heatley kicking his hundredth goal kick 16 4 100 after an inaccurate first half but need six of the last seven goals to give Swans their sixth consecutive finals defeat 46 Second semi finalSunday 5 September 2 15 pm West Perth 14 7 91 def by Claremont 15 12 102 Subiaco Oval crowd 13 187 Since the two semi finals were played at the same venue on the same day the attendance figure is the same Claremont kick four goals in seven minutes early in the last quarter to overcome their West Perth bogey from the home and away season against a team lacking 1992 Sandover winner Robbie West 47 Preliminary final Edit Preliminary finalSaturday 11 September 2 15 pm West Perth 21 8 134 def Subiaco 15 12 102 Subiaco Oval crowd 11 325 A best on ground performance by Robbie West 21 kicks nine handballs five goals plus repeated time on lapses by Subiaco places West Perth despite Heatley s nine goals in its first Grand Final since 1975 Grand Final Edit Main article 1993 WAFL Grand Final 1993 WAFL Grand FinalSunday 19 September Claremont def West Perth Subiaco Oval crowd 32 404 48 5 4 34 10 7 67 10 10 70 13 14 92 Q1Q2Q3 Final 2 3 15 5 8 38 7 12 54 8 14 62 Umpires Sam Kronja Greg Scroop Simpson Medal Dale Kickett Claremont Morgan 3 Klemm 3 Smith 2 Gerreyn 2 Mitchell Kickett Brendan Green Goals Mifka 2 O Brien Curley Jones Hall Burns Trevor GreenKickett best on ground Malone Scott Edwards Brendan Green Gary Edwards Hendry Best Harris Nelson Mifka Jones West O BrienScott Edwards by field umpires Kronja and Scroop and emergency umpire Trevor Garrett for striking Darren Harris in second quarterClinton Woolf by field umpire Scroop for striking Robbie West in second quarter Reports Andrew Nichols by goal umpire John Hauswirth for instigating a wrestle with Paul Morgan in the second quarterClaremont s halfback and centrelines were too hard to penetrate for the Falcons and Jeff Gieschen s inability to find key forwards ensures a win rated by Neesham as the most satisfying of his four as Tiger coach 49 Notes Edita Owing to redevelopment of Perth Oval for soccer club Perth Glory East Perth moved to Leederville after the 1999 season References Edit Rogers Stephen The Complete Book of VFL Records p 278 ISBN 1862528020 Casellas Ken Falcons Nestled in Promised Land The West Australian 25 April 1994 p 61 a b Lague Steve Blow in Heatley Takes WAFL by Storm The West Australian 1 June 1993 p 88 a b Wilson Ray Coaches Critical of Short Quarters Inside Football 7 April 1993 p 25 a b East Perth Lowest Scores WAFL Footy Facts Most Consecutive Games Between Successive Draws Archived April 15 2014 at the Wayback Machine WAFL Footy Facts Drawn Matches Archived 2014 05 13 at the Wayback Machine Lague Steve Demons Hold Crisis Talks to Settle Row The West Australian 19 April 1993 p 91 Stocks Gary New Look Falcons Now Play to Plan The West Australian 27 April 1993 p 94 Perth Metro Mount Lawley 009225 May 1993 rainfall Duffield Mark Judge Blast Fires Lockyer The West Australian 3 May 1993 p 91 Acott Kent Blackout on the Agenda The West Australian 3 May 1993 p 93 Lague Steve Subi Run Falcons Ragged The West Australian 17 May 1993 p 93 Stocks Gary Narkle Conjures Swans Victory The West Australian 17 May 1993 p 92 Stocks Gary Connell at Home in Lions Den The West Australian 24 May 1993 p 90 Marsh David Spinks Tips Scales The West Australian 24 May 1993 p 91 Duffield Mark O Brien All Class in Upset Win The West Australian 24 May 1993 p 91 Lague Steve Sharks Late Goal Blitz Sinks Perth The West Australian 24 May 1993 p 91 McGrath John Best Still Ahead for Soaring Falcons The West Australian 31 May 1993 p 91 WAFL Footy Facts Subiaco v East Perth Archived from the original on 19 December 2013 Retrieved 23 December 2013 Stocks Gary Swans at Full Throttle The West Australian 31 May 1993 p 91 Lague Steve Subiaco Runners the Key to Victory The West Australian 8 June 1993 p 102 Stocks Gary Matera Sparks Bulldogs The West Australian 14 June 1993 p 79 West Australian Football League Highest Scores Archived from the original on 24 December 2013 Retrieved 23 December 2013 Stocks Gary Gieschen Rallies His Troops The West Australian 21 June 1993 p 75 Stocks Gary Hall Lifts Flying Falcons to Brink of Finals The West Australian 28 June 1993 p 75 Lague Steve Harris Leads Falcons Fightback The West Australian 5 July 1993 p 66 Stocks Gary Wolf Too Tough for Bulldogs The West Australian 5 July 1993 p 66 Stocks Gary Swans on the Rebound The West Australian 12 July 1993 p 83 Reid Russell Kickett Settles into New Role The West Australian 12 July 1993 p 83 Reid Russell Rejuvenated Mifka Sinks Sharks The West Australian 19 July 1993 p 75 Duffield Mark Hastie Gamble Plays Big Dividends The West Australian 19 July 1993 p 75 Lague Steve Ball Makes Lions Pay Dearly for a Shocker The West Australian 26 July 1993 p 79 McGrath John Frustrating Lions at Sunday Best The West Australian 2 August 1993 p 75 Duffield Mark Demon Cummings an Unlikely Hero The West Australian 2 August 1993 p 75 Stocks Gary Caputi Picks Right Time to Find Form The West Australian 9 August 1993 p 80 Reid Russell Gerreyn the Perfect Substitute The West Australian 9 August 1993 p 80 Lague Steve New Role for Subi Puts Snow Back on Top The West Australian 9 August 1993 p 80 Duffield Mark Johnstone Inspires Royals The West Australian 9 August 1993 p 80 Stocks Gary Swans Find a Gem in Donnelly The West Australian 16 August 1993 p 76 Subiaco Biggest Wins West Australian Football League Biggest Crowds Archived from the original on 24 December 2013 Retrieved 23 December 2013 McGrath John Judge Takes a Shot at Critics The West Australian 23 August 1993 p 74 Stocks Gary Macnish Leads Lions Home The West Australian 30 August 1993 p 73 Duffield Mark Speedy Tigers Expose Swans The West Australian 30 August 1993 p 72 Lague Steve Lions Serve Notice with Last Term Blitz The West Australian 6 September 1993 p 78 Duffield Mark Tigers Turn Tables on West Perth The West Australian 6 September 1993 p 78 Duffield Mark Falcons Run into Claremont Wall The West Australian 20 September 1993 p 70 Stocks Gary Neesham Victory the Sweetest of All The West Australian 20 September 1993 p 70External links EditOfficial WAFL website West Australian Football League Season 1993 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1993 WAFL season amp oldid 1050804655, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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