1975 WANFL season

Australian rules football season

Australian rules football season
1975 WAFL season
Teams8
Premiers‹See Tfd›West Perth
15th premiership
Minor premiers‹See Tfd›West Perth
8th minor premiership
Sandover MedallistAlan Quartermaine (‹See Tfd›East Perth)
Bernie Naylor MedallistMurray Couper (‹See Tfd›Perth)
Matches played88
← 1974
1976 →

The 1975 WANFL season was the 91st season of senior Australian rules football in Perth and the forty-fifth as the “Western Australian National Football League”. The season saw West Perth, after unexpectedly falling to last in 1974, rise under former Fitzroy coach Graham Campbell to a remarkable premiership win over South Fremantle by a record 104 points in front of what was then the biggest WANFL crowd on record and has since been only exceeded by the 1979 Grand Final. The Bulldogs, apart from Claremont the least successful WANFL club between 1957 and 1974, rose with arrival of Aboriginal stars Stephen Michael and Maurice Rioli to their first finals appearance in five years and began their greatest era since their golden days of the middle 1950s. With East Perth, revitalised after injuries affected their 1974 campaign, and the inconsistent but at times incomparable Swan Districts, they comprised a top four that remained unchanged for the final fourteen rounds.

East Fremantle, plagued by injuries to Doug Green[1] and a broken wrist for Brian Peake during the first game against West Perth,[2] falling from premiers to fifth and Perth after a slow start of five consecutive losses from runners-up to sixth. Subiaco fell from fourth to second-last and begun a bleak era with no subsequent finals appearance until 1985, but owing to the loss of Featherby, Robertson and Fitzpatrick to retirement or the VFL, critics generally predicted this before the season. Despite recruiting champion East Perth and Richmond player and coach Mal Brown, Claremont collected their fourteenth and to this date last wooden spoon by an equal-record six clear games, as Brown set a record of fifteen matches suspended during the season – beating another Tiger recruit from East Perth in “Nails” Western forty-three seasons previously.[3]

Home-and-away season

Round 1

Round 1
Saturday, 5 April ‹See Tfd›Perth 16.8 (104) def. by ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 17.15 (117) Lathlain Park (crowd: 11753)
Saturday, 5 April ‹See Tfd›West Perth 13.13 (91) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Perth 14.13 (97) Leederville Oval (crowd: 13771)
Saturday, 5 April ‹See Tfd›Claremont 9.11 (65) def. by ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 19.15 (129) Claremont Oval (crowd: 8316)
Saturday, 5 April ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 15.16 (106) def. ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 14.14 (98) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 13876)

The opening round attendance of 47,716 was a WAFL record beating the 45,525 who attended the opening day of 1968.[4]

Round 2

Round 2
Saturday, 12 April ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 17.18 (120) def. ‹See Tfd›East Perth 9.11 (65) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 11368)
Saturday, 12 April ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 13.20 (98) def. ‹See Tfd›Perth 11.12 (78) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 9675)
Saturday, 12 April ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 19.17 (131) def. ‹See Tfd›Claremont 9.11 (65) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 11635)
Saturday, 12 April ‹See Tfd›West Perth 14.16 (100) def. ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 12.5 (77) Leederville Oval (crowd: 10726)

South Fremantle’s great speed demolished the taller Royal team, whilst veteran Bob Carson held a ruck division previously viewed too weak.[5]

Round 3

Round 3
Saturday, 19 April ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 18.24 (132) def. ‹See Tfd›Perth 15.11 (101) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 10320)
Saturday, 19 April ‹See Tfd›East Perth 12.9 (81) def. by ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 13.8 (86) Perth Oval (crowd: 10336)
Saturday, 19 April ‹See Tfd›Claremont 9.12 (66) def. by ‹See Tfd›West Perth 14.9 (93) Claremont Oval (crowd: 7158)
Saturday, 19 April ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 23.15 (153) def. ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 11.11 (77) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 10790)

Swans’ high-power attacking football led by Brian Close and veteran Bill Walker’s old-fashioned drop and stab kicks moves the club to early premiership favouritism.[6]

Round 4 (Anzac Day)

Round 4
Friday, 25 April ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 10.13 (73) def. by ‹See Tfd›West Perth 14.11 (95) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 15889)
Saturday, 26 April ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 12.13 (85) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 18.15 (123) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 18278)
Saturday, 26 April ‹See Tfd›Perth 13.16 (94) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Perth 20.12 (132) Lathlain Park (crowd: 10098)
Saturday, 26 April ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 18.25 (133) def. ‹See Tfd›Claremont 8.9 (57) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 7772)
  • In Bill Dempsey’s 300th WANFL match, West Perth end Subiaco’s unexpected unbeaten beginning. David Parkin, now cleared from Hawthorn, plays in the reserves whilst coaching Subiaco’s league team.[7]
  • The crowd of 15,889 was then a record for a home-and-away game at Subiaco Oval.[7]
  • After Walker left the field, Swans had no answer to the pace of South Fremantle, who took their place at the top.[8]

Round 5

Round 5
Saturday, 3 May ‹See Tfd›West Perth 18.10 (118) def. ‹See Tfd›Perth 13.19 (97) Leederville Oval (crowd: 9242)
Saturday, 3 May ‹See Tfd›East Perth 23.15 (153) def. ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 16.9 (105) Perth Oval (crowd: 13596)
Saturday, 3 May ‹See Tfd›Claremont 10.12 (72) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 21.15 (141) Claremont Oval (crowd: 8707)
Saturday, 3 May ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 13.26 (104) def. ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 13.4 (82) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 8759)

Round 6

Round 6
Saturday, 10 May ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 9.6 (60) def. by ‹See Tfd›West Perth 18.12 (120) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 13340)
Saturday, 10 May ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 16.19 (115) def. ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 6.16 (52) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 11735)
Saturday, 10 May ‹See Tfd›East Perth 18.14 (122) def. ‹See Tfd›Claremont 10.11 (71) Perth Oval (crowd: 7756)
Saturday, 10 May ‹See Tfd›Perth 19.15 (129) def. ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 16.9 (105) Lathlain Park (crowd: 8565)

West Perth kick ten unanswered goals after being only two points ahead to demolish Swan Districts in the last quarter.[9]

Round 7

Round 7
Saturday, 17 May ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 17.12 (114) def. ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 12.13 (85) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 8284)
Saturday, 17 May ‹See Tfd›West Perth 18.15 (123) def. ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 9.13 (67) Leederville Oval (crowd: 18974)
Saturday, 17 May ‹See Tfd›Claremont 9.10 (64) def. by ‹See Tfd›Perth 15.14 (104) Claremont Oval (crowd: 6457)
Saturday, 17 May ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 19.13 (127) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Perth 19.16 (130) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 9199)

Subiaco use gold guernseys with maroon lions for the first time, after their maroon ones (with gold lion) were partially missing and the published number sequence broken.[10]

Round 8

Round 8
Saturday, 24 May ‹See Tfd›Perth 26.10 (166) def. ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 11.15 (81) Lathlain Park (crowd: 9880)
Saturday, 24 May ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 9.13 (67) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Perth 17.17 (119) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 10937)
Saturday, 24 May ‹See Tfd›West Perth 13.19 (97) def. ‹See Tfd›Claremont 13.3 (81) Leederville Oval (crowd: 6971)
Saturday, 24 May ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 20.16 (136) def. by ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 26.12 (168) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 8239)

Murray Couper kicks thirteen goals in a surprise thrashing, the equal second largest tally by any Perth player behind Albert Gook’s sixteen against West Perth in 1939.[11]

Round 9 (Foundation Day)

Round 9
Saturday, 31 May ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 8.21 (69) def. ‹See Tfd›Perth 9.10 (64) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 11435)
Saturday, 31 May ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 6.11 (47) def. by ‹See Tfd›Claremont 10.7 (67) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 7370)
Monday, 2 June ‹See Tfd›East Perth 13.11 (89) def. by ‹See Tfd›West Perth 17.7 (109) Perth Oval (crowd: 20363)
Monday, 2 June ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 15.12 (102) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 19.21 (135) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 16865)

On the first really wet day of the season, Swan Districts defeat Perth at Bassendean for the first time since April 1967,[12] ending an 11-match winning streak that remains the second-longest at the ground and the longest until 2007.[13]

Round 10

Round 10
Saturday, 7 June ‹See Tfd›East Perth 15.8 (98) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 15.14 (104) Perth Oval (crowd: 8823)
Saturday, 7 June ‹See Tfd›Perth 11.15 (81) def. ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 7.7 (49) Lathlain Park (crowd: 7390)
Saturday, 7 June ‹See Tfd›Claremont 3.12 (30) def. by ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 15.22 (112) Claremont Oval (crowd: 8220)
Saturday, 7 June ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 18.16 (124) def. ‹See Tfd›West Perth 16.12 (108) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 10593)

Claremont do not kick their first goal until time-on in the third quarter, and kick their lowest score for thirty years.[14] Only inaccuracy by full-forward Max George, who kicked 4.7 (31), saves them from further humiliation.[15]

Round 11

Round 11
Saturday, 14 June ‹See Tfd›West Perth 18.21 (129) def. ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 14.10 (94) Leederville Oval (crowd: 6967)
Saturday, 14 June ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 18.18 (126) def. ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 13.18 (96) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 8501)
Saturday, 14 June ‹See Tfd›East Perth 20.11 (131) def. ‹See Tfd›Perth 15.16 (106) Perth Oval (crowd: 7860)
Saturday, 14 June ‹See Tfd›Claremont 12.13 (85) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 13.16 (94) Claremont Oval (crowd: 4960)

Round 12

Round 12
Saturday, 21 June ‹See Tfd›Perth 18.16 (124) def. ‹See Tfd›West Perth 9.7 (61) Lathlain Park (crowd: 9056)
Saturday, 21 June ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 16.18 (114) def. ‹See Tfd›East Perth 8.16 (64) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 11370)
Saturday, 21 June ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 19.27 (141) def. ‹See Tfd›Claremont 11.12 (78) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 9606)
Saturday, 21 June ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 16.17 (113) def. ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 13.21 (99) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 7418)

Round 13

Round 13
Saturday, 28 June ‹See Tfd›West Perth 20.9 (129) def. ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 10.11 (71) Leederville Oval (crowd: 11986)
Saturday, 28 June ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 11.11 (77) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 12.17 (89) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 9076)
Saturday, 28 June ‹See Tfd›Claremont 11.24 (90) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Perth 15.11 (101) Claremont Oval (crowd: 7252)
Saturday, 28 June ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 9.7 (61) def. by ‹See Tfd›Perth 15.17 (107) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 8505)
  • West Perth hold top position by showing that Swan Districts’ reliance on height and weight could not beat the Cardinals’ superior skill.[16]
  • Rovers Wiley and Mitsopoulos exploit a dominant Demon ruck for the Demons’ first win at East Fremantle since 1970 and move the Demons within a game of the top four.[17]

Rodney Burnby does ACL and doesn't play the rest of the season.

Round 14

Round 14
Saturday, 5 July ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 19.22 (136) def. ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 16.13 (109) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 8970)
Saturday, 5 July ‹See Tfd›East Perth 19.11 (125) def. ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 17.19 (121) Perth Oval (crowd: 10152)
Saturday, 12 July ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 15.19 (109) def. ‹See Tfd›West Perth 13.7 (85) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 11253)
Saturday, 12 July ‹See Tfd›Perth 8.18 (66) def. by ‹See Tfd›Claremont 11.10 (76) Lathlain Park (crowd: 7092)
  • Instead of a week’s break during interstate games, the WANFL experimented with the VFL practice of a “split round” over two weekends, but the experiment was not persisted with.
  • At odds of 7/1 against, Claremont win against a strong breeze by holding the in-form Perth, who earlier recorded seven consecutive behinds during the second quarter.[18]

Round 15

Round 15
Saturday, 19 July ‹See Tfd›Perth 13.10 (88) def. by ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 13.14 (92) Lathlain Park (crowd: 7321)
Saturday, 19 July ‹See Tfd›East Perth 16.20 (116) def. ‹See Tfd›West Perth 8.14 (62) Perth Oval (crowd: 9010)
Saturday, 19 July ‹See Tfd›Claremont 16.14 (110) def. ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 9.22 (76) Claremont Oval (crowd: 5018)
Saturday, 19 July ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 11.14 (80) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 17.19 (121) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 9643)

A week of studying coaching tactics with future champion Essendon coach Kevin Sheedy pays off for the Royals, whose get-the-ball tactics given them eleven free kicks for holding-the ball in the first quarter and carry on to knock West Perth from top position.[19]

Round 16

Round 16
Saturday, 26 July ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 17.19 (121) def. ‹See Tfd›East Perth 10.18 (78) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 12629)
Saturday, 26 July ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 15.10 (100) def. ‹See Tfd›Perth 13.11 (89) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 5,140)
Saturday, 26 July ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 16.15 (111) def. ‹See Tfd›Claremont 11.7 (73) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 7620)
Saturday, 26 July ‹See Tfd›West Perth 14.23 (107) def. ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 9.13 (67) Leederville Oval (crowd: 7017)

An all-in-brawl at Fremantle Oval after an altercation on the half-time siren, in which Bulldog captain Ciccosto is hit by an onlooker, is followed by a 10.7 to 0.5 third quarter by South Fremantle who move clear on top.[20]

Round 17

Round 17
Saturday, 2 August ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 12.17 (89) def. by ‹See Tfd›Perth 14.15 (99) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 8575)
Saturday, 2 August ‹See Tfd›East Perth 18.22 (130) def. ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 14.4 (88) Perth Oval (crowd: 7236)
Saturday, 2 August ‹See Tfd›Claremont 13.10 (88) def. by ‹See Tfd›West Perth 15.18 (108) Claremont Oval (crowd: 7249)
Saturday, 2 August ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 29.20 (194) def. ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 14.13 (97) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 7320)

Swan Districts kick their highest score on record to that point, beating a previous record from 1961 against South Fremantle.[21] Their 11.7 (73) is still the largest last-quarter score at Bassendean Oval.[13] Brian Close, playing as a rover, kicked ten goals – still a record for Swans against East Fremantle.[22]

Round 18

Round 18
Saturday, 9 August ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 14.10 (94) def. ‹See Tfd›West Perth 10.22 (82) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 6561)
Saturday, 9 August ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 19.11 (125) def. ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 9.10 (64) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 12761)
Saturday, 9 August ‹See Tfd›Perth 14.18 (102) def. ‹See Tfd›East Perth 12.12 (84) Lathlain Park (crowd: 7487)
Saturday, 9 August ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 23.19 (157) def. ‹See Tfd›Claremont 11.7 (73) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 4520)

Round 19

Round 19
Saturday, 16 August ‹See Tfd›West Perth 13.14 (92) def. ‹See Tfd›Perth 12.5 (77) Leederville Oval (crowd: 7020)
Saturday, 16 August ‹See Tfd›East Perth 12.16 (88) def. ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 9.18 (72) Perth Oval (crowd: 8561)
Saturday, 16 August ‹See Tfd›Claremont 10.11 (71) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 11.19 (85) Claremont Oval (crowd: 4617)
Saturday, 16 August ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 10.16 (76) def. ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 9.6 (60) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 3447)

In wet conditions, East Perth trail 2.4 (16) to 7.7 (49) during the second quarter, but hold Swan Districts goalless after half-time as Peter Spencer and Larry Kickett established an iron grip on the middle of the ground.[23] It would become the last time a WA(N)FL team was goalless in the second half until 1983.

Round 20

Round 20
Saturday, 23 August ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 22.13 (145) def. ‹See Tfd›West Perth 5.9 (39) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 8750)
Saturday, 23 August ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 9.7 (61) def. by ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 13.17 (95) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 5078)
Saturday, 23 August ‹See Tfd›East Perth 19.15 (129) def. ‹See Tfd›Claremont 11.16 (82) Perth Oval (crowd: 5048)
Saturday, 23 August ‹See Tfd›Perth 10.14 (74) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 13.9 (87) Lathlain Park (crowd: 3727)
  • With Garry Sidebottom exploiting West Perth’s lack of physical strength to dominate the ruck and kick five goals resting in attack, Swan Districts’ muster a superb win in mud and rain to take top position ahead of the other three finalists by percentage.[24]
  • West Perth’s score remains their lowest against Swan Districts,[22] and until 1983 was the lowest by any visiting team at Bassendean Oval.[13]

Round 21

Round 21
Saturday, 30 August ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 19.17 (131) def. ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 15.14 (104) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 10048)
Saturday, 30 August ‹See Tfd›West Perth 20.19 (139) def. ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 16.14 (110) Leederville Oval (crowd: 12260)
Saturday, 30 August ‹See Tfd›Claremont 16.18 (114) def. by ‹See Tfd›Perth 22.14 (146) Claremont Oval (crowd: 4288)
Saturday, 30 August ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 17.30 (132) def. ‹See Tfd›East Perth 19.8 (122) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 7973)
  • West Perth’s win, with a forward line revitalised by Barry Day and Norm Knell, jumps them from fourth to top as the other two finalists lose.[25] The Cardinals were to beat their highest score for 1975 in each of their final three matches.
  • Subiaco send Peter Burton out a winner[a], as the retiring ruckman dominates Swans’ danger players Sidebottom and Bob Beecroft.[26]
  • East Fremantle’s win is the biggest with two fewer goals in WA(N)FL history.[27] It is the most recent senior WA(N)FL win with two fewer goals, though in 1984 South Fremantle won with three fewer goals.

Ladder

1975 ladder
Pos Team Pld W L D PF PA PP Pts
1 ‹See Tfd›West Perth (P) 21 14 7 0 2087 1926 108.4 56
2 ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 21 13 8 0 2345 1994 117.6 52
3 ‹See Tfd›East Perth 21 13 8 0 2254 2064 109.2 52
4 ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 21 13 8 0 2199 2026 108.5 52
5 ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 21 10 11 0 2195 2308 95.1 40
6 ‹See Tfd›Perth 21 9 12 0 2096 1952 107.4 36
7 ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 21 9 12 0 1834 1995 91.9 36
8 ‹See Tfd›Claremont 21 3 18 0 1578 2323 67.9 12
Source: WAFL Footy Facts
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) percentage; 3) number of points for.
(P) Premiers

Finals

First semi-final

First semi-final
Saturday, 6 September ‹See Tfd›East Perth 10.14 (74) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 21.13 (139) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 25,570)

Bob Carson’s defeat of Ron Alexander and the roving of Ciccosto and Maurice Rioli overwhelm a Royal side decimated by the tactical gamble of alternating centreman Spencer as a rover.[28]

Second semi-final

Second semi-final
Saturday, 13 September ‹See Tfd›West Perth 20.22 (142) def. ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 8.16 (64) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 29,015)

A brilliant first half, including 88 possessions to a mere 49 in the first quarter against the wind, gives West Perth revenge for their Round 20 caning.[29]

Preliminary final

Preliminary final
Saturday, 20 September ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 12.21 (93) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 15.16 (106) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 23,986)

Swans’ wasteful 3.11 (29) with the wind in the first quarter and the dominance of South Fremantle ruck-rover Eddie Bauskis decides a low-standard if tough match.[30]

Grand Final

1975 WANFL Grand Final
Saturday, 27 September ‹See Tfd›West Perth def. ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle Subiaco Oval (crowd: 52,322) [31]
5.1 (31)
9.6 (60)
13.12 (90)
23.17 (155)
Q1
Q2
Q3
Final
3.2 (20)
4.6 (30)
7.8 (50)
7.9 (51)
Umpires: Ross Capes
Simpson Medal: Mel Whinnen (‹See Tfd›West Perth)
Day 8, Watling 5, Knell 4, Smeath 4, Wilson, Hillier Goals Ray Bauskis 3, Eddie Bauskis, Haddow, Rioli, Ciccotosto
Whinnen, Dempsey, Watling, Hillier, Prunster, Sheridan, Smeath, Logan Best Barrett, Eddie Bauskis, McKay, Haddow, Magro, Carson

In front of a record Grand Final crowd, West Perth, with veterans Whinnen and Dempsey dominating their on-ball division, overwhelm South Fremantle in the second half to record the largest Grand Final win on record.[32]

Notes

a Burton would return briefly in 1976 to help the struggling Lions.

References

  1. ^ Lee, Jack; Celebrating 100 Years of Tradition: East Fremantle Football Club 1898-1997; pp. 365-366
  2. ^ East, Alan; ‘Peake in Attack’; The West Australian, 2 June 1975, p. 46
  3. ^ Casey, Kevin; The Tigers’ tale : the origins and history of the Claremont Football Club; p. 133 ISBN 0-646-26498-2
  4. ^ Christian, Geoff; ‘Football Arrived with Record Crowd’; The West Australian, April 7, 1975, p. 40
  5. ^ Casellas, Ken; ‘South Cut East Perth to Ribbons’; The West Australian, 14 April 1975, p. 54
  6. ^ East, Alan; ‘Who’s Going to Stop Swan Districts’; The West Australian, 21 April 1975, p. 55
  7. ^ a b Christian, Geoff; ‘West Perth Prick the Bubble at Subiaco’; The West Australian, 26 April 1975, p. 92
  8. ^ Hopkins, Collin; ‘Swans Cut Back to Size by Pacy South’; The West Australian, 28 April 1975, p. 47
  9. ^ Christian, Geoff; ‘Swans Collapse Under Pressure’; The West Australian, 12 May 1975, p. 42
  10. ^ ‘No Firm Policy on Guernseys’; The West Australian, 19 May 1975, p. 43
  11. ^ East, Alan (2005); From Redlegs to Demons : A History of the Perth Football Club from 1899; p. 215
  12. ^ East, Alan; “Swans Find Something Extra at the Right Time”; The West Australian, 2 June 1975, p. 47
  13. ^ a b c WAFL Footy Facts: Bassendean Oval Archived September 21, 2013, at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Claremont: Lowest Scores
  15. ^ Wright, Frank; ‘Swans Get Little Opposition’; The West Australian, 9 June 1975, p. 43
  16. ^ Hopkins, Colin; ‘Take That, Swan Districts’; The West Australian, 30 June 1975, p. 55
  17. ^ Christian, Geoff; ‘Perth Nudge Closer to Four’; The West Australian, 30 June 1975, p. 54
  18. ^ East, Alan; ‘Perth Given Lesson in Will-to-Win’; The West Australian, pp. 59-60
  19. ^ East, Alan; ‘Kevin Sheedy Sets East Perth Alight’; The West Australian, 21 July 1975, p. 54
  20. ^ ‘Big Brawl at Fremantle Oval’; The West Australian, 28 July 1975, pp. 1, 56
  21. ^ "WAFL Footy Facts: Swan Districts Game Records". Archived from the original on 28 September 2013. Retrieved 29 September 2013.
  22. ^ a b "WAFL Footy Facts: Swan Districts v Each Opponent". Archived from the original on 30 September 2013. Retrieved 19 December 2013.
  23. ^ Christian, Geoff; ‘All Credit to East Perth for Courage’; The West Australian, 18 August 1975, p. 59
  24. ^ Christian, Geoff; ‘Rain, West Perth No Trouble to Swans’; The West Australian, 25 August 1975, p. 35
  25. ^ Christian, Geoff; ‘West Perth Hit Top at the Right Time’; The West Australian, 1 September 1975, p. 63
  26. ^ East, Alan; ‘Spotlight on Burton’; The West Australian, 1 September 1975, p. 62
  27. ^ "WAFL Footy Facts: Wins with Less Goals". Archived from the original on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 29 September 2013.
  28. ^ Christian, Geoff; ‘South Followers Open Door to Victory’; The West Australian, 8 September 1975, p. 47
  29. ^ Christian, Geoff; ‘How to Play Football – By West Perth’; The West Australian, 15 September 1975, p. 59
  30. ^ Christian, Geoff; ‘South Not in Top Form But Still Too Good’; The West Australian, 22 September 1975, p. 55
  31. ^ Christian, Geoff; ‘No-Contest at the End: Copybook Display by West Perth’; in The West Australian, 29 September 1975, p. 44
  32. ^ Christian, Geoff; ‘Whinnen, Dempsey the Master Craftsmen’; in The West Australian, 29 September 1975, p. 42
  • Official WAFL website
  • Western Australian National Football League (WANFL), 1975
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