1997 Westar Rules season

Australian rules football season
1997 WAFL season
Teams9
Premiers‹See Tfd›South Fremantle
11th premiership
Minor premiers‹See Tfd›South Fremantle
10th minor premiership
Sandover MedallistBrady Anderson (‹See Tfd›East Perth)
Bernie Naylor MedallistJon Dorotich (‹See Tfd›South Fremantle)
Matches played94
← 1996 (WAFL)
1998 →

The 1997 Westar Rules season was the 113th season of senior football in Perth, Western Australia. It featured a number of dramatic changes to a competition whose popularity had been dramatically reduced by the drain of players to the Eagles and Dockers of the AFL. The competition's name was changed from the prosaic ‘West Australian Football League’ to ‘Westar Rules’ in an attempt to update the local competition for a more sophisticated audience.[1] However, this change became regarded as unsuccessful and was reversed as per recommendations of the “Fong Report”[2] after four seasons. West Perth also changed their name to Joondalup to recognise their location in Perth's growing northwestern suburbs, but changed back after the ninth round.

More significantly, after intense debate for a number of years about whether to expand or contract the competition,[3] a new team, ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder, was added, despite requests from Peel's licence holders that they not be required to enter before 1998.[4] This was the first change to the number of teams in the WA(N)FL for sixty-three years.

In their first eighteen seasons, Peel won only seventy-three matches out of 354 (a winning percentage of 20.6%) and never had a winning season, finishing with nine wooden spoons. Along with occasional serious financial difficulties,[5] this produced serious criticism of the decision in subsequent years, but Peel qualified for the finals for the first time in 2015, and won the premiership the following year. A proposal to limit Westar to players under 25 and a few older veterans in order to allow a better flow of players to the AFL[6] was made during the season but rejected.

Affected badly by the erratic availability of a number of AFL-listed players,[7] reigning premiers Claremont had their worst season since 1975 and equalled East Fremantle's decline in 1980 from premiers to only five wins, whilst Swan Districts, brilliant but erratic during 1996, began with nine wins in their first ten matches before losing eight of their next nine to miss the finals for the third successive season.

On a more positive side, the season saw ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle win its first premiership in seventeen years in a thrilling comeback Grand Final win over traditional rivals East Fremantle, and ‹See Tfd›Perth have (after a disastrous opening) its only winning season since 1988, and culminating in its last finals appearance until 2020.

Home-and-away season

Round 1 (Easter weekend)

Round 1
Saturday, 29 March ‹See Tfd›Perth 2.5 (17) def. by ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 11.9 (75) Lathlain Park (crowd: 1317)
Sunday, 30 March ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 8.4 (52) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 25.10 (160) Rushton Park (crowd: 5781)
Monday, 31 March ‹See Tfd›Claremont 11.7 (73) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Perth 11.18 (84) Claremont Oval (crowd: 2686)
Monday, 31 March Joondalup 11.9 (75) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 11.15 (81) Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2841)
Bye
‹See Tfd›Subiaco
  • Playing during an unseasonal thunderstorm,[8] Perth kick its lowest score since 1952 and second-lowest since 1919.[9] Its two goals were both from free kicks for ruck infringements, the first at the twenty-minute mark of the third quarter and the other in time-on of the last.[10]
  • The sole lower score Swan Districts have ever held an opponent to is Claremont’s 1.7 (13) the previous season; the previous lowest by the Demons against the Swans was a winning score of 5.11 (41) after being goalless at half-time in 1973.
  • Injury-plagued ruckman Travis Edmonds dominates along with forward Bernard Carney, Brendan Retzlaff, Troy Ugle and Stewart Kestrel who had not been together in 1995 and 1996[10]
  • Debutant Peel kick the first goal against the Bulldogs and are in front until early in the second quarter before being overwhelmed[11]

Round 2

Round 2
Saturday, 5 April ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 15.18 (108) def. ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 7.9 (51) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1448)
Saturday, 5 April ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 11.13 (79) def. by ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 16.11 (107) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1779)
Saturday, 5 April ‹See Tfd›Claremont 6.10 (46) def. by ‹See Tfd›Perth 13.8 (86) Claremont Oval (crowd: 1138)
Saturday, 5 April ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 20.19 (139) def. Joondalup 8.5 (53) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 2107)
Bye
‹See Tfd›East Perth

Following their shocker against Swans, Perth coach Wayne Blackwell punished his side with a five-hour Tuesday training session and they respond with an excellent win in slippery conditions.[12]

Round 3

Round 3
Saturday, 12 April ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 15.14 (104) def. ‹See Tfd›Claremont 11.7 (73) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 2183)
Saturday, 12 April ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 27.20 (182) def. ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 5.5 (35) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1531)
Saturday, 12 April Joondalup 8.14 (62) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Perth 14.13 (97) Bunbury (crowd: 2212)
Bye
‹See Tfd›East Fremantle, ‹See Tfd›Perth, ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle
  • Subiaco had their biggest ever win in open-age WAFL football, beating their famous record from the 1959 first semi-final, though they have beaten the record several times during their 2000s WAFL dynasty.[13]
  • Troy Ugle does two brilliant shepherds and two difficult snap shots to derail a comeback by Claremont that threatened to give the Tigers their first win.[14]

Round 4

Round 4
Friday, 18 April (7:30 pm) ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 17.14 (116) def. ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 11.9 (75) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 5328)
Saturday, 19 April ‹See Tfd›Perth 11.13 (79) def. ‹See Tfd›East Perth 5.12 (42) Lathlain Park (crowd: 2603)
Saturday, 19 April ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 9.9 (63) def. by ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 26.18 (174) Rushton Park (crowd: 2006)
Saturday, 19 April Joondalup 15.13 (103) def. ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 8.9 (57) Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2202)
Bye
‹See Tfd›Claremont

For the first time, a night match is played at Fremantle Oval, and the experiment is an instant success that later led to lights at most league venues.[15]

Round 5 (Anzac Day)

Round 5
Friday, 25 April ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 8.8 (56) def. by ‹See Tfd›Perth 25.11 (161) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1413)
Friday, 25 April ‹See Tfd›East Perth 17.12 (114) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 19.11 (125) Perth Oval (crowd: 2324)
Saturday, 26 April Joondalup 27.23 (185) def. ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 9.11 (65) Arena Joondalup (crowd: 1383)
Saturday, 26 April ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 16.11 (107) def. ‹See Tfd›Claremont 14.14 (98) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1638)
Bye
‹See Tfd›Swan Districts
  • The Subiaco v Perth game was curtain-raiser to an AFL game between Fremantle and St Kilda, an experiment regarded as a success but not supported by Westar Rules’ clubs.[16]
  • Peel defender Scott Simister kicks an amazing 85-metre goal after a 50 metre penalty on the final siren against Joondalup.[17]

Round 6

Round 6
Saturday, 3 May ‹See Tfd›Claremont 15.7 (97) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 16.13 (109) Claremont Oval (crowd: 1347)
Saturday, 3 May ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 9.15 (69) def. ‹See Tfd›East Perth 10.8 (68) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1889)
Saturday, 3 May ‹See Tfd›Perth 10.11 (71) def. by Joondalup 13.9 (87) Lathlain Park (crowd: 2156)
Saturday, 3 May ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 14.13 (97) def. by ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 18.7 (115) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2076)
Bye
‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder
  • The return of “Spider” Burton helps the Lions contrive a win by the narrowest of margins after being nineteen points behind with less than ten minutes remaining. East Perth’s errors cost it severely.[18]
  • Former Falcon forward Troy Wilson is moved to defence and Joondalup beat the Demons due to his power.[19]

Round 7

Round 7
Saturday, 10 May ‹See Tfd›Perth 13.10 (88) def. ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 11.8 (74) Lathlain Park (crowd: 1443)
Saturday, 10 May ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 26.17 (173) def. ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 8.7 (55) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1700)
Saturday, 10 May ‹See Tfd›Claremont 13.18 (96) def. ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 7.12 (54) Claremont Oval (crowd: 1467)
Sunday, 11 May ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 20.11 (131) def. ‹See Tfd›East Perth 17.10 (112) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 2656)
Bye
Joondalup
  • Peel Thunder set a WAFL record of four consecutive losses by over 100 points. Despite continued woeful on-field performances the Thunder have never equalled this debut-season ignominy.[20]
  • Jon Dorotich kicks 9.8 (62) as South Fremantle kick eleven goals to one after Peel showed some improvement for three quarters.[21]
  • Aided by five AFL discards, reigning premiers Claremont win its first game for 1997, with ruckman Greg Egan defeating a higher-profile relegation from the AFL in “Spider” Burton.[22]

Round 8

Round 8
Saturday, 17 May ‹See Tfd›East Perth 9.10 (64) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 15.9 (99) Perth Oval (crowd: 1862)
Saturday, 17 May ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 23.14 (152) def. ‹See Tfd›Perth 10.7 (67) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2204) [23]
Saturday, 17 May Joondalup 18.12 (120) def. ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 10.12 (72) Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2734)
Saturday, 17 May ‹See Tfd›Claremont 14.11 (95) def. by ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 14.14 (98) Anniversary Park (crowd: 1005)
Bye
‹See Tfd›Subiaco
  • Peel Thunder win one of only two games during their first three seasons, beating the reigning premiers in a match played to celebrate the centenary of the satellite town of Rockingham.[24] Their first “home” win was not until 2000, and ironically was also against the Tigers.
  • The extremely small size of Anniversary Park prevented the running game that had made the Thunder look third-rate from establishing itself.[24]
  • Jon Dorotich kicks 13.2 for South Fremantle in their big win over Perth.
  • Fremantle-listed ruckman Matthew Whitelaw thrashes Sandover hopeful Travis Edmonds as Joondalup end Swans’ unbeaten start by kicking the last twelve goals[25]

Round 9

Round 9
Saturday, 24 May ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 10.10 (70) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 18.17 (125) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1399)
Saturday, 24 May ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 16.15 (111) def. ‹See Tfd›Perth 7.10 (52) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 1938) [26]
Saturday, 24 May ‹See Tfd›Claremont 8.11 (59) def. by Joondalup 14.12 (96) Claremont Oval (crowd: 1119)
Saturday, 24 May ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 11.5 (71) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Perth 12.22 (94) Rushton Park (crowd: 1858)
Bye
‹See Tfd›East Fremantle
  • East Perth discard Spiro Mallis effectively ends the reigning premiers’ finals hopes with a superb display on the wing.[27]
  • An inaccurate East Perth hold out Peel in windy conditions but lose key ruckman Jeremy Crough and forward Brady Anderson to injuries, leaving the previous season’s grand finalists appearing troubled.[28]

Round 10 (Foundation Day)

Round 10
Saturday, 31 May ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 22.15 (147) def. ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 6.11 (47) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 981)
Monday, 2 June ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 14.13 (97) def. ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 8.12 (60) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 5531)
Monday, 2 June ‹See Tfd›West Perth 14.8 (92) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Perth 19.14 (128) Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2298)
Bye
‹See Tfd›Claremont, ‹See Tfd›Perth, ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts

West Perth discarded ‘Joondalup’ and return to their long-established club name during the week before this round.

Round 11

Round 11
Saturday, 7 June ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 33.8 (206) def. ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 7.9 (51) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 1844)
Saturday, 7 June ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 10.5 (65) def. by ‹See Tfd›West Perth 18.11 (119) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2035)
Saturday, 7 June ‹See Tfd›Perth 18.9 (117) def. ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 17.7 (109) Lathlain Park (crowd: 1886)
Saturday, 7 June ‹See Tfd›East Perth 16.8 (104) def. ‹See Tfd›Claremont 14.12 (96) Perth Oval (crowd: 2154)
Bye
‹See Tfd›South Fremantle

Swan Districts kick the second most accurate score in WAFL history, with Aboriginal forward Troy Ugle kicking twelve,[29] which despite the Thunder’s continued ineptitude remains a record by one player against them[30]

Round 12

Round 12
Saturday, 14 June ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 9.6 (60) def. by ‹See Tfd›West Perth 14.10 (94) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2341)
Saturday, 14 June ‹See Tfd›Claremont 14.6 (90) def. ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 12.12 (84) Claremont Oval (crowd: 1233)
Saturday, 14 June ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 19.20 (134) def. ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 16.4 (100) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 2252)
Saturday, 14 June ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 6.7 (43) def. by ‹See Tfd›Perth 17.19 (121) Rushton Park (crowd: 1363)
Bye
‹See Tfd›East Perth

Claremont, aided by the return of AFL discards Tony Delaney, Michael Gardiner and Anthony Jones, record a fine win over the eventual Grand finalists.[7]

Round 13

Round 13
Saturday, 21 June ‹See Tfd›West Perth 17.23 (125) def. ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 5.10 (40) Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2057)
Saturday, 21 June ‹See Tfd›Perth 14.12 (96) def. ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 9.11 (65) Lathlain Park (crowd: 1887)
Saturday, 21 June ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 14.7 (91) def. ‹See Tfd›East Perth 9.10 (64) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1785)
Sunday, 22 June ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 10.6 (66) def. by ‹See Tfd›Claremont 17.12 (114) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 2407)
Bye
‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder
  • West Perth thrash Subiaco as a tribute to Wayne “Terror” Dayman, who died in an industrial accident on the Monday, despite losing five players to state duty[31]
  • East Perth fade out against a depleted Shark team after leading 7.8 (50) to 1.3 (9) entering time-on in the second quarter.[32]

Round 14

Round 14
Saturday, 28 June ‹See Tfd›East Perth 24.14 (158) def. ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 7.8 (50) Perth Oval (crowd: 1418)
Saturday, 28 June ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 16.12 (108) def. ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 8.8 (56) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2282)
Saturday, 28 June ‹See Tfd›Perth 11.18 (84) def. by ‹See Tfd›Claremont 13.13 (91) Lathlain Park (crowd: 1739)
Sunday, 29 June ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 8.7 (55) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 28.15 (183) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1347)
Bye
‹See Tfd›West Perth

East Fremantle record their biggest ever win over Subiaco, and also their biggest away win over any opponent.[33]

Round 15

Round 15
Saturday, 5 July ‹See Tfd›Claremont 8.9 (57) v ‹See Tfd›West Perth 14.10 (94) Claremont Oval (crowd: 1520)
Saturday, 5 July ‹See Tfd›East Perth 13.13 (91) def. ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 12.9 (81) Perth Oval (crowd: 2751)
Saturday, 5 July ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 7.4 (46) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 18.14 (122) Rushton Park (crowd: 1249)
Saturday, 5 July ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 10.15 (75) def. by ‹See Tfd›Perth 13.7 (85) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1559)
Bye
‹See Tfd›Subiaco
  • Perth coach Wayne Blackwell is reported for disputing a decision on the sideline, but his team move into the four by breaking down East Fremantle attacks very efficiently.[34]
  • South Fremantle coach John Todd blasts Peel as uncompetitive in a spiteful game with six reports.[35]

Round 16

Round 16
Saturday, 12 July ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 14.9 (93) def. ‹See Tfd›Claremont 9.12 (66) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1184)
Saturday, 12 July ‹See Tfd›West Perth 14.8 (92) def. by ‹See Tfd›Perth 18.9 (117) Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2207)
Saturday, 12 July ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 12.11 (83) drew with ‹See Tfd›East Perth 12.11 (83) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2670)
Saturday, 12 July ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 12.8 (80) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 22.11 (143) Rushton Park (crowd: 1351)
Bye
‹See Tfd›Swan Districts

In an all-day thriller South Fremantle and East Perth played the second and last WASFL/WAFL/Westar Rules draw of the 1990s. The previous drawn match was 406 games ago in April 1993 between the Royals and Claremont.[36] Dorotich kicked 8.2 in a superb display, but East Perth rover Shawn Colbin was penalised for holding the ball on the siren within range when it appeared he may have got rid of the ball.[37]

Round 17

Round 17
Saturday, 19 July ‹See Tfd›West Perth 10.5 (65) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 23.18 (156) Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2338)
Saturday, 19 July ‹See Tfd›Claremont 9.11 (65) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Perth 13.13 (91) Claremont Oval (crowd: 2088)
Saturday, 19 July ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 13.10 (88) def. by ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 17.9 (111) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1841)
Saturday, 19 July ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 11.15 (81) def. by ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 22.17 (149) Rushton Park (crowd: 2085)
Bye
‹See Tfd›Perth

Round 18

Round 18
Saturday, 26 July ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 9.9 (63) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 24.9 (153) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 1919)
Saturday, 26 July ‹See Tfd›East Perth 14.10 (94) def. ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 8.8 (56) Perth Oval (crowd: 1952)
Saturday, 26 July ‹See Tfd›Perth 23.18 (156) def. ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 8.12 (60) Lathlain Park (crowd: 1267)
Saturday, 26 July ‹See Tfd›West Perth 7.15 (57) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 15.15 (105) Arena Joondalup (crowd: 1569)
Bye
‹See Tfd›Claremont

Round 19

Round 19
Saturday, 2 August ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 18.9 (117) def. ‹See Tfd›West Perth 9.9 (63) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1499)
Saturday, 2 August ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 11.9 (75) def. by ‹See Tfd›Perth 28.10 (178) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 2418)
Saturday, 2 August ‹See Tfd›Claremont 22.15 (147) def. ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 3.17 (35) Claremont Oval (crowd: 853)
Saturday, 2 August ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 14.15 (99) def. ‹See Tfd›East Perth 14.6 (90) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2480)
Bye
‹See Tfd›South Fremantle
  • Brett Spinks and Jermaine David kick seven each in a crushing Demon win, whilst Winston Abraham stars in the back pocket.[38]
  • In the best game of the season to date, East Fremantle take top position with a fine win under great pressure.[39]

Round 20

Round 20
Saturday, 9 August ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 13.21 (99) def. ‹See Tfd›Claremont 3.11 (29) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1153)
Saturday, 9 August ‹See Tfd›East Perth 14.10 (94) def. ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 4.6 (30) Perth Oval (crowd: 1523)
Saturday, 9 August ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 6.5 (41) def. by ‹See Tfd›West Perth 8.12 (60) Rushton Park (crowd: 1109)
Sunday, 10 August ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 10.9 (69) def. by ‹See Tfd›Perth 11.23 (89) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1675)
Bye
‹See Tfd›East Fremantle
  • Claremont fail to goal after quarter-time for the second time in three seasons; having done so against West Perth in 1995[40]
  • Crippled by injuries and off-field dissent about who will coach in 1998,[41] Swan Districts kick their lowest score for 29 years[42]
  • Perth move to top position despite kicking ten behinds without the ball moving out of their attacking fifty-metre arc.[43]

Round 21

Round 21
Saturday, 16 August ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 14.13 (97) def. ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 13.11 (89) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1554)
Saturday, 16 August ‹See Tfd›West Perth 12.18 (90) def. ‹See Tfd›Claremont 5.14 (44) Arena Joondalup (crowd: 1551)
Saturday, 16 August ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 14.10 (94) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 18.12 (120) Bassendean Oval (crowd: 1453)
Saturday, 16 August ‹See Tfd›Perth 19.19 (133) def. ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 7.7 (49) Lathlain Park (crowd: 1437)
Bye
‹See Tfd›East Perth

Perth win six consecutive games for the only time since 1977, but lose key forward Brett Spinks to an injury that affects their competitiveness in the following two key matches.[44]

Round 22

Round 22
Saturday, 23 August ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 18.8 (116) def. ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 14.11 (95) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1217)
Saturday, 23 August ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 11.18 (84) def. ‹See Tfd›Claremont 8.6 (54) East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1569)
Saturday, 23 August ‹See Tfd›East Perth 19.9 (123) def. ‹See Tfd›West Perth 11.3 (69) Perth Oval (crowd: 4709)
Saturday, 23 August ‹See Tfd›Perth 10.15 (75) def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 15.15 (105) Lathlain Park (crowd: 3122)
Bye
‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder
  • Dorotich kicks eight goals to reach the century, becoming the oldest player to achieve the feat in WAFL/WANFL/Westar history.[45]
  • Subiaco’s win over Swans seals the top four with West Perth having the last round bye.

Round 23

Round 23
Saturday, 30 August ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 5.17 (47) def. by ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 22.23 (155) Rushton Park (crowd: 1461)
Saturday, 30 August ‹See Tfd›Claremont 11.11 (77) def. by ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 21.17 (143) Claremont Oval (crowd: 1304)
Saturday, 30 August ‹See Tfd›East Perth 18.9 (117) def. ‹See Tfd›Perth 9.10 (64) Perth Oval (crowd: 3708)
Saturday, 30 August (6:30 pm) ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 14.6 (90) def. ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 10.14 (74) Fremantle Oval (crowd: 7688)
Bye
‹See Tfd›West Perth

Peel Thunder lose by 100 points or more for the tenth time in their debut season

Ladder

1997 ladder
Pos Team Pld W L D PF PA PP Pts
1 ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle (P) 20 14 5 1 2144 1549 138.4 58
2 ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 20 13 7 0 2042 1611 126.8 52
3 ‹See Tfd›Perth 20 13 7 0 1936 1593 121.5 52
4 ‹See Tfd›East Perth 20 12 7 1 1912 1585 120.6 50
5 ‹See Tfd›Swan Districts 20 11 9 0 2113 1870 113.0 44
6 ‹See Tfd›West Perth 20 11 9 0 1801 1694 106.3 44
7 ‹See Tfd›Subiaco 20 9 11 0 1852 1912 96.9 36
8 ‹See Tfd›Claremont 20 5 15 0 1567 1805 86.8 20
9 ‹See Tfd›Peel Thunder 20 1 19 0 1120 2868 39.1 4
Source: WAFL Footy Facts
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) percentage; 3) number of points for.
(P) Premiers

Finals series

Semi-finals

First semi-final
Saturday, 6 September (11:20 am) ‹See Tfd›Perth 17.12 (114) def. ‹See Tfd›East Perth 6.11 (47) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 8,918)

The return of centre half-forward Brett Spinks helps Perth reverse their previous loss to East Perth with a crushing victory in windy conditions, led by 100 gamer Toby Jackson.[46]

Second semi-final
Saturday, 6 September ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 7.5 (47) def. by ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle 10.12 (72) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 8,918)
  • Since the two semi-finals were played at the same venue on the same day, the attendance figure is the same.
  • Damian Condon demolishes veteran Dorotich in windy conditions to leave East Fremantle little trouble defeating their neighbours, who score just 3.2 (20) after quarter-time.[47]

Preliminary final

Preliminary final
Sunday, 14 September ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle 19.13 (127) def. ‹See Tfd›Perth 14.6 (90) Subiaco Oval (crowd: 7,585)

Clem Michael’s ruck dominance allows the strong Bulldog midfield to dominate during an eight-goal second quarter burst that Perth never counter.[48]

Grand Final

1997 Westar Rules Grand Final
Saturday, 19 September ‹See Tfd›East Fremantle def. by ‹See Tfd›South Fremantle Subiaco Oval (crowd: 32,371)
5.4 (34)
8.6 (54)
10.10 (70)
11.13 (79)
Q1
Q2
Q3
Final
3.1 (19)
6.2 (38)
8.5 (53)
13.7 (85)
Umpires: Trevor Garrett, Adam Binks, Wayne French
Simpson Medal: David Hynes (‹See Tfd›South Fremantle)

References

  1. ^ Devaney, John; Full Points Footy’s WA Football Companion; p. 96. ISBN 9780955689710
  2. ^ Barker, Anthony J. Behind the Play: A History of Football in Western Australia; pp. 358-360. ISBN 0975242709
  3. ^ See Casey, Kevin (1995); The Tigers’ Tale: the origins and history of the Claremont Football Club, p. 201. ISBN 0646264982
  4. ^ See Lewis, Ross; ‘Margin Could Cost Falcons’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian 11 August 1997
  5. ^ ‘WAFL club Peel Thunder found to have $300,000 loss’
  6. ^ Lewis, Ross; ‘Pair Show Virtues of Age’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 18 August 1997
  7. ^ a b Stocks, Gary; ‘Part-Time Tigers Make a Difference’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 16 June 1997
  8. ^ Perth Metro (Mount Lawley) March 1997 rainfall
  9. ^ Perth: Lowest Scores
  10. ^ a b Lague, Steve; ‘Swans’ Five Steal Show’; in The Game, p. 8; from The West Australian, 31 March 1997
  11. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Strong South Spoil Celebrations’; in The Game, p. 8; from The West Australian, 31 March 1997
  12. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Horror Session Stops Rot’; in The Game, p. 8; from The West Australian, 7 April 1997
  13. ^ Subiaco Football Club: Biggest Wins
  14. ^ ‘Ugle Leads Swans from Brink’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 14 April 1997
  15. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Lights Attract Fans’, in The Game, p. 11 from The West Australian, 21 April 1997
  16. ^ Reid, Russell; ‘Westar Fine for Starters’, in The Game, p. 12 from The West Australian, 28 April 1997
  17. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Simister Steals Joondalup’s Thunder’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 28 April 1997
  18. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Shawcross, Burton Turn Lions Around’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 5 May 1997
  19. ^ Reid, Russell; ‘Wilson Moves Back to the Forefront’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 5 May 1997
  20. ^ "WAFL Footy Facts: Consecutive Losses by 100+". Archived from the original on 15 April 2014. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
  21. ^ Reid, Russell; ‘Thunder Stilled by Growling Bulldogs’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 12 May 1997
  22. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Mitchell Burst Gets Tigers off Mark’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 12 May 1997
  23. ^ Reid, Russell; ‘Late Changes Lead to Easy Bulldogs Win’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 19 May 1997
  24. ^ a b ‘Peel Upholds Local Pride’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 19 May 1997
  25. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Whitelaw Rises to Occasion’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 19 May 1997
  26. ^ Reid, Russell; ‘Edmonds Looks Sandover Material’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 25 May 1997
  27. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Mallis Pivotal in Killing off Tiger Hopes’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 25 May 1997
  28. ^ Duffield, Mark; ‘Victory Is Costly for Royals’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 25 May 1997
  29. ^ "WAFL Footy Facts: Swan Districts v Each Opponent". Archived from the original on 30 September 2013. Retrieved 18 August 2013.
  30. ^ "WAFL Footy Facts: Peel Thunder". Archived from the original on 31 October 2013. Retrieved 12 September 2013.
  31. ^ Lewis, Ross; ‘Spirit of “Terror” Sustains Falcons’ Charge’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian 23 June 1997
  32. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘More Questions than Answers for Royals’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian 23 June 1997
  33. ^ "East Fremantle v Subiaco- Game Records". Archived from the original on 28 September 2013. Retrieved 31 August 2013.
  34. ^ Reid, Russell; ‘Demons Turn Up the Heat’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian 7 July 1997
  35. ^ Lewis, Ross and Lague, Steve; ‘Todd Blasts Thunder’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian 7 July 1997
  36. ^ WAFL Footy Facts: Drawn Matches Archived 2014-05-13 at the Wayback Machine
  37. ^ Lewis, Ross; ‘“Apples” Bears Fruit in a Thriller; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian 14 July 1997
  38. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Demons Blast Swans out of Water’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian 4 August 1997
  39. ^ Stocks, Gary; ‘Sharks Raise Hopes of Centenary Premiership’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian 4 August 1997
  40. ^ Claremont: Lowest Scores
  41. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Swans’ Season Sinks in Mire’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian 11 August 1997
  42. ^ Swan Districts: Lowest Scores
  43. ^ ‘Perth Gets Points for Persistence’; ; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian 11 August 1997
  44. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Spinks Injury Sours Demons’ Win’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 18 August 1997
  45. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Dorotich Helps Himself to a Piece of History’; in The Game, p. 11; from The West Australian, 25 August 1997
  46. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Happy Jackson Marks Milestone’; The Game, p. 11, from The West Australian, 8 September 1997
  47. ^ Reid, Russell; ‘Condon Leads Sharks’ Revival’; The Game, p. 11, from The West Australian, 8 September 1997
  48. ^ Lague, Steve; ‘Bulldogs Bubble in a Champagne Spell’; The Game, p. 11, from The West Australian, 15 September 1997
  • Official WAFL website
  • Westar Rules Season 1997
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