Round 19, 1986 – South Fremantle v West Perth, Fremantle Oval
This
Round 19 match at Fremantle Oval was a match West Perth really had to win to
secure a final-four position, as David Marsh wrote in his match preview in The West Australian on the morning of
the game (see below for the full-text of Marsh’s match preview). On paper it
did not look a difficult proposition for West Perth to win as the club was
sitting on 8 wins, 9 losses, and a draw, with percentage of 89%, compared to
South Fremantle’s 5 wins, 13 losses, and 72%. If West Perth could not win a
game against a rival with such a track record then obviously it had little hope
of ending the year successfully even if it did scrape into the final-four.
South Fremantle was in a rebuilding year with the few older players still
hanging around from the premiership year of 1980, such as Benny Vigona,
entering their twilight years.
One interesting development of the last two years of the
WAFL prior to introduction of West Coast Eagles was the surprising resurgence
of depleted East Perth and South Fremantle sides which were then, by necessity
as much as by choice, filling their senior teams with promising youngsters.
These young players had not yet begun to make a huge impression on the scoreboard
with these two clubs finishing sixth and seventh in 1986. However, both clubs
contained large numbers of promising juniors who would go on to forge
successful VFL/AFL careers. This shows the magnificent ability of the WAFL
clubs, even at this late stage of the game (one year prior to formation of West
Coast), to re-create themselves successfully from within during down years by
turning to talented juniors from the country and metropolitan zones. A read
through the selected teams of both East Perth and South Fremantle in 1986 shows
what great talents were emerging. As David Marsh wrote, SFFC had begun the
season extremely poorly but slowly the young team had begun to gel and pick up
its self-confidence, playing with the enthusiasm of youth mixed with that
indomitable bulldog spirit. Marsh wrote that South Fremantle had inflicted surprise
mid-season defeats upon the eventual premier Subiaco and the eventual
third-placed team Perth. South had won 2 and lost 3 since Round 13. Another
factor counting against West Perth this day was its bad record at Fremantle
Oval, traditionally a graveyard for WPFC teams. Marsh wrote that the Falcons
had not won at this windswept ground in eight years prior to this match. This means
that even in 1982 when West Perth had finished third and in 1985 when West
Perth had finished fourth it had been unable to win against South at South’s
home ground. Because of these factors, West Perth fans who headed to Fremantle
Oval this day in 1986 found it hard to push aside feelings of foreboding.
If
we look at South Fremantle’s nominated team, we can see it included a number of
brilliant young players who would go on to achieve great success in the
VFL/AFL. Starting from the back line and working forward, this included Peter
Sumich at centre-half-back (a first-year player); Mark Bairstow in the centre
(a second-year player); Neil “Nicky” Winmar on the half-forward flank (a
fourth-year player); John Worsfold as ruck-rover (a first-year player); and
Wally Matera as first rover (a fifth-year player). Other players who would not
play VFL/AFL but who had great years at Fremantle Oval included Brad Collard on
the left wing (a third-year player); Matt Sambrailo at full-forward (a
first-year player); Derek Collard in the forward pocket / second rover (a
second-year player); and the 1989 Sandover Medallist Craig Edwards as first
ruckman (a third-year player). This would have been the beginnings of a new
dynasty for South Fremantle had the VFL/AFL not intervened and picked all the
best talent out of the side.
By
contrast, the West Perth team was largely unchanged from the previous year but
just a little older. It had some juniors coming through but not in the same
numbers and not with the same quality as those at the port club. West Perth’s
best young players included John Gastev, Sean King, Dean Laidley, Paul Mifka,
and Craig Turley, all of whom later played for West Coast. Another promising
young player was Darren Bewick, probably the best of the lot, but his great success
at Essendon probably surprised many who had watched him play in the WAFL. His
elder brother Corry returned to West Perth in 1986 and he was one of the best
and most consistent players for the club that year. Claremont player Simon Lill
was really the only recruit of note to come from another WAFL club in 1986. The
East Fremantle premiership player Gavin Wake was a sensational recruit for West
Perth in 1987 but his impact was lost in the year when most football fans had
turned their attentions from the WAFL to West Coast Eagles. If Wake had come
over a year earlier it might have made a big difference as that type of
toughness is hard to come by at West Perth (except for ruckmen) and has always
had to be imported.
Like the 1985 first semi-final (West Perth versus Swan
Districts) this was a demoralizing game to watch for WPFC fans as the result
was never in doubt and the club was just overshadowed and outplayed in pretty
much all positions without being completely disgraced. West Perth trailed 21.12
to 10.9 at three-quarter time and the game was obviously completely over. I remember
sitting and watching this game with my friend 16-year-old Pete C. on the
concrete terraces on the scoreboard wing at around the half-forward flank
position at the city-end of the ground. Pete C. and I were the only remnants
remaining of the West Perth Cheer Squad which had sat behind the northern-end
goals at Leederville Oval during 1984-85. The group had gradually disintegrated
from its peak of 15-20 regulars starting in Round 2 of the 1986 season as people
just naturally drifted apart due to life changes and with no-one making the
mental effort anymore to keep the group together. I only met Pete by chance this
day. Both Pete and I were wearing our usual clothes of long-sleeve replica West
Perth jumpers and jeans. We had a good time chatting as we hadn’t seen each
other for a few months. Pete’s elder brother Mike was nowhere to be seen.
After
all the atmosphere and pressure had left the game in the last quarter, West
Perth kicked six goals to three but still only managed to close the gap to 55
points. WPFC was now in fifth place, six premiership points adrift of
Claremont, and with two games remaining. Most supporters wrote off the club’s
chances of reaching the finals series after this game. The top five players on
the ground were all South Fremantle players, according to Monday’s The West Australian. These included
promising youngsters Wally Matera, Mark Bairstow, and Peter Sumich (this day at
centre-half-back), and the more experienced hands Craig Edwards (enjoying his
life at Fremantle Oval more than his days as a Royal) and Warren Mosconi (who
had made his league debut as long ago as 1981).
The
late Geoff Christian in his match report (full-text reproduced below) remarked
that there was so much young talent at South Fremantle that aging veterans
Benny Vigona and Willie Roe had played in the reserves. Obviously they hadn’t
been needed. Christian made the important observation that while South had many
brilliant individual players on this day it was their “bulldog spirit” that
West Perth just had no hope of matching anywhere south-west of Leederville
Oval. Christian wrote in his match report as follows: “South had plenty of
other individual stars but it were more the spirit and the team co-operation
revealed by this young Bulldogs’ line-up that West Perth found impossible to
match for all but the opening 12 minutes”. Neil Winmar (still not yet called
“Nicky” by the press) was mentioned in closing by Christian for his excellent
17-kick, 4-goal effort in the centre which did not even grant him a spot in his
team’s best five players. He had been named on the half-forward flank so even
at this young age he was beginning to show his remarkable versatility. Other
good players for the Southerners were Matt Sambrailo (5.1) at full-forward and
Ross Hutcheson at centre-half-forward. Best players for West Perth were John
Gastev, Craig Nelson, Craig Binder, Les Fong, Craig Turley, and Corry Bewick.
Surprisingly, one of the best West Perth players in the past three seasons,
centre-half-forward Phil Bradmore, was well held by Peter Sumich. Christian
stated that Sumich was “a first year player who started the season in attack
but looked admirably suited at centre-half-back”.
South
had left its run too late and could not play finals although clearly it was now
playing football at finals’ standards. By contrast, West Perth showed everybody
at the ground that it was far away from being of final round standard even if
by good fortune it might just sneak into fourth place. Its recruits were not as
good as those at other clubs and its dedication was not what it should have
been. The club was relying too much on the heroes of the past few years (such
as Phil Bradmore, Les Fong, and Peter Menaglio), and while Corry Bewick had
played well all year his advancing age meant he was never going to be anything
more than a stopgap. Noel Mugavin was a dependable old warhorse at full-back
but he was basically just the last one left standing of the old-guard full-back
line which had included at various times Graeme Comerford, Bill Duckworth, John
Duckworth, Russell Ellen, Geoff Hendriks, Ray Holden, Ben Jager, and Mick
O’Brien.
The
club had failed to recruit strong new key attacking players (to replace Rod
Alderton and Brian Adamson and in time Phil Bradmore) nor had it recruited new
key defenders (to replace Graeme Comerford, John Duckworth, Geoff Hendriks, Ray
Holden, and Noel Mugavin). The fact that the ex-West Perth player Mick Rea had
morphed into an excellent full-forward at Perth and was leading the goalkicking
list with 80 majors after 19 rounds was particularly irksome for West Perth
fans. The WPFC coach John Wynne seemed to lack the ability to consistently
bring the best out of former second-string players as Mal Brown was now doing
at Perth with Mick Rea. Too many good players had been allowed to slip through
the net including not only Mick Rea but also David Hart (South Fremantle) and
Derek Kickett (Claremont). The juniors coming through were all running
midfielders, a type of player West Perth traditionally had an abundance of.
West Perth had no tall juniors who could play in key positions coming through
whereas South had Craig Edwards, Matt Sambrailo, and Peter Sumich. No West
Perth player this day scored more than three goals. (John Gastev kicked 3.2.)
In the Round 13 win over Claremont no West Perth player had kicked more than
four goals. These statistics tell an important story.
The absence of any West Perth players in the best five players’ list shows that on the day it was completely outclassed both as individuals and as a unit. The youngsters at the club were too inconsistent and too easily intimidated at hostile away grounds such as Fremantle Oval. The only young players in West Perth’s best six players’ list were John Gastev and Craig Turley. Clearly, Dean Laidley (out with an ankle injury) was sorely missed but I would not be foolish enough to suggest that his presence might have influenced the result.
Likely
line-ups:
(Source: The West Australian, Saturday, 9 August
1986, p. 187)
South Fremantle FC
Backs: Macdonald, Carter,
Maskos
Half-backs: D Wilson,
Sumich, Mosconi
Centres: B Collard,
Bairstow, Lynch
Half-forwards: Winmar,
Hutcheson, Todd
Forwards: Bennett, M
Sambrailo, D Collard
Ruck: Edwards, Worsfold,
Matera
Interchange: Lockhart, Sims
West Perth FC
Backs: Munns, Mugavin,
Barns
Half-backs: Binder, Mifka,
Turley
Centres: D Bewick, Bell,
King
Half-forwards: Menaglio,
Bradmore, Lill
Forwards: Waddell, Foley,
Gastev
Ruck: Nelson, Fong, C
Bewick
Interchange: Collinge,
Martin
In: Waddell, Collinge,
Martin
Out: Laidley (ankle), Chaplin (ankle), Bennett
Match preview
By David Marsh:
“Today is D-Day – do-or-die
– for West Perth, who have their last chance to stake a claim for a berth in
this year’s finals.
“And they could not have a
tougher assignment, as they meet giant-killers South Fremantle at Fremantle
Oval.
“South have had victories
over Subiaco and Perth in the past three weeks. In addition, West Perth have
not won at Fremantle Oval for eight years”.
Match
results –
Saturday, 9 August, 1986, Fremantle Oval
South Fremantle FC 7.5
16.10 21.12 24.18 (162) d West Perth FC 3.5 6.6 10.9 16.11 (107)
Scorers: SF: Edwards 5.3,
Matt Sambrailo 5.1, Winmar 4.2, Matera 4.1, D Collard, Bairstow 2.2, Hutcheson,
Todd 1.0, B Collard 0.2, Worsfold, Lockhart 0.1, Forced 0.3.
WP: Gastev 3.2, Bradmore
2.1, Fong, King, D Bewick 2.0, C Bewick, Collinge 1.2, Foley, C Nelson 1.1,
Menaglio, Lill 0.1. [KJ note: One WP goal seems to be missing from this list.]
(Source: The West Australian, Monday, 11 August
1986, p. 101)
Weather: Fine, light
south-westerly breeze.
(Source: The West Australian, Monday, 11 August
1986, p. 101)
Attendance: 5,872 (from
WAFL Online)
Free-kicks: SF: 7, 4, 4, 3
– 18.
WP: 4, 5, 4, 1 – 14.
Best players:
WA Footballer of the Year
Award:
5 votes Wally Matera (South
Fremantle) – A brilliant 22-kick, four-goal display of roving.
4 votes Mark Bairstow
(South Fremantle) – Another strong, creative performance at centre where he was
under notice from the start.
3 votes Craig Edwards
(South Fremantle) – A quality performance in the ruck and when resting in
attack. Marked brilliantly and kicked four goals.
2 votes Warren Mosconi
(South Fremantle) – A dashing and effective half-back who was outstanding in a
solid South defence.
1 vote Peter Sumich (South
Fremantle) – A notable performance at centre-half-back against Phil Bradmore.
(Source: The West Australian, Monday, 11 August 1986, p. 100)
Team rankings: SF: W Matera
1, M Bairstow 2, C Edwards 3, W Mosconi 4, P Sumich 5, D Collard 6.
WP: J Gastev 1, C Nelson 2,
C Binder 3, L Fong 4, C Turley 5, C Bewick 6.
(Source: The West Australian, Monday, 11 August 1986, p. 100)
|
Round 19 |
WAFL |
Table |
1986 |
|
|
|
Played |
Won |
Lost |
Drawn |
% |
Points |
SUBIACO* |
19 |
15 |
4 |
- |
134.56 |
60 |
EAST FREM** |
19 |
14 |
5 |
- |
132.29 |
56 |
PERTH |
19 |
12 |
6 |
1 |
105.06 |
50 |
CLARE |
19 |
10 |
9 |
- |
119.01 |
40 |
West Perth |
19 |
8 |
10 |
1 |
89.54 |
34 |
South Frem |
19 |
6 |
13 |
- |
72.80 |
24 |
Swan Dist |
19 |
5 |
14 |
- |
86.09 |
20 |
East Perth |
19 |
5 |
14 |
- |
82.24 |
20 |
(Source: The West Australian, Monday, 11 August
1986, p. 101)
*eventual 1986 WAFL
premiers
**eventual 1986 WAFL runners-up
Leading goal-kickers after Round 19 (Top 9 players):
80 – Mick Rea (P)
71 – John Scott (C)
55 – Warren Dean (S),
Stephen Sells (S), Colin Waterson (EF)
53 – Brian Peake (EF)
48 – Wayne Ryder (P), Craig
Edwards (SF)
41 – Tony Buhagiar (EF)
(Source: The West Australian, Monday, 11 August 1986, p. 101)
Complete match report
(full-text):
By the late GEOFF
CHRISTIAN:
“South Fremantle are at the
start of a bright [new] era in league football based on an excellent mix of raw
talent and enthusiasm, blended with the right amount of experience.
“That formula was the basis
of South’s scintillating 55-point win over West Perth at Fremantle Oval on
Saturday, a victory full of merit and one that should help guarantee that the
season ends a lot happier than it started for the Bulldogs.
“An indication of the
amount of ability available at Fremantle Oval these days can be gauged by the
fact that gifted veterans Benny Vigona and Willie Roe were in action in the
reserves on Saturday.
“The absence of these
brilliant attacking players obviously did not hamper South who kicked their
season’s highest score [of] 24.18 and almost kicked the Falcons out of
business.
“West Perth arrived at
Fremantle Oval on Saturday knowing that victory was a stepping stone into the
final four. It was not an easy task on an oval where the ground surface is
obviously a big advantage for the home team.
“The Falcons left four
hours later without even touching that stepping stone and failed miserably to
measure up to the challenge laid down by South.
“The victory was built
around superb performances by No. 1 rover Wally Matera (their smallest player),
ruckman Craig Edwards (their biggest player) and centreman Mark Bairstow, who
fitted neatly in the middle.
“[Wally] Matera has not
given a better display of his roving skills. His work at the fall of the ball
was classical in style and he made few, if any, handling errors.
“Edwards’ marking and
general ruck play was superb and the same could be said of Bairstow whose
powerful work in the middle was of the quality West Perth wished they had
available to them.
“South had plenty of other
individual stars but it was more the spirit and the team co-operation revealed
by this young Bulldogs’ line-up that West Perth found impossible to match for
all but the opening 12 minutes.
“Everywhere West Perth
turned on Saturday they found trouble. On a day dedicated to national dental
health week, West Perth simply bit off more than they could chew.
They lacked the bite of the
Bulldogs; there was [sic] too many
gaps in their play and too many weak spots that obviously were tender to the
probe.
“It was not a day when
centre-half-forward Phil Bradmore could lead the Falcons out of trouble. He was
well held by Peter Sumich, a first year player who started the season in attack
but looked admirably suited at centre-half-back.
“There was plenty of
defensive support for Sumich, mainly from Warren Mosconi, Gavin Carter and
Arthur Maskos.
“Things were no better in
defence for West Perth.
“Matt Sambrailo, who
started the year for South on a wing, showed natural flair at full-forward when
he kicked 5.1 and Barry Hutcheson has the look of a man who knows how to play
at centre-half-forward.
“And to add to the woes of
the West Perth defence, Neil Winmar [later “Nicky” Winmar] decided to show how
well he can play at centre with a 17-kick, four-goal effort”.
(Source: Geoff Christian
(1986), “Bulldogs find a formula for success”, The West Australian, Monday, 11 August 1986, p. 100)
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