2017 WAFL 16'S FIXTURES

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

2017 WAFL 16'S FIXTURES 2017 WAFL 16’s FIXTURES MATCH 1 (WAFL Pre-Season Week 3) Saturday 11 March 5.00pm East Fremantle v East Perth East Fremantle Oval Saturday 11 March 5.00pm Peel Thunder v West Perth Bendigo Bank Stadium Saturday 11 March 9.00am South Fremantle v Claremont Fremantle Community Bank Oval Saturday 11 March 9.00am Swan Districts v Subiaco Steel Blue Oval BYE: Perth MATCH 2 (WAFL Round 1) Saturday 18 March 5.00pm East Fremantle v Claremont East Fremantle Oval Saturday 18 March 11.40am East Perth v Peel Thunder Leederville Oval Saturday 18 March 9.00am South Fremantle v Subiaco Fremantle Community Bank Oval Saturday 18 March 5.00pm Swan Districts v Perth Steel Blue Oval BYE: West Perth MATCH 3 Saturday 25 March 9.00am Peel Thunder v East Fremantle Bendigo Bank Stadium Saturday 25 March 8.30am Subiaco v Perth Leederville Oval Saturday 25 March 5.00pm Swan Districts v South Fremantle Steel Blue Oval Sunday 26 March 4.30pm West Perth v East Perth HBF Arena BYE: Claremont MATCH 4 Friday 31 March 4.30pm West Perth v Subiaco HBF Arena Saturday 1 April 9.00am Peel Thunder v South Fremantle Bendigo Bank Stadium Saturday 1 April 9.20am East Perth v Swan Districts Leederville Oval Sunday 2 April 11.00am Perth v Claremont Gosnells Oval BYE: East Fremantle MATCH 5 (SCHOOL HOLDAYS) Friday 7 April 5.35pm East Perth v Claremont Leederville Oval Saturday 8 April 2.00pm East Fremantle v Perth East Fremantle Oval Saturday 8 April 5.35pm Subiaco v Peel Thunder Leederville Oval Saturday 8 April 9.00am South Fremantle v West Perth Fremantle Community Bank Oval BYE: Swan Districts MATCH 6 (SCHOOL HOLDAYS) Tuesday 11 April 12.00pm Peel Thunder v Perth Bendigo Bank Stadium Tuesday 11 April 9.00am East Fremantle v Swan Districts East Fremantle Oval Wednesday 12 April 10.00am West Perth v Claremont HBF Arena Friday 14 April 8.30am Subiaco v East Perth Leederville Oval BYE: South Fremantle WAFL 16’s Selection Trial Game 1 Saturday April 15 State Academy 16’s Induction Day Saturday April 22 All matches are 4 x 20 minute quarters with NO time-on. Breaks are 5 mins, 15 mins & 5 mins for all matches .
Recommended publications
  • What's Inside?
    What’s Inside? 2017 YEARLY PLANNER PLAYERS EVERY ISSUE DAY ROUND EVENT GAME LOCATION TIME Sat, 18th Round 1 EFFC v CFC East Fremantle Oval 2.15pm MEET MESSAGE FROM Sat, 25th Round 2 CFC BYE 8 THE PLAYERS 4 THE PRESIDENT MARCH Sat, 1st Round 3 PFC v CFC Lathlain Park 1.40pm *7MATE WINMAR MAKING MESSAGE FROM 16 Fri, 7th Round 4 Fathering Project EPFC v CFC Leederville Oval 7.10pm 17 5 THE CEO HIS THIRD START Fri, 14th Round 5 Easter SFFC v CFC Fremantle Oval 4.15pm APRIL Laurie, the MESSAGE FROM HARRIS HAS THE MIDAS Sat, 22nd Round 6 ANZAC CFC v SFC East Fremantle Oval 2.15pm 18 drought buster 6 THE COACH TOUCH Sat, 29th Round 7 SDFC v CFC Steele Blue Oval 2.15pm LEE HAS EYES DISTRICT APRIL Sat, 6th Round 8 CFC v PTFC Fremantle Oval 2.15pm 19 ON A FLAG 24 SCHOOL CLINIC Sat, 13th Round 9 CFC v PFC Fremantle Oval 7.10pm MAY Sat, 20th Round 10 Men’s Health WPFC v CFC HBF Arena Joondalup 2.15pm CLAREMONT MORABITO HOPING 25 WOMEN’S Sat, 27th State Round CFC BYE 20 FOR A MAY START 13 FOOTBALL NEWS Sat, 3rd Round 11 WA Round CFC BYE Sat, 10th Opening Day 1.45pm LE FANU ABOUT OUR 21 CONTINUES HIS Sat, 10th Round 12 Count me in Round CFC v EFFC Claremont Oval 2.15pm 26 2017 SPONSORS FOOTBALL MURPHY REMAINS AT THE JUNE Sat, 17th Round 13 CFC v SDFC Claremont Oval 2.15pm JOURNEY HELM COACHES Sat, 24th Proudie’s Day Sat, 24th Round 14 CFC v WPFC Claremont Oval 2.15pm CLUB AWARDS BRADLEY’S Sat, 1st Round 15 PTFC v CFC Bendigo Bank Stadium 2.15pm 7 SAGE ADVICE Sat, 8th Round 16 NAIDOC Round CFC v SFFC Claremont Oval 1.40pm *7MATE ED & SHIRLEY Sat,15th Round 17 SFC v CFC Esperance 2.15pm JULY 23 HONOURED CONDON AND WHITE Sat, 22nd Round 18 CFC BYE 12 ARE ON BOARD 22 Sat, 29th Round 19 CFC v EPFC Claremont Oval 2.15pm KEN CASELLAS Sat, 5th Round 20 PFC v CFC Lathlain Park 2.15pm 14 TALKS TO THE CLAREMONT SALUTES A Sat, 12th CFC Ladies Day 1.40pm *7MATE COACHES.
    [Show full text]
  • The Heart Still Beats True
    Issue 5, July 2018 HEARTBEAT A newsletter for past players and officials of the West Perth Football Club The heart still beats true Inside this Issue Page Welcome 1 Where Are They Now? 2 Heading West 4 1957 team flashback 8 Mel is recognised 9 Welcome to the July 2018 those past players who Father and son in focus 12 issue of HeartBeat. may have sired future My first game 14 club champions, we take a In this edition, we catch look at the father-son and Obituaries 16 up with former captain- grandfather -grandson coach Bob Spargo and rules as they stand. players Brendon Fewster and Howard Collinge. Finally, if you back yourself to name the We’ll also look back on a player in the above big night at the Australian photograph, feel free to Does your heart beat true? Football Hall of Fame for drop us a line at Mel Whinnen and, for all [email protected] career, and recognise other past players who have passed away more recently. Where are they now? – Howard Collinge I started my junior football in the West Perth zone and landed in the Falcons Colts at age sixteen, alongside a bunch of skinny talented guys like Craig Turley, Dean Laidley, Paul Mifka and Darren Bewick. I progressed to the Reserves to play alongside great athletes like John Gastev, Peter Cutler and James Waddell. They all went on to great careers at West Perth and beyond. I took a different path. I was a Falcons fan, for sure. Les Fong was a secret hero of mine for many reasons.
    [Show full text]
  • Reporter Stirling Vincent 10062021
    Thursday, June 10, 2021 perthnow.com.au/community-news Council staff bid to stop ASHESmemorials to loved ones TEST Kristie Lim she wanted more time to did not have the informa- discuss whether ashes tion on-hand at the meet- CITY of Vincent officers could be allowed to be ing. want to stop people scat- scattered in public places. Cr Ashley Wallace said tering the ashes of their “In Wales, they have for- more time was needed to loved ones on council ests where you can put consider whether a ban on land. your loved one in an orga- scattering of ashes would The proposal is part of a nic cardboard box and be a good idea or not. review of the City’s bury them in a forest Infrastructure and memorials in public plac- where there are no environment executive es and reserves policy. plaques,” she said. director Andrew Murphy Council officers say “I do think that our per- said some people might people can instead use the ceptions of what we do not like ashes being scat- Metropolitan Cemeteries with our loved ones are tered in public areas. Board’s “specialised facil- changing and if it is orga- The policy will be dealt Turtley awesome ities”. nic and not upsetting the with by the council before However the council environment, I don’t have December 31. Ten gorgeous baby turtles have been has pushed back, voting at a problem with it.” The City of Bayswater released into a suburban lake. its May 18 meeting to defer She also asked officers has a memorial seat policy Picture: Catherine advertising the proposed about whether there were which does not allow ash- FULL STORY P3 Ehrhardt policy for comment.
    [Show full text]
  • S E a S O N G U I
    21 2021 20 21 SEASON GUIDE 21 2021 2021 2021 20 2 | 2021 SEASON GUIDE 2021 FIXTURES ROUND DATE VS LOCATION TIME 1 Sat, April 3 Swan Districts Steel Blue Oval 2:10pm 2 Sat, April 10 South Fremantle Revo Fitness Stadium 2:10pm 3 Sat, April 17 Perth Revo Fitness Stadium 2:10pm 4 Sat, April 24 Peel Thunder David Grays Arena 2:10pm 5 Sat, May 1 West Perth Revo Fitness Stadium 2:10pm 6 Sat, May 8 Subiaco Leederville Oval 2:10pm 7 Sat, May 22 East Fremantle New Choice Homes Park 2:10pm 8 Sat, May 29 East Perth Revo Fitness Stadium 2:10pm 9 Sat, June 5 West Coast Revo Fitness Stadium 12:10pm 10 Sat, June12 Peel Thunder Revo Fitness Stadium 2:10pm 11 BYE 12 Sat, June 26 West Perth Provident Financial Oval 2:10pm 13 Sat, July 3 Swan Districts Revo Fitness Stadium 2:10pm 14 Sat, July 10 South Fremantle Fremantle Community Bank 2:10pm Oval 15 Sat, July 17 East Fremantle Revo Fitness Stadium 2:10pm 16 BYE 17 Sun, August 1 East Perth Leederville Oval 2:10pm 18 Sat, August 7 Subiaco Revo Fitness Stadium 2:10pm 19 Sat, August 14 Perth Mineral Resources Park 2:10pm 20 Sat, August 21 West Coast Revo Fitness Stadium 2:10pm TBC WAFL FINALS TBC GRAND FINAL CLAREMONTFC.COM.AU | 3 As a club let’s all be COMMITTED to the 1% er’s that make big things happen. “The little things,” are the cru- cial details that determine the outcomes of life.
    [Show full text]
  • Lives & Breathes His Way To
    OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE WAFL ROUND 3 AprIL 1, 2017 $3.00 Jones lives300 & breathes games his way to » Game previews » Entertainment » Collectables CONTENTS 3 Every Week 6 Collectables 7 Tipping 7 Tweets of the Week 20-22 WAFC 23 Club Notes 25 Stats 26 Scoreboards and ladders 27 Fixtures Features 4-5 Jones lives and breathes his way to 300 games 8 Entertainment Game time 9 Game previews 10-11 Perth v Claremont 12-13 Peel v South Fremantle 14-15 East Perth v Swan Districts 16-17 West Perth v Subiaco 18 West Coast v St Kilda 18 CONTENTS Port Adelaide v Fremantle 4 Jones lives and300 breathes his way to Publisher games This publication is proudly produced for the WA Football Commission by Media Tonic. Phone 9388 7844 Fax 9388 7866 Sales: [email protected] Editor Tracey Lewis Email: [email protected] Photography Andrew Ritchie, Duncan Watkinson, Showcase photgraphix Design/Typesetting Jacqueline Holland Direction Design and Print Printing Data Documents www.datadocuments.com.au Cover Clint Jones - by Duncan Watkinson The Football Budget is printed on Gloss 90gsm paper, which is sourced from a sustainably managed forest and uses manufacturing processes of the highest environmental standards. Bouncedown is printed by an Environmental Accredited printer. The magazine is 100% recyclable. WAFL admission prices $15 – Adult* $12 – Concession* Free – Children 15 and under *Includes a copy of Football Budget Find us on Copyright © No part of this publication may be reproduced or stored in a retrieval system without the permission of the publisher. Opinions expressed in the Football Budget are not necessarily those of the WAFC.
    [Show full text]
  • BEATTY PARK LEISURE CENTRE CONSERVATION PLAN Vincent
    BEATTY PARK LEISURE CENTRE CONSERVATION PLAN Vincent Street, North Perth September 2007 for the Town of Vincent Job No. 04183 With Robin Chinnery, Historian Cover Image: Original entrance to the Beatty Park Leisure Centre. Image courtesy Town of Vincent. Page i EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The Town of Vincent commissioned this Conservation Plan to assist them in conserving and developing the Beatty Park Leisure Centre to assure its future. Apart from being a very important part of the Town and State’s heritage, it is the Town of Vincent’s most significant trading enterprise. A separate conservation plan will be commissioned for the remainder of the park. The pool and spectator stands were developed in 1962 for the VII th British Empire and Commonwealth Games and substantial additions were made in 1993-4, changing the focus of the venue towards leisure rather than a venue for training elite athletes. The whole of the place is a busy working facility and there is a need to upgrade the 1962 facilities in particular. The Town is considering a major refurbishment and upgrade of the stands and pool area to meet with contemporary standards and expectations, and this prospect precipitated the need for a conservation plan. The 1962 structure is under- utilised with, for example, only a fraction of the stand seating being used, and there are some re-planning possibilities to consider to make the operation as a whole perform better, which may give rise to the consideration of alternative uses for some of the spaces under the 1962 stands. As the place is included in the Register of Heritage Places and registered as Beatty Park and Beatty Park Leisure Centre , the Conservation Plan is intended to assist the Town of Vincent and the Heritage Council of Western Australia to assess the impact of proposed change on cultural heritage values and the conservation of the place.
    [Show full text]
  • P7906a-7921A Dr Tony Buti
    Extract from Hansard [ASSEMBLY — Thursday, 12 November 2020] p7906a-7921a Dr Tony Buti; Mr Dean Nalder; Mr Simon Millman; Mrs Lisa O'Malley; Mr Peter Rundle; Mr David Michael; Mr John McGrath; Mr Mick Murray; Mr Bill Marmion; Mr Peter Katsambanis; Ms Rita Saffioti; Mr Shane Love PUBLIC ACCOUNTS COMMITTEE Seventeenth Report — “More Than Just a Game: The Use of State Funds by the WA Football Commission” — Tabling DR A.D. BUTI (Armadale) [10.27 am]: I present for tabling the seventeenth report of the Public Accounts Committee titled “More Than Just a Game: The Use of State Funds by the WA Football Commission”. I also present for tabling the submissions to the inquiry. [See papers 3980 and 3981.] Dr A.D. BUTI: Football, or Aussie Rules, has played a significant role in the lives of Western Australians for more than 130 years. As former Premier Dr Geoff Gallop remarked, “No sport has had such a critical impact on our social and cultural development as Australian Football.” Football is a game that develops tribal loyalties and arouses passions, but it is also more than just a game. As noted by Dr Neale Fong, a former chair of the West Australian Football Commission, the history of football in Western Australia is not only about footballers, clubs and supporters, it also involves relationships with networks of politicians, governments, businesses and personalities involved in the game. The West Australian Football Commission, established in 1989, is the body charged with responsibility for the overall development and strategic direction of football in this state. The creation of the West Australian Football Commission is unique to WA.
    [Show full text]
  • Australian Rules Football Cheer Squads of the Eighties
    2 BALTIC JOURNAL OF SPORT & HEALTH SCIENCES No. 4(107); 2017; 2–16; ISSN 2351-6496 AUSTRALIAN RULES FOOTBALL CHEER SQUADS OF THE EIGHTIES: A CASE STUDY OF THE WEST PERTH CHEER SQUAD 1984–1986 Kieran James University of the West of Scotland, Paisley, Scotland ABSTRACT Background. In this article I review key studies in the academic literature on football (soccer) hooliganism in the UK and around the world. I apply Armstrong’s anthropological approach to our 15–20 member West Perth unofficial cheer squad (hard-core supporter group) of 1984–1986 (Australian Rules football’s WAFL competition). Method. This is an ethnographic study of the West Perth cheer squad 1984–86 told from the viewpoint of the author who was co-founder and co-leader of this group. It is both strength and weakness of the research data that the author was an active participant in the events rather than a researcher performing typical ethnographic research as a non-participant. Results. I find that the anthropological approach is able to explain many aspects of our cheer squad’s culture and members’ behaviours including the quick disintegration of the cheer squad early in the 1986 season without anyone officially ending it. However, our group members did not adjust their commitment downwards during the cheer squad’s years of action; most members attended all home-and-away matches during May 1984–March 1986. This research also shows the diffusion of Australian Rules football supporter culture from Melbourne to Adelaide and from these two cities to Perth, to a lesser extent, and the impact of TV news reports of British football hooliganism on our group’s style and macho posturing.
    [Show full text]
  • High Octane Energy Powers Ames to 250
    OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE WAFL ROUND 5 AprIL 14, 2017 $3.00 AmesHigh octane energyto 250powers » Country and Community football wraps » East Fremantle team poster CONTENTS Untitled-1 1 23/3/17 7:40 am 3 Every Week 6 Collectables 7 Tipping 7 Tweets of the Week 22-24 WAFC 27 Club Notes 28 Stats 29 Scoreboards and ladders 30 Fixtures Features 4-5 High octane energy powers Ames to 250 8 Entertainment 16-17 East Fremantle team poster Game time 9 Game previews 10-11 Peel v West Perth 12-13 South Fremantle v Claremont 14-15 Subiaco v East Perth 18-19 East Fremantle v Swan Districts 20 West Coast v Sydney 20 CONTENTS Melbourne v Fremantle 4 PowersHigh octane energy powers ames » Tallan Ames is still a fierce competitior Publisher This publication is proudly produced for the WA Football Commission by Media Tonic. Phone 9388 7844 Fax 9388 7866 Sales: [email protected] Editor Tracey Lewis Email: [email protected] Photography Andrew Ritchie, Duncan Watkinson, Showcase photgraphix Design/Typesetting Jacqueline Holland Direction Design and Print Printing Data Documents www.datadocuments.com.au Cover Tallan Ames The Football Budget is printed on Gloss 90gsm paper, which is sourced from a sustainably managed forest and uses manufacturing processes of the highest environmental standards. Bouncedown is printed by an Environmental Accredited printer. The magazine is 100% recyclable. WAFL admission prices $15 – Adult* $12 – Concession* Free – Children 15 and under *Includes a copy of Football Budget Tributes from the football world: Current teammate Tony Notte – “There are a Tom Smirk – “I love his hair styles.” Find us on few things that come to mind when you think of Amesy – he is the type of player you love to run out Supporter Rick – “A great SD champion and State with on game day because you know he is always player, should be a lock in again this year against going to give 100 percent.
    [Show full text]
  • Round 3 August 1, 2020 Official Publication of the Wafl $3.00
    OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF THE WAFL $3.00 ROUND 3 AUGUST 1, 2020 becomes WAFL Premiership prize Australia’s oldest football trophy has integrating it into the WAFL Grand Final day returned to the WAFL. presentations.” The Dixson Cup will become the “I would like to thank the former official WAFL Premiership Cup from WAFL Council of Presidents Chairman this year onwards, celebrating the rich Ric Gloede for coordinating the history and past of football in Western fundraising effort with WA football Australia. stakeholders including the WAFL Inaugurated in 1885, the cup was Clubs, West Coast Eagles, Fremantle awarded to the Premiers of the West Football Club and the West Australian Australian Football Associated (now Football Commission to secure the the WAFL) for the first five years before Dixson Cup at auction.” spending more than 100 years in The Dixson Cup private ownership. Introduction The storied piece of history was u Hugh Dixson named after Sir Hugh Robert Dixson, the Inaugurated in 1885, the Dixson Cup man responsible for Aussie rules becoming is the oldest premiership cup in Australian the first organised code in Western Australia. Rules history. After a century in the wilderness, the WAFL & WA It is also the centrepiece in an intriguing WA football Football stakeholders purchased the trophy back in story, having been presented to the Premiers of the early 2020. West Australian Football Association for the first five West Australian Football Commission Heritage years of the competition, before spending more than Committee Chairman Grant Dorrington couldn’t be 100 years in private ownership and only returning to more thrilled to have the piece of WA Football history the hands of WAFL officials in 2020.
    [Show full text]
  • Fluid Post-Modern Neo-Tribes: a Case Study of the West Perth Cheer Squad (Australian Rules Football), 1984-1986
    Review Article J Phy Fit Treatment & Sports Volume 3 Issue 5 - May 2018 Copyright © All rights are reserved by Kieran James DOI: 10.19080/JPFMTS.2018.03.555621 Fluid Post-Modern Neo-Tribes: A Case Study of the West Perth Cheer Squad (Australian Rules Football), 1984-1986 Kieran James* School of Business and Enterprise, University of the West of Scotland, Paisley campus, Scotland Submission: May 02, 2018; Published: May 11, 2018 *Corresponding author: Kieran James, School of Business and Enterprise, University of the West of Scotland, Paisley campus, Scotland; Tel: ; Email: Abstract to explainIn this many article aspects I apply of Armstrong’s our cheer squad’s anthropological culture and approach members’ to behaviours soccer hooliganism including studiesthe quick to disintegrationour 20-member of theWest cheer Perth squad unofficial early incheer the squad (hard-core supporter group) of 1984-86 (Australian Rules football’s WAFL competition). I find that the anthropological approach is able describe and explain the tough posturing but generally peaceable behaviour of our West Perth cheer squad. It also well explains our group members’1986 season partly without sub-consciously anyone officially adopted ending submissive it. Theoretically attitude Marsh’s towards definition the Swan of “aggro”Districts’ as supporters“the illusion at of Bassendean violence” seems Oval toin almost 1985 and perfectly their response to that submission (and their team’s win) which was to quietly walk away, their job done. They enforced the total authority of
    [Show full text]
  • ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT April 10, 2021 1958 Carnival, Subiaco
    ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT April 10, 2021 1958 carnival, Subiaco. CONTENTS Looking back on the history of the PFL .............3 Big names who started in amateurs .................. 4-5 100 notable Western Australians of amateur football ............................................6-7 Centenary Round ...............................................8 Partnering with Carlton Dry ...............................9 Women’s amateur football ..........................10-11 Commemorating 100 years ............................. 12 Old and new clubs .......................................13-14 Integrated Football ........................................... 15 State footy ........................................................ 16 New initiatives ................................................... 17 Club directory ................................................... 18 SHAPING TRADITION ON AND OFF THE FIELD Calendar of events ........................................... 19 The history of amateur football in Western and older to provide a high-standard competition, heralded a new era of domination and competition, Australia goes well beyond the recollection while accommodating considerable numbers of as Postals and Sandovers would trade blows with of record goal scorers, dynastic teams and volunteers and supporters. University, until Wembley accomplished a three-peat best and fairest medals, it is a window into the For many players, the league provides a competitive between 1938-40, only stopped by North Fremantle values we cherish as a nation. competition for those not wishing to undertake the in 1941. Shaped by Australian ideals of rugged commitment required by the WAFL training, whether North Fremantle would also accomplish three titles determination, mateship and an adherence to a it be due to study and career commitments or simply in a row – it just took seven years, as World War II fair game, the sport has in turn helped inform and a desire to pursue football as a recreational pursuit. forced a stop to the league. reinforce these cultural traits in our society.
    [Show full text]