1999 Westar Rules season

The 1999 Westar Rules season was the 115th season of the various incarnations of the West Australian Football League and the third as “Westar Rules”. It is most notable for the first winless season in open-age Western Australian football since Midland Junction in their final 1917 season lost all twelve of their games, although South Fremantle in the under-19 1944 competition lost all nineteen of their games.[1] Peel Thunder, who at the completion of the season had won only two of their first sixty Westar Rules matches, achieved the equal second-longest winless season in a major Australian Rules league behind SANFL club Sturt in 1995.[a] Although beforehand most critics thought the Thunder would improve on what they did in their first two seasons,[2] late in the season none of the major Westar Rules writers gave them a chance to win even against second-last East Perth at Rushton Park.[3]

1999 WAFL season
Teams9
PremiersWest Perth
17th premiership
Minor premiersSouth Fremantle
11th minor premiership
Sandover MedallistGus Seebeck (Perth)
Bernie Naylor MedallistRod Tregenza (East Fremantle)
Matches played94
← 1998
2000 →

In the process Peel became the first team for fifty-four seasons to fail to score in the first half and suffered the second-worst loss in open-age WA(N)FL football. Amazingly, the Thunder's only near miss was against minor premier South Fremantle in the last round, when they led all day only to lose by seven points.[b] Their inept performances led to controversy concerning the Thunder's existence among both critics[4] and other Westar Rules clubs, which were to come to a tipping point in subsequent WAFC reports on the state of the competition, notably the “Fong Report” after the 2000 season.

Apart from Peel's ignominious season, East Perth, suffering from internal dissent[5] and disputes over where they would play their home matches – Perth Oval was scheduled for redevelopment as a rectangular field for soccer club Perth Glory,[6] – fell from fourth to second last in their worst season since 1989, winning only twice against the top seven clubs. South Fremantle and West Perth established themselves as the competition's heavyweights with a run of spectacular performances. Despite the pre-season loss of Peter Sumich and Scott Watters,[7] the Bulldogs, aided by access to Docker players under the first host club scheme and whose season featured numerous “centenary year” celebrations,[c] won fifteen on end after an opening round defeat[8] and the Falcons lost only once in the final fifteen home-and-away rounds.

Home-and-away season

Round 1 (Easter weekend)

Round 1
Saturday, 3 AprilPerth 6.13 (49)def. bySubiaco 12.8 (80)Lathlain Park (crowd: 1490)
Sunday, 4 AprilPeel Thunder 11.6 (72)def. bySwan Districts 17.13 (115)Rushton Park (crowd: 2245)[9]
Sunday, 4 April (6:45 pm)West Perth 14.13 (97)def.East Perth 5.9 (39)Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2935)[10]
Monday, 5 AprilEast Fremantle 18.14 (122)def.South Fremantle 14.10 (94)East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 4012)
Bye
Claremont
  • Seven straight majors in the final quarter ensure East Fremantle win their seventeenth consecutive match, after a seemingly depleted South Fremantle scores 6.5 (41) to 1.4 (10) in the third quarter.[11]
  • In the first night match at Arena Joondalup, the troubled Royals start well but fade severely, not goalling between the seven-minute mark of the second quarter and the fifteen-minute mark of the last.

Round 2

Round 2
Saturday, 10 AprilPeel Thunder 9.9 (63)def. bySubiaco 11.16 (82)Rushton Park (crowd: 1132)
Saturday, 10 AprilSwan Districts 9.8 (62)def. byWest Perth 16.13 (109)Bassendean Oval (crowd: 1902)
Saturday, 10 AprilClaremont 17.19 (121)def.East Perth 6.11 (47)Claremont Oval (crowd: 1377)
Sunday, 11 AprilSouth Fremantle 21.20 (146)def.Perth 11.9 (75)Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1261)
Bye
East Fremantle
  • In a match billed as the “battle of the centenarians”[c], Perth are completely outplayed in the first and final quarters as South Fremantle’s Brad Bootsma stars with thirty-two kicks from a half-back flank.[12]
  • Tiger coach Don Pyke uses the first host club scheme to create a seemingly perfect blend with Claremont’s abundant supply of local juniors so that East Perth again fail against a powerful centreline.[13]

Round 3

Round 3
Saturday, 17 AprilPerth 9.8 (62)def.East Fremantle 8.12 (60)Lathlain Park (crowd: 1447)
Saturday, 17 AprilSubiaco 8.9 (57)def. byWest Perth 10.12 (72)Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1903)
Saturday, 17 AprilSwan Districts 15.8 (98)def.Claremont 13.14 (92)Bassendean Oval (crowd: 1391)
Saturday, 17 AprilSouth Fremantle 33.21 (219)def.Peel Thunder 3.6 (24)Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1142)
Bye
East Perth
  • South Fremantle record the second-biggest win in open-age WAFL football, behind only West Perth’s 210-point win over the Bulldogs in 1987.[14] After the red and whites fail to goal in the first fifteen minutes, the remained of the match is an embarrassment for Peel.[15]
  • Perth end East Fremantle’s run of seventeen straight victories, the equal fifth-longest in open-age Westar/WAFL/WANFL football,[8] as the injury-plagued Darren Rigby – who had played only seventeen matches in four seasons due to leg fractures – dominates returning AFL star Shaun McManus.[16]

Round 4 (Anzac Day)

Round 4
Saturday, 24 AprilSubiaco 22.17 (149)def.East Perth 3.1 (19)Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1313)[17]
Saturday, 24 AprilWest Perth 7.18 (60)def. byEast Fremantle 14.8 (92)Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2462)
Saturday, 24 April (6:45 pm)Peel Thunder 4.10 (34)def. byPerth 9.18 (72)Rushton Park (crowd: 1305)[18]
Monday, 26 AprilClaremont 7.9 (51)def. bySouth Fremantle 20.14 (134)Claremont Oval (crowd: 2471)
Bye
Swan Districts

East Perth suffer their biggest loss to Subiaco.[19] The Royals record the fewest scoring shots in a WANFL/WAFL/Westar match since Claremont in 1945 against Perth and their fewest since 1913.[20]

Round 5

Round 5
Saturday, 1 MayEast Fremantle 19.18 (132)def.Peel Thunder 11.13 (79)East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1284)
Saturday, 1 MaySwan Districts 14.16 (100)def.East Perth 10.10 (70)Bassendean Oval (crowd: 2128)
Saturday, 1 MaySouth Fremantle 11.15 (81)def.West Perth 11.10 (76)Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1794)
Saturday, 1 MayClaremont 3.6 (24)def. bySubiaco 15.16 (106)Claremont Oval (crowd: 1137)
Bye
Perth
  • Subiaco become the first WAFL/WANFL/WASFL/Westar club to hold consecutive opponents to three or fewer goals since East Perth in Rounds 13 and 14 of 1919. The Lions’ experience, especially in defence, completely decimates Claremont as Ryan O'Connor and Andrew Donnelly consistently keep the ball from the Tigers’ forward line.[21]
  • West Perth failed to catch South Fremantle after coach Tony Micale rested his top backmen and the Bulldogs get two key goals after fifteen goalless minutes at the star of the final quarter.[22]

Round 6

Round 6
Saturday, 8 MayWest Perth 12.14 (86)def.Perth 9.4 (58)Arena Joondalup (crowd: 1302)[23]
Saturday, 8 MayEast Fremantle 26.13 (169)def.Claremont 11.9 (75)East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1417)[24]
Saturday, 8 MaySubiaco 19.12 (126)def.Swan Districts 10.9 (69)Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1228)
Saturday, 8 MaySouth Fremantle 16.23 (119)def.East Perth 7.4 (46)Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1117)[25]
Bye
Peel Thunder

Round 7

Round 7
Saturday, 15 MayWest Perth 20.13 (133)def.Peel Thunder 7.4 (46)Arena Joondalup (crowd: 1282)[4]
Saturday, 15 MayEast Perth 8.14 (62)def. byEast Fremantle 19.13 (127)Perth Oval (crowd: 1380)
Saturday, 15 MaySwan Districts 11.6 (72)def. bySouth Fremantle 13.17 (95)Bassendean Oval (crowd: 1686)
Saturday, 15 MayClaremont 14.8 (92)def.Perth 6.12 (48)Claremont Oval (crowd: 1143)
Bye
Subiaco

After long-serving ground disputes and modification of the draw, East Perth play their first home game for the season, but are thwarted by the return of former Eagle champion Chris Mainwaring, whose solid, injury-free display suggests he is ready for an AFL recall.[26]

Round 8

Round 8
Saturday, 22 MayPerth 12.11 (83)def. byEast Perth 13.9 (87)Lathlain Park (crowd: 2031)[27]
Saturday, 22 MayPeel Thunder 7.10 (52)def. byClaremont 15.15 (105)Rushton Park (crowd: 976)
Saturday, 22 MaySouth Fremantle 7.13 (55)def.Subiaco 7.6 (48)Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2010)
Saturday, 22 MayEast Fremantle 16.12 (108)def.Swan Districts 8.12 (60)East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1575)
Bye
West Perth
  • South Fremantle gain revenge for a thrashing in the pre-season Grand Final as their exceptional discipline shuts down a Lion team whose ability to deal with close tagging is questioned.[28]
  • Seventeen-year-old Andrew Embley stars for Claremont, who are unsettled by Peel‘s tactic of using goalkicker Scott Simister and vice-captain Wayne Barden on the ball – Embley shuts both down after quarter-time when Peel had gained a surprise lead.[29]
  • East Perth break a run of ten straight losses, their fourth-longest losing streak on record.[30]

Round 9

Round 9
Saturday, 29 MayEast Fremantle 10.11 (71)def. bySubiaco 11.15 (81)East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2097)
Saturday, 29 MayEast Perth 15.7 (97)def.Peel Thunder 6.11 (47)Perth Oval (crowd: 1481)[31]
Saturday, 29 MaySwan Districts 12.13 (85)def. byPerth 13.11 (89)Bassendean Oval (crowd: 1636)
Sunday, 30 MayClaremont 5.11 (41)def. byWest Perth 14.13 (97)Claremont Oval (crowd: 1931)
Bye
South Fremantle
  • Troy Wilson’s brilliant defensive marking and robust physical work in free play smashes the Tiger attack to make the four look already sealed with two-thirds of the season still to be played.[32]
  • Despite having played only twenty Westar Rules games between them, youngsters Leon Davis, Chance Bateman, Darren Glass, Richard Kelly and Matt Shaw show Perth have a big AFL-ready talent pool with dominant displays in an unexpected narrow win for the Demons.[33]

Round 10 (Foundation Day)

Round 10
Saturday, 5 JuneSubiaco 16.14 (110)def.Perth 8.8 (56)Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1539)[34]
Saturday, 5 JunePeel Thunder 7.12 (54)def. bySwan Districts 12.10 (82)Rushton Park (crowd: 1137)[35]
Monday, 7 JuneEast Perth 7.4 (46)def. byWest Perth 18.17 (125)Perth Oval (crowd: 2968)[36]
Monday, 7 JuneSouth Fremantle 13.8 (86)def.East Fremantle 12.10 (82)Fremantle Oval (crowd: 12258)[37]
Bye
Claremont

The Foundation Day derby saw the last Westar Rules/WAFL home-and-away attendance of over 10,000 until 2009 and the second last to date.[38] The Bulldogs win a high-standard thriller as the Sharks’ run proves too late – a special win in their centenary year.

Round 11

Round 11
Saturday, 12 JuneWest Perth 17.14 (116)def.Swan Districts 5.8 (38)Arena Joondalup (crowd: 1801)
Saturday, 12 JunePerth 12.9 (81)def. bySouth Fremantle 15.8 (98)Lathlain Park (crowd: 1787)
Saturday, 12 JuneEast Perth 10.7 (67)def. byClaremont 16.10 (106)Perth Oval (crowd: 1376)
Saturday, 12 JuneSubiaco 17.14 (116)def.Peel Thunder 4.3 (27)Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1263)[39]
Bye
East Fremantle
  • Peel Thunder become the first WANFL/WAFL/WASFL/Westar Rules club to fail to score in the first half since Claremont against Perth in 1945.
  • Perth’s enthusiasm has them leading South Fremantle for over two quarters before Tony Delaney wrests control of the centre from Bateman and leads the Bulldogs to a ninth consecutive victory – equalling their 1998 win tally.[40]

Round 12

Round 12
Saturday, 26 JunePerth 8.7 (55)def. byWest Perth 21.23 (149)Lathlain Park (crowd: 1423)
Saturday, 26 JuneEast Perth 6.11 (47)def. bySouth Fremantle 17.11 (113)Perth Oval (crowd: 1431)
Saturday, 26 JuneSwan Districts 6.20 (56)def. bySubiaco 20.8 (128)Bassendean Oval (crowd: 1474)
Saturday, 26 JuneClaremont 14.9 (93)def.East Fremantle 11.15 (81)Claremont Oval (crowd: 1137)[41]
Bye
Peel Thunder
  • Swan Districts’ inexperience has them thrashed despite having four more kicks and only two fewer scoring shots,[d] which lead to undisciplined frustration among the Swans’ players.[42]
  • East Perth are predictably outclassed by the top-of-the-table Bulldogs after being three goals ahead entering time-on of the opening quarter, as the Royals’ initial desire and especially their forward line (which does not goal again until well into the last quarter) disintegrate.[43]

Round 13

Round 13
Saturday, 3 JulyWest Perth 11.14 (80)def.Subiaco 8.8 (56)Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2565)
Saturday, 3 JulyPeel Thunder 5.8 (38)def. bySouth Fremantle 18.16 (124)Rushton Park (crowd: 1266)
Saturday, 3 JulyEast Fremantle 13.15 (93)def.Perth 12.10 (82)East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1646)[44]
Saturday, 3 JulyClaremont 19.15 (129)def.Swan Districts 12.8 (80)Claremont Oval (crowd: 922)
Bye
East Perth

Steve Trewhella, whose start to 1999 was delayed by a broken wrist, plays a major role in a crucial win lifting the Falcons to clear second by tagging Fremantle-listed Luke Toia to completely reverse a 20-point half-time Lion lead that actually flattered West Perth.[45]

Round 14

Round 14
Saturday, 10 JulyPerth 13.9 (87)def.Peel Thunder 9.12 (66)Lathlain Park (crowd: 1368)
Saturday, 10 JulyEast Fremantle 9.5 (59)def. byWest Perth 16.14 (110)East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1897)
Saturday, 10 JulyEast Perth 8.8 (56)def. bySubiaco 20.9 (129)Perth Oval (crowd: 1380)[46]
Saturday, 10 JulySouth Fremantle 14.14 (98)def.Claremont 9.9 (63)Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1818)
Bye
Swan Districts
  • West Perth fan favourite Paul Mifka returns for his first match since a car accident in 1998, nullifying veteran Earl Spalding and keeping East Fremantle to three second-half goals after a close first half.[47]
  • Fraser Gehrig’s comeback for Perth is nearly upset by an inaccurate Thunder team[48]

Round 15

Round 15
Saturday, 17 JulyWest Perth 4.17 (41)def. bySouth Fremantle 12.7 (79)Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2328)
Saturday, 17 JulyPeel Thunder 7.11 (53)def. byEast Fremantle 20.13 (133)Rushton Park (crowd: 1202)
Saturday, 17 JulyEast Perth 9.14 (68)def. bySwan Districts 14.14 (98)Perth Oval (crowd: 1508)
Saturday, 17 JulySubiaco 10.9 (69)def. byClaremont 13.8 (86)Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1553)[49]
Bye
Perth
  • Despite the handicap of working a one-man police station at Wyalkatchem 235 kilometres (150 mi) from Perth and training with the local team, South Fremantle veteran Marty Atkins’ solid defence leaves the Bulldogs two games clear on top as West Perth cannot convert their chances.[50]
  • East Fremantle’s targeting of Peel as needing to go for an eight-club competition does nothing inspire the Thunder, who score only 2.6 (18) to 10.6 (66) in two quarters with the wind.[51]

Round 16

Round 16
Saturday, 24 JulyEast Perth 11.6 (72)def. bySubiaco 13.11 (89)Exmouth (crowd: 2114)
Saturday, 24 JulyPerth 20.10 (130)def.Swan Districts 15.13 (103)Moora (crowd: 1746)[52]
Saturday, 24 JulyClaremont 15.14 (104)def.East Fremantle 15.12 (102)Claremont Oval (crowd: 1467)[53]
Bye
Peel Thunder, South Fremantle, West Perth
  • As relief for those who suffered from Cyclone Vance,[54][55] Westar Rules play a game for the first and only time in the Pilbara town of Exmouth, and for one of only two times in Moora in Perth’s country zone.
  • On a windy 29 °C (84.2 °F) day, Subiaco and East Perth are allowed a fourth interchange player (standardised the following season). Fringe Eagle Andrew Donnelly dominates as the Lions win in the trying weather.[54]

Round 17

Round 17
Saturday, 31 JulyPerth 12.10 (82)def. byClaremont 12.15 (87)Lathlain Park (crowd: 1474)[56]
Saturday, 31 JulyPeel Thunder 7.4 (46)def. byWest Perth 13.16 (94)Rushton Park (crowd: 1219)[57]
Saturday, 31 JulyEast Fremantle 17.15 (117)def.East Perth 13.9 (87)East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1662)
Saturday, 31 JulySouth Fremantle 30.11 (191)def.Swan Districts 8.10 (58)Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1656)
Bye
Subiaco

In a thrashing described as a “farce” with the Bulldogs taking 102 marks to 36 and having 113 effective handballs to 45, South Fremantle’s Anthony Jones makes a memorable 100 metre run regarded as the best play in Westar Rules for a long time.[55]

Round 18

Round 18
Saturday, 7 AugustEast Perth 10.8 (68)def. byPerth 19.4 (118)Perth Oval (crowd: 1533)[58]
Saturday, 7 AugustSubiaco 14.8 (92)def. bySouth Fremantle 16.9 (105)Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1517)
Saturday, 7 AugustSwan Districts 11.18 (84)def.East Fremantle 11.17 (83)Bassendean Oval (crowd: 1439)
Saturday, 7 AugustClaremont 22.9 (141)def.Peel Thunder 9.8 (62)Claremont Oval (crowd: 616)[59]
Bye
West Perth
  • Despite a broken left hand, South Fremantle’s Brad Bootsma, with 32 possessions mainly in the second half, courageously leads a win after being behind for most of the last quarter, which virtually settles the double chance in the finals.[60]
  • Swan Districts rebound from their South Fremantle thrashing to pip East Fremantle and leave Claremont in the four. The marking of West Coast Eagle discard Jason Ball and attack on the ball of Shane Beros win for Swans.[61]

Round 19

Round 19
Saturday, 14 AugustWest Perth 11.22 (88)def.Claremont 9.9 (63)Arena Joondalup (crowd: 2100)
Saturday, 14 AugustPerth 18.12 (120)def.Swan Districts 10.10 (70)Lathlain Park (crowd: 1642)
Saturday, 14 AugustEast Perth 13.20 (98)def.Peel Thunder 7.9 (51)Perth Oval (crowd: 954)
Saturday, 14 AugustSubiaco 25.11 (161)def.East Fremantle 12.4 (76)Subiaco Oval (crowd: 1476)[62]
Bye
South Fremantle
  • Brendon Fewster’s size and strength leaves Claremont with no options, as does Troy Wilson in defence. Only inaccurate kicking prevents a humiliation, but East Fremantle’s thrashing keeps Claremont in the four.[63]
  • East Perth’s Ashley Hutchison is sent off after being reported twice – once for striking and once for spitting. He is one of four Westar players to suffer this ignominy.[64]
  • In a game where, despite East Perth having won only twice, no tipster gave the Thunder a chance to break their winless season,[65] Ryan Turnbull shows the form that made him a dominating figure in the Royals’ mini-dynasty of the early 2000s.[64]

Round 20

Round 20
Friday, 20 August (6:45 pm)West Perth 14.11 (95)def.East Perth 10.8 (68)Arena Joondalup (crowd: 1838)
Saturday, 21 AugustPerth 7.10 (52)def. bySubiaco 16.14 (110)Lathlain Park (crowd: 1798)[66]
Saturday, 21 AugustSwan Districts 22.12 (144)def.Peel Thunder 10.8 (68)Bassendean Oval (crowd: 1228)[67]
Saturday, 21 AugustEast Fremantle 17.23 (125)def.South Fremantle 10.15 (75)East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 2849)
Bye
Claremont

By guarding Bootsma and the other South Fremantle on-ballers, the Sharks end a worrying slump by convincingly ending the seemingly invincible Bulldogs’ run of fifteen consecutive victories – in spite of kicking five goals fifteen behinds in the first half.[68]

Round 21

Round 21
Friday, 27 August (6:45 pm)South Fremantle 11.7 (73)def.Claremont 10.11 (71)Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1317)[69]
Saturday, 28 AugustEast Fremantle 7.11 (53)def. byWest Perth 10.13 (73)East Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1747[70])
Saturday, 28 AugustPeel Thunder 7.9 (51)def. byEast Perth 11.15 (81)Rushton Park (crowd: 2569)
Bye
Perth, Subiaco, Swan Districts

After Peel hold a narrow lead for most of the first half in wet conditions, Rhys Croxford dashed the Thunder’s hope of a win for 1999 with one goal late in the second quarter and three early in the third – and Peel did not receive another chance.[71]

Round 22

Round 22
Saturday, 4 SeptemberEast Perth 13.9 (87)def.Claremont 8.8 (56)Perth Oval (crowd: 1605)
Saturday, 4 SeptemberSubiaco 23.7 (145)def.Peel Thunder 7.5 (47)Subiaco Oval (crowd: 927)[72]
Saturday, 4 SeptemberSwan Districts 7.7 (49)def. byWest Perth 22.15 (147)Bassendean Oval (crowd: 1772)[73]
Saturday, 4 SeptemberSouth Fremantle 20.10 (130)def.Perth 5.9 (39)Fremantle Oval (crowd: 1538)[74]
Bye
East Fremantle

East Perth leave their home since 1910 of Perth Oval (though it was not known at the time) on a high with a win that denies Claremont a finals berth.[6] The brilliant speed of Halls Creek recruit Brendan Thomas led the Royals to score 5.3 (33) to nothing after Claremont took the lead halfway through the last quarter in a game that had always been close to that stage.[75]

Round 23

Round 23
Saturday, 11 SeptemberWest Perth 16.20 (116)def.Subiaco 16.7 (103)Arena Joondalup (crowd: 1818)[76]
Saturday, 11 SeptemberPerth 11.8 (74)def. byEast Fremantle 21.19 (145)Lathlain Park (crowd: 1590)[77]
Saturday, 11 SeptemberClaremont 19.12 (126)def.Swan Districts 8.12 (60)Claremont Oval (crowd: 918)
Saturday, 11 September (6:45 pm)Peel Thunder 13.13 (91)def. bySouth Fremantle 13.20 (98)Rushton Park (crowd: 1178)
Bye
East Perth

The winless Thunder nearly cause a huge upset against the minor premiers, leading all day only to go down by seven points after the Bulldogs, looking for a “solid hit-out”, rested six top players. It was the first time in thirty-two games Peel had actually led at half-time, and at one point they led by 37 points with Scott Simister in his best form.[78]

Ladder

1999 ladder
PosTeamPldWLDPFPAPPPts
1South Fremantle20182022131342164.972
2West Perth (P)20173019641191164.968
3Subiaco20146020371251162.856
4East Fremantle20119020301655122.744
5Claremont20119017261700101.544
6Perth2071301512189979.628
7Swan Districts2071301583212174.628
8East Perth2051501312199165.920
9Peel Thunder2002001071229846.60
Source: WAFL Footy Facts
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) percentage; 3) number of points for.
(P) Premiers

Finals

Semi-finals

First semi-final
Sunday, 19 SeptemberSubiaco 13.10 (88)def.East Fremantle 9.15 (69)Subiaco Oval (crowd: 9,064)

Subiaco exploit East Fremantle’s newfound lack of height to eliminate the reigning premiers, who score 2.10 (22) from many more opportunities in the final quarter.[79]

Second semi-final
Sunday, 19 SeptemberSouth Fremantle 13.13 (91)def.West Perth 10.16 (76)Subiaco Oval (crowd: 9,064)[80]
  • Since the two semi-finals were played at the same venue on the same day, the attendance figure is the same.
  • A poor second quarter ensures West Perth are always playing catch-up football against the skill and experience of Atkins – and with Mann beating the Falcons’ danger man in Fewster.

Preliminary final

Preliminary final
Sunday, 26 SeptemberWest Perth 16.13 (109)def.Subiaco 6.8 (44)Subiaco Oval (crowd: 6,149)
  • In wet conditions that had caused late changes to both teams, West Perth’s defence crushes the Lions.[81]
  • Subiaco were fined for playing a player who was not in their original list of 24.[81]

Grand Final

1999 Westar Rules Grand Final
Saturday, 2 OctoberSouth Fremantledef. byWest PerthSubiaco Oval (crowd: 25,473)[82]
3.1 (19)
8.1 (49)
10.5 (65)
 11.6 (72)
Q1
Q2
Q3
 Final
6.4 (40)
9.8 (62)
11.9 (75)
 14.13 (97)
Umpires: Mark Fussell, Wayne French, Brett Rosebury
Simpson Medal: Christian Kelly (West Perth)
Taylor 3, Clark 2, Bootsma, Schell, Maher, Worsfold, Grover, PaRsonsGoalsKelly 4, Fewster 2, Britten 2, Symmons 2, Logan, Bruce, Skender, Morrell[83]
Toby McGrath, Cory McGrath, Taylor, Porter, ClucasBestKelly, Kim Kigali, Fewster, Curley, Clayton Lassock, Mifka

West Perth jump the minor premiers unexpectedly and some brilliant play allows them to evade a Bulldog comeback to win comfortably.

Notes

a Central District in 1964 and several VFA/VFL clubs share the Thunder's ignominy of a 20-game winless season: Sandringham in 1941, Box Hill in 1951, and the Bendigo Diggers in 2001 and 2002.
b The only other winless VFL, SANFL or WAFL clubs whose narrowest loss was to the minor premier have been St. Kilda in 1902, whose closest shave was against premiers Collingwood, also by seven points, and Sturt in 1995, whose narrowest loss was to Central District by 24 points.
c Both South Fremantle and Perth were formed in 1899, though South Fremantle's ancestry can be traced back to the older Fremantle Football Club.
d The WA(N)FL/Westar record win with fewer shots is 53 points (with two fewer shots) by Claremont against Perth in 1994, whilst with equal shots the record is fifty points – also by Subiaco against Swan Districts – in 1968.

References