Showing posts with label NEWS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NEWS. Show all posts

Thursday, 13 June 2019

ARTICLE: "Not Black and White", by John Townsend (Swan Districts oppose changes to WAFC), 13/6/2019.

It’s good to see that Swan Districts has the courage to stand up against the VFL demigods and their WA sycophants at the WAFC. Swans want grassroots people to have a say.
Not Black And White
JOHN TOWNSEND

ARTICLE: Swan Districts oppose WA Football Commission electoral changes. Swan Districts are the only WA football stakeholders to oppose constitutional changes to the WA Football Commission that would formalise the complex election system in place for most of this century.

The two AFL clubs and eight other WAFL clubs agreed to the constitutional changes required by all WA organisations before June 30 under the new Associations Incorporation Act.

A WAFC special general meeting was held at Subiaco Oval last night to formally ratify the changes that were endorsed by the clubs this month.

But Swans opposed the changes and want the WAFC to apply the recommendations of the 2017 structural review of football to overhaul the current governance structure.

Swans' chief executive Jeff Dennis declined to comment yesterday and president Peter Hodyl could not be contacted.

Under the WAFC constitution, the nine WAFL clubs have half the votes at commission elections while the two AFL clubs have the other half.

But that is not applied in practice with the WAFC using the model designed in the 2001 Crawford report that gives 20 per cent of the votes to each of West Coast and Fremantle, 30 per cent to the combined WAFL clubs, 20 per cent to the commission itself and the final 10 per cent to community football, such as amateur and country associations.

Swans argue that the current breakdown, with the AFL clubs and commission holding a majority of votes, ensures the WAFL clubs will be invariably outvoted in any matter that conflicts between the two levels of the game.

A WAFC spokesman said a full governance review would be undertaken and was expected to be finished next year.

Monday, 4 September 2017

NEWS: West Australian Football Golden Era 1984-86 book published, 4 September 2017

Back cover of book (the can bar, Lathlain Park for Perth versus Swan Districts, 2 July 2011).
Paperback version
Message from the author Kieran James: "If you enjoyed this blog, the book is now finally available in paperback. Topic: West Australian Football Golden Era 1984-86. The book looks at the big games and main players in the Western Australian Football League (WAFL) over this period 1984-86".

SUMMARY: This book is the memoir of Kieran James, and details his experiences as co-founder of West Perth Football Club’s unofficial cheer squad from 1984 to 1986. The book shows how, because of neo-liberal ideologies and the corporatization of football, the new national league (the “expanded VFL” / AFL) relegated the WAFL to a second-tier league in 1987. This move took place over the heads of ordinary football supporters and two WAFL club presidents. Moves to bring the game closer to the people in 1984, such as holding the best-and-fairest award count night at Perth Entertainment Centre, should be seen in this light. This book will allow supporters to relive great teams, great players, and great matches from a wonderful era in WA football 1984-86 before West Coast Eagles joined the expanded VFL.

Hardcover version
AUTHOR BIO: Dr Kieran James is a Senior Lecturer in Accounting at the University of the West of Scotland, Paisley, Renfrewshire, Scotland.  He was formerly Accounting Professor at the University of Fiji from 2013-15. Alongside his high-school friend Michael Blewett, he was co-founder of the West Perth Cheer Squad (WAFL), 1984-86. He is the founder of the WAFL Golden Era website (established 18 December 2011) at http://waflgoldenera.blogspot.com which has had over 100,000 unique page-views as at 18/2/2017. Kieran is also a regular contributor to the Say NO to any AFL clubs in the WAFL Facebook group. He has published an academic journal article: “Where to now, Melbourne Croatia? Football Federation Australia’s use of accounting numbers to institute exclusion upon ethnic clubs” in Asian Review of Accounting (Vol. 19, No. 2, 2011). He is presently researching Fiji Soccer History 1980-89. His Fiji Soccer History website Nadi Legends Club can be viewed at the following URL: http://nadilegendsclub.blogspot.com. His email contact addresses are: Kieran.James@uws.ac.uk and Kieran.James99@yahoo.co.uk and his Facebook page is at: https://www.facebook.com/kieran.james.94 [Kieran James].

Thursday, 10 August 2017

GOODBYE LEEDERVILLE OVAL: New book published about WAFL Golden Era, 1984-86, by Kieran James

Message from the author Kieran James: "My new book is now available for purchase. Topic: West Perth unofficial cheer squad 1984-86. Also looks at the big games and main players in the Western Australian Football League (WAFL) over this period 1984-86".

Hardcover version
SYNOPSIS: This book is the memoir of Kieran James, and details his experiences as co-founder of West Perth Football Club’s unofficial cheer squad (hardcore support) from 1984 to 1986 (Western Australian Football League / WAFL). Using Marsh’s theory of the “illusion of violence”, the author links the cheer squad to the academic literature on British soccer hooligans, Italian ultras, and other soccer supporter groups from around the world. The book details “traditional”, “hot” support for West Perth Football Club among teenaged supporters from middle-class and working-class backgrounds. The findings conform to Armstrong and Hughson’s idea of fluid “post-modern” “neo-tribes” where affiliations are very loose and people can easily adjust their degree of commitment to a group and / or leave the group when their personal priorities change. The book also allows the reader to relive great WAFL matches and meet again key players from the era.



Paperback version
AUTHOR BIO: Dr Kieran James is a Senior Lecturer in Accounting at the University of the West of Scotland, Paisley, Renfrewshire, Scotland.  He was formerly Accounting Professor at the University of Fiji from 2013-15. Alongside his high-school friend Michael Blewett, he was co-founder of the West Perth Cheer Squad (WAFL), 1984-86. He is the founder of the WAFL Golden Era website (established 18 December 2011) at http://waflgoldenera.blogspot.com which has had over 100,000 unique page-views as at 18/2/2017. Kieran is also a regular contributor to the Say NO to any AFL clubs in the WAFL Facebook group. He has published an academic journal article: “Where to now, Melbourne Croatia? Football Federation Australia’s use of accounting numbers to institute exclusion upon ethnic clubs” in Asian Review of Accounting (Vol. 19, No. 2, 2011). He is presently researching Fiji Soccer History 1980-89. His Fiji Soccer History website Nadi Legends Club can be viewed at the following URL: http://nadilegendsclub.blogspot.com. His email contact addresses are: Kieran.James@uws.ac.uk and Kieran.James99@yahoo.co.uk and his Facebook page is at: https://www.facebook.com/kieran.james.94 [Kieran James]. 

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
Dr Sean Gorman (left) and Dr Kieran James
I would like to thank: Mr. Brian Atkinson (official historian of the West Perth Football Club and the author of It’s a Grand Old Flag); Michael “Mike” Blewett (co-founder of the WPFC cheer squad 1984-86); Caveman (leader of the Footscray not Western Bulldogs lobby group based in Melbourne); John Devaney of Full Points Footy website and Full Points Publications; Chris Egan (Australian Society for Sports History Perth chapter member, Perth Glory historian, and Peel Thunder supporter); Professor Lionel Frost (Monash University and editor of Sporting Traditions); Dr. Sean Gorman (Curtin University academic and the author of BrotherBoys); Professor Chris Hallinan (Monash University); Pave Jusup, Kova, and Sime (MCF hooligan firm at Melbourne Knights Soccer Club); Patrick Mirosevich (present-day South Fremantle cheer squad member); Mark Whiting (East Fremantle supporter); members of the Lost WAFL Facebook group; and members of the Say NO to any AFL clubs in the WAFL Facebook group.

FOREWORD, by Brian Atkinson
This is a book with a difference. It recounts primarily the memories and reflections of a then 15-year-old school boy who jointly founded a cheer squad for the West Perth Football Club (WPFC) in 1984 to succeed the previous one that was disbanding. These memories and reflections cover the 1984-1986 period. The nature of social relations within the group is also examined.
Dr Kieran James (left) and Mr Brian Atkinson
The book commences with a review of the extensive literature covering “hooliganism” associated with soccer “cheer groups” in the United Kingdom and Europe in those times and up until the hooligan scene wound itself up in the late-1980s. It examines the intersection between punk rock music and soccer hooliganism.
The author recalls commencing to follow West Perth in 1976 at the age of seven, and describes some of his early memories. The performances of the West Perth team and of many of the players from 1984 to 1986 are then recounted. Readers will enjoy recalling many team and individual highlights from that period in particular. Some interesting exchanges with cheer squads from the other Western Australian Football League (WAFL) clubs are described.
Tin shed with Technical School behind it, 6 July 2011.
This book will appeal to WAFL traditionalists who mourn the demise of the then elite suburban based tribal football competitions, as they were, within the states. The author expresses some very strong views about the evolution of the national Australian Football League (AFL) competition in 1987, and the impact that the creation of the West Coast Eagles, and subsequently the Fremantle Dockers, had on the WAFL competition. He deplores the corporatization of football. He has similarly strong views on the relocation of the West Perth Football Club from Leederville Oval to Arena Joondalup in 1994. These developments impacted heavily on his enthusiasm for football.
The book will assist to preserve the memories and part of the history of the transition period of the middle- and late-1980s when Australian Rules Football was changed forever, and the impact that this change had on the WAFL.
This book is very well researched, extensively referenced, and very well written. It will create controversy amongst readers. Many will strongly agree with the views of the author. Many will strongly disagree. But all West Perth supporters will enjoy their recollections of the players and the times of the mid-1980s.
Mr. Brian A. Atkinson,
West Perth FC official historian,
Perth, 19 November 2011.

Book Extract (from Chapter 4, page 153):
South Fremantle versus West Perth, Fremantle Oval, Round 19 (9 August), 1986

I once talked to Pete C. and spent the game with him on the scoreboard bank’s concrete terracing at Fremantle Oval (at around the half-forward flank position closest to the northern-end goals) for a match against South Fremantle late in the 1986 season. The flags had vanished and there was only the two of us left at this juncture in time. Pete C. and I hadn’t even arranged in advance to meet; it was a chance meeting. I would have to say that the cheer squad no longer existed at this point. However, Pete’s charming, quiet, and thoughtful manner had not changed.
After the game Pete C. and I walked through the Fremantle city streets together and I think Pete took a Number 106 bus or a train back to Perth while I took a different bus to Booragoon. We probably parted at Fremantle train station. I originally wrote this paragraph 26 years later, on 9 January 2013, and I still haven’t seen Pete again since that day at Fremantle Oval near to the close of the 1986 season. As we walked through the Fremantle city streets together, as the dark and the chill started drifting in from the ocean (minimum temperatures were 4.5 and 4.0 degrees Celsius on Saturday 9th and Sunday 10th August 1986), we were both fairly subdued and disappointed as it looked like our team’s season was over (the team probably could not make the final-four) and all the hope of the past two years had come to nothing. I think that another reason for my anxious and melancholic mood was the realization, pushed to the back of my mind, that my life was changing and it would never be the same again. I was 17-years-old, in the first year of university, and the adult world of responsibilities, choices, careers, and consequences was fast closing in, whilst childhood was at an end. In football terms, there was also massive change at work behind the scenes as the powerbrokers were putting together and planning for the new as yet unnamed super-team which would play in the VFL in 1987. Every genuine football person in Perth knew that the WAFL would never be the same again no matter how upbeat the newspapers were. Like my childhood, the old WAFL was slipping away. The days of 14,000 plus crowds at the match-of-the-round were never coming back.
West Perth unofficial cheer squad (1984-86) co-founders Mike Blewett (left) and Kieran James, Exchange Hotel, Kalgoorlie, 14 July 2011.
Laurie James @ Leederville Oval, looking south towards the city-centre, 6 July 2011. On fine winter days like this one in the eighties West Perth could be devastating at home with the roar of the crowd behind them. However, with no grand-final appearances between 1976 and 1994, it was also a case of potential unfulfilled. Supporter group the Grandstand Falcons used to sing the England 1982 World Cup song "This Time (We'll Get it Right)" which summed up the frustration of West Perth fans in the mid-eighties just as well as it had reflected the mindset of English soccer fans in 1982.
Kieran James back behind the northern-end goals at the Technical School end of the ground where the West Perth cheer squad congregated from 1984-86. The wooden benches behind the goals are now gone but the tin shed (see earlier picture) in the north-west corner of the ground looks much like it did in the eighties, and the wooden benches still go down from the tin shed to the playing arena fence. Picture date: 6 July 2011.

Wednesday, 14 May 2014

PICTURE GALLERY: Eagles Puppets Football Club banner displayed at East Fremantle Oval

The picture shows East Fremantle supporters on the scoreboard bank at East Fremantle Oval protesting the alignment of East Perth with West Coast Eagles prior to East Perth's visit to their ground for a WAFL match in May 2014. This scoreboard bank is a familiar sight to all WAFL fans and even those who do not love the club are forced to respect it. Although only AFL clubs get the lion's share of media coverage today historically the two most successful league-standard clubs in Australia are East Fremantle and Port Adelaide Magpies. We should respect these great clubs for what they have given to our game. You can almost smell and bottle that culture of respect and success once you walk inside the gates at East Fremantle Oval, a truly hallowed ground for WAFL fans. The way that winning culture is passed on through the generations is truly remarkable. This is a ground feared and respected by all opposition fans. For a West Perth fan the chilly ocean winds, the transport difficulties (no train station), and the bleak grey tin sheds at each end were the physical backdrops to regular depressing defeats at the hands of the home team. I like what David Edmondson has posted on Facebook: "East Fremantle, no-one's bitch since 1898". I remember standing on this screboard bank with my late grandfather Herbert Acott to watch Fremantle Dockers play Essendon in a practice match prior to the 1995 season [by Kieran James]. [These pictures were first posted by Ian Ross on the "Say No to AFL clubs in the WAFL" Facebook page on 4 May 2014 and are used here with Ian's kind permission.]

Monday, 11 November 2013

NEWS: 1981 WAFL Grand Final Budget, Claremont vs South Fremantle, sold for AUD43.00 on Ebay, 6/11/2013

NEWS: 1981 WAFL Grand Final Budget, Claremont vs South Fremantle, very good condition, sold for AUD43.00 on Ebay (auction ended 6 November 2013)
Other WAFL-related items won by Ebay auctions recently:

1968 WAFL Second Semi-Final Football Budget, Perth versus West Perth, winning bid AUD20.50 (auction ended 10 November 2013)
1969 WAFL Second Semi-Final Football Budget, West Perth versus East Perth, winning bid AUD20.50 (auction ended 10 November 2013)
WAFL-related items recently sold as normal purchase (not via auction) on Ebay recently:

1990 West Australian Football Register, 28th and last edition, sold for AUD34.00 by gardenvalecollectables
1988 Football's Who's Who, published by Indian Pacific Limited on behalf of West Coast Eagles and WAFL, sold for AUD14.40 by phils_time_booksellers
Mal Brown & Mongrels I've Met, by Mal Brown and Brian Hansen (1994), sold for AUD8.00 by taroona123
The Footballers, by Geoff Christian, 1985 edition, hardcover, sold for AUD45.00 by bobwardell
Set of 4 WAFL Football Budgets from 1990 & 1991, sold for AUD44.00 by gardenvalecollectables



Tuesday, 20 August 2013

NEWS: WAFL Golden Era website passes 26,760 page-views (record WAFL crowd, EP v WP, 1969)

Perth Oval today, main gates, Perth Glory vs Glasgow Celtic, 9 July 2011
NEWS: The WAFL Golden Era website has surpassed an important milestone, 26,760 page-views, and I am sure every old-school WAFL supporter will break out in a knowing smile. Of course the all-time record home-and-away crowd at a WAFL match was 26,760 at the game at Perth Oval on 31 May 1969 when West Perth defeated East Perth 16.15 (111) to 12.11 (83) (see WAFL Online). Thank you to readers for your continued support of this website. We will press on to surpass the 1979 Grand Final record attendance next!

Coming up: I will be posting full match scores and the original West Australian match report for the 1986 Preliminary Final Subiaco versus Perth. That was a year when Perth fans were quietly hoping that their team under Mal Brown could achieve a miracle but at the end of the day Subiaco and East Fremantle were just too strong and those clubs were deserved grand finalists. As I write this it appears that the 2013 season, whilst also promising much, will ultimately end in disappointment again for Perth Demons' fans who have had very little to cheer about since 1977. However, congratulations are due to the club, the coaching staff, and the playing roster for a great improvement over last year in all areas including such intangibles as club culture and spirit.

- Jack Frost
21 August 2013.

Wednesday, 27 February 2013

NEWS: 2013 WAFL Pre-season Scratch Match Results (photo captions by Jack Frost)


 
Lathlain Park: can bar is open to the public for all pre-season and regular season games, $6 cans Carlton Draught (all games), $5 Carlton Draught on tap (regular season games only), great atmosphere. 
Round 1 - Saturday, 23 February 2013

Claremont 16.6 (102) d Swan Districts 12.8 (80), Claremont Oval
Perth 12.14 (86) d South Fremantle 6.9 (45), Lathlain Park, crowd 300
East Perth 10.10 (70) d Subiaco 7.11 (53), Leederville Oval
Peel Thunder 12.6 (78) drew East Fremantle 11.12 (78), Rushton Park

Round 2 - Saturday, 2 March 2013

Swan Districts 15.11 (101) Perth 6.16 (52), Bassendean Oval
Subiaco 13.8 (86) d East Fremantle 10.8 (68), East Fremantle Oval
Claremont 15.14 (104) d East Perth 13.9 (87), Leederville Oval
West Perth 17.11 (113) d South Fremantle 8.9 (57), Fremantle Oval

Round 3 - Saturday, 9 March 2013 

East Fremantle 17.8 (110) d Perth 11.7 (73), Lathlain Park, crowd 200 
South Fremantle 18.8 (116) d Swan Districts 11.9 (75), Fremantle Oval 
West Perth 14.10 (94) d Peel 13.7 (85), Rushton Park 
Claremont 15.5 (95) d Subiaco 14.4 (88), Leederville Oval 

Leederville Oval (Medibank Stadium) - hosting one game each Saturday pre-season
R.A. McDonald Stand, Bassendean Oval, SD host Perth 10.30am Round 2
South Fremantle cheer squad - full of hope for the new season despite first-up loss to Perth at Lathlain
PFC merchandise stand open at pre-season and regular games at Lathlain Park - you can buy PFC jerseys, tee-shirts, scarves, Grand Final DVDs, and the excellent club history book

OPINION: On the Prison Bars: From Destiny by Dr Norman Ashton (2018), p. 153.

From Destiny by Dr Norman Ashton (2018), p. 153: Given who the opponent was to be in 1997, a letter of 1 September 1995 from Collingwood Pre...