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The late great Maurice Rioli |
This game was for many people of my generation the highlight of the WAFL Golden Era. I was ten years old when the game was played but I was not at the ground because my dad would only take me to qualifying round matches until I reached high-school age. (The first grand final I watched at the ground was 1981.) On the 1979 GF DVD, expert commentator Steve Marsh often talks about the 1954 Grand Final and other grand finals of his era. Back in 1979 those games were still in the living memory of most people just as the 1980s games are today. However, I was too young to have experienced the 1950s, 1960s, and early-1970s. For people of my generation this game was the greatest game and most significant game that we are able to personally remember. It was an even contest with East Fremantle only sealing the game when it went four goals ahead around the 20-minute mark of the last quarter. It was of course the day a record Grand Final crowd of 52,781 entered Subiaco Oval with the gates being shut at 2pm. Before the official crowd figure came through after half-time the commentators were suggesting 54,000 plus people. This attendance of 52,781 was not bettered in the period 1980-86 and obviously in today's environment of the WAFL as a second-tier league the record will never be beaten. It will stand for eternity or as long as the WAFL continues to exist (whichever is the shorter, God bless the WAFL)!
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Tony Buhagiar (Essendon days) |
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B Peake, young & bearded, 1981 |
In what was surprising but totally expected in terms of the spirit of this game the SFFC full-forward Ray Bauskis came to life in the second-half playing a traditional full-forward's role of wrestle, lead, mark and kick, similar to Tony Lockett or Jason Dunstall but perhaps one notch in class lower (which is not to call Bauskis a bad player, he was one of a long list of great SFFC full-forwards from Gerovich and Naylor to Sumich and Dorotich). He marked well, out-wrestled and outran his immediate opponents and scored well from set shots (unlike Taylor at the other end). He looked genuinely dangerous and it seemed SFFC might be able to kick a winning score through Bauskis. [Bauskis played 120 games for SFFC from 1972-80.] However, as the game wore on, Peake played a more important role as did Judge and Taylor up forward, Turco and Green in defence, and Robbie Johnson (Percy Johnson's son) around the ground. Geraldton player Graham Kickett came on to the ground in the last quarter and was placed on the wing. His fresh legs and passion were obvious and he was involved in a few great passages of play as the minutes ticked away at the end. His very presence with his fresh legs probably was enough to cause discouragement among the SFFC players. However, this was one grand final where just based on its performance on the day you can say SFFC would have been worthy winners and worthy premiers. Of course SFFC won the following year's 1980 Grand Final against Swan Districts and that was poetic justice of a sort.
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B Peake, 1982 VFL Scanlens card |
What can you see of the crowd? Obviously it was a packed venue that day. This was the era of the three-tier stand all on its lonesome at the southern end (opened 31/8/1969), concrete terracing on the Roberts Road wing, grassy bank at the city end, and the old grandstand on the western flank. The two-tier stand was not opened until 27/4/1981 (according to the Paterson's Stadium page at www.Austadiums.com). The public admission areas obviously were extremely full. The gates were closed at 2pm for the 2.20pm start. You can see about ten people sitting on the roof of a fast-food van at the top of the grassy bank. The old tin shed and scoreboard can be seen on the eastern flank. Progress scores for North Melbourne v Carlton (VFL) can be read on the board. The crowd was very much pro-South Fremantle. If you look at people in the crowd wearing the club colours I would estimate 80%-90% was South and only 10%-20% was East. This shows the huge dormant followings clubs such as South Fremantle, West Perth, and East Perth had back in this era. At the ground alone there must have been around 30,000 to 40,000 SFFC fans and 5,000 to 15,000 EFFC fans. EFFC even then had fewer supporters than many other clubs probably in part because its urban territory was and is a closed square, bordered by SFFC to the south, PFC to the east, and the Swan River to the north. Many red-and-white flags were obvious at the city end and there were one or two EFFC young people with flags in the middle of them. One of these guys stood on the fence and waved his flag when EFFC scored and did what appeared to be a two-fingered salute each time SFFC scored. That particular salute seems to have died out now and I can't say that is a bad thing. It is hard to be sure whether all these South flags at the city end on the DVD were part of an organized cheer squad or they were just carried by isolated individuals who all just happened to sit behind the goals.
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B Peake in recent years |
On the DVD you can see that around 30% or 40% of the boundary fence had no sponsorship signs on it. At the city end goals people were allowed to leave their flags hanging over the boundary fence when not in use. Imagine that being allowed in the hyper-corporate and politically-correct AFL of today! Clearly these were simpler and less politically-correct times when the football public rather than the sponsors were still perceived to be the most important stakeholder within the footballing community. Around the half-forward flank at the city end in front of the tin shed you can see on the DVD a Red Rooster advertising sign on the boundary fence. I can remember this company used to advertise its meals frequently in the Football Budget including mouth-watering photographs of the Hawaiian Pack so that football patrons could start to get hungry during the last quarter and then head directly to Red Rooster straight after the game. Red Rooster was an integral part of the WAFL football match-day experience for many people in the late-1970s. At Bassendean Oval in the 1980s supporters would get half-time pass-outs and go to the Red Rooster shop across the street (on the corner of West Street and Extension Street) and then bring the food back into the ground. Bassendean Oval was such an intimidating place for West Perth fans back in that era that you learnt to appreciate little things at the ground such as the Red Rooster meals which you couldn't access easily at any of the other suburban grounds.
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SFFC aboriginal legends - Vigona, Roe & Rioli |
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SFFC coach Mal Brown (a mongrel I never met)! |
WAFL joke: Q: Where would you be if you tried to put a carrot through the eye of a needle?
A: At an East Fremantle FC training session circa 1979!
Facebook comment by Marco Melia (11 September 2018): "Brian Peake was my apprenticeship officer when I was doing Panel beating at Carisle Tech, ripper bloke".
Facebook comment by Doug Winning (11 September 2018): "Played under 16's cricket with Brian Peake at the South Perth Cricket Club. He was our opening bowler. At South Perth at the time, all playing under 16's at the same time were a plethora of talented kids. They included Sandover medallist Peter Spencer; West Coast, Perth and Richmond star Robert Wiley; Australian Hockey representatives Greg and Craig Davies; and former East Fremantle league footballer Paul Bennett." (Note: Doug Winning's cousin Dean Winning played 13 senior games for Claremont in 1984-85.)
Link to buy Grand Final DVDs at EFFC's official website (valid as at 7 October 2012):
http://www.effc.com.au/team-store/match-dvds/