First semi-final, 30
August 1986 – Perth v Claremont, Subiaco Oval
If we look at the 1986 season, most people were not at all surprised
by the results of the finals series because they followed the league ladder at
the end of the home-and-away rounds – Subiaco first, East Fremantle second, then a
long way further back Perth and then a long way further back again Claremont.
Although (despite the late Geoff Christian’s optimism about Perth’s prospects in his
match report after the first semi-final), dedicated WAFL fans that year were
convinced that the grand finalists would be Subiaco and East Fremantle because
those two teams were a class above all their competitors as win-loss records of
17-4 (S) and 16-5 (EF) indicate. Perth was a long way back with 12-8-1.
However, credit where credit is due. Perth had finished last or second-last in
each season from 1981-84. Legendary WAFL coach one Malcolm Gregory "Mal" Brown took over as coach for the 1985 season and by season’s end obvious improvements were being noted by
discerning critics with the club winning its last two home-and-away games. Mal Brown’s coaching was responsible for developing physical
and mental toughness, self-confidence, and teamwork in his charges at Perth as
he had done earlier with South Fremantle (1980 premiers and 1979 and 1981 runners-up). Perth drew against 1985 finalists
West Perth on the first day of the 1986 season and people were forced to
recognize that Perth had rapidly closed the gap between a fourth-placed team
such as West Perth and itself. Mal Brown had the ability to turn ordinary
fringe players into stars after he had injected them with healthy doses of
self-belief. Examples include three former West Perth players John Gavranich in
the ruck, Mick Rea at full-forward, and Ray Holden at full-back. Another ex-West Perth player, the late Chris Stasinowsky was also a fine contributor for Perth in 1985-86. (Really it's hard at times to think of Perth and West Perth as separate clubs given the two-way traffic of players between them in the 1970s and 1980s. To use an example from PFC's geographic territory the volume of traffic between the clubs rivaled Albany Highway outside Carousel during shopping hours.) Rea was a
revelation, topping the goal kicking list in 1986 with 80 majors and beating the VFL/AFL standard
defenders of other high-performing clubs. Rea proved himself again on first semi-final day 1986 when he kicked 6.3 and defeated
Claremont’s John Hutton.
For nearly 40 years Perth has continually had an absorbing but frustrating game-plan of kicking the ball sideways and backwards and generally over-finessing and lairising (to use a somewhat dated word favoured by my late grandfather who although living in PFC territory for his last 50 years never shifted his allegiance from the black-and-whites). This game-plan only worked in years such as 1976-77 and 1986 when Perth had midfielders talented enough to play this type of game. In 1986 these talented midfielders at Perth included such players as Robert Wiley (back from Richmond where he played 95 games from 1979-83), Allan Montgomery (back from Carlton where he played 33 games from 1982-85), Chris Stasinowsky (RIP), Joe Santostefano, Kim Fancote, Mark Watson, Adrian Barich, and Bryan Cousins. This day Perth’s attack was far too good for Claremont with the team kicking 24.18 including 6.3 from Mick Rea, 4.2 from Chris Stasinowsky, 3.2 from Earl Spalding, and 3.1 from Robbie Wiley. With Rea, Whittington, Santostefano, and Stasinowsky all coming back into the team for this match, Perth was at full strength and playing with self-confidence. It was able to put its losses in the last two qualifying games behind it. In my opinion, Santostefano and Stasinowsky were two of the best players of this era never to play VFL/AFL. Allan Montgomery, like Alan Johnson a decade before him, was a player who never drew attention to himself on or off-field but was remarkably talented and consistent and would have been one of the first players picked in any side. He was also one of the best players this day. Furthermore, in the past 40 years whenever Perth has been successful it has had a fast-leading and strong-marking full-forward, namely Murray Couper in 1976-77 and Mick Rea in 1986 (with the future Melbourne and Carlton player Earl Spalding also offering another tall key-position player option in 1986). Without such a full-forward, Perth's style of play means its players get bogged down around the half-forward line and hang on to the ball while running around in circles because they are afraid of losing possession.
For nearly 40 years Perth has continually had an absorbing but frustrating game-plan of kicking the ball sideways and backwards and generally over-finessing and lairising (to use a somewhat dated word favoured by my late grandfather who although living in PFC territory for his last 50 years never shifted his allegiance from the black-and-whites). This game-plan only worked in years such as 1976-77 and 1986 when Perth had midfielders talented enough to play this type of game. In 1986 these talented midfielders at Perth included such players as Robert Wiley (back from Richmond where he played 95 games from 1979-83), Allan Montgomery (back from Carlton where he played 33 games from 1982-85), Chris Stasinowsky (RIP), Joe Santostefano, Kim Fancote, Mark Watson, Adrian Barich, and Bryan Cousins. This day Perth’s attack was far too good for Claremont with the team kicking 24.18 including 6.3 from Mick Rea, 4.2 from Chris Stasinowsky, 3.2 from Earl Spalding, and 3.1 from Robbie Wiley. With Rea, Whittington, Santostefano, and Stasinowsky all coming back into the team for this match, Perth was at full strength and playing with self-confidence. It was able to put its losses in the last two qualifying games behind it. In my opinion, Santostefano and Stasinowsky were two of the best players of this era never to play VFL/AFL. Allan Montgomery, like Alan Johnson a decade before him, was a player who never drew attention to himself on or off-field but was remarkably talented and consistent and would have been one of the first players picked in any side. He was also one of the best players this day. Furthermore, in the past 40 years whenever Perth has been successful it has had a fast-leading and strong-marking full-forward, namely Murray Couper in 1976-77 and Mick Rea in 1986 (with the future Melbourne and Carlton player Earl Spalding also offering another tall key-position player option in 1986). Without such a full-forward, Perth's style of play means its players get bogged down around the half-forward line and hang on to the ball while running around in circles because they are afraid of losing possession.
The old Victoria Park station (prior to renovations). |
The old Lathlain station (since demolished) looking south. |
Likely line-ups:
(Source: The West Australian,
Saturday, 30 August 1986, p. 194)
Perth Demons FC
Backs: Cousins, Holden, Bogaards
Half-backs: Yorgey, Montgomery, Whittington
Centres: Santostefano, Wiley, Barich
Half-forwards: Garbin, Spalding, Ryder
Forwards: Stasinowsky, Rea, Lucas
Ruck: Gavranich, Fancote, Watson
Interchange (from): Newman, C Smyth, Grljusich, McCracken
In; Rea, Whittington, Santostefano, Stasinowsky
Out: Mount (thigh), Zaikos, Moir
Claremont Tigers FC
Backs: L Kickett, Hutton, McKenna
Half-backs: M O’Connell, Miles, Morton
Centres: Panizza, Malaxos, Povey
Half-forwards: Lewis, D O’Connell, Thorne
Forwards: Cook, D Kickett, Dintinosante
Ruck: Hepburn, Goulding, Mitchell
Interchange (from): Shepherd, Hann, Mumme, Tait
In: Malaxos, Mitchell, Goulding, Hutton
Out: Court
Match results – Saturday 30 August, 1986, Subiaco Oval
Perth FC 7.3 13.7 19.12 24.18 (162) d Claremont 3.2 7.4 10.7 13.11
(89)
Scorers: P: Rea 6.3, Stasinowsky 4.2, Spalding 3.2, Wiley 3.1, Ryder
2.5, Lucas 2.0, Barich 1.0, Bogaards 1.0, Fancote 1.0, Yorgey 1.0, Watson 0.2,
Newman 0.1, Whittington 0.1.
C: Hutton 3.1, Morton 2.0, Panizza 2.0, Goulding 1.1, Hepburn 1.1,
Lewis 1.1, Malaxos 1.1, Dintinosante 1.0, D Kickett 1.0, Thorne 0.4, Shepherd
0.1, Forced 0.1.
Weather: Fine, moderate south-westerly winds.
(Source: The West Australian,
Monday, 1 September 1986, p. 81)
Attendance: 21,037 (from WAFL Online)
Free-kicks: P: 10, 4, 2, 2 – 18.
C: 10, 5, 6, 6 – 27.
Team rankings: GEOFF CHRISTIAN:
P: A Montgomery 1, I Newman 2, B Yorgey 3, R Wiley 4, C Smyth 5, J
Lucas 6.
C: C Lewis 1, G Miles 2, M Hepburn 3, J Hutton 4, C Shepherd 5, M
O’Connell 6.
KEN CASELLAS:
P: B Yorgey 1, R Wiley 2, J Gavranich 3, A Montgomery 4, M Rea 5, B
Cousins 6.
C: C Lewis 1, M O’Connell 2, G Miles 3, M Hepburn 4, C Shepherd 5, J
Hutton 6.
GARY STOCKS:
P: B Yorgey 1, A Montgomery 2, R Wiley 3, A Barich 4, I Newman 5, J
Gavranich 6.
C: C Lewis 1, G Miles 2, M Hepburn 3, C Shepherd 4, M O’Connell 5, B
Cook 6.
DAVID MARSH:
P: B Yorgey 1, A Montgomery 2, I Newman 3, J Gavranich 4, R Wiley 5,
M Rea 6.
C: C Lewis 1, M O’Connell 2, G Miles 3, S Goulding 4, C Shepherd 5,
D O’Connell 6.
(Source: The West Australian,
Monday, 1 September 1986, p. 81)
By the late GEOFF CHRISTIAN:
“Perth played well enough for long enough against a sub-standard
Claremont in the first semi-final on Saturday to sound a genuine warning to the
losers of the Subiaco-East Fremantle second semi-final at Subiaco Oval next
Saturday.
“Perth emerged from this game in top form, with no serious injury
problems and with the prospect of having key defender Stephen Mount and rover
Stephen Lally available on Saturday week.
“There was no need to tell Perth yesterday that they will not have
things as easy against either Subiaco or East Fremantle as they did on
Saturday, when they controlled the action from the start with a minimum of
interference.
“But Perth could not have expected to do more in a dress-rehearsal
for the preliminary final than to kick 24.18 – their second-highest score in
final-round football – and win by 73 points in what was the most one-sided
first semi-final since 1959.
“That was when Subiaco beat Perth by 129 points at the start of a
final-round trip that ended in a grand-final clash with East Perth.
“Perth now plan to travel the same route in 1986 – win the
preliminary final and qualify for their first grand final appearance since 1978
when they lost to East Perth.
“Saturday’s semi-final was a no-contest; an exercise which left all
Claremont fans with amnesia.
“But Perth fans enjoyed the after-glow of victory and they had
plenty to remember about a match in which their team snapped back into form
with a minimum of fuss and a maximum of attacking efficiency.
“These who believed the 1986 premiership battle was a two-way
contest between Subiaco and East Fremantle were left pondering whether the
Demons have the skill to bridge the big gap between the first semi-final and
the grand final.
“Subiaco probably thought a little deeper and longer than East
Fremantle because it was only three weeks ago that Perth beat Subiaco 21.10 to
11.18 at Subiaco Oval.
“East Fremantle would not have ignored the fact that Perth handled a
meek challenge from Claremont nearly as easily as did the Sharks at Claremont
Oval a week earlier, when they won 27.14 to 13.11.
“Perth swept back into form after two weeks on the outer on a
healthy winning mixture of dominant play on the ball, excellent forward work and
strong defensive play against a Claremont side that was out-of-business by
half-time.
“Perth will have to create a similar set of circumstances to advance
further in this year’s final round, but the following features of their
football were excellent signs:
-
The combined ruck work of Ian
Newman, who was superb in the first half, and John Gavranich, who turned on his
best 45 minutes of football for the year in the second.
-
The roving of [Robert] Wiley,
who absorbed a heavy head-shot late in the second term and gave a second-half
display that was testimony to his skill and courage. The support from Mark
Watson and Kim Fancote was of the standard required to win in up-tempo
football.
-
The capacity of forwards Mick
Rea (6.3) and Chris Stasinowsky [RIP] (4.2) to give telling comeback
performances that destroyed the stability of the Claremont defence by
quarter-time.
-
The versatility of Brett
Yorgey, who slipped neatly into the centre in the first quarter to help lift
the efficiency of Perth in a performance that guaranteed him a place in the
best-player list.
-
The effectiveness of Craig
Smyth (opposed by Steve Malaxos) and Jack Lucas (v Michael Mitchell) in their
personal duels with two of Claremont’s most capable attacking players.
-
The experience and skill of key
defender Allan Montgomery, which went on display in telling fashion throughout.
He set a standard that was quickly followed, notably by Mick Garbin, who had a
significant win over Derek Kickett.
-
The second-half form of wingman
Adrian Barich and centre-half-forward Earl Spalding, both of whom will be
required to play that well (and for a little longer) in the [preliminary]
final”.
(Source: Geoff Christian (1986), “Devastating Demons
deliver warning”, The West Australian,
Monday, 1 September 1986, p. 84) [archival research by Jack Frost].