Friday, 10 June 2016

Round 11, 1976: West Perth 14.17 (101) d Subiaco 4.6 (30) (includes Facebook comments)

During the premiership drought years of the late-1970s and 1980s West Perth could beat anyone on sunny winter's days like this one at Leederville Oval with the passionate home crowd roaring their support. However, the club found it very hard to win at venues like Bassendean Oval and the two Fremantle grounds even in years such as 1976-78, 1982, and 1985 when it made the finals.
Memories of my first WAFL match? It was Round 11 1976 (Saturday 19 June). West Perth had won the 1975 premiership under the coaching of former Fitzroy rover Graham Campbell but to many people's surprise West Perth was won 3 and lost 7 after 10 rounds in 1976. However, the team's good percentage of 91.43% suggested it might have been unlucky. Final football was looking unlikely unless WP improved quickly and started winning games. I was 7-years-old and my father took me to Leederville Oval for Round 11, WP v Subiaco (of course that was a WP home game in those days). It was a terrible day with non-stop heavy rain. We were able to get a seat behind the fence in front of the tin shed in the north-west corner of the ground (see the second picture below). People helped us squeeze in there because I was just a young fellow. We ended up talking to the mother of the then WP back-pocket player Ian Kent (or at least a close female relative of Ian Kent). Due to the rain we left at half-time but I was hooked on WAFL football. Final score: West Perth 14.17 (101) d Subiaco 4.6 (30), attendance 5,175 (sourced from WAFL official website). This day was the start of a WP resurgence and the club made the final four at season's end. However, Perth won the 1976 premiership after comfortably beating WP in the first semi-final. I remember this day in Round 11 the colourful WP jumpers standing out in front of the grey and depressing background. Attendance of the round: 16,785 at Perth Oval to see East Perth easily beat Claremont [by Kieran James, 2 June 2016, first posted in "Say NO to any AFL Clubs in the WAFL" Facebook group.].

This post generated the following Facebook comments (all comments used with permission):

Adrian Gibson (Perth supporter): Such a good memory you have for someone who was so young at the time and the year 1976 was one of the best for me with Perth winning the flag but I was surprised how West Perth was going that year after the way they thrashed South Freo the year before [1975 Grand Final].

Kieran James: I did a bit of research and from 1975-89 WP performed well in their first year with a new coach and then performance declined in each case (Campbell in 1975-77, Percy Johnson in 1978-mid 1979, Cometti in 1982-84, Wynne in 1985-86, and Michalczyk in 1989-91).

Adrian Gibson: Wow you did do your research, I never thought of that but now I’m thinking about it looking at those names you are so right. With coaches at Perth we just start bad and go downhill after that.

Kieran James: I was talking about West Perth but Perth may have been the same. Another interesting fact is the trainload of players who travelled between P and WP in those years. I think P did best out of the trades in total but it was close.

Adrian Gibson: It was strange they did get rid of Campbell so soon after that flag. I remember a couple of games at Lathlain Park when we played West Perth. The first was 73: Barry Cable was on fire, we were in front 4.4 to 1.4, then he got injured and they just ran over the top of us. I also remember another game when a car went a bit fast in the car park and hit me on the leg. They took me to the West Perth change rooms to see if I was OK. I remember being a wide eyed kid of about 12 or 13 and I saw Polly Farmer, Mel Whinnen, and Bill Dempsey up so close it blew me away.

Tin shed and Tech School beyond, Leederville Oval, July 2011
Kieran James: Great memories you shared there. Campbell stayed until end of 77, I don’t know why he left; maybe his family missed Melbourne. I don’t think he was pushed out. WP made finals every year from 1975-77 under Campbell and then in 1978 under Percy Johnson. Johnson was fired mid-season 1979, and Campbell replaced him and stayed until the end of 1981. However, Campbell could only walk on water once and the club missed finals from 1979-81.

Adrian Gibson: I even think I may be wrong but I thought he coached Fitzroy in the VFL at one stage.

Kieran James: Yes he did and they won a night flag under him I think [yes, 1978]. He also coached Glenelg in 1963-84 and ex-West Perth player Ross Gibbs was part of that team.

Adrian Gibson: Yes Ross Gibbs, I remember him; he was such a great mark for someone his size. Now his son plays for Carlton and it makes me feel old lol. I know Leederville was a very hard place to win at. We used to leave there with a 10 goal hiding no matter how good a side we had.

Kieran James: Yes, WP could beat anyone on a sunny day at Leederville, with the crowd behind them, ladder placings didn’t matter, but away from home they were often shocking especially at Bassendean and both Fremantle grounds.

Adrian Gibson: Yes, it was hard for most teams at those grounds. My best mate was an East Perth supporter so we used to go to the footy in turns one week his team and then mine. I also used to do the scoreboard at Lathlain which was fun. Home ground advantage used to be a lot stronger in those days and the West Perth Cheer Squad used to be very loud.

View from Can Bar @ Lathlain Park, P v SD, 2/7/2011
Kieran James: Adrian, who was P’s greatest rival then and how was WP viewed? My memory is WP and P were on fairly friendly terms. … The drawn WP v P game in Round 1, 1986 was a big match. WP had high hopes of doing well in 1986 but Perth was emerging fast under Browny [Mal Brown] and you took over from us in the final four that year (we made it in 1985).

Adrian Gibson: I think East Perth was our greatest rival. I mean we beat them in four grand finals; they were the Collingwood of the WAFL. They lost 66, 67, and 68 to us; 69 and 71 to you; and then 76 to us and they only won in 72 and 78 (which still hurts also). I wasn’t very fond of South Freo either.

Kieran James: And the 78 win was due to Ian Miller and Barry Cable switching sides and Murray Couper and John Quartermaine being out of the Perth team. Those EP defeats were very enjoyable.

Adrian Gibson: Yes and when we kicked with the wind that day [1978 grand final versus EP], it poured down and when they kicked with it there was no rain at all. Miller wanted to come back to Perth but they were so up themselves and had just won the flag so they said they didn’t need him. That made me so angry, I thought it would bite them in the backside which it did. He played really well that day; Buzz [Peter Bosustow] nearly got us over the line but we really missed Couper and Quartermaine that day.

Discussion turned to the 1982 Final Round Series as West Perth supporter Andrew Henryon joined the chat.

Andrew Henryon (West Perth supporter): East Fremantle and Claremont have always been our nemesis. As [John] Dimmer used to say: “If we can win at Shark Park, we can win the GF!” We should’ve won the flag in 1982.

Can Bar crowd, Lathlain Park, P v SD, 2/7/2011
Adrian Gibson: Yes, I remember 82. I thought it would be Claremont and West Perth in the grand final but Swans came from nowhere to win it. [Dennis] Cometti had a good side that year.

Kieran James: And West Perth found Claremont hard to beat but did well against Swans from 1982-84 so it was unfortunate we met Claremont in the preliminary final. In fact in Swans’ premiership years [1982-84] we won 5 out of the 9 home-and-away games against them. [Note: Doubters can verify the accuracy of this statement by checking the old results year by year at the WAFL’s official website.] I remember the 82 preliminary final, watching it from the middle-tier of the three-tier stand and seeing Ray Holden being outclassed by Warren Ralph. I had high hopes in 1985 too; we were good against East Fremantle that year but we didn’t meet them in the finals.

Andrew Henryon: The David Palm suspension from the 1982 1st semi-final thrashing of East Perth did not help. Shame because 1982 was our year and it got away, like what happened to the Dockers in 2013.

We went on to a discussion of the 1985 final round series:

Kieran James: East Fremantle was our nemesis in every year except for 1985 when WP beat EF in two out of the three home-and-away games including the last minute Subiaco Oval win when the late Chris Mainwaring missed at the end. (In the video on YouTube I can be seen at 2:53-54 congratulating the West Perth players after the siren, I was a tall and skinny 16-year-old guy, black hair, light-blueish check flannel shirt, jeans, and WP jumper tied around the waist.)

Andrew Henryon: The Mainwaring miss. … We were never a chance in 85 under John Wynne, I’m not going there.

Can Bar Crowd, Lathlain Park, P v SD, 2/7/2011
Kieran James: As a young fan I remember having hope in 85 but of course was unaware of any goings on at the club. 1986 was a huge disappointment.

Then there was some mention of 1978, another year that got away for both Perth and West Perth.

Andrew Henryon: Have a look at the 1978 home-and-away. In Round 21 EP 5th to 2nd, WP 2nd to 4th after EP beat us in round 21 at Leedy in front of 24000! Real bizarre events and EP came from nowhere to win the flag. Unbelievable destiny!

Adrian Gibson: Yes, I remember that last game in 78. East Perth was on a winning streak of 7 or 9 games or something and had to win to make the four and the other results went their way and they ended up 2nd and played us in the 2nd semi-final but the crowd was so amazing at that game.

Kieran James: It was too bad that Perth came so close to repeating their hat-trick of flags exactly one decade later but failed (66-67-68 and nearly 76-77-78).

[A special thanks to Adrian Gibson and Andrew Henryon for their kind permission in allowing me to share their comments here. We should write down our memories of the WAFL Golden Era while there are still some of us left. Someone who was 6-years-old when the West Coast Eagles was formed will be 35-years-old today. People of this age and below have no personal memory of the pre-Eagles environment in Western Australia. If people don’t care about the WAFL Golden Era today there may come a time when they will care again.]

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