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Stats observations

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The Longest 'Highest','Lowest' and Biggest of the Round/Year - 'Droughts'.
(Current teams not including Gold Coast and GWS.)

The last time Brisbane kicked the 'sweep' (highest score of the round) was round 8 2009 - 18.11-119 v Adelaide.
The last time Sydney conceded the 'sweep' was round 16 2009 - v Carlton 19.10-124

The last time Hawthorn recorded the lowest score of the round was round 19 2009 - 7-7-49 v St Kilda.
The last time Nth. Melbourne conceded the lowest score of the round was round 11 2007 - v St Kilda 8.10-58

The last time Richmond had the biggest win of the round was round 15 2008 - 24.8-152 v West Coast 11.9-75
The last time St Kilda had the biggest loss of the round was round 5 2007 - 6.7-43 v Port Adelaide 14.12-96.

There have been 375 matches that produced the highest and lowest score plus the biggest win of the round.
The last time Sydney did it was round 3 1998 - 24.16-160 v Geelong 7.15-57 (Fremantle never have.)
The above match was the last time Geelong conceded the highest score, scored the lowest score and had the biggest loss of the round.

The last time WB/Footscray recorded the highest score of the year was in 1978 - 33.15-213 v St Kilda
(Fremantle are yet to have the highest score of the year.)
The last time Collingwood conceded the highest score of the year was in 1976 - v Hawthorn 25.22-172
(Adelaide and Port Adelaide are yet to concede the highest score of the year.)

The last time Sydney/SM recorded the lowest score of the year was 1974 - 4.7-31 v Hawthorn
(Adelaide are yet to have the lowest score of the year.)
The last time Sydney/SM conceded the lowest score of the year was 1943 - v Nth Melbourne 6.6-42
(Fremantle are yet to concede the lowest score of the year.)

The last time WB/Footscray had the biggest win of the year was 1951- 23.14-152 v Melbourne 5.19-49
(Fremantle and Port Adelaide are yet to have the biggest win of the year.)
The last time Collingwood had the biggest loss of the year was 1968 - 7.11-53 v Essendon 20.18-138
(Port Adelaide are yet to have the biggest loss of the year.)

Only 4 matches have provided the highest score, lowest score and biggest win of the year.

1899: Geelong 23.24-62 v St Kilda 0.1-1
1904: Fitzroy 16.12-108 v Carlton 1.8-14
1906: Fitzroy 17.18-120 v Melbourne 2.1-13
2012: Hawthorn 28.25-193 v GWS Giants 4.7-31
 
The Longest 'Highest','Lowest' and Biggest of the Round/Year - 'Droughts'.
(Current teams not including Gold Coast and GWS.)

The last time Brisbane kicked the 'sweep' (highest score of the round) was round 8 2009 - 18.11-119 v Adelaide.
The last time Sydney conceded the 'sweep' was round 16 2009 - v Carlton 19.10-124

The last time Hawthorn recorded the lowest score of the round was round 19 2009 - 7-7-49 v St Kilda.
The last time Nth. Melbourne conceded the lowest score of the round was round 11 2007 - v St Kilda 8.10-58

The last time Richmond had the biggest win of the round was round 15 2008 - 24.8-152 v West Coast 11.9-75
The last time St Kilda had the biggest loss of the round was round 5 2007 - 6.7-43 v Port Adelaide 14.12-96.

There have been 375 matches that produced the highest and lowest score plus the biggest win of the round.
The last time Sydney did it was round 3 1998 - 24.16-160 v Geelong 7.15-57 (Fremantle never have.)
The above match was the last time Geelong conceded the highest score, scored the lowest score and had the biggest loss of the round.

The last time WB/Footscray recorded the highest score of the year was in 1978 - 33.15-213 v St Kilda
(Fremantle are yet to have the highest score of the year.)
The last time Collingwood conceded the highest score of the year was in 1976 - v Hawthorn 25.22-172
(Adelaide and Port Adelaide are yet to concede the highest score of the year.)

The last time Sydney/SM recorded the lowest score of the year was 1974 - 4.7-31 v Hawthorn
(Adelaide are yet to have the lowest score of the year.)
The last time Sydney/SM conceded the lowest score of the year was 1943 - v Nth Melbourne 6.6-42
(Fremantle are yet to concede the lowest score of the year.)

The last time WB/Footscray had the biggest win of the year was 1951- 23.14-152 v Melbourne 5.19-49
(Fremantle and Port Adelaide are yet to have the biggest win of the year.)
The last time Collingwood had the biggest loss of the year was 1968 - 7.11-53 v Essendon 20.18-138
(Port Adelaide are yet to have the biggest loss of the year.)

Only 4 matches have provided the highest score, lowest score and biggest win of the year.

1899: Geelong 23.24-62 v St Kilda 0.1-1
1904: Fitzroy 16.12-108 v Carlton 1.8-14
1906: Fitzroy 17.18-120 v Melbourne 2.1-13
2012: Hawthorn 28.25-193 v GWS Giants 4.7-31

Fascinating stats R.R. I'm amazed at that stat in 1968, that Essendon's relatively narrow margin of 85 points over Collingwood was the biggest win by anybody that season! I know Geelong lost a game to the Doggies that year by 83 points, and finished with a pretty mediocre percentage despite an imposing 15-5 record....indeed just 106.78% actually.

Couple of things, would that year (1968 which also provided a remarkably low scoring GF) be one of very few years in post-war times to have such a low 'Highest margin' of just 85 points, and would Geelong's meek 106.78% be the lowest percentage for any side with a 15-5 record (or for comparison's sake, say a 14-4 or 16-6..with a 10-win differential at the end of a season?
 
Fascinating stats R.R. I'm amazed at that stat in 1968, that Essendon's relatively narrow margin of 85 points over Collingwood was the biggest win by anybody that season! I know Geelong lost a game to the Doggies that year by 83 points, and finished with a pretty mediocre percentage despite an imposing 15-5 record....indeed just 106.78% actually.

Couple of things, would that year (1968 which also provided a remarkably low scoring GF) be one of very few years in post-war times to have such a low 'Highest margin' of just 85 points, and would Geelong's meek 106.78% be the lowest percentage for any side with a 15-5 record (or for comparison's sake, say a 14-4 or 16-6..with a 10-win differential at the end of a season?

There have been 17 lower 'biggest wins' of the season than 85 points. The lowest is 60 points in 1917 - the semi-final Collingwood 13.17-95 v Sydney/SM 3.17-35. The lowest since 1968 was 79 points in 1973 - Carlton 19.16-130 v Sydney/SM 7.9-51, which is also the last time the biggest win of the year was under 100 points. The other two instances lower than 85 since 1945 were in 1957 - Melbourne 24.14-158 v Fitzroy 10.14-74 and in 1962 - Geelong 19.15-129 v Nth Melbourne 6.14-50.

Geelong's percentage of 106.78% in 1968 is the lowest recorded on a final ladder for a team with a match/win% of 75% or more.
Next lowest is Collingwood's 111.61% in 1932 - m/w% 77.78 (14 wins, 4 losses from 18 matches.)
More recently Nth. Melbourne in 1999 had a m/w% of 77.27% (17 wins, 5 losses) and a percentage of 115.69 on the final ladder.

The lowest percentage in a complete season for a team with a m/w% of 75.0 (15 wins, 5 losses) or more is Collingwood's 107.10% in 1932.

Geelong's percentage for the complete season in 1968 was 120.07% which is the 12th lowest for a complete season by a team with a m/w% of 75 (15 wins, 5 losses) or more.

In 1936 Sydney/SM's m/w% for the complete season was 80.95% (17 wins, 4 losses) with a percentage 116.08% - the only time a team has finished a season with a m/w% over 80 and a percentage under 120.
 
West Coast - oldest teams:

AvAge|Year|Rd|AvGms|Res|Opp
\ 25.84 | 2013 | 10 | 117.23 || Ri
\25.73|2013|3|104.09|W|Me
\25.59|1998|22|117.82|L|Ad
\25.57|1995|19|97.43|W|Ad
\25.56|1994|13|87.71|L|Co
\25.52|2013|8|111.82|W|NM
\25.52|1995|20|97.43|W|Me
\25.52|1995|5|85.52|W|Me
\25.52|2013|4|96.55|L|Ca
\25.50|1995|11|90.24|L|Ri
\25.50|2013|2|96.23|L|Ha
\25.47|1995|1|96.43|W|St
\25.46|2012|EF|116.14|W|NM
\25.46|1997|QF|104.43|L|Ad
\25.45|2013|5|93.18|L|PA
\25.45|2012|SF|117.68|L|Co
 

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Observed in Round 10 2013:

  • A first for Collingwood in Brisbane.
  • A 1 in 126 win for Carlton.
  • GWS have done in 32 matches what has taken Geelong 1,006 matches.
  • A first for Fremantle against Adelaide.
  • Only the third time in 117 years that the Swans have beaten Essendon in a particular way.
  • A first in Geelong since 1991.
  • A 1 in 1,782 event at Kardinia Park.
  • Three new club records for the Bulldogs against the Power.
  • Melbourne’s behinds haven’t been as low since 1919.
  • Hawthorn have had only 2 better starts to a season – Melbourne have had only 1 worse.
  • A first and a new club record for the Kangaroos against the Saints.
  • West Coast perhaps need to ask their visitors about the location of the goals at their home ground.
  • Somewhere Richmond have not been since 2005.
  • An attendance not seen since 1993.

Details and more: Click here.
 
top8_opponents_zpscdc98d55.png
2013 Round 1-10​
Matches against opponents placed in the top 8 on the ladder at the time of the match.​
(Final placing in 2012 used for round 1.)​
 
http://stats.rleague.com/afl/stats/teamshi.html#lc12

^ lowest free kick counts on record

tonights game had 15 coming towards the end. probably ended up with 18 or 19 so will make that list. lowest in probably 7 or 8 years.

Ended with 17. (Cats/Suns and Swans/Bombers matches last round each had 20.)

Would be interesting to see the ratio of tackles to free kicks in the eras when free kick tallies were sometimes over the 100 mark, but I don't think we have the tackle counts going back very far. It is my impression that 30 to 40 years ago nearly every tackle resulted in a free kick, now the play mostly continues. Have a look at the 'most frees' table here: http://stats.rleague.com/afl/stats/teamshi.html#h12 noting that the figures only are for the first named team - in the round 7, 1978 match where Collingwood received 71 free kicks, Carlton had 47 for a total of 118!)

Where the notion that the game in recent times has become 'over umpired' comes from from can perhaps be mainly put down to shallow and uninformed thinking processes that work on a short term proposition that 'once is always' and 'twice is never'.

May not be enough of a sample but its interesting to note that in the two most recent rounds of AFL and WAFL, the umpires in the WAFL have been giving an average of around 33% more free kicks than their counterparts in the AFL - 40 v 30.
 
After compiling these stats, I perused them and then thought, do they really mean anything significant? Maybe they're just interesting to look at. I thought I'd post them anyway, and if someone else can read something meaningful into them, then so be it. Perhaps one thing is how quickly a team can get itself into a period of sustained success. Carlton took the most matches needed to reach 12 premierships but the fewest needed to reach 14, even though there are only three clubs who have reached this total.

FEWEST AND MOST MATCHES PLAYED TO REACH x TOTAL OF PREMIERSHIPS

1 FEWEST: 17 Essendon (1897), MOST: 1202 St. Kilda (1897-1966)
2 FEWEST: 51 Fitzroy (1897-1899), MOST: 1015 North Melbourne (1925-1977)
3 FEWEST: 145 Fitzroy (1897-1904), MOST: 1454 North Melbourne (1925-1996)
4 FEWEST: 165 Fitzroy (1897-1905), MOST: 2116 South/Sydney (1897-2005)
5 FEWEST: 312 Fitzroy (1897-1913), MOST: 2283 South/Sydney (1897-2012)
6 FEWEST: 364 Fitzroy (1897-1916), MOST: 1227 Hawthorn (1925-1986)
7 FEWEST: 464 Fitzroy (1897-1922), MOST: 2164 Geelong (1897-2007)
8 FEWEST: 604 Collingwood (1897-1929), MOST: 2214 Geelong (1897-2009)
9 FEWEST: 625 Collingwood (1897-1930), MOST: 2264 Geelong (1897-2011)
10 FEWEST: 722 Collingwood (1897-1935), MOST: 1735 Hawthorn (1925-2008)
11 FEWEST: 742 Collingwood (1897-1936), MOST: 1425 Carlton (1897-1972)
12 FEWEST: 1072 Collingwood (1897-1953), MOST: 1590 Carlton (1897-1979)
13 FEWEST: 1171 Collingwood (1897-1958), MOST: 1672 Essendon (1897-1984)
14 FEWEST: 1664 Carlton (1897-1982), MOST: 1887 Collingwood (1897-1990)
15 FEWEST: 1783 Carlton (1897-1987), MOST: 2346 Collingwood (1897-2010)
16 FEWEST: 1968 Carlton (1897-1995), MOST: 2047 Essendon (1897-2000)
 
Observed in Round 11, 2013

  • Essendon evened up their record against Carlton in close ones.
  • A ‘home and away’ century for Essendon v Carlton.
  • One of only 5 score-lines for Geelong 1897-2013.
  • A first in consecutive goals conceded since 1995.
  • An all-time points conceded record set.
  • A lowest attendance in over 20 years.
  • The Swans make things even at Football Park.
  • Gold Coast get over half-way.
  • Two new ‘lows’ for the Suns.
  • A first for West Coast v St Kilda.
  • Collingwood lead in giving the goal umpires one arm action in the last 5 seasons.
  • Melbourne approaching some all-time worsts.
  • A never before seen first quarter in a Collingwood v Melbourne match.

Details and More: Click Here.
 
In the "Umpires" section of The AFL Record, they list stats for the most career games by field umpires, but not for goal or boundary umpires. This is a top 20 games umpired for goal umpires as listed on the website www.aflua.com.au/history_statistics

Umpire | Years | Games | Finals | Grand Finals
\David Flegg|1990-2011|337|19|3
\Craig Clark|1987-2007|334|28|6
\Colin Hood|1990-2008|311|13|1
\Charles Bell|1915-1937|310|15|4
\Steven Stirling|1992-2010|304|18|1
\James Mahoney|1965-1981|289|14|2
\Thomas Nicholson|1930-1950|288|10|4
\Mark Canning|1994-2012|281|19|2
\David Dixon|1998-2011|273|28|6
\Douglas Gourlay|1986-2003|273|14|2
\Ted Johnson|1971-1986|266|11|1
\Herbert Dummett|1927-1945|264|6|2
\Graham Danne|1977-1994|253|11|1
\Anthony Black|1994-2007|252|25|7
\Thomas Rossiter|1960-1974|249|10|4
\George Fox|1920-1938|247|5|1
\Reginald Treloar|1927-1943|247|24|8
\Frederick Franks|1897-1915|245|12|4
\John Currie|1930-1945|232|14|5
\Roland Caird|1955-1970|231|6|1
\Joseph Jones|1898-1916|231|9|2
 
Last edited:

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And now for the boundary umpires:

Umpire | Years | Games | Finals | Grand Finals
\Darren Wilson|1992-2012|335|47|12
\Herbert Kent|1941-1963|330|17|4
\Murray Williams|1969-1985|320|25|4
\Desmond Fitzgerald|1955-1973|312|15|3
\Shane Jansen|1996-2010|311|25|2
\John Hicks|1949-1969|308|10|3
\Matthew Vitiritti|1995-2008|300|22|2
\Leigh Paterson|1976-1990|275|23|9
\Scott Hutton|1996-2010|262|14|0
\Mark Thomson|1996-2012|258|22|4
\Allan Cook|1991-2003|256|19|3
\Glenn Sinclair|1998-2011|250|19|4
\Philip Sutton|1981-1993|243|17|2
\Chris Macdonald|1995-2007|242|14|0
\Ian Green|1986-1999|236|12|2
\Kevin Mitchell|1968-1979|236|23|8
\John Geggie|1954-1968|234|14|4
\Sam Leslie|1994-2004|234|16|1
\John Morris|1993-2012|234|14|0
\Gary Grant|1970-1982|232|4|0
 
Last edited:
Youngest VFL/AFL teams:

AvAge|Cb|Year|Rd|Op|OpAge|R|Mgn
\20.69|WB|1959|8|Ri|23.36|L|26
\ 20.73 | GWS | 2013 | 12 | PA | 23.99 | L | 75
\20.77|WB|1960|12|Ge|21.69|L|27
\20.87|GWS|2012|18|Co|24.04|L|120
\20.96|WB|1959|7|Es|22.18|L|16
\20.99|NM|1972|1|St|23.70|L|58
\21.01|WB|1959|9|NM|23.94|L|28
\21.05|WB|1961|13|NM|22.73|L|3
\21.13|Co|1968|17|Es|24.39|L|85
\21.16|WB|1960|10|Ca|23.35|L|30
\21.19|Sy|1963|12|Ge|23.00|L|35
\21.22|NM|1972|6|Sy|23.14|L|15
\21.23|WB|1959|11|Fi|24.63|L|20
\21.25|WB|1959|10|Ge|22.66|L|18
\21.25|GWS|2012|5|WB|24.38|L|42
\21.25|NM|1971|19|Ha|23.06|L|92
\21.25|Fi|1967|2|Sy|22.64|L|38
\21.26|Co|1968|18|Ca|24.25|L|37
\21.26|GWS|2012|17|Fr|25.17|L|95
\21.27|Co|1968|19|Me|23.86|W|1
 
Observed in Round 12 2013.

  • A first for Hawthorn v Carlton since 2001.
  • A unique score-line Friday night.
  • A first time for Richmond v Adelaide.
  • Richmond’s best percentage in nearly 20 years.
  • In Fremantle’s 415th League match they had a scoring feat seen 414 times before.
  • A most for Fremantle since 2006.
  • Essendon 2013 within .0.2% of Essendon 2012.
  • Port Adelaide’s 2nd biggest in 99 matches.
  • A lowest ever for Port Adelaide.
  • A new League record alongside the Giant’s name.
  • A first for Collingwood since 1994.
  • A reminder to the once called “tricolurs” of their French connection.
 
Anyone looking for an upset this weekend might do well to note Richmond's below-par record with unchanged teams after winning their previous game:

Cb|M|W|L|D|Win %
\Ad|27|20|7|-|74.07
\Br|15|11|4|-|73.33
\Fi|43|29|13|1|68.60
\Es|48|32|16|-|66.67
\Ca|67|44|22|1|66.42
\Co|68|44|23|1|65.44
\Ge|75|48|26|1|64.67
\Sy|93|60|33|-|64.52
\WC|23|14|9|-|60.87
\St|59|34|25|-|57.63
\Me|54|31|23|-|57.41
\Ha|55|31|24|-|56.36
\NM|58|29|27|2|51.72
\WB|61|31|29|1|51.64
\PA|18|9|9|-|50.00
\Ri|65|29|35|1|45.38
\Fr|21|6|15|-|28.57
\Un|1|-|1|-|-
\All|851|502|341|8|59.46
Ross Lyon is unbeaten in 9 games with unchanged teams.

After losing the previous game:

Cb|M|W|L|D|Win %
\Un|1|1|-|-|100.00
\Ad|4|3|1|-|75.00
\Ge|10|7|3|-|70.00
\Fr|3|2|1|-|66.67
\Me|3|2|1|-|66.67
\Ca|11|7|4|-|63.64
\Es|5|3|2|-|60.00
\WB|5|3|2|-|60.00
\Ri|9|5|4|-|55.56
\St|10|5|5|-|50.00
\NM|8|4|4|-|50.00
\Co|4|2|2|-|50.00
\Sy|8|3|5|-|37.50
\Br|4|1|3|-|25.00
\Ha|4|1|3|-|25.00
\Fi|9|2|7|-|22.22
\WC|1|-|1|-|-
\PA|2|-|2|-|-
\All|101|51|50|-|50.50
After a draw:

Cb|M|W|L|D|Win %
\NM|2|1|1|-|50.00
\Ge|1|-|1|-|-
\Ri|1|-|1|-|-
\WB|1|-|1|-|-
\All|5|1|4|-|20.00
 

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... record with unchanged teams after winning their previous game:

Cb|M|W|L|D|Win %
\All|851|502|341|8|59.46

After losing the previous game:

Cb|M|W|L|D|Win %
\All|101|50|51|-|49.51


Fascinating stuff Ron, thanks for that. So coaches are 8.5 times more likely to stick with a winning team than a losing team, even though there is only a 10% difference in the stats above when it comes to the next match (I'm theorising that is less than the difference between teams that did make a change).

What would be really interesting is if you could look at how often teams made a change when they won by less than 10 points, versus when they lost by less than 10 points. In those cases, the result is not very 'informative' about how the team is really going. A paper a couple of years ago called "Sticking with What (Barely) Worked" by Lefgren, Platt and Price looked at this outcome bias in the context of changing team strategy, and said it was a sign of crap thinking. Teams would even make more changes when their loss was small and they would have expected to lose by more.

Could be a research paper in this ... and a lesson for coaches.
 
Fascinating stuff Ron, thanks for that. So coaches are 8.5 times more likely to stick with a winning team than a losing team, even though there is only a 10% difference in the stats above when it comes to the next match (I'm theorising that is less than the difference between teams that did make a change).

What would be really interesting is if you could look at how often teams made a change when they won by less than 10 points, versus when they lost by less than 10 points. In those cases, the result is not very 'informative' about how the team is really going. A paper a couple of years ago called "Sticking with What (Barely) Worked" by Lefgren, Platt and Price looked at this outcome bias in the context of changing team strategy, and said it was a sign of crap thinking. Teams would even make more changes when their loss was small and they would have expected to lose by more.

Could be a research paper in this ... and a lesson for coaches.

Bearing in mind of course that many changes (I'd estimate at least half) are forced through injury or some other reason, and that coaches would like to leave the side unchanged more often:

Previous|M|W|L|D|Win %
\won by 10+|747|442|298|7|59.64
\won by < 10|104|60|43|1|58.17
\lost by < 10|24|11|13|-|45.83
\lost by 10+|77|40|37|-|51.95
Was doing some related stats and noticed Sheedy has only presided over 12 unchanged teams - fewer than some current coaches who've coached far fewer games (Craig, Clarkson, Worsfold).

NB There was a minor error in the table concerning results after a loss - University won their only game in this situation.
 
Mark Neeld was sacked after 33 games coached for the Demons.

The previous Melbourne coach sacked which was Dean Bailey had his final game as coach conceding a score of 233.

That opponent was Geelong and Geelong was Mark Neeld's first club at AFL level.
 
Observed in Round 13 2013

  • A first for Hawthorn against West Coast.
  • One of only 30 matches with the most goals to the fewest behinds.
  • A first for Hawthorn since 1975.
  • Average scores in Adelaide are lower than elsewhere.
  • Melbourne’s lowest percentages from 1st and 3rd quarter results after 12 matches ever.
  • A second time only winning feat for Richmond.
  • A new high after 12 matches for Richmond in over 30 years.
  • Two lowest evers for Fremantle.
  • A scoring event not seen since 1991.
  • A first time ever for Brisbane.
  • A worst for Geelong since 2003.
  • Fremantle have won 17 of their last 22 matches.
  • The lowest average attendance for a round since 1995.
  • Currently a higher percentage of matches have been won in 2013 by teams trailing at 1/2 time than in any season since 1987.
Full details and more here:
 
Total points scored in Fremantle games this year = 1985 - lowest 13-game total since 1968.

Matches in which neither coach has played a VFL/AFL game:

Year|Rd|Coach 1|Coach 2
\1911|6|Hickinbotham, Dave (Ge)|Worrall, John (Es)
\1911|15|Worrall, John (Es)|Hickinbotham, Dave (Ge)
\1913|7|Worrall, John (Es)|Brown, Vic (Un)
\1913|16|Brown, Vic (Un)|Worrall, John (Es)
\1919|12|Worrall, John (Es)|Melling, Ted (Fi)
\1989|3|Kinnear, Col (Sy)|Todd, John (WC)
\1989|16|Todd, John (WC)|Kinnear, Col (Sy)
\2013|14|Craig, Neil (Me)|McCartney, Brendan (WB)
 
Observed in Round 14 2013.

  • Eagles still having more trouble finding the space between the goalposts at home than their visitors.
  • Some scoring for the Swans not seen since 2005.
  • Blues and Swans predominate in a particular aggregate score.
  • Carlton take the lead in low first half scoring this century.
  • A new highest and lowest score against each other in the same match.
  • Something not seen for Port Adelaide since their first year in the competition.
  • An attendance milestone passed for Collingwood.
  • Geelong duplicate what they first did in 1898.
  • A scoring event not seen against Geelong since 1901.
  • The equal 2nd most points scored in a last quarter by a team that lost by less than a goal.
  • An attendance low at the MCG since 1987.
  • A first for Hawthorn against Brisbane.
  • Nth. Melbourne set a scoring record.
  • Things in a match against St Kilda not seen by Tiger supporters in many years.
  • Lowest average attendance for a round in 20 years.
  • The only teams to have a points surplus in all 4 quarters are Carlton, Geelong, Hawthorn, Richmond and Sydney.
Details and more: Click here.
 

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