WAFL vs VFL

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Aug 16, 2009
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What a superb performance by the WAFL boys in beating the VFL by 63 points today at Port Melbourne.
Ben Saunders won the Simpson Medal but all 23 players played well and have done the State & WAFL proud with this resounding win.
 
What a superb performance by the WAFL boys in beating the VFL by 63 points today at Port Melbourne.
Ben Saunders won the Simpson Medal but all 23 players played well and have done the State & WAFL proud with this resounding win.
Anywhere the stats can be found.
 
This is a massive boost not just for WA, but for interstate football as well.

To beat the Big V in Melbourne is something WA legends like Barry Cable, Ron Alexander, John Todd tried and failed to do when representing WA. The WAFL along with Channel 7 in Perth should put out a commemorative DVD to mark the occasion. As for Victoria, well....


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State Game – WAFL v VFL Match ReportSaturday, May 27, 2017 - 4:13 PM - by Chris Pike
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THE WAFL State Team has made history becoming the first ever West Australian senior team to beat Victoria in Melbourne and doing so in style defeating the VFL by 63 points on Saturday at North Port Oval.

On 23 previous attempts, WA teams whether they be interstate matches, as part of carnivals, State of Origin or representative clashes they have failed to find a way to beat the Big V in Melbourne.

And on the last attempt it was a day everyone in the WAFL would care to forget at the very same Port Melbourne venue in 2007 with a 119-point defeat.

The WAFL came into Saturday's clash at North Port Oval on the back of wins the past four years against the VFL in Northam, NEAFL in Sydney, SANFL at Lathlain Park and Tasmania at Steel Blue Oval to have some confidence.

Then it was a performance for the ages in the state game itself with the WAFL dominating the home team after quarter-time kicking 17 goals to seven.

Not only did WA break a drought that began with the first attempt to win in Melbourne since 1904, but did so emphatically with the eventual 20.14 (134) to 10.11 (71) victory.

The 63-point winning margin was a terrific reward for WAFL coach Michael Broadbridge and his staff who picked a squad who was experienced, had big bodies and were perfectly suited to play to the conditions on the small ground.

The blend in the team selected between the hard, tough ball winners and enough players with a bit of X-factor proved perfect and it looked a side more ready and capable for the conditions and occasion than those from Victoria.

South Fremantle's goal machine Ben Saunders took home the Simpson Medal after kicking six goals from 16 possessions and eight marks. As if six goals weren’t enough, he could have easily reached double-figures had he converted some of his seven behinds.

He has now kicked 16 goals in his three games representing the WAFL and now has the Simpson Medal to add to his three Bernie Naylor Medals.

There were plenty of other candidates for the Simpson Medal as well as you would expect in a 63-point triumph.

WA's midfield got right on top of the Big V both on the inside and outside with last year's Simpson Medallist and Sandover Medal winner Jye Bolton finishing with another 24 possessions and a goal.

South Fremantle's Tim Kelly was terrific with 25 disposals while prolific West Perth ball winner Shane Nelson had it another 25 times.

Captain Kyal Horsley also had 23 possessions and five tackles for the WAFL with his Subiaco teammate Leigh Kitchin finishing with 20 touches and 10 tackles.

There were plenty more options in attack as well as Saunders with his former Claremont teammate Jack Bradshaw kicking three goals as did his current South Fremantle teammate Haiden Schloithe to go with 18 possessions and seven tackles.

Leroy Jetta and Clancy Wheeler also kicked two goals apiece for WA.

West Perth's Kody Manning was the most physically imposing player on the ground with his attack on the ball and the Victorian players when they had the ball unlike anyone else in the game. He finished with 14 possessions and five tackles.

The WAFL back-line stood tall also despite losing East Perth's Kyle Anderson to a dislocated shoulder just before quarter-time. Jordan Lockyer, Jonathon Marsh, Kirk Ugle, Andrew Strijk and Corey Adamson all did well in defence.

Tom O'Sullivan was presented with the Frank Johnson Medal as the best player for the VFL after he had 28 possessions, six tackles and a goal.

Sam Switkowski and Jordan Lisle kicked two goals each for Victoria with Cam O'Shea also having 25 disposals, Matt Hanson 23, Sam Darley 22 and Eli Templeton 20.

The VFL made a promising start with the advantage of the breeze getting the game's first goal through Hanson after five minutes. The WAFL responded impressively firstly when Bradshaw kicked truly after finding some space in heavy track.

Tony Notte soon added WA's second and Jetta his first but two goals to the Big V from Lisle saw the home team lead narrowly by two points at the first change.

The WAFL had the breeze behind them in the second quarter but it was much more than just that which led to them taking control of the contest.

WA soon regained the lead with a goal to Wheeler before it very quickly became the Saunders show.

His first goal was a beauty when he dribbled one through from well outside 50 before his second came after he took a strong, high-flying mark.

By the time he kicked his third at the 16-minute mark, the WAFL was out to a 23-point lead and it was 29 after Saunders set up Bradshaw to kick his second.

Victoria finally kicked its first goal of the second term at the 19-minute mark through Switkowski and added another two minutes later through Michael Gibbons. But the WAFL had the last say of the half with a clever effort leading to Jetta's second goal to make the half-time margin 22 points.

It took 10 minutes for either side to kick a goal in the second half but it was the WAFL who got on the board first again thanks to Wheeler.

Schloithe then added another soon after before a fourth and fifth from Saunders put the game virtually beyond doubt with the Black Swans out to a 49-point lead.

Switkowski did stem the tide briefly for the VFL with a goal along with another to O'Sullivan, but it wouldn’t last with the WAFL finishing the third term with majors to Bradshaw and Schloithe to be 45 points to the good at three quarter-time.

Saunders started the fourth term with his sixth goal and while he threatened to add to that, he only could manage behinds the rest of the way.

But Ryan Cook, Aaron Black and then Schloithe all kicked last quarter goals for WA to secure the eventual 63-point triumph.

WESTERN AUSTRALIA 3.2 9.5 15.10 20.14 (134)
VICTORIA 3.4 5.7 8.7 10.11 (71)

WAFL – Goals: Saunders 6; Bradshaw, Schloithe 3; Jetta, Wheeler 2; Black, Cook, Bolton, Notte.
Best: Saunders, Schloithe, Manning, Bolton, Kelly, Kitchin, Nelson, Horsley.
VFL – Goals: Lisle, Switkowski 2; O'Sullivan, Gibbons, Hanson, Templeton, Darley, Ferry.
Best: O'Sullivan, O'Shea, Switkowski, Goodwin, Hanson.

Simpson Medal (WAFL): Ben Saunders.
Frank Johnson Medal (VFL): Tom O'Sullivan.

j4mzoijbjjme-666px.jpg
 
This is a massive boost not just for WA, but for interstate football as well.

To beat the Big V in Melbourne is something WA legends like Barry Cable, Ron Alexander, John Todd tried and failed to do when representing WA. The WAFL along with Channel 7 in Perth should put out a commemorative DVD to mark the occasion. As for Victoria, well....


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It certainly didnt help our cause that a lot of the time those WA legends were actually playing for Vic against WA as State Of Origin only arrived in 1977 with WA winning that inaugural clash by 94 points!
 
So, what does the win by WA over Victoria mean as far as interstate football is concerned?

Could we see the possibility of a Senior State League Series involving all states and territories along the lines of the NAB Under 18s Championships-as early as next year?
 
So, what does the win by WA over Victoria mean as far as interstate football is concerned?

Could we see the possibility of a Senior State League Series involving all states and territories along the lines of the NAB Under 18s Championships-as early as next year?

I still think it means a heap to the players and people involved, as far as the public are concerned they don't seem to care now.
 
So, what does the win by WA over Victoria mean as far as interstate football is concerned?

Could we see the possibility of a Senior State League Series involving all states and territories along the lines of the NAB Under 18s Championships-as early as next year?
The 5 big State Leagues- WAFL, VFL, SANFL, TFL & NEAFL already have State clashes on a rotational basis, I cannot see a carnival happening unless it was played pre season or post season as it would affect the local clubs too much especially considering the 18s already do this especially in WA, SA & TAS.
 
The 5 big State Leagues- WAFL, VFL, SANFL, TFL & NEAFL already have State clashes on a rotational basis, I cannot see a carnival happening unless it was played pre season or post season as it would affect the local clubs too much especially considering the 18s already do this especially in WA, SA & TAS.
The TFL hasn't existed for over 30 years.
 
State Game – WAFL v VFL Match ReportSaturday, May 27, 2017 - 4:13 PM - by Chris Pike
Share |
lixi2p2bttpu_250.jpg

THE WAFL State Team has made history becoming the first ever West Australian senior team to beat Victoria in Melbourne and doing so in style defeating the VFL by 63 points on Saturday at North Port Oval.

On 23 previous attempts, WA teams whether they be interstate matches, as part of carnivals, State of Origin or representative clashes they have failed to find a way to beat the Big V in Melbourne.

And on the last attempt it was a day everyone in the WAFL would care to forget at the very same Port Melbourne venue in 2007 with a 119-point defeat.

The WAFL came into Saturday's clash at North Port Oval on the back of wins the past four years against the VFL in Northam, NEAFL in Sydney, SANFL at Lathlain Park and Tasmania at Steel Blue Oval to have some confidence.

Then it was a performance for the ages in the state game itself with the WAFL dominating the home team after quarter-time kicking 17 goals to seven.

Not only did WA break a drought that began with the first attempt to win in Melbourne since 1904, but did so emphatically with the eventual 20.14 (134) to 10.11 (71) victory.

The 63-point winning margin was a terrific reward for WAFL coach Michael Broadbridge and his staff who picked a squad who was experienced, had big bodies and were perfectly suited to play to the conditions on the small ground.

The blend in the team selected between the hard, tough ball winners and enough players with a bit of X-factor proved perfect and it looked a side more ready and capable for the conditions and occasion than those from Victoria.

South Fremantle's goal machine Ben Saunders took home the Simpson Medal after kicking six goals from 16 possessions and eight marks. As if six goals weren’t enough, he could have easily reached double-figures had he converted some of his seven behinds.

He has now kicked 16 goals in his three games representing the WAFL and now has the Simpson Medal to add to his three Bernie Naylor Medals.

There were plenty of other candidates for the Simpson Medal as well as you would expect in a 63-point triumph.

WA's midfield got right on top of the Big V both on the inside and outside with last year's Simpson Medallist and Sandover Medal winner Jye Bolton finishing with another 24 possessions and a goal.

South Fremantle's Tim Kelly was terrific with 25 disposals while prolific West Perth ball winner Shane Nelson had it another 25 times.

Captain Kyal Horsley also had 23 possessions and five tackles for the WAFL with his Subiaco teammate Leigh Kitchin finishing with 20 touches and 10 tackles.

There were plenty more options in attack as well as Saunders with his former Claremont teammate Jack Bradshaw kicking three goals as did his current South Fremantle teammate Haiden Schloithe to go with 18 possessions and seven tackles.

Leroy Jetta and Clancy Wheeler also kicked two goals apiece for WA.

West Perth's Kody Manning was the most physically imposing player on the ground with his attack on the ball and the Victorian players when they had the ball unlike anyone else in the game. He finished with 14 possessions and five tackles.

The WAFL back-line stood tall also despite losing East Perth's Kyle Anderson to a dislocated shoulder just before quarter-time. Jordan Lockyer, Jonathon Marsh, Kirk Ugle, Andrew Strijk and Corey Adamson all did well in defence.

Tom O'Sullivan was presented with the Frank Johnson Medal as the best player for the VFL after he had 28 possessions, six tackles and a goal.

Sam Switkowski and Jordan Lisle kicked two goals each for Victoria with Cam O'Shea also having 25 disposals, Matt Hanson 23, Sam Darley 22 and Eli Templeton 20.

The VFL made a promising start with the advantage of the breeze getting the game's first goal through Hanson after five minutes. The WAFL responded impressively firstly when Bradshaw kicked truly after finding some space in heavy track.

Tony Notte soon added WA's second and Jetta his first but two goals to the Big V from Lisle saw the home team lead narrowly by two points at the first change.

The WAFL had the breeze behind them in the second quarter but it was much more than just that which led to them taking control of the contest.

WA soon regained the lead with a goal to Wheeler before it very quickly became the Saunders show.

His first goal was a beauty when he dribbled one through from well outside 50 before his second came after he took a strong, high-flying mark.

By the time he kicked his third at the 16-minute mark, the WAFL was out to a 23-point lead and it was 29 after Saunders set up Bradshaw to kick his second.

Victoria finally kicked its first goal of the second term at the 19-minute mark through Switkowski and added another two minutes later through Michael Gibbons. But the WAFL had the last say of the half with a clever effort leading to Jetta's second goal to make the half-time margin 22 points.

It took 10 minutes for either side to kick a goal in the second half but it was the WAFL who got on the board first again thanks to Wheeler.

Schloithe then added another soon after before a fourth and fifth from Saunders put the game virtually beyond doubt with the Black Swans out to a 49-point lead.

Switkowski did stem the tide briefly for the VFL with a goal along with another to O'Sullivan, but it wouldn’t last with the WAFL finishing the third term with majors to Bradshaw and Schloithe to be 45 points to the good at three quarter-time.

Saunders started the fourth term with his sixth goal and while he threatened to add to that, he only could manage behinds the rest of the way.

But Ryan Cook, Aaron Black and then Schloithe all kicked last quarter goals for WA to secure the eventual 63-point triumph.

WESTERN AUSTRALIA 3.2 9.5 15.10 20.14 (134)
VICTORIA 3.4 5.7 8.7 10.11 (71)

WAFL – Goals: Saunders 6; Bradshaw, Schloithe 3; Jetta, Wheeler 2; Black, Cook, Bolton, Notte.
Best: Saunders, Schloithe, Manning, Bolton, Kelly, Kitchin, Nelson, Horsley.
VFL – Goals: Lisle, Switkowski 2; O'Sullivan, Gibbons, Hanson, Templeton, Darley, Ferry.
Best: O'Sullivan, O'Shea, Switkowski, Goodwin, Hanson.

Simpson Medal (WAFL): Ben Saunders.
Frank Johnson Medal (VFL): Tom O'Sullivan.

j4mzoijbjjme-666px.jpg
Looks like there's more players than supporters at this match.
So, the WAFL beat the VFL Reserves, whatever......................
 

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No AFL listed players and a general lack of interest in the concept.

So the WAFL reserves beat the VFL reserves!
It's hardly a new concept, State footy has been played for decades. There is still great reward for the players who play in these games, it is still a great achievement to be picked in any rep side. That the public don't show interest is the publics issue.
AFL listed players can't be picked as they have chosen they are to precious to represent their states.
 

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