2006 WAFL Season
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The 2006 WAFL season was the 122nd season of the various incarnations of the
West Australian Football League The West Australian Football League (WAFL) is an Australian rules football league based in Perth, Western Australia. The league currently consists of ten teams, which play each other in a 20-round season usually lasting from March to September, ...
. Owing to low crowds making the city's traditional big-match venue, Subiaco Oval, uneconomic due to high overheads, the WAFL followed the AFL since 1991 by scheduling finals (except the Grand Final) at the home ground of the club higher on the ladder. It saw the three top clubs of 2005 – Subiaco, South Fremantle and Claremont – intensify their dominance of the competition, being five games and a large percentage ahead of the remaining six clubs and losing only four games to any of the other six clubs. The only major disappointment on-field was East Perth, who for their centenary season invested considerably in recruiting but won only one extra match vis-à-vis 2005 despite widespread expectation the Royals would be the main threat to the power clubs. The Royals had numerous injury problems with their recruits and coach Warren Mahoney resigned after the club lost its first seven games for its longest losing streak since 1929. West Perth after a poor pre-season comfortably took the final place in the four, and Peel Thunder, who suffered from predictions of extreme doom despite having won the past two colts premierships,Pedler, Ryan; ‘Waterman Vows to Keep Youngsters after Upset Win: Child’s Play for Peel’; ''The Game'', p. 11, from ''The West Australian'', 27 March 2006 doubled their 2005 win tally with some excellent football in July and August. Swan Districts, finalists in 2004 and 2005, began well but a horror run with injuries after MayReid, Russell; ‘Swans in Top Shape after Upset’; ''The Game'', p. 14, from ''The West Australian'', 5 June 2006 whereby they lost sole ruckman Taylan Ames,Townsend, John; ‘Taylor Flies Flag for Code and Claremont’; ''The Game'', p. 15, from ''The West Australian'', 19 June 2006
Shane Beros Shane Beros (born 22 October 1973, in Perth, Western Australia) is a former Australian rules footballer who played for Swan Districts in the West Australian Football League (WAFL) from 1998 to 2008. He was the winner of the 2003 Sandover Medal. ...
, Craig Callaghan and
Daniel Wulf Daniel Wulf (born 19 May 1980) is an Australian rules footballer, who played for St Kilda Football Club in the Australian Football League (AFL). Wulf originally played for Doveton and Dandenong Stingrays. He was recruited by the Western Bul ...
Lewis, Ross; ‘Seaby and Falcons Both End Up Winners’; ''The Game'', p. 11, from ''The West Australian'', 26 June 2006 meant that after inflicting the first defeat upon Subiaco the Swans could win only one of their final eleven matches, losing many of the others in spectacular fashion. A record dry year helped produce a marked increase in scoring compared with the past decade, with the average score of 99.41 points per team per game as much as thirteen points higher than the previous season and the highest in the WAFL or Westar Rules since 1991. Included in this was a record half-time margin and the highest score in the WAFL since 1987 by South Fremantle against their struggling derby rivals, who took their second wooden spoon in three years as a dwindling support base and severe financial deficits meant the Sharks could not compete for the best players with the stronger clubs.Townsend, John; ‘Lions Make Light Work of Toothless Sharks’; ''The West Australian'', 22 April 2006, p. 182Lewis, Ross; ‘Sharks Rule Dunbar Safe: disappointed East Fremantle Fans Smell Coach’s Blood But Not Club Bosses’; ''The Game'', p. 15, from ''The West Australian'', 24 April 2006


Home-and-away season


Round 1


Round 2


Round 3


Round 4 (Easter weekend)


Round 5


Round 6


Round 7


Round 8


Round 9


Round 10


Round 11


Round 12


Round 13


Round 14


Round 15


Round 16


Round 17


Round 18


Round 19


Round 20


Round 21


Round 22


Round 23


Ladder


Finals


First semi-final


Second semi-final


Preliminary final


Grand Final


Notes

Their sole lower score in this period was 2.4 (16) at Lathlain Park in Round 15 of 1967, when Old Easts did not score between the first and last ten minutes of the match.
Had Malseed been able to kick the goal, he would have produced Perth's first draw since the opening round of 1986, the first draw between the two clubs since 1923, and East Fremantle's first home-and-away draw since the third round of 1974. The latter two streaks remain unbroken as of 2014.


References


External links


Official WAFL websiteWAFLFootyFacts 2006 Season ReviewWest Australian Football League (WAFL), 2006
{{WAFL seasons West Australian Football League seasons WAFL