1994 WAFL season

1994 WAFL season
Teams8
PremiersEast Fremantle
28th premiership
Minor premiersClaremont
11th minor premiership
Sandover MedallistIan Dargie (Subiaco)
Bernie Naylor MedallistBrenton Cooper (Perth)
Matches played90
← 1993
1995 →

The 1994 WAFL season was the 110th season of the West Australian Football League in its various incarnations.

It was the final season before, to stem fears of dominance by the Eagles of the AFL, a second Western Australian team, the Fremantle Dockers was added to the national competition. Along with financial difficulties faced by perennial stragglers Perth and to a lesser extent West Perth, East Perth,[1] Swan Districts and on-field power club Claremont,[2] this made the league consider substantial measures to deal with the declining popularity of the competition. The 1994 season did see two home-and-away attendances of over ten thousand for the last time in the competition's history.

With president Tom James admitting that if the Falcons remained based in the aging districts of Daglish and Shenton Park, the club would be extinct by 2000,[3] West Perth took the league to the rapidly growing northwestern suburbs of the city by moving to Arena Joondalup in a newly developing region of the city, vacating Leederville Oval for six seasons until the redevelopment of Perth Oval as a rectangular soccer field for the Perth Glory forced the Falcons’ traditional rivals East Perth to move there. The 1994 season also saw the last WAFL games at the WACA Ground until 2022, due to redevelopment of the drainage and grandstands of Subiaco Oval during this and the early part of the 1995 season.

Another notable feature was the first converts to Australian Rules from basketball, Daniel Bandy and Leon Harris, who debuted for Perth and East Perth respectively. Bandy was to be a mainstay for the Dockers during their early years in the AFL.

  1. ^ East, Alan (2005); From Redlegs to Demons: A History of the Perth Football Club from 1899, p. 165
  2. ^ See Casey, Kevin (1995); The Tigers’ Tale: the origins and history of the Claremont Football Club, p. 201. ISBN 0646264982
  3. ^ Casellas, Ken; ‘Falcons Nestled in Promised Land’; The West Australian, 25 April 1994, p. 61