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・ 1926 Toronto Argonauts season
・ 1926 Tour de France
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・ 1926 U.S. National Championships (tennis)
・ 1926 U.S. National Championships – Men's Singles
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1926 WAFL season
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・ 1926 Women's World Games
・ 1926 World Artistic Gymnastics Championships
・ 1926 World Figure Skating Championships
・ 1926 World Series
・ 1926 World Table Tennis Championships
・ 1926 World Table Tennis Championships – Men's Singles


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1926 WAFL season : ウィキペディア英語版
1926 WAFL season

The 1926 WAFL season was the forty-second season of senior football in Perth, Western Australia.
Desire had existed upon some stakeholders to expand the competition ever since it contracted to six clubs during World War I,〔East, Alan (2005); ''From Redlegs to Demons : A History of the Perth Football Club from 1899''; p. 43〕 but because districts were not applied to the senior competition until 1925, the leading contenders, former club Midland Junction and established B-grade club Claremont-Cottesloe, were not able to attract or keep top players. Claremont, wearing the blue and gold colours of the local swimming club, were admitted at a meeting on 19 August 1925〔Casey, Kevin; ''The Tigers’ tale : the origins and history of the Claremont Football Club''; pp. 12-15; ISBN 0-646-26498-2〕 and made their debut in 1926 but former “B” grade Claremont juniors with established WAFL clubs like Jerry Dolan and Pat Rodriguez were permitted to stay with their current clubs. Claremont had an exceedingly inexperienced team and were only able to win one game and that by a single point.〔Casey; ''The Tigers’ Tale''; p. 20〕 Patronisingly called the “babies” in their early years in the WAFL,〔Devaney, John; ''Full Points Footy’s WA Football Companion''; p. 41. ISBN 9780955689710〕 Claremont were not to finish above second-last in their first ten seasons, and were not helped by being the worst sufferer from the interstate recruiting drives of VFL clubs when the Great Depression began.〔Barnett, Peter; ‘Claremont’s Twenty-Five Years’; ''The Western Mail'', 17 May 1951, p. 23〕
With the return of champion coach Phil Matson after he was widely tipped to take over the reins at ,〔Devaney, ''Full Points Footy’s WA Football Companion''; p. 183〕 East Perth won their sixth premiership in eight seasons. West Perth, who had been last in 1924 but had a new grandstand constructed during the season at their eleven-year-old home base of Leederville,〔‘Leederville Oval: New Stand Approved’; ''The West Australian'', 16 March 1926, p. 7〕 rivalled them until September before the Royals showed themselves clearly the best team in the run home. Subiaco, who had developed what many regard as the best team it ever fielded in the previous season,〔Spillman, Ken; ''Diehards: The Story of the Subiaco Football Club 1896-1945'', pp. 100-104 ISBN 0646358340〕 were disappointing until a stirring run from a mathematical chance for the four drives them to the Grand Final only to be thrashed – a scenario repeated by the Maroons in 1933.
==Home-and-away Season==


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