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・ 1937 All-Ireland Senior Hurling Championship Final
・ 1937 All-Pacific Coast football team
・ 1937 All-SEC football team
・ 1937 Allan Cup
・ 1937 American Football League season
・ 1937 Argentine Primera División
・ 1937 Arkansas Razorbacks football team
・ 1937 Army Cadets football team
・ 1937 Atlantic hurricane season
・ 1937 Australian Championships
・ 1937 Australian Championships – Men's Singles
・ 1937 Australian Championships – Women's Singles
・ 1937 Australian Grand Prix
・ 1936 VFL season
・ 1936 Vuelta a España
1936 WANFL season
・ 1936 Washington Senators season
・ 1936 Wightman Cup
・ 1936 Wimbledon Championships
・ 1936 Wimbledon Championships – Men's Singles
・ 1936 Wimbledon Championships – Women's Singles
・ 1936 Winter Olympics
・ 1936 Winter Olympics medal table
・ 1936 Wisconsin Badgers football team
・ 1936 Women's British Open Squash Championship
・ 1936 Women's Western Open
・ 1936 World Archery Championships
・ 1936 World Figure Skating Championships
・ 1936 World Series
・ 1936 World Snooker Championship


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1936 WANFL season : ウィキペディア英語版
1936 WANFL season

The 1936 WANFL season was the fifty-second season of the Western Australian National Football League. The most conspicuous features were the rise of Claremont to their first finals appearance since entering the WAFL ten years beforehand after having won only forty (plus two draws) of its first 183 games,〔Devaney, John; ''The Full Points Footy Encyclopedia of Australian Football Clubs, Volume 1''; pp. 98-99 ISBN 978-0-9556897-0-3〕 and the thrilling finals series in which East Perth rose to their first premiership for nine years after holding on to a thrilling struggle for fourth position where all eight clubs were in the running well into August,〔‘League Football – Claremont Recovers; Keen Rivalry – Swan Districts Fourth’; ''The West Australian'', 10 August 1936, p. 6〕 then winning two finals by a solitary point. In the process the Royals set a record for the most losses by an eventual premiership club in major Australian Rules leagues, but won their last open-age premiership until 1956. The Royals overcame much adversity to win the premiership, including a crippling injury toll and a schedule modified to allow them to tour Victoria, South Australia and Tasmania between 4 July and the first week of August.
George Moloney, famous as a prolific goalscorer, aided Claremont’s rise in his new role as a centreman and won the club’s fourth Sandover Medal in five seasons, whilst former West Perth key forward Frank Hopkins took Moloney’s place at the goalfront to great effect.
The Cardinals, who had won three premierships during the previous four seasons, began a short but extraordinarily steep decline this season, not returning to the finals until 1941 (when they won another premiership) and suffering two wooden spoons and twenty-seven consecutive losses.
Victoria Park, wooden spooners in 1935, reverted to the club’s traditional name of ‘Perth’ after Parliament failed to pass an Act to allow them to acquire Raphael Park to develop a new oval.〔See East, Alan (2005); ''From Redlegs to Demons: A History of the Perth Football Club from 1899''; p. 58〕 After a poor beginning the Redlegs improved, but were not again to contest open-age finals until they began three decades of only briefly interrupted success in 1947.
Off the field, 1936 saw the WANFL establish permanent headquarters at Subiaco Oval,〔‘New Football Headquarters’; ''The West Australian'', 7 September 1936, p. 7〕 whilst the Grand Final was the first game with a new grandstand at the ground.
==Home-and-away Season==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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