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1992 WAFL season : ウィキペディア英語版 | 1992 WAFL season
The 1992 WAFL season was the one hundred and eighth season of senior football in Perth, Western Australia. It is most notable for the end of the Claremont dynasty of the previous five seasons, which was pre-season an expected result of losing all but nine of the premiership side to the AFL draft or in two cases retirement.〔Stocks, Gary; ‘Norrish Passed Fit for Tigers’; ''The West Australian'', 4 April 1992, p. 91〕 The Tigers, whose guernsey reverted from the gold sash to the CFC monogram as they did during their miraculous premiership rise in 1964,〔Stocks, Gary; ‘Claremont Revert to Logo’; ''The West Australian'', 4 April 1992, p. 91〕 fell from first with only two losses to avoiding the wooden spoon only by percentage, in the process using fifty-two players in the league team.〔Casey, Kevin (1995); ''The Tigers’ Tale: the origins and history of the Claremont Football Club'', p. 175. ISBN 0646264982〕 East Fremantle won their first premiership for seven years after a very disappointing 1991, whilst East Perth, who had been stragglers for the preceding half-decade, made a remarkable rush from fifth position (after being outside the five for most of the season) to narrowly miss their first Grand Final since winning the 1978 premiership. After Ian Dargie’s drought-breaking Sandover win for Subiaco in 1991, West Perth, despite suffering the rare ignominy of finishing last in all three grades〔(WAFL Reserves Ladder Positions ) (download)〕〔(WAFL Colts Ladder Positions ) (download)〕 and having their colts lose fifteen matches in succession after winning their first six,〔Stocks, Gary; ‘Time for City Clubs to Move’; ''The West Australian'', 24 August 1992, p. 88〕 ended the second-longest club drought in Sandover history with the Falcons’ first win since Brian Foley in 1959. Off the field, the WAFL was hit by the unwillingness of financially crippled Perth to accept relocation to Kelmscott as an integral part of its future development plan〔East, Alan (2005); ''From Redlegs to Demons : A History of the Perth Football Club from 1899''; p. 165〕 – indeed there was an aggressive debate during the pre-season about whether Perth or East Perth should have been the team to make this move.〔 The reluctance of West Perth to move to the northwestern suburbs despite incentive payments from the WAFL totalling $390,000 also affected the league,〔‘WA Football 2000’; in Barker, Anthony J. ''Behind the Play: A History of Football in Western Australia''; pp. 275-276 ISBN 0975242709〕 although unlike the Demons West Perth announced mid-season they would move to Joondalup for 1994.〔 ==Home-and-away Season==
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