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・ 2001 World Junior Ice Hockey Championships
・ 2001 World Marathon Cup
・ 2001 World Matchplay (darts)
・ 2001 World Men's Handball Championship
・ 2001 World Music Awards
・ 2001 world oil market chronology
・ 2001 World Rally Championship season
・ 2001 World Rhythmic Gymnastics Championships
・ 2001 World Rowing Championships
・ 2001 World Series
・ 2001 World Series of Poker
・ 2001 World Short Track Speed Skating Championships
・ 2001 Vuelta Ciclista de Chile
・ 2001 WABA Champions Cup
・ 2001 WAC Men's Basketball Tournament
2001 WAFL season
・ 2001 Wales rugby union tour of Japan
・ 2001 Walker Cup
・ 2001 Warragamba bushfires
・ 2001 Washington Mystics season
・ 2001 Washington Redskins season
・ 2001 Washington State Cougars football team
・ 2001 WCHA Men's Ice Hockey Tournament
・ 2001 WDF World Cup
・ 2001 Web Cartoonists' Choice Awards
・ 2001 Webby Awards
・ 2001 Welsh Open (snooker)
・ 2001 West Virginia Mountaineers football team
・ 2001 WGC-Accenture Match Play Championship
・ 2001 WGC-NEC Invitational


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2001 WAFL season : ウィキペディア英語版
2001 WAFL season

The 2001 WAFL season was the 117th season of the various incarnations of the West Australian Football League. Following the off-season “Fong Report” by WAFC President Neale Fong which was written as a response to the problems then faced on-and off-field by AFL and domestic football in Western Australia,〔See (WAFL Future Directions )〕 the league reverted to calling itself the ‘WAFL’ because it was acknowledged ‘Westar Rules’ was painfully contrived and did not reflect the history or traditions of the local game.〔Barker, Anthony J.; ''Behind the Play: A History of Football in Western Australia''; pp. 358-360. ISBN 0975242709〕
2001 also saw the abandonment of the “double-header” system of playing finals that began with the replay of the 1989 First Semi-Final, and also an unsuccessful experiment of giving each club four byes during the home-and-away season rather than three.
East Perth continued on from their dominance of the 2000 season to win a second successive premiership for the first time in forty-two seasons, thrashing a South Fremantle team that came from third position – after along with minor premiers Claremont completely dominating the season up to the end of May – to the Grand Final. Former West Coast Eagle regular Ryan Turnbull became the second player in four seasons to complete the Sandover/Simpson double. 2000 Grand Finalists East Fremantle, after having the best WAFL/Westar record during the 1990s, fell to second-last ahead of only financially crippled Swan Districts and were to play only one final during the rest of the decade. Peel Thunder, after advancing to four wins in 2000, advanced further despite the “Fong Report” recommending the withdrawal of their licence and at one time looked a chance for the finals, but the off-field pressure caused them to falter severely in the run home.〔Lague, Steve and Lewis, Ross; ‘Minister Leads Bid to Save Thunder’; ''The West Australian'', 28 August 2001, p. 56〕
==Home-and-away Season==


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