1933 WANFL season
http://dbpedia.org/resource/1933_WANFL_season an entity of type: WikicatWestAustralianFootballLeagueSeasons
The 1933 WANFL season was the 49th season of the Western Australian National Football League in its various incarnations. It was the last year of a seven-team senior competition, and saw George Doig, during the second semi-final, become the first player to kick one hundred goals in a season. Claremont-Cottesloe finished with its third consecutive wooden spoon, but defender “Sammy” Clarke became the first player to win the Sandover Medal in his debut season.
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1933 WANFL season
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wafl
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1934
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On a sultry day that reached during the match, Subiaco fight with extreme pluck but the work of previous weeks gives the Maroons little chance against their fresh and powerful rivals.
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1932
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1933
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Sammy Clarke
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Mackay, Ahearn, Smith, Merson, Bant, Davies
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Gilbert 2, Merson, Nissen, Smith, Toll
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Jarvis , W. James, Woods, Dolan, Reynolds, McGlinn, Charlie Doig
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Butcher 5, George Doig 2, McGlinn, Kingsbury, Reynolds
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George Doig
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The 1933 WANFL season was the 49th season of the Western Australian National Football League in its various incarnations. It was the last year of a seven-team senior competition, and saw George Doig, during the second semi-final, become the first player to kick one hundred goals in a season. The premiership was won by East Fremantle, who claimed its sixth straight minor premiership, after it defeated fourth-placed Subiaco in the Grand Final. Subiaco's feat in reaching the premiership decider was itself a remarkable one, given that the Victorian Football League had deprived it of the majority of it star players: only six of its 1931 Grand Final team played in the corresponding match two seasons later, and the Maroons had been last or second last for most of 1933 before entering the four at the last minute. Old Easts led all season: despite losing a number of key players to the Sydney Carnival during July and August, the blue and whites won two of three games when depleted. Claremont-Cottesloe finished with its third consecutive wooden spoon, but defender “Sammy” Clarke became the first player to win the Sandover Medal in his debut season.
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