1996 AFL Grand Final
1996 AFL Grand Final | ||||||||||||||||
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Date | 28 September 1996 | |||||||||||||||
Stadium | Melbourne Cricket Ground | |||||||||||||||
Attendance | 93,102 | |||||||||||||||
Ceremonies | ||||||||||||||||
Pre-match entertainment | A collection of past singers | |||||||||||||||
Accolades | ||||||||||||||||
Norm Smith Medallist | Glenn Archer (North Melbourne) | |||||||||||||||
Jock McHale Medallist | Denis Pagan | |||||||||||||||
Broadcast in Australia | ||||||||||||||||
Network | Seven Network | |||||||||||||||
Commentators | Bruce McAvaney and Sandy Roberts | |||||||||||||||
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The 1996 AFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between the North Melbourne Football Club and the Sydney Swans, held at the Melbourne Cricket Ground in Melbourne on 28 September 1996. It was the 100th annual Grand Final of the Victorian Football League/Australian Football League, staged to determine the premiers for the 1996 AFL season. The match, attended by 93,102 people, was won by North Melbourne by a margin of 43 points, marking that club's third premiership victory. North Melbourne were awarded a gold premiership cup instead of the usual silver in honor of the centenary grand final.
Background
Sydney were playing in a Grand Final for the first time since relocating from South Melbourne. It was the Swans' first appearance in a premiership decider since losing the 1945 VFL Grand Final, while it was North Melbourne's first since losing the 1978 VFL Grand Final.
At the conclusion of the home and away season, Sydney had finished first on the AFL ladder with 16 wins and 5 losses and one draw, winning the McClelland Trophy. North Melbourne had finished second with 16 wins and 6 losses.
The lead-up to the game was dominated by the tribunal case of Sydney defender Andrew Dunkley, who was to be the Swans' match-up for star Kangaroos forward Wayne Carey. On the Wednesday before the Grand Final, Dunkley was reported on video evidence – which was still relatively uncommon practice at the time – for striking Essendon's James Hird in the previous week's preliminary final. On the Thursday, Sydney successfully obtained an Supreme Court injunction to prevent the case from being heard until after the Grand Final, with the judge ruling that requiring Dunkley to face the tribunal only one day after learning of the charge and two days before the Grand Final would deny him natural justice and deny him the time required to prepare a defence. Consequently, Dunkley was free to play.[1] When Dunkley ultimately faced the tribunal, he was suspended for three weeks.[2]
Match summary
Team | 1 | 2 | 3 | Final |
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North Melbourne | 3.2 (20) | 8.7 (55) | 12.14 (86) | 19.17 (131) |
Sydney | 6.2 (38) | 8.5 (53) | 9.7 (61) | 13.10 (88) |
The AFL's centenary year was crowned by North Melbourne which made amends for the disappointment of three successive failed finals campaigns. The Kangaroos won their third flag (and the only Gold Premiership Cup in history) despite a slow start. Led by bullocking defender Glenn Archer and superstars Corey McKernan and Wayne Carey, the Kangaroos were hellbent in their premiership quest.
The Swans, although overwhelmed at the finish, started well and kicked the last three goals of the first quarter to lead by 18 points at quarter time. When Jason Mooney goalled early in the second quarter the Swans' lead extend to 24 points. However, Glenn Freeborn's move to the forward line sparked the Kangaroos, with Freeborn kicking three goals for the quarter and Darren Crocker and Brett Allison each kicking one, and by half time the Kangaroos led by 2 points.
North Melbourne dominated the third quarter, with two goals to Craig Sholl and one each to Peter Bell and Crocker, which saw them leading by 26 points at three quarter time.
The Kangaroos kicked the first two goals of the final quarter through Anthony Stevens and Mark Roberts to effectively kill the contest. The two teams traded goals until the end of the game, with North ultimately triumphing by 43 points.
Tony Lockett tried hard for the Swans in his first and only Grand Final, booting six goals. Paul Roos was playing in his 314th game of VFL/AFL football. He continues to hold the record for the most games played before participating in his first Grand Final.
The Norm Smith Medal was awarded to Archer for being judged the best player afield.
Teams
B: | 8 Robert Scott | 4 Mick Martyn | 11 Glenn Archer |
HB: | 2 Wayne Schwass | 6 Ian Fairley | 12 John Blakey |
C: | 34 David King | 37 Adam Simpson | 7 Dean Laidley |
HF: | 17 Glenn Freeborn | 18 Wayne Carey (c) | 33 Brett Allison |
F: | 24 Craig Sholl | 31 Corey McKernan | 27 Darren Crocker |
Foll: | 16 Matthew Capuano | 3 Anthony Rock | 10 Anthony Stevens |
Int: | 5 Stuart Anderson | 22 Mark Roberts | 26 Peter Bell |
Coach: | Denis Pagan |
B: | 7 Brad Seymour | 6 Andrew Dunkley | 30 Mark Bayes |
HB: | 39 Adam Heuskes | 1 Paul Roos | 19 Michael O'Loughlin |
C: | 27 Wade Chapman | 8 Daryn Cresswell | 9 Shannon Grant |
HF: | 34 Troy Luff | 17 Jason Mooney | 3 Dale Lewis |
F: | 5 Craig O'Brien | 4 Tony Lockett | 11 Stuart Maxfield |
Foll: | 15 Greg Stafford | 12 Kevin Dyson | 14 Paul Kelly (c) |
Int: | 24 Derek Kickett | 32 Daniel McPherson | 29 Simon Garlick |
Coach: | Rodney Eade |
Goal kickers
North Melbourne
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Sydney
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References
- ^ Russell Coulson; Ron Reed (27 September 1996). "First round goes to Sydney". Herald Sun. Melbourne, VIC. p. 5.
- ^ Al Paton (8 May 2014). "SuperFooty takes a look at the biggest cases to hit the tribunal as Jack Viney prepares for his appeal". Herald Sun. Retrieved 30 December 2015.