2011 West Coast Eagles season

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West Coast Eagles
2011 season
PresidentAlan Cransberg
CoachJohn Worsfold
Captain(s)Darren Glass
Home groundPatersons Stadium
Pre-season competitionSemi-finals
AFL season4th
Finals series4th
Best & FairestDarren Glass
Leading goalkickerJosh Kennedy (59)
Highest home attendance42,803, against Carlton, semi-final
Lowest home attendance35,059, against Port Adelaide, rd. 13
Average home attendance37,436

The 2011 season was the West Coast Eagles' 25th season in the premier Australian rules football competition, the Australian Football League (AFL). The previous season, West Coast had finished 16th and last overall to receive their first wooden spoon. The club began the season by reaching the semi-finals of the league's pre-season knock-out competition, the NAB Cup. They began their season with a four-point win over North Melbourne on Sunday, 27 March. At the conclusion of round 10, West Coast had won five of their nine games and lost four, but over the remainder of the season won 12 of their 13 games to finish fourth at the end of the regular season. In the finals series, the club lost their qualifying final to Collingwood by 20 points. They defeated Carlton in a home semi-final, but lost to Geelong, the eventual premiers in a preliminary final at the MCG the following week, to finish fourth overall.

Darren Glass and John Worsfold were retained as captain and coach respectively from the previous season, with Beau Waters appointed as sole vice-captain. At the conclusion of the season Glass was awarded the Club Champion Award as the club's best and fairest, with Matt Priddis finishing runner-up. Josh J. Kennedy was the leading goal-kicker, kicking 59 goals throughout the season.

Squad

Template:2011 West Coast Eagles squad

Leadership group

The Eagles' leadership group for 2011 is composed of the captain Darren Glass, vice-captain Beau Waters, as well as Andrew Embley, Shannon Hurn, Josh Kennedy, Mark LeCras, Matt Priddis, Adam Selwood, Scott Selwood and Beau Waters.[1]

Pre-season

Delistings

Ashley Hansen, Matthew Spangher, Will Sullivan, Adam Cockie and Tony Notte were delisted.[2][3][4] Tim Houlihan was delisted but was later re-listed by the Eagles in the 2011 Rookie Draft.[5]

Trades

West Coast traded Ben McKinley to North Melbourne in exchange for pick 86 in the 2010 National Draft.

Draft selections

4 - Andrew Gaff (Oakleigh Chargers)
26 - Jack Darling (West Perth) (priority)
29 - Scott Lycett (Port Adelaide)
62 - Jacob Brennan (East Fremantle) (F/S)
5 - Blayne Wilson (Peel Thunder)
10 - Tim Houlihan (West Coast Eagles) (re-drafted)
27 - Anton Hamp (Claremont)
44 - Jeremy McGovern (Claremont)

West Coast also upgraded rookies Lewis Stevenson, Callum Wilson and Andrew Strijk to the senior list using selections 78, 84 and 93 respectively.

NAB Cup

The first round of the 2011 NAB Cup was played using a round-robin format where the Eagles, Fremantle and Hawthorn each played each other once in a series of games held at Patersons Stadium on 13 February.[6] The Eagles won both of their games, progressing through to the NAB Cup quarter-finals, where they defeated Gold Coast by 37 points to progress to a semi-final against Collingwood, however they lost their semi-final by 24 points and were eliminated from the NAB Cup.

Round Date Score Opponent Opponent's Score Result Venue Attendance
Pool Sunday, 13 February 4:45pm 0.5.1 (31) Hawthorn 0.4.5 (29) Won by 2 points Patersons Stadium 25,035
Sunday, 13 February 6:55pm 0.5.7 (37) Fremantle 0.4.1 (25) Won by 12 points Patersons Stadium 25,776
QF Sunday, 27 February 4:40pm 0.12.15 (87) Gold Coast 1.5.11 (50) Won by 37 points Patersons Stadium 12,625
SF Saturday, 5 March 5:40pm 0.8.8 (56) Collingwood 1.9.17 (80) Lost by 24 points Patersons Stadium 15,360

Season overview

After finishing with the wooden spoon in 2010, most commentators predicted the Eagles to finish in the bottom four.[7][8][9][10] The team won their first two matches, against North Melbourne and Port Adelaide by four points and 18 points respectively, and lost the next two, at home to Sydney by 13 points and away to Hawthorn by seven points. The team won the Western Derby by 33 points in round 8, their first since 2007. The Eagles won their round 9 match against the Western Bulldogs by 123 points, the Eagles' highest score and greatest winning margin against the Bulldogs, and the third-biggest winning margin in the club's history, with Josh Kennedy kicking 10 goals, the season-high for the competition.[11] West Coast lost to Collingwood in round 10 by 52 points before going on a five-match winning streak, their best since 2007. The team's round 16 win over Geelong was their first over the Cats since 2006.[12]

Fixtures

Home team's score listed in bold:

Round Date Score Opponent Opponent's score Result Venue Attendance
1 Sunday, 27 March 4:10pm 13.14 (92) North Melbourne 13.10 (88) Won by 4 points Patersons Stadium 35,855
2 Saturday, 2 April 2:40pm 16.20 (116) Port Adelaide 15.8 (98) Won by 18 points AAMI Stadium 23,214
3 Saturday, 9 April 5:40pm 13.10 (88) Sydney 15.11 (101) Lost by 13 points Patersons Stadium 37,288
4 Saturday, 16 April 2:10pm 9.11 (65) Hawthorn 10.12 (72) Lost by 7 points Aurora Stadium 15,063
5 bye
6 Thursday, 28 April 6:40pm 15.16 (106) Melbourne 6.16 (52) Won by 54 points Patersons Stadium 36,298
7 Sunday, 8 May 1:10pm 12.18 (90) Essendon 16.10 (106) Lost by 16 points Etihad Stadium 33,631
8 Sunday, 15 May 2:40pm 14.12 (96) Fremantle 9.9 (63) Won by 33 points Patersons Stadium 40,567
9 Sunday, 22 May 2:40pm 26.19 (175) Western Bulldogs 8.4 (52) Won by 123 points Patersons Stadium 37,308
10 Sunday, 29 May 2:10pm 7.11 (53) Collingwood 16.9 (105) Lost by 52 points MCG 52,560
11 Saturday, 4 June 1:10pm 13.7 (85) Gold Coast 10.7 (67) Won by 18 points Patersons Stadium 36,815
12 Saturday, 11 June 2:40pm 15.16 (106) Adelaide 10.7 (67) Won by 39 points AAMI Stadium 31,412
13 Sunday, 19 June 2:40pm 15.20 (110) Port Adelaide 13.10 (88) Won by 22 points Patersons Stadium 35,059
14 Sunday, 26 June 2:10pm 15.13 (103) Carlton 10.7 (67) Won by 36 points Etihad Stadium 38,241
15 bye
16 Friday, 8 July 6:40pm 14.12 (96) Geelong 13.10 (88) Won by 8 points Patersons Stadium 40,164
17 Saturday, 16 July 7:10pm 9.7 (61) St Kilda 13.4 (82) Lost by 21 points Etihad Stadium 31,416
18 Sunday, 24 July 2:40pm 8.17 (65) Fremantle 9.10 (64) Won by 1 point Patersons Stadium 41,005
19 Saturday, 30 July 2:10pm 15.13 (103) Western Bulldogs 15.5 (95) Won by 8 points Etihad Stadium 28,883
20 Sunday, 7 August 2:40pm 22.15 (147) Richmond 14.6 (90) Won by 57 points Patersons Stadium 38,106
21 Sunday, 14 August 1:10pm 16.14 (110) Melbourne 9.8 (62) Won by 48 points Etihad Stadium 15,709
22 Saturday, 20 August 1:10pm 20.14 (134) Essendon 11.11 (77) Won by 57 points Patersons Stadium 38,253
23 Saturday, 27 August 7:10pm 13.11 (89) Brisbane Lions 11.15 (81) Won by 8 points The Gabba 13,500
24 Saturday, 3 September 5:10 pm 22.13 (145) Adelaide 7.8 (50) Won by 95 points Patersons Stadium 36,062
QF Saturday, 10 September 2:25pm 9.8 (62) Collingwood 12.10 (82) Lost by 20 points Melbourne Cricket Ground 67,379
SF Saturday, 17 September 5:50 pm 15.11 (101) Carlton 15.8 (98) Won by 3 points Patersons Stadium 42,803
PF Saturday, 24 September 2:20 pm 10.9 (69) Geelong 17.15 (117) Lost by 48 points Melbourne Cricket Ground 59,455

source: Fixtures

Tribunal cases

Seven West Coast Eagles were cited by the Match Review Panel for eight separate offences during the 2011 season:[13] Quinten Lynch was the only player suspended, receiving a one-match suspension after the round 14 game against Carlton for forceful front-on contact with Marc Murphy:

Player Round Charge category Subject of offence (club) Result Verdict Points[b]
Callum Wilson PS Striking Nathan Krakouer (Gold Coast) Guilty (early plea) Reprimand 93.75
Luke Shuey PS Rough conduct Tom Hunter (Collingwood) Guilty (early plea) Reprimand 93.75
Scott Selwood 11 Striking Gary Ablett (Gold Coast) Guilty (early plea) Reprimand 93.75
Jack Darling 12 Negligent contact with an umpire Brett Rosebury (umpire) Guilty (early plea) Fine ($900) 0
Quinten Lynch 14 Forceful front-on contact Marc Murphy (Carlton) Guilty Suspension (one match) 126.56
Quinten Lynch 14 Striking Marc Murphy (Carlton) Guilty (early plea) Reprimand 45.00
Will Schofield 14 Tripping Marc Murphy (Carlton) Guilty (early plea) Reprimand 93.75
Nic Naitanui 16 Forceful front-on contact Taylor Hunt (Geelong) Guilty (early plea) Reprimand 93.75

Awards

League awards

Club awards

The 2011 West Coast Eagles Club Champion Awards were held on Friday, 7 October 2011, at the Burswood Entertainment Complex. Darren Glass was named Club Champion and Best Finals Player, Brett Jones received the Best Clubman award and Luke Shuey was awarded Rookie of the Year. Josh Kennedy was leading goal-kicker, kicking 59 goals for the year. Mark LeCras (47 goals) and Mark Nicoski (41 goals) was next.[19] Adam Selwood, Richard Godfrey and Glenn Stewart were inducted as life members of the club. The voting for the Club Champion Award went as follows:[20]

2011 Club Champion
Position Name Votes
1 Darren Glass 398[a]
2 Matt Priddis 398[a]
3 Dean Cox 397
4 Shannon Hurn 374
5 Luke Shuey 359
6 Adam Selwood 342
7 Nic Naitanui 338
8 Andrew Embley 333[b]
9 Mark Nicoski 333[b]
10 Scott Selwood 332
a Glass and Priddis finished equal first on votes, but Glass was awarded Club Champion on countback, having played less games.
b Embley and Nicoski both polled the same number of votes, but Embley finished higher, having played less games.

Season records and milestones

Team records

Source: AFL Tables

Player records

Source: West Coast 2011 statistics

Milestones

Debuts

Ladder

Template:AFL Ladder/2011

Notes

b "Points" refers to carry-over points accrued following the sanction. For example, 154.69 points draw a one-match suspension, with 54.69 carry-over points (for every 100 points, a one-match suspension is given).

References

  1. ^ Eagles go for top 10 - WestCoastEagles.com.au
  2. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 3 September 2010. Retrieved 3 September 2010. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. ^ http://www.sportsandracing.com.au/2010/11/03/afl-team-lists-new-and-delisted-afl-players-for-season-2011/
  4. ^ http://www.heraldsun.com.au/sport/afl/ashley-hansen-delisted-by-west-coast/story-e6frf9jf-1225956854161
  5. ^ http://www.contestedfooty.com/2010/12/rookie-draft-wrap/
  6. ^ 2011 NAB Cup fixtures
  7. ^ AFL Ladder Prediction 2011 Archived 6 August 2011 at the Wayback Machine - The Final Siren. Written by Anthony Piccolo. Published 31 January 2011. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
  8. ^ The also-rans - afl.com.au. Written by Leigh Matthews. Published 22 March 2011. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
  9. ^ AFL 2011: odds for the teams to win title - The Roar. Written by Andrew Leonard. Published 18 March 2011. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
  10. ^ Just How Good Are The Eagles? - Thebigtip. Written by Matt Marsden. Published 8 July 2011. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
  11. ^ West Coast slaughters [sic] woeful Bulldogs by a staggering 123 points - PerthNow. Written by Michael Washbourne. Published 22 May 2011. Retrieved 20 July 2011.
  12. ^ Coghlan, Scott (9 July 2011). "West Coast Eagles topple falling Geelong". The Australian. Archived from the original on 19 October 2011. Retrieved 20 July 2011. {{cite news}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  13. ^ Tribunal 2011 – Footystats. Retrieved 26 February 2012.
  14. ^ Worsfold: a team effort – westcoasteagles.com.au. Published 29 September 2011. Written by Gary Stocks. Published 12 October 2011.
  15. ^ Glass, Cox earn All Australian nod – westcoasteagles.com.au. Published 20 September 2011. Written by Gary Stocks. Retrieved 12 October 2011.
  16. ^ [1]
  17. ^ Heppell, the first Don – Published 7 September 2011. Written by Luke Holmesby. Retrieved 12 October 2011.
  18. ^ Brownlow voting – theage.com.au. Published 27 September 2011. Retrieved 12 October 2011.
  19. ^ 2011 West Coast statistics - Official AFL website of the West Coast Eagles. Retrieved 12 October 2011.
  20. ^ Glass takes home Club Champion – westcoasteagles.com.au. Published 8 October 2011. Written by Nathan Schmook. Retrieved 12 October 2011.

External links