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1995 AFL season

99th season of the Australian Football League (AFL)


99th season of the Australian Football League (AFL)

The 1995 AFL season was the 99th season of the Australian Football League (AFL), the highest level senior Australian rules football competition in Australia, which was known as the Victorian Football League until 1989.

The league expanded to sixteen clubs, with the newly established Fremantle Football Club, based in Fremantle, Western Australia, joining the league. The season ran from 31 March until 30 September, and comprised a 22-game home-and-away season followed by a finals series featuring the top eight clubs.

The premiership was won by the Carlton Football Club for the 16th time, after it defeated by 61 points in the 1995 AFL Grand Final.

AFL Draft

See 1995 AFL draft.

Ansett Australia Cup

Main article: 1995 Ansett Australia Cup

defeated 14.9 (93) to 8.15 (63) in the final.

Home-and-away season

Round 1

******15.12 (102)**12.13 (85)Whitten Oval19,189Sunday, 2 April

Round 2

10.15 (75)******11.14 (80)**SCG12,973Sunday, 9 April

Round 3

******14.14 (98)**12.10 (82)MCG60,057Monday, 17 April

Round 4

17.9 (111)16.15 (111)MCG94,825Tuesday, 25 April
  • This round featured the first Anzac Day match held between and , which famously ended in a draw.
  • The crowd of 94,825 for the Anzac Day match was the second-largest crowd for a home and away game in AFL history. It is currently the third-largest crowd, having been surpassed by the crowd of 95,179 at the Round 6, 2023 Anzac Day match.

Round 5

******20.24 (144)**12.15 (87)SCG15,491Sunday, 30 April

Round 6

******19.14 (128)**14.16 (100)Optus Oval17,646Sunday, 7 May

Round 7

******12.10 (82)**10.15 (75)MCG12,783Sunday, 14 May

Round 8

13.12 (90)******16.12 (108)**Subiaco Oval34,731Sunday, 21 May

Round 9

******17.18 (120)**8.6 (54)Subiaco Oval17,574Sunday, 28 May

Round 10

******26.16 (172)**10.10 (70)Optus Oval29,520Sunday, 4 June

Round 11

******17.11 (113)**9.17 (71)Waverley Park19,737Monday, 12 June

Round 12

******11.7 (73)**10.12 (72)Subiaco Oval24,574Sunday, 25 June

Round 13

7.7 (49)******15.16 (106)**Subiaco Oval25,465Sunday, 2 July

Round 14

7.8 (50)******15.12 (102)**Subiaco Oval16,161Sunday, 9 July

Round 15

8.13 (61)******12.15 (87)**Subiaco Oval30,169Sunday, 16 July

Round 16

9.13 (67)******10.14 (74)**Subiaco Oval18,723Sunday, 23 July

Round 17

6.10 (46)******11.10 (76)**Football Park33,829Sunday, 30 July

Round 18

******17.14 (116)**9.10 (64)Subiaco Oval20,073Sunday, 6 August

Round 19

6.8 (44)******27.8 (170)**Whitten Oval7,426Sunday, 13 August

Round 20

******17.14 (116)**12.13 (85)Subiaco Oval18,175Sunday, 20 August

Round 21

16.8 (104)******15.15 (105)**Subiaco Oval41,492Sunday, 27 August

Tony Lockett kicked both his 100th goal for the season and his 1000th career goal during the Sydney Swans v Fremantle game at the Sydney Cricket Ground.

The Brisbane Bears vs Essendon Bombers game at the Gabba is the first ever night game in Brisbane.

Round 22

8.10 (58)******16.15 (111)**Subiaco Oval39,844Sunday, 3 September

Ladder

Qualified for finals

|- style=background:#FFFFBB | 1 || align=left | (P) || 22 || 20 || 2 || 0 || 2357 || 1711 || 137.8 || 80 |- style=background:#FFFFBB | 2 || align=left | || 22 || 16 || 6 || 0 || 2558 || 1939 || 131.9 || 64 |- style=background:#FFFFBB | 3 || align=left | || 22 || 15 || 6 || 1 || 2096 || 1943 || 107.9 || 62 |- style=background:#FFFFBB | 4 || align=left | || 22 || 14 || 6 || 2 || 2464 || 1931 || 127.6 || 60 |- style=background:#FFFFBB | 5 || align=left | || 22 || 14 || 8 || 0 || 2079 || 1692 || 122.9 || 56 |- style=background:#FFFFBB | 6 || align=left | || 22 || 14 || 8 || 0 || 2311 || 2013 || 114.8 || 56 |- style=background:#FFFFBB | 7 || align=left | || 22 || 11 || 10 || 1 || 1879 || 2054 || 91.5 || 46 |- style=background:#FFFFBB | 8 || align=left | || 22 || 10 || 12 || 0 || 2104 || 2207 || 95.3 || 40 |- | 9 || align=left | || 22 || 9 || 13 || 0 || 1938 || 1925 || 100.7 || 36 |- | 10 || align=left | || 22 || 8 || 12 || 2 || 2043 || 2111 || 96.8 || 36 |- | 11 || align=left | || 22 || 9 || 13 || 0 || 1749 || 2184 || 80.1 || 36 |- | 12 || align=left | || 22 || 8 || 14 || 0 || 2314 || 2299 || 100.7 || 32 |- | 13 || align=left | || 22 || 8 || 14 || 0 || 2051 || 2209 || 92.8 || 32 |- | 14 || align=left | || 22 || 8 || 14 || 0 || 1814 || 2258 || 80.3 || 32 |- | 15 || align=left | || 22 || 7 || 15 || 0 || 1857 || 1975 || 94.0 || 28 |- | 16 || align=left | || 22 || 2 || 20 || 0 || 1617 || 2780 || 58.2 || 8 |}

Rules for classification: 1. premiership points; 2. percentage; 3. points for Average score: 94.4 Source: AFL Tables

Progression by round

Finals

Qualifying Finals

******13.12 (90)**12.5 (77)MCG52,092Sunday, 10 September

Semi finals

******18.21 (129)**10.11 (71)MCG53,759Sunday, 17 September

Preliminary Finals

******18.10 (118)**8.8 (56)MCG72,552Saturday, 23 September

Grand final

Main article: 1995 AFL Grand Final

11.14 (80)******21.15 (141)**MCG93,102Saturday, 30 September

Awards

  • The Brownlow Medal was awarded to Paul Kelly of .
  • The Leigh Matthews Trophy was awarded to Wayne Carey of .
  • The Coleman Medal was awarded to Gary Ablett of .
  • The Norm Smith Medal was awarded to Greg Williams of .
  • The AFL Rising Star award was awarded to Nick Holland of .
  • The Wooden Spoon was "awarded" to .

Notable events

  • The Fremantle Dockers made their debut in the competition.
    • They played their first game against at the MCG and won their first game against at Whitten Oval.
  • The first ANZAC Day clash between and was held in round 4 which ended in a draw.
  • won a record 16th premiership, winning twenty games for the home-and-away season, also a new record (subsequently surpassed by Essendon in 2000 and Geelong in 2008). They won their 16th consecutive match in the grand final, comfortably beating 21.15 (141) to 11.14 (80).
  • Amidst these records, they also suffered the rare ignominy of losing to the bottom team () while atop the ladder in their Round 9 game. In this game, they failed to score a goal in the first half and became the fifth (and to date last) premier team to have kicked a season's lowest score (also in 1923, 1968, 1970 and 1992).
  • reached the finals for the first time since 1982, finishing 3rd and making the preliminary finals.
  • They won their first 7 games, winning their first five games for the first time since 1982.
  • They were on top of the ladder for the first time since 1982 (from rounds 9 to 12).
  • made an exceptional late season charge to reach the finals for the first time in team history.
  • The Bears sat 14th after 15 rounds with a win–loss record of 4–11 and a percentage of 83.2%.
  • In Round 16 at the Gabba against Hawthorn, the Bears trailed Hawthorn by 45 points at three-quarter time, but scored nine goals to one in the final quarter to pull off a seven-point victory. It set a new record as the largest three-quarter time deficit ever overcome in VFL/AFL history, a record which stood until 2025. The Bears were still in 14th place at the end of the game.
  • Brisbane won its next two games against bottom eight opposition to reach 12th place, but were to face Carlton, Richmond and Essendon (who then held the top three places respectively) in the following three weeks. Against all odds, Brisbane lost to Carlton by only 14 points, then thrashed the Tigers by 77 points and beat Essendon by 32 points.
  • At the start of the final round, Melbourne, Collingwood and Brisbane sat 8th, 9th and 10th respectively, all on nine wins. Brisbane needed to beat Melbourne, and rely on Sydney (13th place) beating Collingwood to reach the finals. Brisbane beat Melbourne by 21 points on Friday night, then watched on Sunday as Sydney scored eight final quarter goals to overhaul Collingwood by 23 points.
  • The Bears finals appearance was short-lived, as the eventual premiers Carlton beat them by 13 points in the first week of the finals in a very high standard game.
  • However, the 10 wins and 12 losses of Brisbane in 1995, remains the worst record of a team in VFL/AFL history which qualified a team for the finals (excluding those seasons where more than half of teams qualified for the finals).
  • Tony Lockett transferred from St Kilda to .
  • , VFL and State of Origin legend Ted Whitten died.
    • He had been given a "lap of honour" during the 1995 State of Origin match between Victoria and South Australia. The State of Origin saw Victoria win against South Australia in Melbourne and Allies win against Western Australia in Perth.
    • The Western Oval would be renamed the Whitten Oval in his memory.
  • missed out on the finals for the first time since 1981.
  • The team finished second last, failing to register a win for its last seven matches.
  • continued to decline, failing to register a win from round 9 and finished on the bottom of the ladder with just 2 wins.
  • There were many significant changes to incumbent AFL team coaches:
  • After round 19, the coach Bernie Quinlan was sacked and replaced by caretaker coach Alan McConnell for the remaining three games of their season (Michael Nunan later was signed as coach for 1996).
  • Peter Knights was sacked as coach of .
  • John Northey resigned from (he became coach of in 1996).
  • Robert Walls resigned as coach of and joined as coach in 1996.
  • Ron Barassi coached his last VFL/AFL match, resigning as coach of at the end of 1995.
  • The first ever (and to date only) AFL game was played at Bruce Stadium in Canberra, between Fitzroy and West Coast Eagles in round 9.

Sources

References

  1. Caffrey, Oliver. (2020-04-19). "Parkin's 1995 Blues an unstoppable force".
  2. Gemma Bastiani. (27 July 2025). "Saints produce biggest comeback EVER to sink Dees after the siren". Australian Football League.
Info: Wikipedia Source

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