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2015 AFL season

119th season of the Australian Football League (AFL) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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The 2015 AFL season was the 119th 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 season featured eighteen clubs, ran from 2 April until 3 October, and comprised a 22-game home-and-away season followed by a finals series featuring the top eight clubs.

Quick Facts Teams, Premiers ...

The premiership was won by the Hawthorn Football Club for the 13th time and third time consecutively, after it defeated West Coast by 46 points in the 2015 AFL Grand Final.

The season was marred by the mid-season death of Adelaide senior coach Phil Walsh, who was the victim of a domestic incident. Adelaide's following match was cancelled.[1]

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Pre-season

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All Stars game

The biennial All Stars game, this year played in Western Australia, featuring an AFL team and the Indigenous All Stars team made up of some of the best Indigenous players in the game, returned for the 2015 pre-season. West Coast was the All Stars' opponent, and the match was played at Medibank Stadium in Perth.[2][3]

2015 Indigenous All Stars Game
Friday, 20 February 7:45 pm (AWST) Indigenous All Stars def. by West Coast Medibank Stadium (crowd: 10,000) Report
1.2 (8)
5.6 (36)
5.9 (39)
5.11 (41)
Q1
Q2
Q3
Final
3.2 (20)
4.2 (26)
5.5 (35)
7.7 (49)
Polly Farmer Medal: Shaun Burgoyne[4]
Edwards, Jetta, Yarran, Pickett, B.Hill Goals McGovern, Sheppard, Wellingham, Gaff, Cripps, Powell, Lamb
Burgoyne, Harbrow, Martin, B.Hill, S.Hill Best Wellingham, Masten, Gaff, Schofield, Sinclair, Cripps
Nil Injuries Nil
Nil Reports Nil

NAB Challenge

The pre-season series of matches, known as the 2015 NAB Challenge, featured 27 practice matches played over 25 days, beginning 26 February and ending 22 March. The matches were stand-alone in nature, with no overall winner crowned for the series.[5] Each team played three pre-season games, many of which were played at suburban or regional venues, with most games televised on Fox Footy. The nine-point super goal was used in these matches.

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Premiership season

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Notable features of the draw include:

  • To address poor attendances and late-finishing matches, all Saturday night matches on the east coast were brought forward by 20 minutes, with matches in this timeslot now starting at 7:20 pm and Saturday twilight matches were brought forward by five minutes to start at 4:35 pm. Matches in Adelaide and Perth retained their respective local starting times of 7:10 pm and 5:40 pm.[6]
  • Many of the grounds used by the AFL hosted games in the 2015 Cricket World Cup, which ended on 29 March. Consequently, the season started and finished slightly later than in previous years, with the Grand Final scheduled for the first Saturday in October instead of the customary last Saturday in September.
  • Due to the Sydney Royal Easter Show, Greater Western Sydney's primary home ground (Spotless Stadium) was unavailable until round 6, therefore the club's first two home games were at its secondary home ground, StarTrack Oval, in rounds 2 and 4.[7]
  • Mother's Day Round (Round 6) saw six matches played on Saturday instead of the usual five, with only two matches played on Mother's Day itself.[8] This was repeated in round 23, with no twilight game on the Sunday.[9]
  • The Friday before the Grand Final became a public holiday in Victoria, following an election promise by the incoming state government, under the premiership of Daniel Andrews.
  • All starting times are local.

Round 1

More information Round 1 (Opening Round) ...

Round 2

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Round 3

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Round 4

More information Round 4 (ANZAC Round) ...

Round 5

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Round 6

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Round 7

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Round 8

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Round 9

More information Round 9 (Indigenous Round) ...

Round 10

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Round 11

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Round 12

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Round 13

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Round 14

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Round 15

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Round 16

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Round 17

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Round 18

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Round 19

More information Round 19 (Multicultural Round) ...

Round 20

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Round 21

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Round 22

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Round 23

More information Round 23 ...

Season notes

Win/loss table

More information Team, F1 ...
+WinQualified for finals
-LossXBye
DrawEliminated

Bold – Home game
X – Bye
C – Cancelled[a]
Opponent for round listed above margin

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Ladder

More information Pos, Team ...
Source: [48]
Rules for classification: 1) points; 2) percentage; 3) number of points for.
(P) Premiers
Notes:
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    The round 14 Adelaide vs. Geelong match was cancelled due to the death of Adelaide coach, Phil Walsh, both clubs received two premiership points each, with no change to their percentages.
  2. The round 14 match between Adelaide and Geelong was cancelled due to the death of Adelaide coach Phil Walsh, and both teams were awarded two premiership points each.

Ladder progression

  Numbers highlighted in green indicate that the team finished the round inside the top 8.
  Numbers highlighted in blue indicates the team finished first on the ladder in that round.
  Numbers highlighted in red indicates the team finished in last place on the ladder in that round.
  Underlined numbers indicate that the team had a bye during that round.
More information Team ╲ Round, Fremantle ...
Source: [citation needed]
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Finals series

Qualifying and elimination finalsSemi-finalsPreliminary finalsGrand final
12 Sep, Domain Stadium
1Fremantle10.9 (69)
4Sydney7.18 (60)19 Sep, ANZ Stadium
Sydney7.9 (51)
13 Sep, MCGNorth Melbourne11.11 (77)25 Sep, Domain Stadium
5Richmond14.4 (88)Fremantle10.7 (67)
8North Melbourne15.15 (105)Hawthorn15.4 (94)3 Oct, MCG
Hawthorn16.11 (107)
12 Sep, MCG26 Sep, Domain StadiumWest Coast8.13 (61)
6Western Bulldogs14.18 (102)West Coast10.20 (80)
7Adelaide16.13 (109)18 Sep, MCGNorth Melbourne7.13 (55)
Hawthorn21.9 (135)
11 Sep, Domain StadiumAdelaide8.13 (61)
2West Coast14.12 (96)
3Hawthorn9.10 (64)

Week one

More information Qualifying Finals ...
More information Elimination Finals ...

Week two

More information Semi-finals ...

Week three

More information Preliminary Finals ...

Week four

More information Grand Final ...

Attendances

By club

More information Club, Total ...

By ground

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Awards

Milestones

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Coleman Medal

  • Numbers highlighted in blue indicates the player led the Coleman that round.
  • Underlined numbers indicates the player did not play that round.
More information Player, Total ...

Best and fairest

Club leadership

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Coach changes

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Club financials

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Post-season

International Rules Series

The International Rules Series returned in November 2015, with Ireland entitled to the hosting rights. The match was played on Saturday, 21 November 2015 at Dublin's Croke Park. A highly qualified Australian side, who were looking for back-to-back series wins, fell to a classy Irish team by 4 points.[147]

2015 International Rules Test
Saturday, 21 November (7:00pm IST) Ireland 3.11.5 (56) def. Australia 1.13.7 (52) Croke Park, Dublin (crowd: 38,386) Report
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Notable events and controversies

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Doping and drugs

The AFL suffered significant bad publicity during 2015 related to four cases of illicit substance abuse in AFL clubs – three related to doping and one related to recreational drugs:

  • The Essendon Football Club supplements controversy – relating to the supplements program operating at the Essendon Football Club during the 2011/12 offseason – continued to be heard during the 2015 season. The 34 players implicated in the controversy were served with infraction notices in November 2014, and were provisionally suspended until their hearings at the AFL anti-doping tribunal were complete.[148] In the week before the start of the AFL season, the players were found not guilty and their suspensions were lifted.[149] In May 2015, the World Anti-Doping Agency announced an appeal of the not guilty verdicts to the Court of Arbitration for Sport;[150] this was ultimately heard in early 2016, and resulted in the not guilty verdicts being overturned and many players being suspended for the 2016 season.
  • Ryan Crowley (Fremantle) faced the AFL anti-doping tribunal after having tested positive to a banned substance in a drug test after Fremantle's round 17, 2014 win against Greater Western Sydney. He commenced a provisional suspension commenced after a positive confirmation tests (also known as B-sample) mid September 2014. He appeared before the AFL Tribunal in May 2015, and was found guilty suspended for twelve months, backdated to the beginning of his provisional suspension; he became eligible to play again on 25 September 2015. The banned substance has not been identified, but is understood to have been present in a painkiller which Crowley had taken but which was not prescribed by the club doctor.[151]
  • Lachlan Keeffe and Josh Thomas (both of Collingwood) tested positive to the banned substance clenbuterol in drug tests taken in February 2015. Both accepted provisional suspensions in March and returned positive B-samples in May.[152] Both were handed infraction notices in July[153] and accepted two-year bans in August (backdated to March), in addition they were delisted and fined $50,000 each by Collingwood.[154]
  • In late June, former Gold Coast player Karmichael Hunt, who was being investigated by the Queensland Crime and Corruption Commission over allegations of cocaine supply and possession, named several current Gold Coast players as having taken illicit recreational drugs during his time at the club.[155] Although nothing further came from Hunt's allegations, days later, photographs from early 2013 emerged showing Gold Coast's Harley Bennell using speed; and a teammate, whose anonymity is protected under the AFL's drugs policy, self-reported shortly afterwards that he had also been present and taken the drug.[156] Bennell was fined $5000 and suspended for three matches.[157]

Death of Phil Walsh

In the early hours of Friday 3 July 2015, Adelaide coach Phil Walsh was found dead at his Adelaide residency following a domestic violence incident; he was killed by his son, Cy, who was charged with his murder, and ultimately found not guilty due to mental incompetence, meaning he is now subject to a lifetime psychiatric supervision order and is permanently detained at the James Nash House forensic Mental Health Facility.[158] Walsh's wife Meredith also suffered injuries in the incident.[1] In the immediate aftermath, the match between Adelaide and Geelong, which was to have been played on Sunday 5 July, was cancelled, with the clubs sharing two premiership points each.[27] At the remaining seven matches of the round (Sydney and Port Adelaide had already played on Thursday night), respect was paid to Walsh by observing moments of silence both before and after the match; and pre- and post-match celebrations or promotions, including the playing of club songs and running through banners, were not carried out.[159]

References

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