1987 SANFL Grand Final

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1987 SANFL Grand Final
North Adelaide design.jpg
North Adelaide
AFL Richmond Icon.jpg
Glenelg
23.7 (145) 9.9 (63)
1 2 3 4
NA 5.2 (32) 11.4 (70) 18.5 (113) 23.7 (145)
GLE 0.1 (1) 1.5 (11) 4.7 (31) 9.9 (63)
DateSaturday, 3 October (2:10 pm)
StadiumFootball Park
Attendance50,617
UmpiresNeville Thorpe, Rick Kinnear, Mostyn Rutter (goal)[1]
Coin toss won byDarel Hart (NA)
Kicked towardsouthern end (with the wind)
Ceremonies
National anthemRicky May
Accolades
Jack Oatey MedallistMichael Parsons (North Adelaide)
Broadcast in Australia
NetworkChannel 7 and 2
CommentatorsPeter Marker, David Darcy, Ian Day, Graham Campbell[1]
← 1986 1988 →

The 1987 SANFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between the North Adelaide Football Club and the Glenelg Football Club, held at Football Park on 3 October 1987. It was the 70th annual grand final of the South Australian National Football League, staged to determine the premiers for the 1987 SANFL season. The match, attended by 50,617 spectators, was won by North Adelaide by a margin of 82 points, marking that club's 12th premiership victory.

Background[]

This was the third consecutive year that North coached by Michael Nunan and Glenelg coached by Graham Cornes met in the grand final. It gave Nunan his first success as a coach, and Cornes the first of 3 losses in 4 years.

The Jack Oatey Medal was won by North Adelaide ruckman Michael Parsons[2] who top scored with 6 goals and 1 behind.[3]

Teams[]

1987 Premiership Team
B: Peter Simmons (31) 32 22
HB: 1 John Riley 29 04 David Tiller
C: 11 Kym Klomp (7) David Sanders (9)
HF: Darren Jarman (8) Peter Bennett (35) 5
F: Michael Parsons (28) 25 John Roberts 02 Steven Sims
Foll: 42 Michael Redden 17 Andrew Jarman 3 Darel Hart (c)
Int: 16 34 Wayne Slattery
Coach: Michael Nunan

Match summary[]

The match was played in superb conditions. Besides North Adelaide's crushing victory, this game would later become known for Ricky May's terrible performance of the national anthem before the game, forgetting the lyrics and falling out of tempo with the backing track.[4]

First quarter[]

Second quarter[]

Third quarter[]

Fourth quarter[]

Scorecard[]

References[]

  1. ^ a b "TV replay". SAfootballarchive. Retrieved 3 February 2018.
  2. ^ "List of Jack Oatey Medal winners". South Australian National Football League. Archived from the original on 3 February 2018. Retrieved 3 February 2018.
  3. ^ "North Adelaide Football Club 1987 grand final – player list". North Adelaide Football Club. Retrieved 3 February 2018.
  4. ^ Jackson, Russell (23 September 2014). "The Joy of Six: AFL grand final entertainment". The Guardian.


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