The 1983 Tasmanian Australian National Football League (TANFL) premiership season was an Australian rules football competition staged in Hobart, Tasmania over twenty (20) roster rounds and five (5) finals series matches (one was a replay due to a draw) between 2 April and 17 September 1983.
The League was known as the Winfield League under a commercial naming-rights sponsorship agreement with the Winfield tobacco company.
General Information | |
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Founded | 12 June 1879 in Hobart, Tasmania |
Previous Names | TFA (1879–1886) STFA (1887-1896) STFL (1897) STFA (1898-1905) TFL (1906–1927) |
TANFL President | Mr John Bennett |
Participating Clubs | Clarence Kangaroos Glenorchy Magpies Hobart Tigers New Norfolk Eagles North Hobart Demons Sandy Bay Seagulls |
Stadiums | North Hobart Oval Bellerive Oval KGV Football Park Boyer Oval |
1983 TANFL Premiership Season. | |
Premiers | Glenorchy 28.19 (187) v New Norfolk 14.11 (95) |
Minor Premier | Glenorchy (7th as Glenorchy) |
Wooden Spooner | Hobart (11th) |
Grand Final attendance | 17,900 at North Hobart Oval |
Total Roster Series attendance | 117,330 for 60 matches at 1,955 |
Total Finals Series attendance | 52,320 for 5 matches at 10,464 |
Total aggregate attendance | 169,650 for 65 matches at 2,610 |
Interstate Match (Sunday, 17 April 1983)
Interstate Match (Saturday, 14 May 1983)
Interstate Match (Saturday, 4 June 1983)
The 1983 Winfield League TANFL season saw Glenorchy as the standout team in a magnificent season for the Magpies.
In a season which saw the Final Four settled fairly early in the piece, Glenorchy finished six wins ahead of its nearest rivals New Norfolk (twelve wins) and Sandy Bay (twelve wins), with a woefully inconsistent Clarence rounding out the Four on ten wins.
Reigning Premier New Norfolk started its campaign by demolishing Hobart at Boyer on the opening day by 145-points and winning six of their opening seven matches including a 70-point demolition of Glenorchy at KGV to sit in top spot.
Glenorchy then went on a rampage winning their final fourteen roster matches to finish on top, New Norfolk began to lose form and suffer from injury concerns while Sandy Bay quietly set about winning matches to maintain second spot, New Norfolk found a purple patch winning four in a row, the last of which saw them booting a TANFL record score of 39.17 (251) against Clarence on 14 July at Boyer to hand the Roos their biggest defeat in their club's history, ironically, Clarence led New Norfolk by 24-points during the first quarter.
This set the stage for a titanic showdown against Glenorchy at KGV the following week where a crowd of almost 5,000 gathered and saw the classy Magpie outfit run out 22-point winners in a high-standard match.
Clarence's staggeringly inconsistent form saw them boot a club record score of 33.23 (221) against Hobart on 23 April at Bellerive, but would suffer from the above-mentioned 173-point loss later in the season to New Norfolk, then two weeks later defeat Hobart by 90-points.
Meanwhile at the other end of the table, North Hobart and Hobart occupied the bottom two places and despite being competitive in many matches, were well behind the top four teams in skill and experience, North Hobart were still sitting in bottom position with one quarter to go of the roster season but Hobart were the victim of a new TANFL record quarter score of 16.3 (99) in the final quarter against Glenorchy to suffer a 103-point loss and take the wooden spoon by 1.13%.
The First Semi Final saw Sandy Bay and Clarence fight out a thrilling draw, the replay the following week was a curtain raiser to the Second Semi Final between Glenorchy and New Norfolk with almost 11,000 attending an impressively high-standard double header with Sandy Bay edging out the Roos in a thriller and the Second Semi Final saw an incredible fifty goals scored, New Norfolk's losing score of 24.10 (154) was another TANFL record.
New Norfolk would run all over a tired Sandy Bay by 53-points in the Preliminary Final to book a spot in the Grand Final against the all-conquering Magpie machine.
A crowd of almost 18,000 attended the Grand Final to see if New Norfolk under Captain/Coach Robbie Dykes could go back-to-back or whether the Magpies under Captain/Coach Garry Davidson could erase the dreadful memories of six Grand Finals and one Preliminary Final loss stretching back to 1976.
Glenorchy answering the question in emphatic fashion to lead late in the match by over 100-points, the Eagles getting two late goals to reduce the margin to 92-points at siren time, the Magpies winning their sixteenth consecutive match in taking their first title since 1975.
Under ground rationalisation plans instigated by the TANFL, both Hobart and Sandy Bay Football Clubs would play their home fixtures this season at KGV Football Park and North Hobart Oval respectively after being removed from their home grounds by the League at the end of the 1982 season.
Team | Played | Won | Lost | Draw | For | Against | Percentage | Points |
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Glenorchy | 20 | 18 | 2 | 0 | 2616 | 1956 | 133.74% | 72 |
New Norfolk | 20 | 12 | 8 | 0 | 2413 | 1857 | 129.94% | 48 |
Sandy Bay | 20 | 12 | 8 | 0 | 1990 | 1813 | 109.76% | 48 |
Clarence | 20 | 10 | 10 | 0 | 2160 | 2159 | 100.05% | 40 |
North Hobart | 20 | 4 | 16 | 0 | 1870 | 2556 | 73.16% | 16 |
Hobart | 20 | 4 | 16 | 0 | 1810 | 2513 | 72.03% | 16 |
(Saturday, 2 April & Monday 4 April 1983)
(Saturday, 9 April 1983)
(Saturday, 16 April 1983)
(Saturday, 23rd & Monday, 25 April 1983)
(Saturday, 30 April 1983)
(Saturday, 7 May 1983)
(Saturday, 21 May 1983)
(Saturday, 28 May 1983)
(Saturday, 11 June 1983)
(Monday, 13 June 1983)
(Saturday, 18 June 1983)
(Saturday, 25 June 1983)
(Saturday, 2 July 1983)
(Saturday, 9 July 1983)
(Saturday, 16 July 1983)
(Saturday, 23 July 1983)
(Saturday, 30 July 1983)
Note: New Norfolk kicks the TANFL record score which lasted until 1995, it was also Clarence Football Club's largest ever defeat.
(Saturday, 6 August 1983)
(Saturday, 13 August 1983)
(Saturday, 20 August 1983)
Note: Glenorchy Football Club kicks their all-time record score.
(Saturday, 27 August 1983)
(Saturday, 3 September 1983)
(Saturday, 3 September 1983)
(Saturday, 10 September 1983)
(Saturday, 17 September 1983)
Source: All scores and statistics courtesy of the Hobart Mercury and Saturday Evening Mercury (SEM) publications.
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