1945 SANFL Grand Final | ||||||||||||||||
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Date | Saturday, 29 September (2:10 pm) | |||||||||||||||
Stadium | Adelaide Oval | |||||||||||||||
Attendance | 47,500 | |||||||||||||||
Accolades | ||||||||||||||||
Best on Ground | Jim Thoms [1] | |||||||||||||||
Australian Football Hall of Fame | Haydn Bunton Sr. (1996; Legend) Bob Quinn (1996) Bob Hank (1999) Bob McLean (2007) | |||||||||||||||
Commentators | Steve McKee (5AD) [2] | |||||||||||||||
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The 1945 SANFL Grand Final was an Australian rules football game contested between the Port Adelaide Football Club and the West Torrens Football Club, held at Adelaide Oval in Adelaide on 29 September 1945. It was the 47th Grand Final of the South Australian National Football League, staged to determine the premiers for the 1945 SANFL season. The match, attended by 47,500 spectators, was won by West Torrens by a margin of 13 points, marking that club's third premiership victory. [3] The game is also remembered for being the final game of Haydn Bunton Sr's career.
This was the first SANFL Grand Final held after World War Two, with Japan surrendering 27 days prior to the game. [4]
Port Adelaide's first quarter score of 8.3 (51) remains the largest opening term to any SANFL grand final.
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Grand Final | |||||
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{{{date}}} | Port Adelaide | def. by | West Torrens | Adelaide Oval (crowd: 47,500) | |
8.3 (51) 9.7 (61) 13.11 (81) 15.12 (102) | Q1 Q2 Q3 Final | 2.7 (19) 9.11 (65) 13.17 (83) 15.25 (115) | |||
Quinn 5 Grimm, Hoffman 3 A. McLean 2 Hall, Dayman 1 | Goals | 4 Turner 3 Nicholls, McInnes 2 Thoms 1 Hodgens, Prior, Coverlid | |||
Fletcher, L. McLean, Bunton, A. McLean, McFarlane, Quinn, Hall | Best | R. Roberts, Edwards, Wood, THoms, Nicholls, Turner, Prior | |||
The crowd of 47,500 broke the attendance for a football match in South Australia that was previously 44,300 held by the 1924 SAFL Grand Final.
The 1945 SANFL Grand Final was Haydn Bunton Sr's last game.
The South Australian National Football League, or SANFL, is an Australian rules football league based in the Australian state of South Australia. It is also the state's governing body for the sport.
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Haydn William Bunton was an Australian rules footballer who represented Fitzroy in the Victorian Football League (VFL), Subiaco in the West Australian Football League (WAFL), and Port Adelaide in the South Australian National Football League (SANFL) during the 1930s and 1940s.
Russell Frank Ebert was an Australian rules footballer and coach. He is considered one of the greatest players in the history of Australian rules football in South Australia. Ebert is the only player to have won four Magarey Medals, which are awarded to the best and fairest player in the South Australian National Football League (SANFL). He is one of four Australian rules footballers to have a statue at Adelaide Oval, the others being Ken Farmer, Malcolm Blight and Barrie Robran. Football historian John Devaney described Ebert as coming "as close as any player in history to exhibiting complete mastery over all the essential skills of the game," and he is widely regarded as the Port Adelaide Football Club's greatest-ever player. Aside from his 392 games at Port Adelaide, Ebert played 25 games for North Melbourne in the 1979 VFL season and collected over 500 possessions as a midfielder for the club, which reached the preliminary final. Ebert was an inaugural inductee into the Australian Football Hall of Fame in 1996, and he was posthumously elevated to Legend status in June 2022, the highest honour that can be bestowed onto an Australian footballer.
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