1988 Adelaide Bicentennial Carnival: Difference between revisions
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* William Briston |
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* Dennis Dunn |
* Dennis Dunn |
Revision as of 16:41, 3 April 2009
The 1988 Adelaide Bicentennial Carnival was the 22nd edition of the Australian National Football Carnival, an Australian rules football State of Origin competition. Australia was celebrating it's Bicentenary in 1988 so the carnival was known as the 'Bicentennial Carnival'. It took place in March and the matches were played at either Football Park or Norwood Oval.
At the carnival, ten teams competed, including all the state of territories, making in the most heavily contested ever. They were divided into two sections, with South Australia, Victoria, Western Australia and New South Wales. Although traditionally the Tasmanians had enjoyed more success in the interstate arena than New South Wales, the latter had 22 VFL players in their squad compared to the island state's 15 which helped get them that final Section One spot.
Section Two was occupied by the Australian Capital Territory, Northern Territory, Queensland, Tasmania and two non regional teams. The Australian Amateurs were one of those, a squad made up amateur players from across the country's leagues. Finally, the Victorian Football Association representative team made up the group but selection was not restricted to VFA players. If a footballer, now competing elsewhere, had started their career in the VFA, like Terry Wallace for example, then they were eligible to join the squad. The same rules applied to the other teams, so if a Tasmanian born player had started their career at West Perth then they could be selected for either Tasmania or Western Australia.
Results
Game | Section | Winning team | Score | Losing team | Score |
1. | Two | Northern Territory | 19.20 (134) | Tasmania | 10.8 (68) |
2. | Two | Australian Amateurs | 14.12 (96) | Australian Capital Territory | 12.11 (83) |
3. | One | Victoria | 20.13 (133) | Western Australia | 10.13 (73) |
4. | Two | Victorian Football Association | 17.9 (111) | Queensland | 4.11 (35) |
5. | Two | Northern Territory | 11.19 (85) | Australian Amateurs | 8.9 (59) |
6. | One | South Australia | 12.8 (80) | New South Wales | 8.11 (59) |
7. | Two | Tasmania | 11.16 (82) | Queensland | 10.10. (70) |
8. | Two | Victorian Football Association | 18.20 (128) | Australian Capital Territory | 9.16 (70) |
9. | Two | Northern Territory | 17.10 (112) | Victorian Football Association | 9.13 (67) |
10. | One | New South Wales | 10.8 (68) | Western Australia | 9.12 (66) |
11. | One | South Australia | 15.12 (102) | Victoria | 6.6 (42) |
Squads
This list is incomplete; you can help by adding missing items. |
ACT | AA | NSW | NT | QLD |
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SA | TAS | VFA | VIC | WA |
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Honours
All-Australians
Leading goal-kickers
- Dennis Dunn (NT) - 16 goals
- Michael Long (NT) - 9 goals
- Stephen Kernahan (SA) - 8 goals
- Stephen Nichols (TAS) - 8 goals
- Paul Salmon (VIC) - 8 goals
- Bruce Lindner (SA) - 6 goals
Medalists
Fos Williams Medals
- Stephen Kernahan (SA)
- Mark Mickan (SA)
Simpson Medal
- Dwayne Lamb (WA)
Tassie Medal
- Paul Salmon (VIC)