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West Coast Eagles (AFL Women's)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
West Coast Eagles
Names
2022 (S7) season
Home-and-away season14th
Leading goalkickerAimee Schmidt
Best and fairestEmma Swanson
Club details
Colours  Royal blue
  Gold
CompetitionAFL Women's
OwnersWest Australian Football Commission (WAFC)
ChairmanPaul Fitzpatrick
CEO[Don Pyke ]
CoachDaisy Pearce
Captain(s)Emma Swanson
Ground(s)Mineral Resources Park (6,500)
Training ground(s)Mineral Resources Park
Uniforms
Home
Away
Clash
Other information
Official websiteOfficial website

The West Coast Eagles (abbreviated as Eagles) is an AFL Women's team based in Perth, Western Australia.

The team is associated with the West Coast Eagles (AFL Men's) team and in September 2017 was granted a license by the AFL to compete in the league from the start of the 2020 season.[1][2] The team shares home games between Lathlain Park, Perth Stadium and Leederville Oval.

Squad

[edit]
Senior list Rookie list Coaching staff

Head coach

Assistant coaches


Legend:
  • (c) Captain(s)
  • (vc) Vice-captain(s)

Updated: 17 October 2024
Source(s): Playing list, Coaching staff


Season summaries

[edit]
West Coast AFLW honour roll
Season Ladder W–L–D Finals Coach Captain(s) Best and fairest Leading goalkicker
2020 13th ^ 1–5–0 DNQ Luke Dwyer Emma Swanson[3] Dana Hooker[4] Hayley Bullas (2)
2021 12th 2–7–0 DNQ Daniel Pratt Emma Swanson Isabella Lewis Grace Kelly (7)
2022 (S6) 14th 1–9–0 DNQ Michael Prior Emma Swanson Emma Swanson Aimee Schmidt (7)
2022 (S7) 16th 2–8–0 DNQ Michael Prior Emma Swanson Emma Swanson Aimee Schmidt (5)
2023 17th 2–8–0 DNQ Michael Prior Emma Swanson Charlotte Thomas Kellie Gibson (12)

^ Denotes the ladder was split into two conferences. Figure refers to the club's overall finishing position in the home-and-away season.

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "AFLW: Tasmania-North Melbourne and Geelong win licenses to field teams in 2019". ABC News. 27 September 2017.
  2. ^ "Your club's B&F: It's Turbo time again as Dockers coach signs on". AFLW. Retrieved 5 June 2021.
  3. ^ "Hooker wins Eagles maiden AFLW best and fairest". The West Australian. 2020-08-11. Retrieved 5 June 2021.
  4. ^ "AFLW: Hooker claims inaugural Club Champion Award". westcoasteagles.com.au. 11 August 2020. Retrieved 5 June 2021.